Mark Dunlop's Involvement
with the FWBO.
I, Mark Dunlop, am an only child, and I
was born in N. Ireland in 1950. My father was in the Navy,
and my family lived in different parts of the world,
following my father's various postings abroad. In 1958 we
settled in Kent, and I attended a minor public school,
Kings School, Rochester, as a dayboy. (There is a
coincidental Buddhist connection, in that Sir Edwin
Arnold, author of 'The Light of Asia' attended this
school about a century earlier). My father had been
diagnosed with multiple sclerosis the previous year, and
was invalided out of the Navy in 1964 (when I was 14).
During my teenage years, my father's illness became
progressively worse, and my mother relied on me
accordingly for moral and practical support. My family's
dependence on me curtailed my personal freedom to a
considerable degree, and it was not until after the death
of my father in March 1972, when I was 22, that I felt
able to leave home. I was, as a result, perhaps not all
that streetwise for my age when I finally left home,
prepared to enter art college in Brighton, where I had
gained a place for the autumn of 1972.
In April of 1972, before taking up my place at Brighton,
I started attending meditation classes with some of my
friends, at the FWBO's public centre in Archway, North
London. Although my father had spoken well of Buddhism,
having visited a few Buddhist stupas and other sites
during his service with the Navy in the Far East, I knew
little about Buddhism, and had no particular desire to
become a Buddhist. I was simply interested to find out
more about meditation, which was becoming more widely
known about at that time. l
Classes were led by Sangharakshita, who wore his monk's
saffron robes while officiating. I was impressed by my
initial contact with Buddhism; in particular, meditation
seemed to work in quite a simple and direct way. The
initial effect was noticeable without being overwhelming;
it was rather like tidying one's room or one's desk, in
that thoughts and ideas became more ordered and
systematic, and life seemed calmer, simpler and more
pleasant.
During the tea break at one of these meditation classes
at Archway, I heard that an American Friend (a 'Friend'
was someone who attended classes fairly regularly, but
without making a formal commitment) called Tom was
looking for people to work on converting his house in
West Hampstead into flats. I approached Tom and arranged
to move into his house and do some carpentry. It seemed a
good arrangement; I could earn some money without too
many expenses (sleeping on the floor at Tom's), move to
London and conveniently follow up my new interest in
Buddhism, and also see more of my old school friend Peter
B., who was attending the Royal College of Music in
Kensington. This was quite a happy period in my life;
there was a lot to see and do in London and I was meeting
new people.
In about June 1972 I was invited for a meal at the flat
at 55, St. James's Lane, Muswell Hill, which was shared
by Sangharakshita, Kevin Brooks and Graeme Sowter (later
Siddhiratna). Mr. Brooks, who worked intermittently at
Tom's, extended the invitation to me, probably at
Sangharakshita's instigation. At any rate, I went back to
the flat for a meal, and once or twice subsequently,
including one or two occasions with my friend Peter B.
I continued to work at Tom's during the day, going to the
FWBO centre one or two evenings a week. At weekends I
would mostly go home to Rochester, but occasionally
stayed up in London to help with a jumble sale or other
FWBO fund raising activity. I was quite enjoying my
contact with the FWBO at this time, partly because they
provided a ready made circle of friends (most of those
involved were around my own age, and some of them were
rather attractive girls), and partly because of my
increasing respect for Buddhism.
Although I was heterosexual myself, I was aware of a
certain amount of homosexuality among FWBO members, but
in the early 1970's this was all part of popular culture,
and I did not see this as being a big issue (pop figures
like Mick Jagger and David Bowie, for example, played
with images of sexuality and were often regarded as being
'bisexuals'); in general the atmosphere was permissive
and it would be seen as rather gauche for a would-be
sophisticated youth to criticise or condemn homosexuality.
Friendship in general and spiritual friendship in
particular were given great importance within the FWBO,
and Sangharakshita initially elaborated on this theme. He
said that I was one of the very few people he knew who
treated him as a person in his own right, rather than as
a machine for solving their problems, as he put it. He
mentioned that on one occasion Eric (later ordained as
Mangala) had been away for a while, and on his return had
called in to pay his respects; Sangharakshita had invited
him to stay for supper, whereupon Eric had said 'Oh no, I
can't stay, I want to see some of my friends now'.
Sangharakshita had felt hurt by the implication that Eric
did not include him in that category. Although it was
obvious that FWBO members thought very highly of
Sangharakshita and it was common for them to believe that
he was 'enlightened', I did in general feel a bit sorry
for him, and my impressions from the beginning were that
there was an element of sadness or dissatisfaction in his
manner. Partly out of sympathy for Sangharakshita, and
partly because of my increasing respect for Buddhism, I
felt disposed to do what I reasonably could to help him
in his work.
