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The kool-aid in koregaon park

Matthew Clayfield doesn't just visit a meditation resort; he infiltrates a fortress of contradictions where the promise of absolute freedom is enforced with rigid, authoritarian rules. His reporting peels back the glossy veneer of the Osho International Meditation Resort to reveal a sophisticated machine of monetization and control that has survived the collapse of its founder's most infamous experiments. For the busy reader seeking to understand how charismatic movements evolve into enduring institutions, this piece offers a rare, boots-on-the-ground look at the mechanics of modern spiritual grift.

The Architecture of Control

Clayfield's entry into the resort immediately highlights the dissonance between the brand's message and its reality. He describes the Welcome Centre not as a sanctuary, but as a bureaucratic checkpoint: "It was clear from the outset that the resort is something of an oasis, even in Koregaon Park, which is itself something of an oasis in the broader context of Pune." Yet, this lushness is guarded by a surveillance state. When a fellow visitor attempts to photograph a pond, a staff member in maroon robes demands the photo be deleted, establishing a culture of secrecy and ownership over the environment.

The kool-aid in koregaon park

The author notes the strange financial architecture, where cash is banned in favor of a voucher system that explicitly frames payments as "donations." Clayfield observes, "These cards state explicitly that you've not actually purchased anything. You have made a 'donation.'" This linguistic sleight of hand is critical to the resort's operation, allowing it to skirt standard commercial regulations while extracting wealth. The system is so arcane that the author suspects it functions as a "tax dodge," a claim that gains weight when one considers the foundation's Swiss domicile.

For a cult that preaches individualism above all things, it has a fierce fascist streak.

This observation lands with particular force because it is drawn from the author's immediate, visceral experience of being forced to change clothes and surrender personal items. The resort demands total conformity in attire and behavior while selling the dream of liberation. This mirrors the historical trajectory of the Rajneeshee movement, where the 1984 bioterror attack in Oregon was born from the same toxic mix of superiority and paranoia that Clayfield detects in the Pune security checkpoints today.

The Legacy of the Grift

Clayfield refuses to treat the Osho phenomenon as a purely spiritual curiosity. Instead, he frames it as a business model that has outlived its founder. He writes, "There is next to no discussion or explanation of the Bhagwan's actual beliefs—perhaps unsurprising, given he was a grifter who made things up as he went along, meaning it might have been difficult to do so with any great consistency." The piece argues that the movement's survival depends not on the coherence of its philosophy, but on the cynicism of its monetization.

The author contrasts the chaotic, violent history of the Oregon experiment with the polished, resort-style current iteration. He notes that after returning to Pune in 1987, the leadership "rebranded himself as Osho... which is kind of like me calling myself 'awesome writer' and insisting that you call me that, too." This rebranding was a strategic pivot to sanitize the image of the movement, stripping away the "violent and rapey elements" while keeping the revenue streams intact. The result is a place where followers, now called "sannyasins," are less interested in changing the world than in "simply keeping the money coming in."

Critics might argue that Clayfield is too dismissive of the genuine spiritual seeking that draws people to the resort, potentially overlooking the psychological comfort the community provides to the disaffected. However, the author's evidence of the strict, almost militaristic control over daily life suggests that the spiritual element is secondary to the institutional need for compliance and profit.

The Goose is Still in the Bottle

The piece culminates in a reflection on the enduring power of the myth, even when the reality is transparently absurd. Clayfield recounts a moment in the meditation hall, a "pyramidal structure" that evokes the all-seeing eye of providence, where the atmosphere is heavy with enforced silence and the hum of a nearby buzzsaw. He notes that despite the absurdity of the situation, the followers remain deeply committed.

He draws a parallel to the 1980s Oregon collapse, where followers feared a Jonestown-style mass suicide, but the leader prioritized his own survival. "Luckily, Oregon collapsed before the Bhagwan could order the self-slaughter," Clayfield writes. Today, the danger is less about mass death and more about the slow erosion of critical thought. The author describes the indoctrination video, featuring an "out-of-place Country song," as a tool to lower defenses before the rules are imposed.

