Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

From Associated Press

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

Hare Krishnas Threatened By Lawsuit

--------------------

FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS

 

By JULIA LIEBLICH

 

ALACHUA, Fla. (AP) - Hare Krishnas with shaved heads

and saffron robes still preach "God consciousness"

on the streets and in temples. But in private talks

and on public Web sites, many accuse their fellow

devotees of the most godless of crimes. After

surviving scandals involving drug and weapons

charges against some leaders, the movement is in

crisis again. This time the issue is child abuse.

 

For at least a decade, current and ex-devotees

claim, leaders of the International Society of

Krishna Consciousness, or ISKCON, knowingly

permitted suspected sex offenders to work among

2,000 children in its boarding schools. Now a law

firm that has won millions from the Catholic Church

is taking their case.

 

All of this could threaten the Hare Krishnas, the

Eastern spiritual community that flowered in 1960s

America only to wither in the '80s, a reminder of a

lost ideal.

 

When the charges surfaced last fall, leaders pledged

to atone. They were lauded for extraordinary

openness when they acknowledged sexual, physical,

and emotional abuse at the schools.

 

Hare Krishna leaders announced in May that they

would pledge $250,000 a year to investigate past

child abuse and aid survivors. The group's Office of

Child Protection compiled the names of 200 people

who allegedly inflicted abuse in the 1970s and '80s.

 

So far the office reports it has finished

investigating 30 cases. The organization says the

investigators' pace is appropriately deliberate, but

it has some former students questioning how serious

movement leaders are.

 

"It's spin control," says Nirmal Hickey, 28, a

boarding school veteran whose father was the Hare

Krishna minister of education. "It's totally phony."

 

After years of silence, former students are lashing

out at the movement. While some, like Hickey, have

left completely, more live on the fringes. They

chant in Hare Krishna temples, sometimes side by

side with people they accuse of abuse.

 

Dallas attorney Windle Turley is building a case on

those survivors' behalf. "We just made a decision to

plunge forward on a very large scale," he says,

refusing to provide details of a planned lawsuit. In

1997, Turley won a $120 million judgment in a sex

abuse case against the Catholic Diocese of Dallas

and agreed to a $30 million settlement.

 

How movement officials respond will likely determine

whether they hold onto their second generation,

whether they become a model for religious groups or

a warning.

 

"We have nothing to lose," says ex-student Arjuna,

who like many Hare Krishnas adopted a single Hindu

name. "They have us to lose."

 

It was the height of the '60s when the Indian guru,

A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, brought his

distinctive form of devotional Hinduism to the

United States. Soon, thousands of Westerners were

wearing saris and pajama-like dhotis, living in Hare

Krishna temple compounds, and chanting the mantra

they believed would lead to a greater awareness of

God known as Krishna.

 

George Harrison of the Beatles turned the chant into

a pop mantra - but this wasn't rock 'n' roll.

 

Prabhupada taught that celibacy was a means to

achieve the highest spiritual state, and even

married couples were not to engage in sex more than

once a month. Children, he said, should be sent to

boarding schools at age 5 so they could learn to be

pure devotees, liberated from familial "ropes of

affection." Parents were then freed to sell

devotional books and do other jobs.

 

"I sent my son away so I would be acceptable in the

movement," says one mother, Nikunjavasini. "I

thought he would have a more simple life in a more

pure environment. I wanted so badly to believe in

purity."

 

By the end of the 1970s, 11 schools, known as

gurukulas or houses of the guru, were operating in

North America with several more around the world.

 

Krsna Avitara, still boyish and lanky at 32,

remembers seeing the movement's promotional films of

children running through fields in Vrindavan, India,

home of a Hare Krishna boys' boarding school. His

parents, a pharmacist and a real estate broker in

Miami, had joined the movement when he was 7. He

grew up surrounded by pictures of his namesake,

Krishna, a puckish blue-skinned deity who frolicked

with the cowherds in his Vrindavan paradise.

 

"I thought that we were going to do the same," Krsna

Avitara says.

 

But there were no cowherds to greet the American

boys with shaved heads and topknots when they

arrived in Vrindavan in 1980. Home was a square

concrete building with stone floors. One hundred

boys ages 5 to 18 slept on mats and picked worms

from their meals.

 

The day began at 3 a.m. with a march to the showers,

followed by chanting in the temple.

 

"Hare Krishna. Hare Krishna. Krishna Krishna. Hare

Hare."