Around the middle of 1972, Sangharakshita suggested I
might move into the flat at Muswell Hill. It did not
occur to me at this time that he might be seeking a
sexual relationship; I thought he was extending
friendship. I had become a bit fed up sleeping on the
floor at Tom's, and so after considering his offer for a
while, I said I would like to move in. I shared the front
room with Sangharakshita, having a mattress on the floor;
Kevin and Graeme both had their own rooms. However as I
got to know Sangharakshita better, I found that he kept
returning to the theme of homosexuality. Around this time,
I told my friend Peter B. that Sangharakashita seemed to
be 'after me' sexually, and that I was not happy about
this.
A few weeks after I had moved in, Sangharakshita
introduced the Buddhist concept of Daka into the
conversation. A Daka (f. Dakini) is a figure in Tibetan
Buddhism similar to a muse, or possibly in Jungian terms
an animus or anima figure. Someone who provides an
inspiration. Someone who was more than just an ordinary
friend.
Sangharakshita suggested that I was a daka and that as
such, I would be able to give a guru or teacher (i.e. him)
more energy and the teacher in turn would be able to give
spiritually more powerful teachings and initiations to
his students. He went on to say that traditionally in
Tibet there were three kinds or degrees of daka (i.e.
there was a qualitative progression); the first, most
refined kind inspired or catalysed the guru's energy by
means of a glance of the eyes; the second by the sound of
his voice; and the third kind by physical contact. I said
that if I was a daka, I'd much rather be the first kind.
Sangharakshita said 'I think actually you're the third
kind'. (I remember these words distinctly). I was
somewhat sceptical, but also flattered. On balance, I
found it difficult to seriously believe that
Sangharakshita might be stringing me a line. He was an
ordained Buddhist monk (I had seen pictures of him with
the Dalai Lama) and the FWBO was a registered charity.
FWBO members whom I spoke to about my misgivings all said
that they felt that they had benefited personally from
their involvement with the FWBO, and that they valued the
help and guidance that they had received from
Sangharakshita. Several also said that they had been able
to extricate themselves from neurotic relationships with
women with Sangharakshita's help. However, no one spoke
about homosexuality in other than general terms, and I
was not able to elicit specific details about anyone's
own experience in this area, although quite a lot was
implied.
What finally made me give way to Sangharakshita was his
arguments that my resistance was a result of conditioning.
On one occasion Sangharakshita said that according to
Kinsey, who had conducted research into sexual behaviour
in America in the 1940's, males were in general bi-sexual,
and that in the case of an average man who was not
conscious of his bi-sexual nature, the homosexual element
might be around 20% (I understand this is in fact a
misrepresentation of Kinsey's evidence, which suggests
that around 80% of men might be bi-sexual to some degree
- but I haven't checked the original source). He went on
to say the reason why such a man might not be conscious
of this homosexual component to his character was social
and parental conditioning (i.e. fear of disapproval of
homosexuality by parents, peer group, etc.) which had led
him to suppress or repress homosexual urges into his
unconscious mind. Sangharakshita didn't say outright 'you
are a homosexual', but more gradually led me to believe
that conditioning was the explanation for my marked lack
of enthusiasm.
My apparent revulsion towards homosexuality could be seen
as a symptom of the extent of my own conditioning. To
make progress emotionally and spiritually, Sangharakshita
said, it was important to try to overcome this irrational
conditioned fear of homosexual contact, which tended to
block my energy and obscure my awareness, and which was,
like any other irrational fear, ultimately based on
ignorance. Paradoxically, the very fact that I felt so
strongly that I didn't want to have sexual contact with
Sangharakshita showed just how deeply I really was
denying my real needs - otherwise why should I reject a
little perfectly natural human affection so vehemently? [See
also the 'Homosexuality Double-Bind' addendum to 'What is
a cult?'].
The teaching of Conditioning (Paticca-samuppada,
literally 'dependent origination' in Pali) has an
important place in Buddhist philosophy, and
Sangharakshita was eventually able to persuade me that
his 'Westernised' interpretation was valid. He was 47, I
only 22. He was a fully ordained monk, learned and
intellectually adroit, well thought of, regarded as
enlightened by many of his followers.
His explanation for the absence of direct references to
homosexuality in Buddhist scriptures was that Indians in
general were much more emotionally expressive than the
English, and that Indian men had few of the western
hangups about expressing physical affection. Therefore
homosexuality as such had never really been an issue for
the Buddha or for eastern Buddhists.
In due course Sangharakshita managed to have physical
contact with me. Initially it was hugging, then caressing
and then kissing (which I hated intensely and soon
managed to get out of). Skin to skin contact was next and
then Sangharakshita started to masturbate himself on my
stomach. This developed over the course of a fortnight or
so, rather than on one occasion. The whole business was
highly unpleasant for me and not in the least erotic.
However, once I had accepted a first time, a pattern was
set which I found difficult to break.
I did consider going along to another Buddhist group, but
Sangharakshita, and indeed many of the FWBO members, were
pretty scathing about these groups, some of which they
had attended themselves, and so I was dissuaded. In late
summer 1972, I decided not to take up my place at
Brighton Art College that autumn, Sangharakshita
persuading me that it was undesirable for me to lose
contact with the FWBO at that stage - there is now an
FWBO branch in Brighton, but that was not formed until
1975.
