LIST OF ARTICLES

THE INVESTIGATIONS MADE BY WIN MCCORMACK ABOUT OSHO




Win McCormack is a renowned American journalist from the state of Oregon, that is, precisely the state where took place the conflicts with the Osho community and the United States, and therefore he was able to investigate this organization very closely, interviewing witnesses, analyzing the trials and following the events that took place.

The investigative coverage made by McCormack and his equip of the Rajneeshee movement was awarded a William Allen White Commendation from the University of Kansas and the City and Regional Magazine Association.

And later, in the year 1987, Win McCormack published the book “The Rajneesh Chronicles“, which is a compilation of the articles they wrote.






About this book, Win McCormack says:

« The Rajneesh Chronicles is a collection of in-depth investigative articles, originally published in Oregon Magazine, covering the time from the cult’s arrival in Oregon in 1981 to its dramatic disintegration at the end of 1985. This second edition of the definitive text on the Rajneesh cult includes an introductory chronology that extends the story up to the present time.

While most press treated the cult’s antics as a humorous sideshow typified by the Bhagwan’s dozens of Rolls-Royces, Oregon Magazine's editor-in-chief Win McCormack and the magazine’s other writers systematically exposed the full range of the Rajneeshees’ depraved behavior, including their involvement in prostitution and international drug smuggling, sexual exploitation of children, attempted poisoning of local government officials and over 700 voters, abuse of the homeless, and the use of brainwashing techniques that bordered on torture.

The tale of the Rajneesh has become an amorphous legend few inside or outside of Oregon actually understand. The Rajneesh Chronicles fully illuminates the shocking reality behind that legend»





And Win McCormack also posted several of those articles on the internet that you can read (here).

·        Bhagwan’s Devious Trap
·        Memoirs of an Ex-Sannyasin
·        Bhagwan’s Death Wish
·        Antelope’s Last Stand
·        Range War: The Disciples Come to Antelope
·        A Mind’s Eye View of 1984
·        The Human Potential Movement Gone Awry
·        Bhagwan’s Jewish Problem
·        A Beautiful Place for an Ashram
·        Valley of Death? The Rajneesh Cult Turns to Arms
·        The Attempted Takeover of Wasco County
·        Bhagwan’s Bottom Line
·        Bhagwan’s Final Year
·        Bhagwan’s Sexism
·        Bhagwan’s Mind Control
·        Last Year at Rajneeshpuram?
·        Rajneesh’s Police State
·        The Rise and Fall of the Rajneesh Cult
·        Bhagwan’s Rich Folk
·        Outside the Limits of the Human Imagination














THE DEATH OF ELIZABETH PROPHET REPORTED BY ASSOCIATED PRESS

 
 
 
 
Religious sect leader Elizabeth Clare Prophet dies, leaves legacy of Armageddon church behind
 
Associated Press (October 16, 2009)
 
 
Bozeman, Montana - Elizabeth Clare Prophet, the spiritual leader of the Church Universal and Triumphant, which gained notoriety in the late 1980s for its followers' elaborate preparations for nuclear Armageddon, has died. She was 70.
 
Prophet suffered from advanced Alzheimer's disease or dementia for years, and was at her apartment when she died Thursday night, said legal guardian Murray Steinman. Steinman said he was not aware of any other complicating health issues.
 
"She just kind of wound down," Steinman said.
 
Prophet led the Park County church that once boasted 50,000 members. In the late 1980s, church members amassed assault rifles and armored vehicles in preparation for a nuclear missile strike that Prophet predicted was on the way. The plan brought national notoriety and a federal investigation.
 
The church's beliefs combined icons from the world's major religions, mixing western philosophy and mysticism. Despite her disease, videos and writings of Prophet continued to dominate church teaching, transformed into a New Age publishing enterprise and spiritual university.
 
The church was still prepared for Armageddon in recent years, and kept a bomb shelter stocked for 750 people deep in a forest near Yellowstone National Park. Gone are the weapons amassed in the late 1980s that got church leaders into trouble with federal authorities.
 
