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Ram Dass

American writer and spiritual teacherFor other people named Ram D*, see Ram D* (disambiguation)."Richard Alpert" redirects here. For other uses, see Richard Alpert (disambiguation).

Ram D* (born Richard Alpert; April 6, 1931 – December 22, 2019), also known as Baba Ram D*, was an American spiritual teacher, guru of modern yoga, psychologist, and author. His best-selling 1971 book Be Here Now, which has been described by multiple reviewers as "seminal", helped popularize Eastern spirituality and yoga in the West. He aut*d or co-aut*d twelve more books on spirituality over the next four decades, including Grist for the Mill (1977), How Can I Help? (1985), and Polishing the Mirror (2013).

Ram D* was personally and professionally *ociated with Timothy Leary at Harvard University in the early 1960s. Then known as Richard Alpert, he conducted research with Leary on the therapeutic effects of psychedelic drugs. In addition, Alpert *isted Harvard Divinity School graduate student Walter Pahnke in his 1962 "Good Friday Experiment" with theology students, the first controlled, double-blind study of drugs and the mystical experience. While not illegal at the time, their research was controversial and led to Leary's and Alpert's dismissal from Harvard in 1963.

In 1967, Alpert traveled to India and became a disciple of Hindu guru Neem Karoli Baba who gave him the name Ram D*, meaning "Servant of Ram," but usually rendered as simply "Servant of God" for western audiences. In the coming years, he founded the charitable organizations Seva Foundation and Hanuman Foundation. He traveled extensively giving talks and retreats and holding fundraisers for charitable causes in the 1970s, 80s, and 90s. In 1997, he had a stroke which left him with paralysis and expressive aphasia. He eventually grew to interpret this event as an act of grace, learning to speak again and continuing to teach and author books. After becoming seriously ill during a trip to India in 2004, he gave up traveling and moved to Maui, Hawaii, where he hosted annual retreats with other spiritual teachers until his death in 2019.

Contents

  • 1 Early life
    • 1.1 Education
    • 1.2 Harvard professorship
      • 1.2.1 Harvard projects
      • 1.2.2 Dismissal from Harvard
    • 1.3 Millbrook and psychedelic counterculture (1963–1967)
  • 2 Spiritual search and name change
    • 2.1 Neem Karoli Baba
    • 2.2 Be Here Now
  • 3 Foundations and Living/Dying Project
  • 4 Later life
  • 5 Personal life
  • 6 Works
    • 6.1 Books
    • 6.2 Recordings
    • 6.3 Films
  • 7 See also
  • 8 References
  • 9 External links

Early life

Ram D* was born Richard Alpert in 1931. His parents were Gertrude (Levin) and George Alpert, a lawyer in Boston. He considered himself an atheist during his early life. Speaking at Berkeley Community Theater in 1973 he said, "My Jewish trip was primarily political Judaism, I mean I was never Bar Mitzvahed, confirmed, and so on." In a 2006 article in Tufts Magazine he was quoted by Sara Davidson, describing himself as "inured to religion. I didn't have one whiff of God until I took psychedelics." He was also interviewed by Arthur J. Magida at the Omega Ins*ute in Rhinebeck, New York, who published the interview in 2008, quoting Ram D* as saying "What I mostly remember about my bar mitzvah was that it was an empty ritual. It was flat. Absolutely flat. There was a disappointing hollowness to the moment. There was nothing, nothing, nothing in it for my heart."

Education

Alpert attended the Williston Northampton School, graduating * laude in 1948. He achieved a Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology from Tufts University in 1952. His father had wanted him to go to medical school, but while at Tufts he decided to study psychology instead. After earning his master's degree in Psychology from Wesleyan University in 1954, his mentor at Wesleyan, David McClelland, recommended Alpert to Stanford University. Alpert wrote his doctoral thesis on "achievement anxiety", receiving his PhD in Psychology from Stanford in 1957. Alpert then taught at Stanford for one year, and began psycho*ysis.

Harvard professorship

McClelland moved to Cambridge, M*achusetts, to teach at Harvard University, and helped Alpert accept a tenure-track position there in 1958 as an *istant clinical psychology professor. Alpert worked with the Social Relations Department, the Psychology Department, the Graduate School of Education, and the Health Service, where he was a therapist. He specialized in human motivation and personality development, and published his first book Identification and Child Rearing.