They may think they are leaving the realm of despised materialism, but they are still being asked to put their reason to sleep, and to discard their minds along with their sandals.

This quote, attributed to Christopher Hitchens in the text, serves as the piece's thematic anchor. It underscores the central irony: the pursuit of enlightenment here requires the abandonment of the very faculties needed to evaluate the pursuit. The resort functions as a "sovereign microstate" where the laws of logic and commerce are suspended in favor of the organization's internal logic.

Bottom Line

Matthew Clayfield's reporting succeeds by exposing the mundane, bureaucratic machinery behind a grand spiritual narrative, proving that the most effective cults are those that look most like a luxury resort. The piece's greatest strength is its refusal to romanticize the experience, instead focusing on the friction between the promise of freedom and the reality of control. The biggest vulnerability for the movement, as the author suggests, is not external scrutiny, but the internal contradiction of demanding total submission in the name of total liberation.

For a cult that preaches individualism above all things, it has a fierce fascist streak.

Deep Dives

Explore these related deep dives:

  • Rajneesh movement

    The article centers on a visit to the Osho ashram and references the cult's history, but doesn't explain the movement's full theological foundations, organizational structure, or global spread - context that would deepen understanding of why the resort operates as it does today

  • 1984 Rajneeshee bioterror attack

    The article mentions Ma Anand Sheela's 'bioterrorism attack' in passing but doesn't explain that this was the largest biological terrorism attack in U.S. history, involving deliberate salmonella contamination of restaurant salad bars in The Dalles, Oregon

  • Human Potential Movement

    The article references 'intense encounter-group therapies' and Dynamic Meditation without explaining their roots in the broader 1960s-70s human potential movement that Rajneesh drew from and commercialized - understanding this context illuminates how the ashram blended Eastern spirituality with Western therapeutic practices

Sources

The kool-aid in koregaon park

by Matthew Clayfield · · Read full article

The grift begins at nine.

The Welcome Centre at the Osho International Meditation Resort in Pune is an open-air affair, a series of low wooden benches, arranged in lines as at a bus station, besides a little manmade pond on the edge of which sits a Buddha statue, mute, still, and beatific. When I arrived a little before nine in the morning, only two other men, both Indian, were waiting. The three of us wore civilian garb. It was clear from the outset that the resort is something of an oasis, even in Koregaon Park, which is itself something of an oasis in the broader context of Pune. The word that came to mind, as I looked beyond the pond through the trees at the figures milling about in maroon robes, was lush, or, perhaps, moneyed.

One of my fellow would-be sannyasins made the mistake of taking a photograph of the pond. Moments later, a blonde Dutchwoman, somewhere in her early sixties and dressed entirely in maroon, appeared out of nowhere and asked him, not so politely, to delete it. Then she turned to me.

I was there to do research for the novel. One of my three protagonists, Catherine, comes to Pune after attending a hen’s party in Goa and gets her arm bent into visiting the ashram. But when the woman, Vayu, asked me what I was doing there, I simply said that I wanted a day pass, which was also true. She asked if I had ever meditated before and I said that I hadn’t, but that I had seen some of the Osho meditations online. This was also true, but only in a vague sense. I had seen some of the more confrontational passages from Wolfgang Dobrowolny’s Ashram in Poona, which are excerpted in Maclain and Chapman Way’s Wild, Wild Country, as well as some more genteel stuff on the ashram-turned-resort’s Instagram account.

Vayu, which is obviously not her real or legal name, led me to a computer and began the registration process. My photo was taken the way photos are taken at passport control the world over, and, indeed, I did feel a little, in that moment, as though I were entering a sovereign microstate. Once upon a time, this process included an HIV test. I’m not sure whether this has been discontinued, or whether it’s no longer required for day-tripping rubberneckers like myself on ...