The church declined in the 1990s, after a doomsday prediction never materialized and Prophet's charismatic presence faded, but lived on with a smaller group of adherents and workers.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

THE DEATH OF ELIZABETH PROPHET REPORTED BY CHRONICLE NEWSPAPER

 
 
 
 
Leader of controversial church group dies
 
Bozeman Daily Chronicle (October 17, 2009)
 
By Amanda Ricker and Karin Ronnow
 
 
Elizabeth Clare Prophet, longtime spiritual leader of the controversial Church Universal and Triumphant (CUT), died Thursday evening at her apartment in Bozeman. She was 70.
 
She suffered from advanced Alzheimer's disease and died with her daughter, Moira, and granddaughter by her side, her daughter, Erin Prophet, said Friday.
 
The longtime spiritual leader of the controversial church died Thursday evening at her apartment in Bozeman. She was 70. As the charismatic leader of the New Age sect that many considered cult-like, Prophet led her followers along a path that over the years included apocalyptic predictions, run-ins with local environmental groups, legal trouble and even a late-in-life "miracle" pregnancy that resulted in the birth of her fifth child when she was 55 years old.
 
Prophet retired from the church in 1999, but her followers still call her "Mother" and listen faithfully to the dictations she recorded while channeling messages from the "Ascended Masters" over the years. A much smaller CUT than the one Prophet moved from California to Montana in the mid-1980s continues to operate from its headquarters on the Royal Teton Ranch in Corwin Springs.
 
Although Prophet led a private life, largely away from the church, for the past decade due to her illness, CUT President Valerie McBride said Friday that the woman who led the church for 25 years will be greatly missed.
 
"She has uplifted millions with her message of spiritual liberation and we're very excited about carrying that message forward," McBride said.
 
Murray Steinman, former CUT spokesman who, along with Erin Prophet, served as Elizabeth's legal guardian for the past decade, said despite how the media painted Prophet, she had a brilliant mind and cared about people.
 
"She made a real contribution to not just religious and spiritual thought, but to try to help people lead better lives," Steinman said.
 
The church hasn't been generated much in the way of news since Prophet retired, noted Carlo Cieri, a Park County commissioner from 1985 to 1995, the years when the CUT was making a lot of headlines.
 
"Now, they're kind of a real low profile," Cieri said.
 
 
 
 
Early years
 
Prophet, born in Red Bank, N.J. and also known as Guru Ma, became the church's leader after her second husband and founder of the group, Mark Prophet, died in 1973. Mark Prophet had founded the group in 1958 under the name The Summit Lighthouse. Mark and Elizabeth had four children together.
 
After Mark's death, Elizabeth Clare took over the teachings, which involved an eclectic mix of karma and reincarnations, belief in celestial beings that spoke through her, and bits and pieces of Christianity, Buddhism, Taoism, astrology and Confucianism.
 
Prophet was said to have extraordinary abilities, capable of serving as an earthly conduit for the "Ascended Masters."
 
Even those who weren't followers noticed her ability to mesmerize a crowd.
 
"She charmed lots of people," said Bob Raney, who was Livingston's representative to the Montana Legislature from 1985 to 2000. "When you went in a room and she was there, you understood it. She had quite an aura, no doubt about it."
 
The church moved several times in the early years, finding a home in Colorado, California, and, in 1986, on the Royal Teton Ranch, a 12,000-acre spread on the Yellowstone River Prophet had bought from publisher Malcolm Forbes for $7 million in 1981.
 
She intended to create an exclusive, self-reliant community on the ranch just north of Yellowstone National Park. Church members and their leaders considered the ranch their promised land, and moved n some from as far away as Europe and South America n to Park County in numbers that caught locals off guard.
 
"They came here in swarms and they had some real smart people who had doctorates and other big degrees," Cieri said.
 
But many locals had a hard time with the New Age theology Prophet was preaching, including the CUT's emphasis on dictations from religious and historical figures that ranged from Jesus Christ to an obscure French count, St. Germain, who in past lives was believed to be Jesus' father Joseph, from Merlin the Magician to Christopher Columbus.
 