McClelland did work with his close friend and *ociate Timothy Leary, a lecturer in clinical psychology at the university. Alpert and Leary had met through McClelland, who headed the Center for Research in Personality where Alpert and Leary both did research. Alpert was McClelland's deputy in the lab.

Harvard projects

After returning from a visiting professorship at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1961, Alpert devoted himself to joining Leary in experimentation with and intensive research to the potentially therapeutic effects of hallucinogenic drugs such as psilocybin, LSD-25, and other psychedelic chemicals, through their Harvard Psilocybin Project. Alpert and Leary co-founded the non-profit International Federation for Internal Freedom (IFIF) in 1962 in Cambridge, M*achusetts, in order to carry out studies in the religious use of psychedelic drugs, and were both on the board of directors.

Alpert *isted Harvard Divinity School graduate student Walter Pahnke in his 1962 "Good Friday Experiment" with theology students, the first controlled, double-blind study of drugs and the mystical experience.

Dismissal from Harvard

Leary and Alpert were formally dismissed from Harvard in 1963. According to Harvard President Nathan M. Pusey, Leary was dismissed for leaving Cambridge and his cl*es without permission or notice, and Alpert for allegedly giving psilocybin to an undergraduate.

Millbrook and psychedelic counterculture (1963–1967)

In 1963 Alpert, Leary, and their followers moved to the Hitch* Estate in Millbrook, New York, after IFIF's New York City branch director and Mellon fortune heiress Peggy Hitch* arranged for her brother Billy to rent the estate to IFIF. Alpert and Leary immediately set up a communal group with former Harvard Psilocybin Project members at the estate (commonly known as "Millbrook"), and the IFIF was subsequently disbanded and renamed the Castalia Foundation (after the intellectual colony in Hermann Hesse's novel The Gl* Bead Game). The core group at Millbrook, whose journal was the Psychedelic Review, sought to cultivate the divinity within each person. At Millbrook, they experimented with psychedelics and often participated in group LSD sessions, looking for a permanent route to higher consciousness. The Castalia Foundation hosted weekend retreats on the estate where people paid to undergo the psychedelic experience without drugs, through meditation, yoga, and group therapy sessions.

Alpert and Leary continued on to co-author a book en*led The Psychedelic Experience with Ralph Metzner, based on the Tibetan Book of the Dead, and it was published in 1964. Alpert co-aut*d LSD with Sidney Cohen and Lawrence Schiller in 1966.

In 1967 Alpert gave talks at the League for Spiritual Discovery's center in Greenwich Village.

Spiritual search and name change

In 1967, Alpert traveled to India where he met American spiritual seeker Bhagavan Das, and later met Neem Karoli Baba.

Neem Karoli Baba

Main article: Neem Karoli Baba

In 1967, Bhagavan Das guided Alpert throughout India, eventually introducing him to Neem Karoli Baba, whom Alpert called "Maharaj-ji", who became his guru at Kainchi ashram. Neem Karoli Baba gave Alpert the name "Ram D*", which means "servant of God", referring to the incarnation of God as Ram or Lord Rama. Alpert also corresponded with Indian spiritual teacher Meher Baba and mentioned Baba in several of his books.

Be Here Now

Main article: Be Here Now (book)

After Alpert returned to America as Ram D*, he stayed at the Lama Foundation in Taos, New Mexico, as a guest. Ram D* had helped Steve Durkee (Nooruddeen Durkee) and Barbara Durkee (Asha Greer or Asha von Briesen) co-found the countercultural, spiritual community in 1967, and it had an ashram dedicated to Ram D*'s guru. During Ram D*'s visit, he presented a m*cript he had written, en*led From Bindu to Ojas. The community's residents edited, illustrated, and laid out the text, which ultimately became a best-selling book when published under the name Be Here Now in 1971. The 416-page manual for conscious being was published by the Lama Foundation, as Ram D*'s benefit for the community. Be Here Now contained Ram D*'s account of his spiritual journey, as well as recommended spiritual techniques and quotes. It became a popular guide to New Age spirituality, selling two million copies. The proceeds helped sustain the Lama Foundation for several years, after which they donated the book's copyright and half its proceeds to the Hanuman Foundation in Taos.

Be Here Now is one of the first guides for those not born Hindu to becoming a yogi. For its influence on the hippie movement and subsequent spiritual movements it has been described as a "countercultural bible" and "seminal" to the era. In addition to introducing its *le phrase into common use, Be Here Now has influenced numerous other writers and yoga prac*ioners, including the industrialist Steve Jobs, the self-help author Wayne Dyer, and the poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti.

