*** Trigger Warning Abuse Warning ***
This article could be very upsetting. If you do choose to read this please have compassion especially for yourself.
a peek behind the curtain...
This article could be very upsetting. If you do choose to read this please have compassion especially for yourself.
a peek behind the curtain...
Sexual assaults and violent rages... Inside the dark world
of Buddhist teacher Sogyal Rinpoche
In August last year, Sogyal Rinpoche, the Tibetan lama whose
book
The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying has sold more than three million
copies around the world, and made him probably the best known Tibetan Buddhist
teacher after the Dalai Lama, gave his annual teaching at his French centre
Lerab Ling. Sogyal’s organisation Rigpa - a Tibetan word meaning the essential
nature of mind - has more than 100 centres in 40 countries around the world,
but Lerab Ling, situated in rolling countryside in L’Hérault is the jewel in
the crown. Boasting what is said to be the largest Tibetan Buddhist temple in
the West, it was formally opened in 2008 by the Dalai
Lama, with Carla Bruni Sarkozy, then France’s first lady, and a host of
other dignitaries in attendance.
Sogyal is regarded by his students as a living embodiment of
the Buddhist teachings of wisdom and compassion, but a man who teaches in a
highly unorthodox way, known as ‘crazy wisdom’. At Lerab Ling, more than 1000
students were gathered in the temple as he walked on stage, accompanied by his
attendant, a Danish nun named Ani Chokyi. Sogyal, who is 70, is a portly,
bespectacled man who requires a footstool to mount the throne from which he
customarily teaches. Approaching the throne, he paused, then turned suddenly
and punched the nun hard in the stomach. ‘I guess the footstool wasn’t in
exactly the right position,’ says Gary Goldman, an American student of more
than 20 years standing, who was seated in one of the front rows. ‘He had this
flash of anger, and he just punched her - a short gut punch. It just stunned
me. I thought, what the hell’s that about? Everybody around me kind of sucked
their breath in. She started crying, and he told her to leave, get out, and
then he started to talk.'
‘To see the master not as a human being but as the Buddha
himself,’ Sogyal has often told his students, ‘is the source of the highest
blessing.’ Those attending his teachings are cautioned not to be surprised or
to draw ‘the wrong conclusions’ about the way he might behave. Apparently
irrational, even violent conduct, it is said, should be viewed as ‘mere
appearance’. But punching a nun in the stomach... ‘Afterwards, everybody
was trying to make sense of what had happened,’ Goldman says. ‘People
were very upset.’ It was customary for students at the retreat to email any
thoughts or questions they might have on the day’s teachings to Sogyal’s senior
instructors.
As a young man, Goldman was a US Army Ranger who served in
Vietnam. ‘We all wrote something up,’ he says. ‘I said, I understood his
methods were unconventional but punching Ani Chökyi was knocking the ball out
of the park. 'I’ve seen this kind of thing in the military and we don’t do that
anymore - at least not legally. But on the other hand, if this was another part
of his ‘crazy wisdom’ teaching, we seriously needed to talk about it...’
The next day, one of the Rigpa hierarchy addressed the
doubters. Sogyal, he said, was upset that people should be questioning his
methods. If people didn’t understand what had actually happened, then they
probably weren’t ready for the promised higher-level teachings, and Sogyal
would not teach again during the retreat. ‘This is what he does,’ Goldman says,
‘when something comes up he’ll very skillfully manipulate his students to
get them back in line. I just thought, I’m done with this...’
Largely thanks to the benign, smiling example of the
Dalai Lama, Tibetan Buddhism has grown enormously in popularity in the West
over the past thirty years, largely escaping the scandal that has dogged other
religious institutions - at least publicly. Within the Buddhist community,
however, Sogyal Rinpoche has long been a controversial figure. For years,
rumours have circulated on the internet about his behaviour, and in the 1990s a
lawsuit alleging sexual and physical abuse was settled out of court. Yet his
position as one of the foremost Buddhist teachers in the West has remained
remarkably intact - until now. In July, eight senior and long-standing
current and former students sent a 12-page letter to Sogyal. ‘Long simmering
issues with your behaviour,’ it began, ‘can no longer be ignored or denied’,
going on to list a catalogue of damning allegations against him.
