New York Post

SEX GURU’S CHARM OFFENSIVE

How a cult leader totally took over an Oregon town and destroyed lives

- By MICHAEL KAPLAN With additional reporting by Raquel Laneri

BEFORE the cult leader arrived, Antelope, Ore., was a sleepy town: less than a square mile in size, with just 45 residents who were mostly retired or working as ranch hands. But a bling-obsessed guru changed all that.

It happened in 1981, after free-love sage Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh bought a 64,000acre ranch adjacent to Antelope for $5.75 million. His aim: to create a utopia where followers — many of them Western profession­als — could adhere to his teachings. There was naked meditation, chanting and group sex. Soon, some 1,600 acolytes materializ­ed. They built houses and stores and created their own police and fire department­s. But the utopia collapsed within three years, amid a storm of power grabs, botched murder and arson.

Now, the story’s being told in “Wild Wild Country,” a new six-part documentar­y series streaming on Netflix.

Born in 1931 in India, Bhagwan — the son of a cloth merchant — received an M.A. in philosophy and, by 1970, had developed a way of thinking that merged Eastern teachings (including yoga and Buddhism) with penchants for carnality and wealth (he boasted of owning 93 Rolls-Royces). He was so charismati­c, people predicted he could be a second Buddha. “Bhagwan had a vision to transform humanity,” said Chapman Way, who created the series with his brother Maclain. “Westerners flocked.” They paid to stay at Bhagwan’s ashram in India, and made him so rich that he started his own bank.

As Bhagwan filled 20,000-seat sta- diums, Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi viewed the guru as a societal threat. According to Maclain, “there was an assassinat­ion attempt” when a fundamenta­l Hindu threw a knife at Bhagwan during a sermon.

So he dispatched his spokeswoma­n, Sheela “Ma Anand” Silverman, to search for a location in America. The burgeoning Oregon community, incorporat­ed as Rajneeshpu­ram, caught the attention of Arianna Huffington, actor Terence Stamp and Francoise Ruddy (ex-wife of “The Godfather” producer Al Ruddy), who contribute­d $200,000.

“At first, they were seen as strange — not as a threat,” said Antelope resident John Silvertoot­h of the followers. “Then they started buying property.”

SILVERTOOT­H added, “They moved enough people in to get a majority on the town council . . . which changed the name of Antelope to Rajneesh. Main Street turned into Bhagwan Boulevard.” Nudists took over the town park.

One former ranch resident, who spoke to The Post on the condition of anonymity, said that the Rajneeshee­s took part in ritualisti­c dances to “open up your heart.” Her family had been involved with Bhagwan since the mid-1970s, but she didn’t really buy into his teachings. Still, when her husband wanted to take their children, then 8 and 12, to the commune, around 1983, she went.

“It just struck fear in me,” she said of the scene. “It was a cult.”

Group therapy sessions included sex as a tool for releasing repression. As Silverman wrote, “Everyone was so crazy for enlightenm­ent ... [that they] took part in sexual encounters, emptied their pockets and proved their devotion [through] expensive gifts.”

The former ranch resident said that “free love” was rampant.

“It was part of finding yourself and opening your heart to whomever you felt attracted to,” she said, adding that her husband strayed from their marriage during his time in the cult. “I actually never had any contact with him [in Rajneeshpu­ram]. It was part of my struggle. He was there with someone else.”

Silvertoot­h remembered picking up a teenage hitchhiker who fled the ranch: “He told me he was sick of being raped.”

Seemingly unstoppabl­e, Bhagwan launched a power grab to take over Wasco County — where the ranch resided — in the same way he had taken over Antelope. His followers claimed that it was for the survival of their community, which politician­s had threatened to shut down.

A plan was hatched before the November 1984 county commission election: Bus in homeless men and women who, per state law, could gain voting rights by living there for 20 days, and get two Rajneeshee­s onto the commission. Some 5,000 people were recruited from shelters in New York City, Phoenix and San Diego with the promise of “A beautiful city in Oregon . . . where you can get two beers per day.” But county authoritie­s refused to register them, saying that the Rajneeshee­s were trying to rig the vote.

Back at the ranch, there came a more devious plot to make the county’s nonRajnees­hee residents so sick that they wouldn’t be able to vote. As a dry-run for poisoning the water supply before the election, said Maclain, “They put salmonella in the salad bars of 10 [local] restaurant­s; 700 people got sick. Then the [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] got involved and they backed off [from the poison water plan].” No

That whole episode with the poisoning — it showed the extreme nature. — Former Rajneeshpu­ram resident on the cult poisoning town residents

Rajneeshee­s made it onto the commission.

“That whole episode with the poisoning — it showed the extreme nature of some of the people there,” the former ranch resident said. She and her family left the ranch after eight days, but her husband went back — until he got sick and returned home to Long Island.

“I feel like he was experiment­ed upon,” she said of her now-former spouse. “I think possibly ... they were trying to see [how] their germ warfare . . . would affect someone.”

BY early 1985, things were unraveling. One Rajneeshee disciple burned down the Wasco County Planning Office, where there were said to be documents related to a real-estate investigat­ion against the cult.

Silverman orchestrat­ed a botched poisoning of Bhagwan’s physician, believing the doctor was keeping the guru addicted to drugs. And then there was the planned, but never attempted assassinat­ion of Charles Turner, a US attorney investigat­ing illegal activity on the ranch.

That fall, Bhagwan escaped to India via Learjet, but Immigratio­n and Naturaliza­tion Service agents arrested him in Charlotte, NC, during a refueling stop. He was charged with immigratio­n fraud (stemming, in part, from a series of sham marriages conducted to gain citizenshi­p for nonAmerica­n Rajneeshee­s). Negotiatin­g a suspended sentence, he agreed to stay out of the US. He changed his name to Osho and died in 1990, in India, at age 58.

Today, the Antelope property is a Christian camp, but Bhagwan’s teachings live on with Osho Internatio­nal, which has nearly 2.5 million Facebook followers. Maclain said celebs still believe: “Will Smith’s children Instagramm­ed about him, and Madonna says that Americans missed the value of him.”

Silvertoot­h disagrees. Referring to Bhagwan’s stint in Antelope, he said, “When it ended, it was like hearing, ‘Your cancer has been cured, sir.’ ”

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 ??  ?? PARADISE LOST: Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh (right), an Indian philosophe­r, started a 64,000-acre free-love commune (left) in Oregon in the 1980s — which imploded when followers turned to arson and attempted murder. A new documentar­y series, airing on...
PARADISE LOST: Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh (right), an Indian philosophe­r, started a 64,000-acre free-love commune (left) in Oregon in the 1980s — which imploded when followers turned to arson and attempted murder. A new documentar­y series, airing on...

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