 

The "gurukulis," as the students were known,

attended classes in Hindi, Sanskrit, Hindu

scripture, English and history, often taught by

young, untrained teachers who lived with them. Most

were the followers deemed least likely to succeed at

proselytizing and fundraising, says E. Burke

Rochford, Jr., a sociology professor at Middlebury

College in Vermont, who has studied the Hare

Krishnas for two decades and was asked by the

organization to look into the problem.

 

Many instructors lashed out at their charges, he and

former students say. A week after he arrived, Krsna

Avitara, then 12, says he was grabbed, hit and

kicked by a teacher.

 

"We all had the same prayer," he says: "'Krishna,

get me the hell out of here."'

 

Some teachers were different, the ones who'd sneak

out and buy them lemonade or care for boys with

malaria. Festivals were the highlights. The newly

outfitted students were paraded like priests before

adoring crowds of Indians.

 

But school offered few respites. Some children

dreaded going to sleep, anticipating teachers'

sexual advances. Referring to one teacher, Krsna

Avitara says: "A lot of my friends slept with him.

We thought that this was what love was about."

 

Former devotee Ben Bressack, 28, says that beginning

at age 10 he was singled out by an 18-year-old

teacher's assistant in Vrindavan. "I was his

girlfriend or boyfriend for years," he says. "It was

accepted. I didn't know any different."

 

Raghunatha, 34, says he endured beating during his

first years at the schools, then at 15 was chosen to

become a teacher's assistant. "I beat the hell out

of Krsna Avitara," says Raghunatha, who has since

apologized.

 

Girls also report emotional and physical abuse.

 

Rukmini, a student at the Los Angeles gurukula,

describes a teacher attacking her with a metal pole.

Her best friend, Jahnavi, says she was made to lick

up a drink she'd spilled on the ground. More painful

was being forced to sleep naked in a bathtub because

she wet her bed.

 

"My security, love, peace of mind were taken away

from me," she says.

 

Sociologist Rochford says it is impossible to know

how many of the approximately 2,000 boarding school

students were abused. Even the most loyal Hare

Krishnas tend to agree with his assessment that much

of the harm occurred because the movement that

prized celibacy did not value its children.

 

"Marriage and family life came to represent a sign

of spiritual weakness," Rochford wrote in an article

commissioned by an official publication of the

International Society of Krishna Consciousness.

 

Most parents, he wrote, "accepted theological and

other justifications offered by the leadership for

remaining uninvolved in the lives of their

children," though a Hare Krishna spokesman,

Anuttama, says protecting children was a basic

value.

 

Few students recall telling their parents about the

abuse. Letters were censored, family visits rare.

Bressack, for one, says he barely knew his mother.

 

"She wasn't anyone special to me," he says.

 

Only recently did she learn of the abuse. "Every day

she apologizes," says Bressack's brother, Arjuna.

 

So does Nikunjavasini, mother of another former

student: "Sending my son away was the biggest

mistake of my life."

 

Hare Krishnas debate how much their leaders knew

about child abuse and when.

 

In 1986, former devotee Kenneth Capoferri was

convicted of seven counts of lewd and lascivious

conduct with young children at a child care center

run by the Hare Krishnas in Los Angeles.

 

In 1987, Frederick DeFrancisco, a teacher's

assistant at the Hare Krishna farm in New Vrindaban,

W.Va., was convicted of sex offenses against a

child.

 

Anuttama, the spokesman for the Hare Krishnas, says

that the GBC, or governing commission of top

leaders, did not understand the depth of the

problem.

 

But longtime Hare Krishna Nara Narayan disagrees:

"The GBC was aware of the gurukula abuses from the

very beginning ... I personally witnessed severe

child abuse by the teachers and registered

complaints to no avail."

 

Even a GBC member, Hare Vilas, says his colleagues

were aware of the problem since the late 1980s and

failed to act. "The GBC has always been

lackadaisical about going after perpetrators," he

says.

 

Former devotee Peter Chatterton, a father who once

headed the international association of ISKCON

temple presidents, says his family felt the

repercussions.

 

Chatterton's teen-age sons hadn't said much when

they returned home to Vancouver, B.C., after

graduating from the Vrindavan school in the

mid-1980s. Their story only emerged after

Chatterton's daughter married a former Vrindavan

teacher, Steven Kapitany. Six months into the

marriage, a 12-year-old boy said Kapitany had

molested him in Vancouver. Chatterton's son then

divulged that Kapitany had abused him in Vrindavan.