Sogyal’s habitual physical abuse, the letter alleged, had
‘left monks, nuns, and lay people students of yours with bloody injuries and
permanent scars.’ He had used his role as a teacher ‘to gain access to
young women, and to coerce, intimidate and manipulate them into giving you
sexual favours’. Students had been ordered to strip, ‘to show you our
genitals’, ‘to give you oral sex,’ and ‘to have sex in your bed with our
partners’. Sogyal, it went on, had led a ‘lavish, gluttonous and sybaritic
lifestyle’, which had been kept secret from the large body of his followers,
and financed by donations by students ‘who believe their offering is being used
to further wisdom and compassion in the world.’ ‘If your striking and punching
us and others, and having sex with your students and married women, and funding
your sybaritic lifestyle with students’ donations is actually the ethical and
compassionate behaviour of a Buddhist teacher, please explain to us how it is.’
Copied to the Dalai Lama, and Sogyal’s most senior students, the letter quickly
went viral, shaking the foundation of Rigpa to the core. For Sogyal Rinpoche
himself it was the prelude to the most spectacular fall from grace.
More than just a sordid story of an errant spiritual teacher,
the case of Sogyal Rinpoche is a symptom of the perils that may arise when
Westerners fall in thrall to esoteric spiritual teachings they may not fully
understand, and when Eastern teachers are exposed to the glamour and
temptations of celebrity worship.
Sogyal Lakar was born in Kham, in the east of Tibet, into a
family of traders. Among his followers, he is believed to be the reincarnation
of Sogyal Terton, a Tibetan lama who was a teacher of the 13th Dalai Lama (the
present Dalai Lama is the 14th). But according to Rob Hogendoorn, a Dutch
academic and Buddhist who has researched Sogyal’s background, the only
authority for that claim appears to be Sogyal’s own mother. Sogyal had little
formal Buddhist training, and it is notable that few in the Tibetan community
have ever attended his teachings. When he was six months old, his mother
put him in the care of her sister, Khandro Tsering Chodron, who was the young
consort - or spiritual wife - of an eminent Tibetan lama, Jamyang Khyentse
Chokyi Lodro, who became Sogyal’s effective guardian.
In 1954 the family fled from the invading Chinese army to
Kalimpong in West Bengal, where Sogyal was educated at a Catholic primary
school, St Augustine’s. Jamyang Khyentse died when Sogyal was around 10 or 11,
and his education continued at an Anglican school, St Stephen’s College in
Delhi. In 1971 he arrived at Trinity College Cambridge, taking a course in
theological and religious studies, although he never graduated. It was in
Cambridge that he met Mary Finnigan, then a young Buddhist student, now an
author and Sogyal’s fiercest critic, who has been assiduous in her chronicling
of his alleged misdemeanours. At that time there were only four Tibetan lamas
living in Britain. ‘There was nobody
teaching in London and there were no centres,’ Finnigan says. She arranged
Sogyal’s first teachings, in the squat where she was living in London, and
would remain his student until 1979.
Sogyal was an exotic presence; a Tibetan who could speak
fluent English and seemed to know what he was talking about. His following
rapidly grew, and with a £100,000 donation from a well-known English comedy
actor he was able establish his first centre in London. Assuming the honorific
Rinpoche (it means ‘precious one’) Sogyal set himself up as a teacher in the
Vajrayana, or tantric, tradition - a deeply esoteric aspect of Tibetan
Buddhism, through which, it is believed, a student can unshackle the chains of
ego and attain enlightenment in a single lifetime - ‘the helicopter to the top
of the mountain’, as Sogyal has put it. It involves the student giving total
obedience to the lama in the belief that whatever the lama does, no matter how
irrational or incomprehensible it may seem, is for the student’s benefit.
Whatever doubts might arise in the mind of the student about these methods is
due to ‘impure perception.’
Tibetan Buddhist lore is filled with stories of great
masters - or mahasiddhas - bringing their pupils to enlightenment by methods
that appear to verge on madness. One of the most famous involves the 9th
century mahasiddha Naropa, whose teacher Tilopa subjected him to a series of
ordeals including leaping from the top of a temple and breaking his bones,
jumping into fire and freezing water, and giving his wife to Tilopa as an
offering. According to these stories every time Naropa was broken or near
death, Tilopa would heal him with the wave of a hand, giving him an instruction
that would bring Naropa’s mind to a more advanced level.