The work at Tom's house had come to an end and in about
Nov. '72 after a short period on the dole, I got a job at
a joinery firm in Crouch End, N. London. I found this
quite difficult to cope with; I enjoyed the actual work,
but I felt uneasy and nervous at some of the social
banter and so forth. I think the reason was that I felt I
was fighting social conditioning in respect of
homosexuality, and had therefore in a significant way put
myself at odds with society in general. Sangharakshita
has said that the 'spiritual life' is 'revolutionary',
and that one has to fight against 'the gravitational pull
of the conditioned' or 'the lower evolution'.
Heterosexuality was, according to him, part of the lower
evolution. At any rate, I felt alienated and out on a
limb in a way which I had never previously experienced,
so I only lasted 3 or 4 weeks at this job.
Sangharakshita had been talking of delegating much of his
responsibility for the day to day running of the FWBO and
devoting himself more to 'literary and creative' work,
and I encouraged him in this. Arrangements were made, a
van was bought and Sangharakshita and I moved in Jan. '73
to Broome House Farm, Nr. Brandon in Suffolk, which was a
Forestry Commission cottage leased to a Friend who in
turn made it available to Sangharakshita.
The daily routine was fairly undemanding. Rise about 7.30
- 8, a cup of tea, then meditation for 40 mins. to an
hour. After breakfast, Sangharakshita would spend most of
the day writing, either correspondence or perhaps
preparing a lecture. I would while away my time in
various ways, fixing the diesel generator, drawing,
chopping wood, study and going for long walks in the
forest. I did the majority though not all of the domestic
jobs. We would generally go out together to do the
shopping, with occasional expeditions out to second-hand
bookshops etc. It was a pretty boring lifestyle from my
point of view - Sangharakshita said that as we were on 'retreat'
it was important to keep distractions to a minimum. My
only entertainment was playing records - when the
generator was working. The day would conclude with a puja
(a traditional devotional ceremony) and meditation, and
we would generally retire to bed soon after.
Sangharakshita would want to have sexual contact about
twice a week on average. He usually said something like:
'let me just lie beside you for a while'. I dreaded
hearing this, but felt mean and selfish if I thought of
refusing. He would get into my bed and perhaps stroke my
chest for a while. Then he would get on top of me and rub
his penis against my stomach until he had an orgasm. I
found the whole business repellant, but at least it didn't
take very long - only about four or five minutes usually.
I was completely passive throughout, just waiting for him
to finish. After he had finished, he would return to his
bed and I would wipe his semen off my stomach with a
towel I kept available. Although the whole process was
strange and distressing, at least it was over quickly and
at the time I felt I would be in the wrong if I refused
him. After all, some of the other 'Buddhist' practises
which I had recently learned, were themselves strange (though
not distressing); sitting cross legged on the floor
concentrating on my breathing, for example, had initially
seemed to me quite an odd thing to do, but once I had
tried it a few times, there were apparent benefits.
Meditation could be, at times, both calming and
refreshing, and thus my initial assessment had turned out
to be incorrect. I felt on balance therefore that I had
to take Sangharakshita's ideas on anti-homosexual
conditioning seriously. I did attempt to refuse him and
argue with him at the beginning and at frequent intervals
later - but he could become very upset and on a couple of
occasions even clutched his chest and said 'Oh, my heart'.
He gave the impression of having palpitations and to this
day I do not know whether this was the case or whether he
was just putting on an act. Sometimes he would remind me
of the Buddhist story about the rock that was split open
by the twentieth blow. Although the nineteen previous
blows might appear to have had no effect, actually they
were preparing the ground for that final twentieth blow.
Similarly, when working on breaking down one's
conditioning, one should not expect instant results, and
should not be put off by initial failure, but should
allow the process to take its natural course to
completion. Perhaps most commonly, he would get his way
when I argued, by drawing attention to the importance of
trust and 'spiritual friendship', and he would admonish
me that I should not give in to my conditioning and allow
it to inhibit development of this 'spiritual friendship',
which the Buddha had once said was really ' the whole of....
this religious life' (Samyutta Nikaya, Vol.V, p2).
Sangharakshita said that his name meant 'protector of the
spiritual community' in Sanskrit and this name, given to
him at his ordination before a sangha of fourteen monks
in Sarnath, N.India, in 1950, added extra weight to his
argument. I would feel that my feelings of revulsion were
crass and insensitive. [I have learnt subsequently from
other sources that 'Sangharakshita' more accurately
translates as 'protected by the spiritual community'.] At
the time all this seemed like something which I had to
bear as part of the spiritual path which I was on, much
as I bore the pain in my knees which developed during
periods of sitting cross legged for meditation. In other
words; no pain, no gain. It was not until 1988, when I
read a newspaper article: 'Victims of disbelief: the
trauma of men who are raped' (Independent, 29.6.88,
appendix A12) that I began to see that what he had been
doing amounted to a form of rape, even though his
techniques were based on psychological and spiritual
manipulation rather than on crude physical force.
