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Follower/Devotee of Osho (neo-sannyasins) from the Osho International Foundation wearing maroon robes in Pune, India

Follower/Devotee of Osho (neo-sannyasins) from the Osho International Foundation wearing maroon robes in Pune, India Stock Photo
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Contributor:

philipjbigg / Alamy Stock Photo

Image ID:

AF21DJ

File size:

48.4 MB (1.9 MB Compressed download)

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Dimensions:

3360 x 5040 px | 28.4 x 42.7 cm | 11.2 x 16.8 inches | 300dpi

Date taken:

19 February 2007

Location:

Pune, Maharashtra, India

More information:

Rajneesh Chandra Mohan Jain (रजनीश चन्द्र मोहन जैन) (December 11, 1931 – January 19, 1990), better known during the 1960s as Acharya Rajneesh, then during the 1970s and 1980s as Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh and later taking the name Osho, was an Indian spiritual teacher. He lived in India and in other countries including, for a period, the United States, and inspired the Osho movement, a controversial spiritual and philosophical movement that still has many followers. Osho taught that the greatest values in life are (in no specific order) awareness, love, meditation, celebration, creativity and laughter. He said that enlightenment is everyone's natural state, [1] but that one is distracted from realising it – particularly by the human activity of thought, as well as by emotional ties to societal expectations, and consequent fears and inhibitions. He was a prolific speaker (in both Hindi and English) on various spiritual traditions including those of Buddha, Krishna, Guru Nanak, Jesus, Socrates, Zen masters, Gurdjieff, Sufism, Hassidism, Tantra and many others. He attempted to ensure that no "system of thought" would define him, since he believed that no philosophy can fully express the truth. An experienced orator, he said that words could not convey his message[2], but that his basic reason for speaking was to give people a taste of meditation:[3] “I am making you aware of silences without any effort on your part. My speaking is being used for the first time as a strategy to create silence in you. This is not a teaching, a doctrine, a creed. That’s why I can say anything. I am the most free person who has ever existed as far as saying anything is concerned. I can contradict myself in the same evening a hundred times. Because it is not a speech, it has not to be consistent. It is a totally different thing, and it will take time for the world to recognise that a tremendously different experiment was going on. Just a moment … when I became silent, you become silent.