The first section of the book inspired the lyrics to George Harrison's song "Be Here Now", written in 1971 and released on his 1973 album Living in the Material World.

Foundations and Living/Dying Project

During the 1970s, Ram D* taught, wrote, and worked with foundations. He founded the Hanuman Foundation, a nonprofit educational and service organization that initiated the Prison-Ashram Project (now known as the Human Kindness Foundation), in 1974. The Hanuman Foundation strives to improve the spiritual well-being of society through education, media and community service programs. He co-founded the Seva Foundation by joining with health-care workers to treat the blind in India, Nepal, and developing countries. Co-founded in 1978 with public health leader Larry Brilliant and humanitarian activist Wavy Gravy, it has become an international health organization.

In the early 1970s, Ram D* taught workshops on conscious aging and dying around the United States. Elisabeth Kübler-Ross was one of his students. Ram D* helped create the Dying Project with its Executive Director Dale Borglum, whom he had met in India. At the time, Borglum was also executive director of the Hanuman Foundation. The Living/Dying Project, based in Marin, California, starting in 1986, was initially named the Dying Center and located in Santa Fe, New Mexico. The Dying Center was the first residential facility in the U.S. where people came to die "consciously".

The Love Serve Remember Foundation was organized to preserve and continue the teachings of Neem Karoli Baba and Ram D*. Ram D* also served on the faculty of the Metta Ins*ute where he provided training on mindful and comp*ionate care of the dying.

Over the course of his life since the inception of his Hanuman Foundation, Ram D* gave all of his book royalties and profits from teaching to his foundation and other charitable causes. The estimated amount of earnings he gave away annually ranges from $100,000 to $800,000.

Later life

At 60 years of age, Ram D* began exploring Judaism seriously for the first time. "My belief is that I wasn't born into Judaism by accident, and so I needed to find ways to honor that", he says. "From a Hindu perspective, you are born as what you need to deal with, and if you just try and push it away, whatever it is, it's got you."

Leary and Ram D*, who had grown apart after Ram D* denounced Leary in a 1974 news conference, reconciled in 1983 at Harvard (at a reunion for the 20th anniversary of their controversial firing from the Harvard faculty), and reunited before Leary's death in May 1996.

In February 1997, Ram D* had a stroke that left him with expressive aphasia, which he interpreted as an act of grace. He stated, "The stroke was giving me lessons, and I realized that was grace—fierce grace ... Death is the biggest change we'll face, so we need to practice change." He lived on Maui and did not leave the Hawaiian Islands from 2004 until his death in 2019, after he almost died from an infection during a trip to India. He continued to make public appearances and to give talks at small venues; held retreats in Maui; and continued to teach through live webcasts. When asked if he could sum up his life's message, he replied, "I help people as a way to work on myself, and I work on myself to help people ... to me, that's what the emerging game is all about." Ram D* was awarded the Peace Abbey Courage of Conscience Award in August 1991.

In 2003, Wayne Dyer published a plea for donations for Ram D*'s support due to his declining health following the stroke,

Now it is our turn ... Ram D*'s body can no longer endure the rigors of travel. He has come to Maui, where I live and write. I speak with him frequently and I am often humbled by the tears in his beautiful 73-year-old eyes as he apologizes for not having prepared for his own elderly health care—for what he now perceives as burdensome to others. He still intends to write and teach; however without the travel—we can now come to him. Maui is healing—Maui is where Ram D* wishes to stay for now! He is currently living in a home on Maui, which he doesn't own and is currently in jeopardy of losing. I am asking all of you to help purchase this home and to set up a financial foundation to take care of this man who has raised so much money to ensure the futures of so many others. To live out what Ram D* has practiced with his actions. Please be generous and prompt—no one is more deserving of our love and financial support.

In 2013, Ram D* released a memoir and summary of his teaching, Polishing the Mirror: How to Live from Your Spiritual Heart. In an interview about the book, at age 82, he said that his earlier reflections about facing old age and death now seem naive to him. He said, in part: "Now, I'm in my 80s ... Now, I am aging. I am approaching death. I'm getting closer to the end. ... Now, I really am ready to face the music all around me."

He died on December 22, 2019, at the age of 88.

Personal life

In the 1990s, Ram D* discussed his bisexuality. He stated, "I've started to talk more about being bisexual, being involved with men as well as women," and added his opinion that who gay people are "isn't gay, and it's not not-gay, and it's not anything—it's just awareness."