At some stage in the winter of 1972-73 (I don't recall
exactly) I ran out of money and Sangharakshita began
supporting me financially. He derived his income
predominantly from the FWBO. We left Suffolk in the
spring of 1973 and moved to Cornwall. After this
Sangharakshita and I moved together to a variety of
locations in the country where we continued a similar
life style, making contact only really with a few members
of the FWBO. In 1974, an order member named Buddhadasa (Hugh
Evans) inherited some money from an aunt, and gave the
bulk of it to Sangharakshita, who used the money to buy a
cottage in Castle Acre, Norfolk. Sangharakshita and I
moved into this cottage about mid-1974. I was ordained at
the beginning of 1975, and given the name Vajrakumara.
During all this period I was not able to spend much time
alone with women and Sangharakshita made me feel guilty
about my attractions to the women I did meet. I had been
celibate since the summer of 1972, and had discussed this
a number of times with Sangharakshita. However, he did
not alter his sexual behaviour towards me; he took the
view that this was not a breach of my celibacy, because I
never became sexually aroused by his actions. Some years
later, in about July 1987, Subhuti told me that
Sangharakshita had said that I was one of the very few
people he (Sangharakshita) knew who were entirely
heterosexual.
This life style continued virtually uninterrupted until
my mother died in October, 1975. I remember being rather
unemotional and matter of fact about my mother's illness
and death; I was surprised how impassive I was. In
retrospect, I feel I had somewhat subjugated personal
feelings concerned with my family and my earlier life
outside the FWBO. On my mother's death, I inherited her
house and some savings, which I put towards purchasing
Lesingham House, in the village of Surlingham, near
Norwich in Norfolk, for use as a retreat centre for the
FWBO. I contributed 29/35 ths of the purchase price;
Sangharakshita sold his cottage in Castle Acre and
contributed the remaining 6/35ths. I might have simply
made my share of the property over to the charity, but
luckily my uncle, who was executor of my mother's will
and who had always been unhappy about my involvement with
the FWBO, had made me promise to keep my share of the
house in my own name, and I kept this promise. Keeping
this promise was also made easier by the fact that
Sangharakshita several times said that when he had
purchased his property (a bungalow with some land in
Kalimpong, N India, which he named the Triyana Vardhana
Vihara), his Tibetan monk friends had all advised him to
make sure that the property was held in his own name, and
not in the name of some organisation.
There was little direct pressure on me to buy this
property, though Sangharakshita was keen that the FWBO
should acquire a country centre. I had to do something
with my inheritance; I didn't want to leave the FWBO,
which at the time would have been in my mind an
equivalent to renouncing Buddhism, and the idea of living
in a larger community not so closeted with Sangharakshita
was certainly attractive; so all in all buying Lesingham
House seemed the sensible thing to do. So in July '76 I
moved to Lesingham House with Sangharakshita and a number
of other FWBO members, and we began holding retreats and
other Buddhist activities. Lesingham House was renamed 'Padmaloka'
('Lotus Realm' in Sanskrit), and the charity 'FWBO (Surlingham)'
was set up by Subhuti and some other order members who
were familiar with the procedures, using the FWBO model
constitution approved by the Charities Commission. There
was a 'gentleman's agreement' between FWBO (Surlingham)
and myself that they could have the use of my share of
the property rent free, but FWBO (Surlingham) would be
responsible for the overheads: rates, insurance, heating,
maintenance, etc.
One evening in I think August '76 when Sangharakshita
wanted sex, I told him that I didn't want his sexual
activity to continue. Basically, I'd had enough; I'd
pretty much given up on the daka idea, and hadn't made
any progress at all towards overcoming or seeing through
my alleged anti-homosexuality conditioning; in fact it
had become rather stronger. I was surprised how easy it
was to get out of sexual duties at last; on previous
occasions when we had discussed it, Sangharakshita had
overcome my objections and my resistance, as previously
described; this time however, he didn't argue all that
much. In any case, he had a number of other young men
available.
Sangharakshita's attitude towards me changed noticeably
after this; he became colder and less friendly, even
though I continued to look up to him as a spiritual
teacher, and I was surprised at the degree of change. I
continued to live at Lesingham House as a community
member for a further eighteen months until I decided to
move out, partly as a result of a general feeling of
claustrophobia and partly with a view to applying once
more for an art college place.