Fundamental to this relationship between master and disciple
is the bond of samaya, or trust, in which the pupil not only vows total
obedience to the guru, but the guru vows to act only for the benefit of the
pupil. Breaking samaya is held to have the most grave consequences, including
banishment to ‘vajra hell’ and an infinity of unfortunate rebirths. Wearing
robes you have one arm bare, and he touched me there, as if I were sexual
object. It made my skin crawl. I saw that the way he related to me could change
completely.
‘Once you enter into the hermetic world of Tibetan Buddhism,
you somehow burn your bridges to Western rationality,’ says Stephen Batchelor,
an English Buddhist teacher and academic who was himself a Tibetan Buddhist
monk for eight years. ‘You enter a world that appears to be entirely consistent
internally; everything makes sense; the structures of power seem to be in the
service of these high ideals of enlightenment, and the relationship with the
guru is the key element in your capacity to follow this path in the most
effective way.’ But the Vajrayana is recognised as a particularly hazardous
path, particularly to Western students without the deep grounding in Tibetan
culture.
In characteristically light-hearted style, the Dalai Lama
has spoken of his own caution in discussing the Vajrayana path. ‘I have to be
careful what I say in teaching, as there are some seekers who might take the
Naropa story literally and jump off a cliff, thinking the guru was hinting
about it. Not only do I not have the ability to heal the broken body with a
wave of my hand, but here in Dharamsala we don’t even have a proper ambulance
service!’ The Dalai Lama has cautioned putative students that a good test
of a teacher who is beyond attachments and the temptations of
self-gratification is whether they can eat a piece of excrement with the same
equanimity as a piece of food. Asked which Tibetan teachers were of a
sufficiently high level of self-realisation to do this, he replied ‘Zero.’
In 1976, Sogyal visited America to meet with another Tibetan
lama, Chogyam Trungpa, who was regarded as the most extreme exemplar of ‘crazy
wisdom’ teachings. Trungpa drank like a fish (he would die in 1987 from
complications arising due to alcoholism), openly slept with his students and
ran his organisation like a feudal court, surrounding himself with an elite
bodyguard, sometimes amusing himself by dressing as a Grenadier guard. ‘The
real function of the guru,’ he once said, ‘is to insult you.’ ‘Sogyal looked at
what Trungpa had,’ says Mary Finnigan, ‘and said “That’s what I want.”’
Like Trungpa, he adopted an unorthodox, often jokey,
teaching style, but he was a compelling orator, with an ability to hold an
audience in the palm of his hand and convey the Buddhist teachings in a clear
and understandable way. ‘There are three kinds of people who show up for
spiritual practice or information,’ Gary Goldman says. ‘You get the
intellectuals who are curious and want to learn something about it; you get the
people who are actively seeking truth, and looking to figure out what life and
the world is about; and then you get the people who are totally psychologically
f-d up; they’ve been abused; terrible things have happened to them. Sogyal was
able to satisfy all three groups, very well and very compassionately.’
In 1992 he published The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying, a
book that presented traditional Tibetan teachings on a happy life and good
death for a Western audience. Clinicians, hospice workers and psychologists
applauded it for the comfort it brought to the terminally ill. John Cleese, an
early supporter, described it as ‘one of the most helpful books I have ever
read.’ It was a runaway success. But quite how much Sogyal himself had to do
with it is debatable; according to those close to the project, most of the work
was done by ghost-writers - Sogyal’s closest student, and now his right-hand
man, Patrick Gaffney, and the author Andrew Harvey. The book made Sogyal a
celebrity. He appeared in Bernardo Bertolucci’s film Little Buddha, and he
travelled the world, establishing new centres. The combination of Sogyal’s
charisma - a purveyor of ancient wisdom in touch with the modern world - and
the mystique of Tibetan Buddhism proved a potent lure for new followers. Those
signing up for his courses had little idea that, as one former follower puts
it, Sogyal was ‘using
meditation as a gateway drug into a cult of personality.’
But the first storm clouds were already gathering. Sogyal is
not a monk, and there is theoretically no prohibition on him marrying or having
sexual relations. But his sexual conduct was becoming a cause of increasing
controversy in Buddhist circles - not least his surrounding himself with an
effective harem of young women, whom Sogyal described as his ‘dakinis’ - a
Tibetan term meaning spiritual muse. In 1994, an American student using the
legal pseudonym Janice Doe brought a suit against Sogyal, alleging that using
the justification of his spiritual status he had sexually and physically abused
her, turning her against her husband and family.