 

Kapitany was eventually found guilty of sexual

assault and sentenced to six months in jail in

Vancouver.

 

At the same time, three of Chatterton's children

told him that another Hare Krishna man had abused

them. Chatterton asked Kalankatha, then temple

president, to ban the man from the premises but he

refused.

 

"I would have moved heaven and earth if I'd had a

shred of proof," Kalankatha says.

 

Two years later, Hare Vilas, the regional director,

asked the man to leave. But by then Chatterton had

left the movement.

 

"I took all my faith and dumped it," he says.

 

Hare Krishnas left the movement en masse during the

1980s, many sensing a growing disconnect between the

group's espoused values and its gurus' behavior.

 

In one case, a guru named Swami Bhaktipada was

accused by prosecutors of ordering the murders of

two members in the 1980s. In a plea bargain in 1996,

he pleaded guilty to racketeering.

 

After a financial collapse, the movement closed all

but a handful of its boarding schools worldwide.

 

As disillusioned students left, their Hare Krishna

parents often rejected them as failures, says

Laxmimoni, now head of the Hare Krishnas' last

U.S.-based boarding school, in Alachua, a rural town

in north central Florida and home to the largest

American Hare Krishna community.

 

But within a few years, students began coming back.

Some say they returned because they had few job

skills and little understanding of life outside.

Others missed the intensity of the spiritual life.

 

In Alachua, hundreds of members practice the

religion to varying degrees. Nationwide, about

100,000 worshipers attend Sunday services.

 

"I'm not really religious," says Krsna Avitara says,

sitting in his sparsely furnished apartment.

 

Still, images of Krishna flash on his computer

screen, and an altar to the deity sits above his

stereo. Each Sunday he, his 18-year-old live-in

girlfriend, Premanjana, and his old friend, Arjuna,

go to the temple to chant and dance with abandon.

 

"It's intoxicating," Premanjana says.

 

Krsna Avitara nods. "It's in our blood."

 

Arjuna, 24, believes many early Hare Krishnas were

lost hippies who misunderstood Prabhupada's

teachings. His own father was a potato farmer in a

nudist commune when Prabhupada visited. "My brother

was named Rainbow," he says, "so you can tell where

my mother was at."

 

But religious truth, he maintains, transcends its

adherents.

 

"Krishna is another name for God, and I have true

love for God," he says. "All the (Catholic) fathers

accused of molestation didn't change Jesus Christ's

teachings."

 

The first public airing of child abuse came in May

1996 when 10 former boarding school students

addressed Hare Krishna leaders who had gathered in

Alachua.

 

"I've never seen 100 grown men cry before," says

Jahnavi, who now heads Children of Krishna, an

organization formed around the same time to help

abuse survivors like herself.

 

The response looked promising. Hare Krishna leaders

pledged $105,000 from their personal funds to the

ex-students. During the next three years, Children

of Krishna would give $85,000 in grants for

counseling, education, and seed money for

businesses. A year later the community formed the

ISKCON Child Protection Task Force.

 

Krsna Avitara, who earned an economics degree from

the University of Florida, was so encouraged he

volunteered to teach at the boys' boarding school in

Alachua. But it wasn't long before new doubts arose.

 

Half the ISKCON leaders did not come through with

their personal pledges, spokesman Anuttama

acknowledged. And temple leaders' plans to raise

funds to build a multimillion-dollar temple in

Mayapur, India, angered devotees who thought the

money should go to ex-students.

 

So far the Office of Child Protection has conducted

training on preventing child abuse and it has

collected names of 200 alleged abusers, according to

its head, Dhira Govinda, a social worker for the

state of Florida's children and family services

agency, whom former students call an advocate.

 

Among the 30 people investigated, at least three

suspects have been banned from Hare Krishna temples;

another is in jail.

 

Meanwhile, as lawyers gather their own evidence,

former students voice mixed feelings.

 

Arjuna has no interest in suing or leaving. Instead,

he says, "We're going to raise our children in

loving homes."

 

Krsna Avitara agrees: "I don't want any money from

these people."

 

What he does want is assurance that the smallest

child can learn about Krishna without being abused

in his name.

 

AP-NY-06-12-99 1137EDT

 

Copyright 1999 The Associated Press.

(Text COM:2401722) --------

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...