I found myself a flat in Norwich in July '78, got a part-time
job at an FWBO run restaurant in Norwich, and started
going to life classes and generally building up a
portfolio of art work. And, most importantly for me, I
started going out with girls again. All was not plain
sailing however - I felt very guilty about my hetero-sexual
nature, and particularly about my tendency to form
emotional attachments outside the Order. A healthy sexual
appetite was one thing, but it was important to avoid
becoming attached, because, according to Sangharakshita's
teaching, attachment implied neurotic projection onto the
object of one's attachment. However, I found that my urge
towards emotional attachment was if anything stronger
than my sexual urge, and as a result, I felt guilty and
inadequate about my emotional weakness. The best way I
can think of to describe the actual feeling at the time
is that I saw myself as some kind of pervert with a
secret vice or compulsion. I felt that I was an
incorrigible reprobate, lacking the commitment and self
discipline necessary to make spiritual progress. I
interpreted this at the time as partly due to my tendency
towards 'neurotic projection', partly due to my
resistance to real change (such as my failure to open up
to and acknowledging the supposed homo-sexual side of my
nature), and in general terms as due to the 'gravitational
pull of the conditioned' I continued to hope and expect
that at some stage, with continued effort, I would be
able to achieve some insight into my conditioning, and to
make the appropriate break through. In retrospect, the
metaphor of dual identity, of the pre-cult self at war
with the cult-self, provided by Steven Hassan and Dr
Lifton (A13) seems appropriate. [Recently I have become
aware of the medical diagnosis of 'ego dystonic sexual
orientation'. This more commonly applies to homosexuals
who feel that their social environment disapproves of
their sexual orientation, and who may consequently suffer
an identity crisis. In my case, it was the reverse, in
that I felt guilty about not being homosexual or bisexual].
However, I didn't know any of this at the time; I simply
felt confused and miserable. During this period, I had a
number of girlfriends; I often think back over these
girlfriends with sadness and regret and with a certain
amount of shame. We would become close to each other or
even fall in love and then I would seize up inside and
become rather distant, so that in effect we drifted apart,
as I did my best to suppress my romantic feelings.
I began going out with D, the girl who had the greatest
effect in this way, in Oct 82. We became very fond of one
another, and in fact were in love, though I did my best
to suppress this emotion in myself, under the influence
of the FWBO's hostility towards heterosexuality and 'neurotic
relationships' (eg. 'The couple is the enemy of the
spiritual community' A6)
About nine months after we had first started going out
together, I told D that I didn't feel able to continue
the sexual side of the relationship anymore. Because our
relationship directly conflicted with FWBO teaching,
which at that time was also precious to me, I felt deep
anxiety and guilt about not being homosexual, and about
holding on to an emotional attachment outside the order.
I really enjoyed the affection and companionship with D,
but they would also give rise to secret feelings of guilt
and even self-disgust. I must say she took it all very
well, with considerable forbearance. We continued to go
out together for another two years or so, and we even had
a couple of platonic holidays together during this period.
I had started Art College in 1979. I left college two
terms before the end of the 4 year course, in Dec. 1982.
I was continuing to experience a similar personal
conflict between art and the so called 'spiritual life'
promoted by Sangharakshita and the FWBO, and felt worn
out with the struggle. During the first half of 1983, my
weight dropped from 11.5 stone to just over 10 stone, and
has remained at this level subsequently.
After a few depressed and aimless months, I moved back
full time to Lesingham House in July '83. I continued to
make attempts to get properly into meditation and
attended study groups and community evenings, but despite
these efforts I still felt like a fish out of water. By
1985, I had decided that I ought to try and move out of
the community. (In retrospect, one reason I hadn't been
encouraged to move out a lot earlier must have been that
the FWBO wanted to keep Lesingham House.) I still admired
and respected Sangharakshita and the FWBO; any
shortcomings were, I felt, entirely on my side. I had
simply failed to make the grade, and was increasingly
being seen as a drain on the community. It was a case of:
'spiritual good, me bad'. I had to go. I had been
considering selling my interest in Lesingham House to the
charity, FWBO (Surlingham), for some time, back to at
least 1980. There had been pressure at various times (mostly
from Kovida and Subhuti, some from Sona, and I suppose
ultimately the pressure was from Sangharakshita, acting
at arms length) for me to sell my share to the charity.
The main reason put forward was that the charity was
legally prevented from spending money on maintaining or
developing a property which was not owned by the charity,
and consequently ownership remaining in my name posed an
obstacle to the continued development of Lesingham House
as an FWBO retreat centre.
This development factor was particularly relevant when a
somewhat dilapidated barn complex adjacent to Lesingham
House became available for purchase in 1981. Presumably
at one time it had all been one property, but at the time
of the purchase of Lesingham House in 1985, the barns
were a separate property, owned by a neighbouring farmer,
Mr Loades, who did not use them apart from storing some
old farm equipment. In 1980, Mr Loades said he would be
willing to sell the barns. The possibility of selling
part of Lesingham House's land for building plots had
been discussed previously, and FWBO member Sona (R.E.Fricker)
obtained outline planning permission for two dwellings. A
local builder offered a good price for the two building
plots, and I was persuaded to sell my 29/35ths share of
the building plots to the charity for a much lower price.