By sleeping with the teacher you get a closeness to him
which everyone is hankering after. This, the charge alleged, was merely one
example of a pattern of abuse against a number of women. The Telegraph Magazine
published a cover story on the case in which two English women spoke about
their own sexual encounters with Sogyal. ‘You’re chosen, which makes you feel
special,’ said one woman. ‘Because he was my spiritual teacher I trusted
that whatever he asked was in my best interests… You want to progress on the
spiritual path, and by sleeping with the teacher you get a closeness to him
which everyone is hankering after. I saw it as part of the teachings on the
illusory nature of experience and emotions. But in fact it caused me a lot of
pain that I wasn’t able to dissolve.’
Another spoke of her distress at discovering, shortly after
he initiated a relationship with her, that Sogyal was also having sex with
three other students. Sogyal, she said, had ‘used the teachings to attempt to
keep me in a sexual relationship with him - one that I did not want to be in.’
The Janice Doe case was settled quietly out of court. And in
an age before the internet, most readers of The Tibetan Book of Living and
Dying remained happily oblivious to any hint of scandal. Rather, the book was
to prove a powerful medium in bringing him new followers. Among them was a
young Australian woman, who would later become a Buddhist nun, taking the name
Drolma. Drolma first read Sogyal’s book as a 21-year-old. ‘I thought that’s all
very nice, but I don’t need this, and put it back on my bookshelf.’ Two years
later, with her life ‘falling apart’ following an abortion and the break-up of
a difficult relationship, she attended a retreat where Sogyal was teaching in
New South Wales.. ‘My life was at a point where I had no understanding of the
suffering I was going through, and this provided some answers, and some
practical steps, like meditation.’
She became more involved in Rigpa, travelling to Lerab Ling
for retreats and facilitating study groups. In 2002 she turned her back on a
flourishing career as an artist to become a nun. ‘There was this aspect of
devotion for the teacher that I felt very strongly. I felt it as the fire of
the love of God. And I chose Buddhism because I felt I’d met an authentic
example, someone I could follow.’ Even before taking monastic vows, she had
witnessed an example of Sogyal’s ‘crazy wisdom’ when he publicly
humiliated a male attendant during a teaching session. ‘He’d forgotten to put a
full stop on the travel plans or something; Sogyal got him to kneel at the foot
of the podium and then run backwards and forwards across the tent. And he did
it with his tail between his legs. I felt terribly uncomfortable but I also
thought he was very fortunate to have such close attention from the teacher.’
Sogyal made Drolma his personal assistant, handling his
schedule. She would later become responsible for caring for his mother and
aunt, Khandro, when they came to live at Lerab Ling. Her duties entailed
maintaining a careful rapprochement with the inner-circle of Sogyal’s dakinis. ‘Their
lives were incredibly pressurised,’ she says, ‘There was lots of jealousy, lots
of secrets. If one of them was unhappy or in a mood, then all of us would feel
the repercussions, so we also had to do our best to keep them supported.’
The first time Sogyal hit her hard on the head with the
backscratcher that he carries everywhere, Drolma says, she accepted it as part
of his ‘wrathful’ training. ‘I thought, wow, he really trusts me...’ It was the
beginning of years of physical abuse and verbal humiliation. ‘If he became
anxious about his mother, or over a relationship with a girlfriend or some
financial thing, he would slap me across the face, or hit me over the head with
his backscratcher.’ On one occasion he pulled her by the ear so violently hard
that it drew blood. The first time he punched her in the stomach was in the
ante-room of the temple at Lerab Ling, where Drolma was preparing his ritual
objects prior to an important ceremony for a visiting lama and his retinue of
monks.
Like Trungpa, he adopted an unorthodox, often jokey,
teaching style, but he was a compelling orator, with an ability to hold an
audience in the palm of his hand and convey the Buddhist teachings in a clear
and understandable way. ‘He got out of the car, furious for some reason,
slammed the door and just punched me. Then he got dressed in his robes and we
went in. I was walking behind him in tears, feeling completely humiliated, with
these Tibetan monks there, thinking “Flakey Western nun…”’ Such incidents of
violence and abuse were common for those closest to Sogyal, explained away by
senior instructors within Rigpa as the lama employing ‘skillful methods’. ‘There
was definitely a very well thought-out structure within the Rigpa system that
would block the perception of abuse, either by using those historical stories,
or making you feel really special if this was the attention you were getting,’
Drolma says. ‘People would say “please train me, Rinpoche.”’