Prophet also believed in reincarnation and told followers that in past lives she had been Marie Antoinette, King Arthur's Queen Guinevere and the Biblical figure Martha.
 
 
 
 
Shelter years
 
After moving the organization to Royal Teton Ranch, Prophet put her staff and members to work building the largest private underground bomb shelter in the United States. CUT leaders were also quietly amassing an arsenal of weapons and armored vehicles, led in part by Prophet's fourth husband, Ed Francis.
 
All of this revolved around Prophet's prediction that the end of the world was imminent and that her followers needed to be prepared.
 
Construction of the 756-person bomb shelter, however, brought the CUT a lot of unwanted attention. It was built up Mol Heron Creek, in an alpine meadow called "The Heart of the Inner Retreat." Environmentalists, already worried that the mushrooming community threatened the ecological balance of Yellowstone National Park, complained loudly that the state needed to intervene and insure water quality and wildlife in the area were protected.
 
The state stepped in and did an environmental review, ultimately giving the CUT the go-ahead for the shelter.
 
Less than a year later, word got out that Prophet was predicting the world would end in March 1990.
 
"That's when it really got strange," Raney said. "There was a frenzy about getting ready for the end."
 
Members had also been instructed to build similar shelters in Glastonbury, a Paradise Valley subdivision then limited to members of the sect.
 
On the night of March 15, 1990, hundreds if not thousands of CUT members entered the bomb shelters. Some had quit jobs and run up big debt, anticipating the apocalypse.
 
"There was car after car heading up the valley," Cieri said. "Some of them were crying because they didn't think they'd get in (a shelter) before the world ended."
 
But nothing happened.
 
Church officials maintained the next day the whole thing had been a drill.
 
 
 
 
Retirement
 
In its heyday, the church had 600 employees at Corwin Springs and many hundreds of followers in Park and Gallatin counties. It operated construction, engineering, food process and printing businesses.
 
The church owned between 30,000 and 40,000 acres of land in Park County. Only the federal government and Burlington Northern railroad owned more.
 
But after the apocalypse never came, the church began to shrink.
 
Prophet announced she was pregnant in 1994, when she was 55 years old. She declined to discuss details. She gave birth to a son, Seth, who lives with his father, Ed Francis.
 
Four years later, Prophet announced she had Alzheimer's disease. She retired the following year.
 
By that time, the group had laid off 90 percent of its employees at Corwin Springs, closing most of its business operations. That same year, the church sold a swath of land to the federal government for a conservation easement. The deal put wildlife habitat in public hands and eased tensions between the church and community.
 
Today, CUT President McBride said there are thousands of members who belong to 250 chapters across the globe and hundreds who attend the church-owned ranch in Corwin Springs. Church literature is printed in 29 different languages.
 
Prophet has lived in Bozeman since her retirement. Her legal guardians limited visitation beginning in 2003 due to her illness.
 
Some CUT members who knew she was in her final days last week filed papers in Gallatin County District Court asking a judge to force Prophet's guardians to put her on a feeding tube to keep her alive.
 
Prophet had lost the ability to swallow, as is common with dementia patients.
 
But Erin Prophet said Friday that feeding her mother intravenously would have caused other complications and would not have prolonged her life.
 
A public visitation for Prophet is planned for 4 to 8 p.m. Wednesday at Dahl Funeral Chapel. A private memorial ceremony will be held later in the week and may be broadcast on the Internet, though details were not available Friday.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

THE DEATH OF ELIZABETH PROPHET REPORTED BY JOURNALIST MATTHEW BROWN

 
 
 
 
Its 'Mother' dead, doomsday sect's future in doubt
 
Associated Press (November 6, 2009)
 
 
Bozeman, Montana - Members of a Montana-based sect whose influence expanded as it prepared for a nuclear holocaust that never came, now search for new directions after the death of Elizabeth Clare Prophet - "Mother" to her thousands of followers.
 