The charity then sold them straight on to the builder,
giving the charity a handsome profit. The charity was
then able to buy the barn complex from Mr Loades, and
still had a good sum left over from the sale of the
building plots to spend on renovating the barns. It was
put to me in unambiguous terms that I would be holding
the retreat centre back if I did not agree to this
arrangement, which would enable the retreat centre
facilities to be considerably extended. FWBO (Surlingham)
needed to own the freehold of the barns, in order for
them to be legally able to expend the money and manpower
necessary to bring the barns up to the standard required
for residential retreat accommodation.
While FWBO (Surlingham) was keen to acquire the freehold
of Lesingham House itself, I continued to prevaricate for
some time, because it seemed unlikely that I would be
allowed to continue living at Lesingham House once it was
owned by the charity, and I was uncertain where I would
end up, or what I could do to earn a living. As the first
step towards a new life, in mid 1985 I began looking for
a house in Norwich, and in November 1985 I contacted the
Norwich branch of Savills Estate agents to ask them for a
verbal valuation on Lesingham House. Savills' valuer, Mr
C, was very keen, saying 'I could sell any number of
properties like this!' (The early stages of the 1980's
property boom were well under way at the time.). Mr C
said that the market value of Lesingham House had been
significantly reduced by its institutionalisation, and he
suggested that it would be a much more marketable
proposition if some work was done to de-institutionalise
the house.
In theory, I could possibly have put my interest in
Lesingham House up for sale on the open market, but
because I still fairly strongly believed in the FWBO's 'give
what you can, take what you need' ethos, this was never
really an option. It would have been a selfish and deeply
unspiritual act, and could also have made about twenty
people homeless, some of whom I regarded at that time as
good friends.
In terms of negotiating a price with the FWBO, I was
unsure how to quantify my own 'needs' as against what I
saw at the time as the morally superior needs of the
Padmaloka retreat community. (Subhuti at one point, only
half-jokingly, said 'how much do we have to pay to get
rid of you? ' Eventually we agreed to a deal which gave
me enough money to buy a house in Norwich in Dec. '85. My
share was sold at an undervalue, and the same solicitor
acted for both parties.
I bought a house in Norwich. Two other order members
rented rooms from me, and I applied for but failed to get
a couple of part time jobs (not in FWBO businesses.) My
general intention was to work towards earning a living as
an artist, with part type work, possibly carpentry or
boat- building related, as a means of earning a living in
the immediate term. One day in the spring of 1986, I was
reflecting how much I missed D, when there was an
unexpected welling up of emotion and I began crying. This
had a purgative effect, and I began to feel strongly that
my heterosexual nature, and in particular the associated
emotions of love and affection, were true and genuine
human feelings, and not some kind of blind perversion, as
I had come to believe during my time in the FWBO. My
emotions had been stirred up a month or so previously
when I had read 'Jane Eyre' for the first time, and I
believe this novel may have acted as a catalyst.
This crying episode marked a turning point in my
relationship with the FWBO. The tears soon gave way to
anger and revulsion, and over the next few weeks and
months, I gradually began to see that there were
significant dangers in the FWBO's distortion of
traditional Buddhism. Unfortunately, the personal process
of coming to terms with my experience in the FWBO
continued to become even more difficult and stressful. It
was very difficult to articulate my feelings and thoughts.
The only outside reference I had at that time was the
novel, Jane Eyre, but it was difficult to relate this
book, or its meaning to me, to Buddhist teaching or to
anything else. It was difficult to explain to other
people how reading it had profoundly changed my
perspective on Sangharakshita's teaching about human
sexuality and about the dangers of 'love' as a neurotic
projection, and how this had caused me to question the
whole ethos and practice of the FWBO as an organisation.
I became obsessed with unraveling my experience in the
FWBO, and began to experience bouts of anger and
depression over my seeming inability to effectively
articulate my concerns.
Over the winter of 86/87 I wrote a critical article 'Composition
in grey and white' about my experience in the order and
with Sangharakshita, which, I said, had left me in a
state of 'confusion, guilt, and misery'. This was
published in Shabda, a photocopied monthly magazine
containing letter reports and other contributions from
order members. Initially my article was refused, as it 'contravened
the criteria' for publication. I said that I would offer
it for publication elsewhere, and then it was accepted.
It was published as an insert in Shabda in May 1987 (though
not in India, as 'Indian Order Members wouldn't be able
to understand the western attitude to homosexuality.').
After publication, I had a dozen or so letters and cards
from order members, all to some degree sympathetic to me
personally, but those that I contacted back all seemed
hostile to the idea of questioning Sangharakshita's
predatory sexual behaviour, or of doing anything to
protect others from going through what I had gone through.
Some people said that I had only given one side of the
story, or that I was being 'negative' or that I was 'cracking
up'. This general lack of concern over ethical misconduct
by Sangharakshita was a surprise and a shock to me, and
deeply disorienting.