The Telegraph has been given numerous accounts of similar
abuse meted out to Sogyal’s closest students: a woman being beaten violently
around the head with a backscratcher. A man being kicked, punched in the face,
pinned against the wall by Sogyal with his hands around his throat, and hit so
hard on the head with a hardbound practice book that he fell to the floor. ‘One
goes back to one’s room at the end of a day of it, thinking what the hell was
that about, but still hanging on to the trust that this is part and parcel of
the purification of negative karma,’ said one man, who was a student for 20
years.
The thought of reporting Sogyal to the police, he said,
never crossed his mind. ‘These are criminal acts. But the problem is we’ve been
complicit, we’ve allowed it, and he keeps doing it.’
In this environment, everything would be rationalised and
accepted as ‘a teaching’. Several people told the Telegraph how Sogyal would
sometimes address his closest students while defecating - like a Tudor monarch,
ordering his ‘dakinis’ to perform the appropriate ablutions as a demonstration
of ‘service’. The analogy with a monarch is not misplaced. It is further
alleged that among his inner circle, Sogyal frequently practiced a sort of droit
de seigneur, taking the wives or girlfriends of his most loyal male followers
as his sexual partners, either openly or covertly. Men were expected to accept
this is as part of the teaching. When one complained, Sogyal told his partner
the man was ‘possessed by demons’. The eight-signatory letter further alleges
that on at least one occasion, Sogyal had offered one of his female attendants
to another lama for sex. For a woman to be chosen by Sogyal as a sexual partner
was regarded as ‘an honour,’ Drolma says. ‘It meant they had dakini qualities,
and you’re said to be prolonging the life of the master.’
The offerings expected from followers maintained Sogyal in a
lifestyle of profligate extravagance. At Lerab Ling, he lived in a chalet,
decorated with cedar wood panels, which overlooked his own heated swimming
pool. There was a giant television on which he enjoyed watching his favourite
American action movies. In the ‘lama kitchen’ attendants were available day and
night to provide his favourite dishes at a moment’s notice. Attendants and his
inner circle were worked to a point of physical exhaustion serving him. In the
months that Sogyal was at Lerab Ling, or whenever she travelled with him,
Drolma worked 14 hour days, six days a week. ‘It was always about survival and
addressing his most immediate needs for fear of the repercussions if you
didn’t.’
On foreign trips, he travelled first class, his retinue with
him. Oane Bijlsma, a Dutch woman who joined Rigpa in 2011 going on to become
one of Sogyal’s attendants, describes how for an Easter teaching in Britain in
2012, Rigpa took over Haileybury, the
public school in Hertfordshire. Sogyal was installed in the music teacher’s
house. On his instruction, his students carefully photographed each room, then
moved every stick of furniture into storage, replacing it with furnishings more
suited to Sogyal’s tastes, including a large flat-screen tv with satellite
connection. At the end of the six day teaching, the rooms were restored to
their original state. Oane, who was in charge of provisions, was instructed to
visit local butchers, taking photographs of the best joints of meat, which she
had to submit for Sogyal’s approval, before buying them. ‘I was shopping for
groceries with hundreds of pounds in my pocket in cash. I was buying ridiculous
amounts of the best meats I could get. And the wine and the roses and the
chocolates... And then people in the inner-circle would be on stage at the
teachings talking about Sogyal living a modest life, and keeping nothing for
himself. It was totally obscene.’ 'In Tibet a lama would have been under
much more control,’ one former follower told me. ‘The system would have curbed
his excesses. But Sogyal has been surrounded by Western followers who believe
that everything he says and does is perfect. It’s a disaster for him, and a
disaster for everybody else. He completely lost touch with reality.’
For some within Rigpa, the paradox between being beaten and
abused while being told it was for their benefit was causing predictable
problems. ‘It creates split personalities in people,’ one student told told me.
‘People feel a loyalty to the teachings which is constantly being contradicted
by Sogyal’s behaviour; their hearts are split in two.’
In 2007, Sogyal introduced a programme that he called ‘Rigpa
Therapy’, in which a number of qualified psychotherapists, who were also Rigpa
students, were assigned to treat those entertaining doubts about the teachings.
