Indiatimes / Spirituality
December 2001
Born in Kuchwada, Madhya Pradesh, India on December 11, 1931, Osho says of his parents, “I had chosen this couple for their love, their intimacy, their almost one-ness.” Osho was an intuitive and adventurous child who explored life fearlessly and intensely. He insisted on experiencing life for himself rather than acquiring beliefs or knowledge given by others.
When he was seven-years-old, he had first hand experience with death when his maternal grandfather died with his head in Osho’s lap. This incidence had a profound effect on his inner life, provoking in him a determination to discover, that which is deathless. “I learned much in that moment of his silence,” Osho said later. “I started on a new search, a new pilgrimage.”
At the age of twenty-one, Osho became enlightened. “For many lives I had been working on myself, struggling, doing whatsoever can be done – and nothing was happening. The very effort was a barrier… Not that one can reach without seeking. Seeking is needed, but then comes a point when seeking has to be dropped… And that day the search stopped…it started happening. A new energy arose… It was coming from nowhere and everywhere. It was in the trees and in the rocks and the sky and the sun and the air – and I was thinking it was very far away. And it was so near…” A full account of his enlightenment can be found in ‘The Discipline of Transcendence’.
After his enlightenment on March 21, 1953, Osho graduated from the University of Sagar with first class honours in philosophy. As a student he won the All-India Debating Championship. He was a professor of philosophy at the University of Jabalpur for nine years.
Alongside he travelled throughout India giving talks, challenging religious leaders in public debate and meeting people from all walks of life. He read extensively, everything he could find to broaden his understanding of the belief systems and psychology of the contemporary man.
Osho had now begun to develop his unique dynamic meditation techniques. According to him, modern man was so burdened with the outmoded traditions of the past and the anxieties of modern-day living that he must go through a deep cleansing process before he could hope to discover the thoughtless, relaxed state of meditation.
He held meditation camps all over India, giving talks to the participants, and personally conducting sessions of the meditation techniques he had developed.
Osho worked directly with people who came to him, sharing his vision of a “New Man” and inspiring them to experiment with a life based on meditation. Bridging the ancient truths of simpler times with the current reality of man, he created numerous meditation techniques, which give seekers an avenue to experience the ultimate. He also worked closely with many prominent therapists from the West to create new meditation therapies.
On his path of spiritual quest, Osho was praised as well as denounced by the people, however, he responded with characteristic humour and uncompromising honesty, publicly challenging his persecutors and at the same time showering his love unconditionally, giving some of his most intimate talks to disciples who gathered around him wherever he went.
After spending some years abroad, Osho finally returned to Puna, India, giving talks twice a day. Thousands of seekers from around the world came together again to be in the presence of this rare Buddha and mystic, and a new commune grew around him. It was during this time that Osho announced that he did not want to be called Bhagwan again: “Enough is enough! The joke is over.”
In these years of his final discourses, Osho gradually began to withdraw from public activities. His fragile health often prevented him from giving discourses, and the periods of his absence grew longer. He introduced a new element into his discourses, guiding his audience into a three-stage meditation at the end of each sitting. Eventually he delivered his last discourse series, answering questions and commenting on Zen sutras.
After his failing health had caused him to stop giving discourses, a message came that the name Rajneesh was also being dropped. Many of his disciples had already collectively decided to call him Osho. He has explained that the word ‘Osho’ is derived from William James’ expression ‘oceanic experience’ which means dissolving into the ocean. “Oceanic describes the experience,” says Osho, “but what about the one who is experiencing? Why do we use the word ‘Osho’.”
In the following months, whenever his health permitted, he would appear in the evening to sit with his disciples and friends in a meditation of music and silence, after which he would retire to his room while the assembly watched one of his videotaped discourses.
Osho left his body on January 19, 1990. Just a few weeks before that time, he was asked what would happen to his work when he was gone. He said:
“My trust in existence is absolute. If there is any truth in what I am saying, it will survive… The people who remain interested in my work will be simply carrying the torch, but not imposing anything on anyone…
“I will remain a source of inspiration to my people… I want them to grow on their own – qualities like love, around which no church can be created, like awareness, which is nobody’s monopoly; like celebration, rejoicing, and remaining fresh, childlike eyes…
“I want my people to know themselves, not to be according to someone else. And the way
is in.”