One order member, who had also been Sangharakshita's 'companion'
for a while, phoned me up to say that there had been some
things (unspecified) that he hadn't been happy about
during his relationship with Sangharakshita. He had
talked to Sangharakshita subsequently about these things,
but he said that he hadn't been able to catch
Sangharakshita out in a direct lie, Sangharakshita had
just said that he didn't remember. When I wrote to this
order member some time later to suggest that he should
speak out about his concerns, as I was doing, he wrote
back to say that he thought my quest was fueled by
negative emotion, that I should practice metta bhavana
meditation on those I felt had perpetrated injustice on
me, and that : 'When all is said and done, 'victim' and 'abuser'
are two sides of a coin, one needs to try to rise above
such dualities.'
Even those FWBO members whom I had regarded as personal
friends were completely unsympathetic. For example, on
one particular occasion I had gone for a pizza with order
member Sona. He took it upon himself to explain that,
while the wall we were sitting next to in the restaurant
appeared to be solid, in reality it was composed of atoms
and electrons, which themselves did not really exist.;
they were just abstract patterns of probability. Likewise,
my allegations and complaints did not have any solid
reality, they were just how things appeared to me,
because I was unable to see through to the deeper reality
beneath. Another OM told me that 'We always have to be
aware that our..um...what we think, is not true, until
enlightenment.'
[ In the FWBO's response to the FWBO Files, published at
www.fwbo.org/communications/ex-fwbo.html Vishvapani
writes, in regard to the Guardian story, that: 'I know
there was homosexual activity in the single-sex
communities, but the curious thing is that I never once
heard a discussion of it. It is hard to know how
significant sex was in the psychology underpinning the
Croydon Buddhist Centre, though for Tim it was clearly
traumatic. But I believe the secrecy surrounding it
established a pattern of duplicity and confusion that
corroded people's integrity.' A page later, he quotes
Edward Gibbon: "As a wise man may deceive himself
and a good man may deceive others, so the conscience may
slumber in a mixed and middle state between self-illusion
and voluntary fraud."]
I felt very frustrated that the allegations I had made in
my article (published as an insert in Shabda May 1987),
had been met with such indifference by other FWBO members.
To express my anger and frustration over this, in June
1987 I broke two windows and did some other minor damage
at Lesingham House, hoping that this might prompt order
members to take more notice of the concerns I had
expressed. Shortly after, Sangharakshita emerged from his
office in a rage, and began haranguing me in front of
about half a dozen order members: 'You think the whole
world revolves around you! and 'We've been so-oo patient
with you' and 'It is still not too late for you to turn
the corner.'
In October 1986, I first saw my GP about my depression
and anger about my experience in the FWBO, and over the
next ten years or so, I was referred to a number of
specialists in the Norwich area. Two of these, both
counselors for sexual abuse victims, were sympathetic,
but the other psychologists and psychiatrists I saw all
seemed to regard me as an obsessive individual who should
put their past mistakes behind them and get on with the
rest of their life. This kind of 'blame the victim'
response tended to increase my anxiety and depression,
and was probably harmful rather than helpful.
Lifton suggests, as quoted by Steven Hassan in an
appendix to his 'Combatting Cult Mind Control'(A13): '
The two selves [cult and non- cult] can exist
simultaneously and confusedly for a considerable time,
and it may that the transition periods are the most
intense and psychologically painful as well as the most
potentially harmful.' This does seem to tie in with my
own experience.
I also went outside the NHS and tried hypnotherapy and
some other therapies, but, with one exception, these
therapies were not particularly helpful either, though at
least they did no harm. The most helpful doctor was Dr T,
whom I first saw in 1991 (?), though I could only afford
to see her a few times, and not for an extended period of
therapy. I did ask my GP if I could be referred to see
her on the NHS, but he declined to do so. However, my
contact with Dr T did provide a lifeline at the time, and
her experience with other ex-cult members and her
understanding of the processes involved in cult
membership, together with reading books by ex-cult
members such as Steven Hassan, gave me a basis from which
to begin to understand my experience in the FWBO and to
gradually escape its shadow.
It was still a real uphill struggle though, because I was
the only ex-FWBO member openly criticizing the group or
saying that they were a cult. The majority of people I
talked to seemed to regard my experiences and my
interpretation of them with great skepticism. The first
person I met who shared my concern about the FWBO was
Richard Hunn (Upasaka Wen Shu), an Englishman who worked
as a Buddhist scholar and Chinese translator.
Unfortunately he was undergoing a difficult divorce at
the time (1988), and was not able to do much to counter
the FWBO. He did put me in touch with Maurice Walshe, who
knew about Sangharakshita's background in India and the
early days of the FWBO, and who was to prove a stalwart
ally. However, these two were for a long time the only
Buddhists that I knew of who were prepared to speak out
openly and publicly about Sangharakshita and the FWBO,
even though it appears that quite a few people within the
British Buddhist world knew about Sangharakshita's
behaviour.
Aside from seeking medical or therapeutic help for myself,
I also continued to approach FWBO members whom I knew, to
express my concerns about the misogyny and the promotion
of homosexuality within the FWBO, but I could make no
headway, and my concerns continued to be dismissed as
before.