Drolma was among them. ‘The crux of every session,’ she says, ‘was exploring
how what Sogyal did related to other past relationships in my life. It was all
about that, and how my difficulties were nothing to do with Sogyal, and how his
blessing was letting me go back to that time and work through it. Basically,
the therapists had been been brought in to stop people leaving.’ If he became
anxious about his mother, or over a relationship with a girlfriend or some
financial thing, he would slap me across the face, or hit me over the head with
his backscratcherDrolma
At around the same time, Drolma appeared in a German film
about Sogyal, Ancient Wisdom For the Modern World, discussing her relationship
with him. ‘Sometimes he’ll be like my father, like my mother, like my boss,
like my friend - like my enemy, because he pushes my buttons,’ she said. ‘But I
know always his heart and his motivation is so pure. 'He’s always showing me
who I am and who I’m not. The buttons he presses are not who I truly am. The
buttons he presses are what needs to be removed. Sometimes there’s a joy when
they’re pressed, because it’s showing what needs to be peeled away. Whenever
there’s any pain that’s not the real me hurting; that’s the ego that Rinpoche
is trying to eradicate.’ Senior instructors congratulated her on her
appearance. But her doubts were hardening. ‘I’d reached saturation point.’ She
confided her feelings to a visiting Spanish nun. ‘I’d always been trained to
keep everything secret from anyone outside; but I ended up telling her
everything. She said, “that’s straight out abuse. You’ve got to leave.”’
In 2010 she travelled to Taiwan with three other nuns from
Lerab Ling for monastic training. She returned to France, but not to Lerab
Ling, hiding out in Paris, ignoring Sogyal’s telephone calls, ‘ranging from
“Dear Drolma, I love you, we can talk about this”, to “where the f-k are
you and you’re making me really angry, and you’d better come back otherwise
you’re going to hell...”’ She fled to India, living in a nunnery, before
finally going home to Australia. In 2011, she summoned her nerve to go back to Lerab
Ling, for the cremation of Sogyal’s aunt, Khandro. ‘It was the hardest
thing I’ve ever done,’ she says. ‘I was in nun’s robes and still keeping my
precepts. 'Wearing robes you have one arm bare, and he touched me there, as if
I were sexual object. It made my skin crawl. I saw that the way he related to
me could change completely.’ The cremation over, she returned to Australia, and
gave up her robes. ‘Looking back,’ she says, ‘I think I’d lost all faculty of
being able to discern clearly what was going on. He absolutely ground me down.
I’m generally someone that’s very trusting of people. And he really took
advantage of that. ‘And I felt ashamed to leave my friends, ashamed to go back
to my family and say I’d made a mistake.’ She pauses. ‘There’s so much shame in
all of this.’
Within Rigpa, a culture of secrecy and denial prevailed
among Sogyal’s inner circle, the worst excesses of his behaviour kept hidden
from the thousands of more casual followers who would attend retreats and
teachings. ‘It’s like an incestuous family, where you keep the secret in the
family,’ one woman who claims she was sexually abused by Sogyal told me. But,
inevitably, allegations of impropriety began to leak out on the internet.
In 2011 Mary Finnigan, the English author and former
student, published a document Behind
The Thankas, charting Sogyal’s history of alleged sexual abuse, and
claiming that there was a sub-sect within Rigpa known as Lama Care, set up
specifically to make sure that women were available for sex with him wherever
he travelled, and that ‘dakinis’ had been pressurised against their will to
take part in orgies. Tibetan culture is such that it will never criticise
another lama, especially one within your own group ~ Stephen Batchelor. In the
same year, a Canadian documentary called In The Name of Enlightenment was
broadcast with more allegations of sexual abuse by former devotees.'
In 2015 the President of Rigpa France, Olivier Raurich,
resigned, explaining in an interview to the French magazine Marianne that ‘I
had come for teachings on humility, love, truth, and trust, and I found myself
in a quasi-Stalinist environment and permanent double-talk’. Sogyal, he said,
‘did not hesitate to brutally silence and ridicule people in meetings. Critical
thinking is prohibited around him. Negative feedback never reaches him - only
praise is reported because people in the close circle are afraid of him.’ Within
Rigpa, students were allegedly instructed to kneel before Sogyal and swear they
would not listen to Raurich’s accusations. He was denounced as an opportunist
who was simply seeking publicity for his own career as a meditation teacher.