The Church Universal and Triumphant still keeps its 750-person underground shelters stocked with food - "insurance," its leaders say, against possible dark days ahead.
 
Yet with Prophet gone, it's uncertain the spiritual movement she embodied will prove as lasting as all the concrete and steel hidden beneath a Montana mountainside north of Yellowstone National Park.
 
"You had a clear figurehead that became the focus of the organization, the object of adoration. When that's suddenly removed it throws people into a tailspin," said Robert Balch, a University of Montana sociologist specializing in cults and unconventional religions.
 
In the waning days of Prophet's reign as the church's divinely chosen messenger, its focus shifted from civilization's end to the development of a New Age publishing juggernaut, producing hundreds of books and recordings drawn from Prophet's mystical declarations.
 
After a decade-long decline caused by Alzheimer's disease, Prophet died last month at age 70 - setting off what Balch called a "crisis of succession" over who will take her place.
 
As her followers convene at the church's sprawling Corwin Springs compound this weekend for a three-day memorial gathering, the struggle to lay claim to Prophet's legacy already has begun.
 
Within days of her death, former church member David Lewis announced he had channeled Prophet's spirit.
 
Like Prophet, Lewis claims the ability to channel Jesus, Buddha and more obscure spiritual figures such as St. Germain and El Morya. But Church leaders have denounced him.
 
Since Prophet fell ill, at least 15 people have stepped forward claiming to be the next messenger, said Neroli Duffy, who sits on the church's 24-member council of elders. None has met with council approval.
 
"We're moving ahead," Duffy said Thursday. "She didn't necessarily think there would be another messenger."
 
Prophet led the church since the 1973 death of her second husband, Mark Prophet, who founded the church's parent organization, The Summit Lighthouse, in 1958.
 
The couple preached that one's soul progresses through a series of earthly incarnations. His past lives were said to have included Aesop, Lancelot and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Hers included Nefertiti, Queen Guinevere of Camelot and Marie Antoinette.
 
Soon after her husband died and became an "ascended master," Elizabeth Prophet began to channel his holy dictations. Over the next two decades she attracted an estimated 50,000 followers around the world.
 
Melding mysticism, Christianity and Eastern religions with strong doses of patriotism and self-sufficiency, she promised adherents a newfound path toward personal enlightenment.
 
Yet long before Elizabeth Prophet's death, Balch and others who tracked her career saw her power base beginning to crumble.
 
The grip she held over her followers first began to loosen after her doomsday predictions went unrealized in 1990.
 
As the church's membership dwindled, she cut back its staff from an estimated 700 workers to fewer than 100. Thousands of acres of church property in Montana's Paradise Valley were sold to bring in extra income.
 
Prophet's five children (including two daughters once groomed as heirs) have since abandoned the church. Others who claim to be the next messenger, including Lewis, are regarded as charlatans by her more fervent followers.
 
Church leaders contend that Prophet –the tie that binds the faith's disparate religious and historical elements– lives on through 22’000 hours of video and audio recordings of her teachings.
 
The tapes and other material are stacked on pallets inside the bomb shelters on the grounds of the Royal Teton Ranch, the church's 7,000-acre Montana compound. Less than half has been transcribed or edited. Church leaders said it will be released gradually in coming years.
 
Church president Valerie McBride would not reveal the size of the church's membership except to say it was in "the thousands" and has spread recently across parts of South America and Russia.
 
Prophet's oldest daughter, Erin, said her mother's power and influence peaked in the late 1980s during the "shelter cycle," when preparations for the coming Armageddon were at their height.
 
Members of the church today appear chagrined by those events, which sparked a federal investigation into weapons amassed by Prophet's followers. They contend Prophet's warnings never carried a fixed date.
 
At a family memorial service for Prophet, her daughters described their mother as a commanding presence consumed by her role as spiritual leader. She once told her children that if they wanted to spend time with her, they would have to watch her work.
 
"I think what my mom did on balance was positive for the world," said daughter Tatiana Prophet, an office manager and aspiring musician in Los Angeles. "But people who still believe she's a perfected being, that's really hard for me."