Showing posts with label Thom Knoles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thom Knoles. Show all posts

May 6, 2021

Legal battle over meditation far from tranquil in Iowa

Ryan J. Foley
Associated Press
January 20, 2013

FAIRFIELD — The followers of a meditation practice that has roots in ancient India say it’s simple: Close your eyes, silently repeat a mantra and relax. But a dispute among rivals for control over its teaching is anything but peaceful, featuring personal attacks, aggressive lawyering and accusations of improper business practices.

The feud pits the Iowa nonprofit that has taught transcendental meditation for decades against Thom Knoles, a former associate who left and built his own group of followers. The outcome could decide whether the Fairfield, Iowa-based Maharishi Foundation will continue to control the teaching of U.S. transcendental meditation — or whether rivals can market similar services and its benefits without obtaining a license from the group.

The sides are fighting for customers and to protect their reputations in a federal-court case over whether the foundation can enforce its trademark rights and claims of false advertising against Mr. Knoles and other teachers of his rival Vedic Meditation.

To the foundation, Mr. Knoles and his followers are using the credibility and positive image associated with its technique to promote themselves and mislead customers. To Mr. Knoles’ backers, the foundation is unfairly seeking a monopoly on a technique that’s existed thousands of years.

Supporters of transcendental meditation are being warned to choose sides carefully.

“Once you’ve formally burned your bridges, however, I’m afraid there’ll be nothing more I or anyone can do to help you,” a foundation supporter wrote in 2011, advising a businessman to reconsider his commitment to Mr. Knoles, in an email included in court records.

Supporters say the technique originated with the Vedas, sacred Hindu texts. Its modern incarnation was developed in India in the 1950s by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, who later spread the technique worldwide and became spiritual guru to celebrities such as the Beatles.

Maharishi founded a university that settled in Fairfield in the 1970s. His backers manage the foundation, which teaches classes to thousands of students annually and owns trademarks for Transcendental Meditation and its TM nickname.

Mr. Knoles, an Australia native, was a teacher in the movement. In court documents, he claims he was personally trained by the Maharishi, who died in 2008, and taught with the support of his groups. He cut ties in 1997 and has taught independently since.

Mr. Knoles started using the term Vedic Meditation to refer to his style, and the Veda Center states on its website it’s not affiliated with the foundation.

The foundation argues that disclaimer isn’t enough. Its attorneys have claimed that Mr. Knoles and his backers mislead customers by implying that scientific studies have found a range of health benefits for Vedic Meditation.

Nov 5, 2018

Hollywood star Tom Cruise introduced James Packer to Scientology — then they fell out

The Price of Fortune: The Untold Story of Being James Packer
IT WAS the movie star Tom Cruise who introduced James Packer to Scientology. What happened after that ruined their close friendship.

Shannon Molloy
news.com.au
October 24, 2018

WHEN his business venture One.Tel ended in spectacular fashion and completely wiped out his personal fortune, billionaire James Packer fled to the United States.

It was 2002 and the son of media magnate Kerry Packer was in the midst of a complete breakdown, due to the very public collapse of the telecommunications company.

In the new biography The Price of Fortune: The Untold Story of Being James Packer, it’s revealed that Packer went to stay with his friend, Hollywood mega star Tom Cruise.

It was the Top Gun actor who introduced the Australian to the controversial Church of Scientology and the practice of dianetics.

The practice is the organisation’s take on treating mental health and Packer and then wife, model Jodhi Meares, were fascinated.

“There are some really insightful ways to view life and handle life, and that is really what Scientology is — particularly if you are going through a difficult time,” Meares told author Damon Kitney.

“It was interesting for me to go and look at Scientology. There was some really interesting stuff there and there were some really great people. It was quite helpful.”

As Packer struggled to cope with his world falling down around him, back at home his father Kerry — a notoriously stern and often fiery figure in his life — was curious about his son’s religious pursuit.

But as the book reveals, the old man received reassurances directly from Cruise himself.

“I went away for a couple of months in 2002 to America to do Scientology courses,” Packer told Kitney.

“I spent a significant amount of time with Tom Cruise and he was incredibly kind and generous to me. And he would actually ring my father … the biggest movie star in the world … would ring up dad and say, ‘James is a good person and he’s getting better.’”

During that dark period, friends of Packer feared he was at risk of taking his life, including former Victorian Premier Jeff Kennett.

“When One.Tel collapsed, I ran into James down at the Capital Golf Course. He was on his own. He was absolutely desolate. He said to me, ‘I feel like a general without an army’,” Kennett revealed.

“Those words have stuck with me. He got into an awful spot then. He was absolutely suicidal at times.”

Packer described Cruise as “as good a friend as a person could hope to have” during that tough part of his life and the pair quickly became inseparable.

When his married to Meares ended, Packer once again turned to his famous mate and Scientology.

Late in 2002, apparently furious at his son’s business failure, his father sold the family’s stake in online auction website eBay without telling anyone.

He pocketed $120 million for the deal, but the business went on to be worth billions. The younger Packer was beside himself.

Their relationship remained strained for many years, until an uncharacteristically “beautiful” call between them in 2005.

The elder Packer told his heir apparent to carve out his own path in life over the course of their one-hour conversation.

“Twenty-four hours later, his doctor rang me and said, ‘Get on a plane, he’s only got 24 hours to live’. I got home and held his hand and he passed.”

At this point, Packer was dating the model Erica Baxter and Cruise was dating actress Katie Holmes, and the two couples were extremely close.

“Most importantly, in 2002 (Cruise) put me back together. He came to dad’s funeral, came to my wedding to Erica, and Erica and I went to his wedding with Katie.”

But as Packer began to drift away from Scientology, his bond with Cruise waned. Apart from a visit in 2009, as his US casino empire fell apart in the wake of the Global Financial Crisis, Packer has distanced himself from the organisation.

He and Cruise no longer speak after an abrupt end to their once-close friendship, which Packer had described as being like brothers.

“It’s his choice that we aren’t friends any more,” he told Kitney for the book.
 
James Packer has found a new spiritual adviser,
the maharishi Thom Knoles.

These days, following a highly publicised breakdown this year, Packer has once again turned to spirituality for guidance.

Packer has the maharishi spiritual guru Thom Knoles on speed dial to provide him with advice and alternative therapies to treat his depression.


“He believes in me. He tries to help me manage my emotions and find more happiness,” Packer said.

The Price of Fortune: The Untold Story of Being James Packer is on sale now.

https://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/real-life/news-life/hollywood-star-tom-cruise-introduced-james-packer-to-scientology-then-they-fell-out/news-story/676548d18803e8a311b700a703dbf563