The following year, a French academic Marion Dapsance
published a book, Les Dévots du Bouddhisme, containing further allegations of
abuse, and the ‘cult-like’ behaviour of Sogyal’s inner circle. A response
posted on the Lerab Ling website described her portrayal as ‘extremely
prejudiced’ and ‘unrecognizable’, invoking the Tibetan teaching of training the
mind in compassion, called lojong, with its core principle of ‘give all profit
and gain to others. Take all loss and defeat upon yourself.’ In this context,
the letter went on, Sogyal, following the example of ‘great saints of the past’
would never respond to such allegations. Ignoring the scandal altogether,
in November 2016, Patrick Gaffney instead wrote to members of Rigpa, explaining
that another lama, and close friend of Sogyal’s, Orgyen Tobgyal Rinpoche,
believing that the next few years represented ‘a critical period in [Sogyal’s]
life’ had consulted ‘a unique clairvoyant master’ in Tibet for advice on what
should be done to avert ‘any obstacles to Rinpoche’s life, health and work.’ The
‘clairvoyant lama’ had recommended a number of different ritual practices to
remove these obstacles.
The most important was for Sogyal’s followers to ‘repair any
impairments of the samaya’ - their vow of trust between guru and student - by
embarking on an intensive practice of reciting mantras. The goal, Gaffney
wrote, was to accumulate 100 million 100 syllable mantras every year - a
practice that would require 3,000 students chanting for 40 minutes a day. ‘If
the practices he recommends are done,’ Gaffney went on, ‘then there is every
chance that Rinpoche will live until at least the age of eighty-five.’ Some saw
it as a subtle way of dampening the growing scandal, and coercing doubting
students back in line. ‘It was shifting the responsibility for the consequences
of Sogyal’s actions onto the students,’ one former student told me. ‘To turn
your back on the guru is the worst thing you can do. No-one wants to go to
Vajra hell.’
In July, as the eight-signatory letter spread like wildfire,
Sogyal wrote an open response to members of Rigpa. He had spent his whole life,
he wrote, ‘trying my best’ to serve the Buddha’ teachings, ‘and not a day goes
by when I am not thinking about the welfare of my students.’ But in light of
the controversy, and following the advice from his own masters about the
obstacles arising for his health and life in general, he now intended to enter
into retreat ‘as soon as possible.’ He would also, he went on, ‘pray and
practice for healing and understanding to prevail, and in the spirit of the
great...masters of the past, take the suffering upon myself and give happiness
and love to others.’
Through all the years of rumours and revelations about
Sogyal’s behaviour, one group maintained a conspicuous silence. His fellow
Tibetan lamas. Sogyal’s large following and considerable wealth made him a
powerful figure within the Tibetan Buddhist community. Over the years he has
been generous in his donations to monasteries in Nepal and India, and other lamas
have frequently given teachings at Lerab Ling, their visits lending authority
to Sogyal’s credentials. ‘Tibetan culture is such that it will never criticise
another lama, especially one within your own group,’ Stephen Batchelor says.
‘But the root of the problem lies in the tantric, aristocratic structure of old
Tibetan society that they are seeking to preserve in exile. They’re in the
business of holding on to their traditions, not reforming them. ‘The problem
facing other lamas is that if they accept these criticisms they are basically
accepting criticism of the whole system that in a way underpins their own
authority; and if they say nothing they know they will be perceived as turning
a blind eye to what looks, quite blatantly, like abusive behaviour. ‘It’s a
terrible thing if this discredits Tibetan Buddhism, because Vajrayana is a very
rich part of Buddhist heritage. But at the same time these abuses have to be
addressed. And the Tibetan tradition has to come to terms with that.’
The Dalai Lama has frequently condemned unethical behaviour
among Buddhist teachers, and urged students to speak out against it - ‘through
the newspaper, through the radio. Make public’ - while never specifically
commenting on Sogyal by name. But last month, speaking in Ladakh, he talked of
the need to reform the ‘influence of the feudal system’ in Tibetan
institutions. Followers, he said, ‘must not say, “this is my guru,
whatever my guru says I must follow.” That’s totally wrong.’ If a teacher is
behaving unethically there was a duty to make their behaviour public. ‘Now
recently,’ he went on, ‘Sogyal Rinpoche, my very good friend, but he is
disgraced....’ To the outsider it might have seemed a fleetingly incidental
reference; to the Buddhist community it was tantamount to excommunication.