At 78, Ram D* learned that he had fathered a son as a 24-year-old at Stanford during a brief relationship with history major Karen Saum, and that he was now a grandfather. The fact came to light when his son, Peter Reichard, a 53-year-old banker in North Carolina, took a DNA test after learning about his mother's doubt concerning his parentage.

Works

Books

  • Identification and Child Rearing (with R. Sears and L. Rau) (1962) Stanford University Press
  • The Psychedelic Experience: A Manual Based on the Tibetan Book of the Dead (with Timothy Leary and Ralph Metzner) (1964) ISBN:0-8065-1652-6
  • LSD (with Sidney Cohen) (1966) ISBN:0-453-00120-3
  • Be Here Now or Remember, Be Here Now (1971) ISBN:0-517-54305-2
  • Doing Your Own Being (1973)
  • The Only Dance There Is (1974) ISBN:0-385-08413-7
  • Grist for the Mill (with Stephen Levine) (1977) ISBN:0-89087-499-9
  • Journey of Awakening: A Meditator's Guidebook (1978) ISBN:0-553-28572-6
  • Miracle of Love: Stories about Neem Karoli Baba (1978) ISBN:0-525-47611-3
  • How Can I Help? Stories and Reflections on Service (with Paul Gorman) (1985) ISBN:0-394-72947-1
  • Comp*ion in Action: Setting Out on the Path of Service (with Mirabai Bush) (1991) ISBN:0-517-57635-X
  • Still Here: Embracing Aging, Changing and Dying (2000) ISBN:1-57322-871-0
  • Paths to God: Living The Bhagavad Gita (2004) ISBN:1-4000-5403-6
  • Be Love Now (with Rameshwar Das) (2010) ISBN:1-84604-291-7
  • Polishing the Mirror: How to Live from Your Spiritual Heart (with Rameshwar Das) (2013) ISBN:1-60407-967-3
  • Walking Each Other Home: Conversations on Loving and Dying (with Mirabai Bush) (2018) ISBN:1-68364-200-7
  • Being Ram D* (with Rameshwar Das) (2021) ISBN:9781683646280

Recordings

  • The Psychedelic Experience: A Manual Based on the Tibetan Book of the Dead (with Timothy Leary & Ralph Metzner) (1966) (reissued on CD in 2003 by Folkways)
  • Here We All Are, a 3-LP set recorded live in Vancouver, BC in the summer of 1969.
  • Love Serve Remember (1973), a six-album set of teachings, data, and spiritual songs (ZBS Foundation) (released in MP3 format, 2008)
  • The Evolution of Consciousness (1973), a 3-LP set recorded live in NYC, March 1969 (Noumedia Co - Harbinger Records Ltd.)
  • Cosmix (2008), a video enhanced CD of Ram D* messages mixed with work by Australian DJ and performer Kriece, released on Waveform Records.
  • RAM D* (2019) collaborative album with musician East Forest featuring the final recorded teachings of Ram D*.

Films

  • A Change of Heart, a 1994 one-hour do*entary directed by Eric Taylor and hosted by Ram D* and shown on many PBS stations. It examined taking social action as a meditative act.
  • Ecstatic States, a 1996 interview on VHS, by Wiseone Edutainment Pty.
  • Ram D*, Fierce Grace, a 2001 biographical do*entary directed by Micky Lemle.
  • Ram D* – Love Serve Remember, a 2010 short film directed by V. Owen Bush, included in the Be Here Now Enhanced Edition eBook.
  • Dying to Know: Ram D* & Timothy Leary, a 2014 do*entary dual portrait.
  • Ram D*, Going Home, a 2017 do*entary portrait of Ram D* in his later years, directed by Derek Peck.
  • Ram D*, Becoming Nobody, a 2019 do*entary portrait of Richard Alpert becoming Ram D* and Ram D* becoming nobody. The slogan of the film is: You have to be somebody to become nobody. Directed by Jamie Catto.

See also

  • John C. Lilly

References

    External links

    Ram D*at Wikipedia's sister projects
    • Media from Commons
    • Quotations from Wikiquote
    • Data from Wikidata
    • Official website
    • Seva Foundation (Organization founded by Ram D*)
    • The Living/Dying Project (an outgrowth of the Hanuman foundation, which was created by Ram D*)
    • Ram D*, Fierce Grace at IMDb
    • Works by or about Ram D* in libraries (WorldCat catalog)