Just a few days after the Dalai Lama’s speech, Sogyal
announced that he was ‘retiring’ as spiritual director of Rigpa, citing the
‘turbulence’ the allegations around him had caused. There was no acknowledgment
of abuse, and no expression of apology or regret. While no longer spiritual
director, he said, he would continue as their teacher. ‘Please understand that
I am not and never will abandon you! I have a solemn commitment to help bring
you to enlightenment and I will never renege on that!’
The Telegraph magazine contacted Rigpa with a detailed list
of the allegations contained in this article, asking for a response. The organisation
replied saying they had no comment to make on the allegations. Instead, they
referred The Telegraph to the
press release announcing Sogyal’s retirement as spiritual director. Having
sought ‘professional and spiritual advice’, that statement went on, Rigpa would
be setting up an investigation by ‘a neutral third party’ into the
various allegations; launching a consultation process to establish ‘a code of
conduct and ‘grievance process’ for Rigpa members; and establishing a new
‘spiritual advisory group’ to guide the organisation. Rigpa declined to specify
what form this independent investigation will take, and also whom the
‘spiritual advisory group’ is likely to be comprised of, saying only that
‘independent professionals will be engaged to lead the internal investigation
and this will probably commence mid-autumn.’
Sogyal’s last public appearance was on July 30, in Thailand,
speaking at the Seventh World Youth Buddhist Symposium. His speech, on the
subject of meditation and peace of mind, made no mention of the scandal that
had engulfed him. ‘If your mind is relaxed and at ease,’ he told his young
audience, ‘no matter what crises you are facing you will not be disturbed. Even
when difficulties come you will be able to turn them to your own advantage.’ Quite
how he could that now do that is open to question. Following submissions from
former Rigpa members, The Charity Commission has opened a case on The Rigpa
Fellowship to assess whether a full investigation into the affairs and
governance of Sogyal’s organisation is required. At the same time former
students are exploring pressing criminal charges.
One leaves a spiritual organisation, Drolma says, with a
mixture of feelings - relief, shame, guilt for those left behind. ‘I haven’t
turned my back on the Buddhist teachings,’ she says, ‘but it was important to
let people know what was going on. Sogyal is an abuser, he’s delusional, and he
has created real, deep harm for people, and that’s not right in any place at
all.’ ‘It’s like the Buddha said,’ Gary Goldman says, ‘everybody wants to be
happy in life. So you join an organisation; you feel good, people are nice, you
start to participate more; you invest a lot of time, perhaps a lot of money. At
some point it becomes interwoven into your psyche. It’s a part of who you are.
And to give that up is incredibly difficult and painful. I saw [Sogyal] as a
friend, and on some level I still admire him as an accomplished teacher; but
he’s lost his way, and it’s very sad. ‘Right now, I’m very unhappy. There’s a
hole in my heart. But a lot of people just can’t give it up; they’re tied to
him; they’d be giving up an authority figure, probably a father figure;
psychologically, it would be a huge loss.’
In July, as the furore over the damning letter from the
eight students gathered pace, stories circulated on Buddhist sites of the
incident in 2016 when the nun, Ane Chokyi, was punched in the stomach. In
response, Ani Chokyi posted a reply on a closed Facebook page, saying that
Sogyal’s teachings at the retreat had been ‘loving beyond any ordinary
description,’ and the punch to the stomach was ‘taken out of a greater context.
‘I have agreed to the skillful means of my master to purify and transform my
delusions into clarity and uproot my attachments,’ she wrote. ‘Sometimes these
means can be wrathful and not always a pleasant experience, but that is what I
need to be able to see through all the layers of ignorance that keep me blinded
and stuck.’ Sogyal, she went on, ‘was definitely not in a fit of rage, there
was just a single moment of wrath, which manifested in a soft punch, but it was
neither violent or abusive, at least not to my feelings.’
Drolma posted a reply. She could understand Ani Chokyi’s
perspective completely, she wrote, because that was how she had once justified
Sogyal’s behaviour to herself. ‘If the student getting this kind of “special
training” has a history of abuse in other relationships in their life (as seems
to be the case of many of us, including myself), then it is so much more
natural, even comforting to receive wrathful attention from someone who is also
telling us they love us deeply.’ But then, she wrote, ‘just like the flick of a
switch, I recognised that “this is abuse”. And with that, I started to reflect
on all the ways in which I had allowed it to happen. It was like in The
Wizard of Oz, when the curtain is finally pulled back and you realise there is
no “all-mighty Oz”, there is just a little man shouting into a microphone…’
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