In approximately July '87 I met Subhuti in Norwich. He
was more friendly than usual and in the Chess Cafe he
said 'I'm sorry, I didn't know all this was going on'. My
article of May '87 was the first time I had had the
courage to speak publicly of my own involvement with
homosexuality in the F.W.B.O., though I had often
criticized the anti-women stance and other matters such
as dependence on the dole. He also told me that
Sangharakshita had said that I was one of the very few
people he (Sangharakshita) knew who was entirely
heterosexual. Subhuti asked me what I actually wanted; I
said repayment of the mortgage, compensation for the
workshop, a public acknowledgment by Sangharakshita of
his actions and their consequences, and some form of
compensation for the distress which they had caused me.
Subhuti went no further than to say that he took note of
this.
Towards the end of '87 I had two or three 'phone
conversations with Sangharakshita. He said he didn't
remember having said that I was a daka or quoting Kinsey.
When asked how he would respond if this memory did come
back to him, he replied that he would be horrified. In
these conversations I felt he was dissembling and evasive.
The only apparent opening came when I said that I had
been in hell, to which he replied that he had been in
purgatory; this was the first time I felt he had
expressed any actual human emotion and the first time I
had hope of some kind of resolution of our differences.
In the event, this was as far as it went.
On three occasions in Jan., March and April '88
Sangharakshita came to my house to talk, the first time
accompanied by Kovida, and subsequently on his own. Again
I felt he was dissembling and evasive and I don't
remember much specifically. I recall him saying that he
didn't think I had been naive, as I had said in my
article; his first impressions of me had been that I was
a sophisticated man of the world, because of the way I
smoked my cigarette ( I smoked roll-ups). He did say that
he felt our relationship had been a mistake, but he didn't
go so far as to say sorry. In short, these discussions
led nowhere.
In Nov. 1988, I had a meeting at the Norwich FWBO centre
with six other order members from the Norwich area, in
which I said I didn't think it was on for Sangharakshita
to behave in the way, he had and expect to get away with
it. Saddhaloka (David Luce) the chairman of the Norwich
Centre, did say that perhaps they had a certain
responsibility, but that's as far as things went at that
meeting.
Subsequently to this meeting, I tried to set up a meeting
with Sangharakshita and two or three senior order members,
and had almost achieved a provisionally definite date
when this avenue went dead, and no-one would speak to me.
About a year later, towards the end of 1989, I managed to
coax a few words out of Subhuti, and he said that the
reason no-one would talk to me was 'The Mirror'.(see
below about my contact with the Mirror newspaper). A
month or two earlier Kovida and Kulananda (Mike
Chaskalson) had both independently said to me that what I
was doing was 'despicable'; they hadn't exactly been
friendly before but now there was a new tone of moral
superiority in their voices.
At the end of June 1988 I read an article on male rape in
the Independent newspaper. ('Victims of disbelief: the
trauma of men who are raped', Independent 29 June 1988)
Although I hadn't previously thought of my experiences in
terms of 'rape', this article rang a lot of bells; in
fact I was shaking after I had read it. The title 'Victims
of disbelief' seemed to describe my own experience quite
well. The reference to victims' general reluctance to
complain or speak out, either for fear of being labelled
gay, or for fear that they will be judged to have in some
way 'asked for it', went some way towards explaining the
skepticism and hostility I had encountered from FWBO
members. Paragraph 4 of the article, referring to 'David's'
frigidity and reluctance to make sexual overtures to a
woman for fear of forcing himself upon an unwilling
partner, appeared to closely, though not exactly, mirror
my own feelings of anxiety and self-loathing. [A more
accurate perspective on this self-loathing is probably
the diagnosis of a serious adjustment disorder, ego
dystonic sexual orientation (F55.1, ICD 10) in a letter
from Dr Elizabeth Tylden, 20 August 1998.] This article
gave me enough of a clue, or enough of a conceptual
liferaft, as it were, to begin to think that perhaps my
unhappiness and resentment over my experience in the FWBO
wasn't as neurotically subjective and unreasonable as
everyone seemed to think.
Soon after reading the article I telephoned the number
for 'Survivors' given in the article and had an
interesting chat. In August 1988 I went down to London
and talked with Nigel O' Mara, a counselor from that
organisation. He had been a rape victim himself (he
claimed to be able to recognise abuse victims in the
street; they had a certain look in their eyes), and his
story seemed pretty horrific to me. He said that rape was
not about sex in the erotic sense, but was to do with
power and humiliation, and gave rise to feelings of anger
and shame in the victim. Often (though not always)
abusers had themselves earlier been victims, and were
trying to compensate for past humiliation by repeating
the abusive situation, but this time with themselves in
the position of power and control.
I said I could understand him feeling angry about his
particular experience, but why was I so angry about my
own milder experience; he said that sexual abuse was
sexual abuse however perpetrated, adding that it could
occur 'anywhere from four to forty'. I asked what I could
do about my anger; he suggested a therapy which basically
involved beating up a telephone directory. I had tried
this approach previously with a punch bag and whilst it's
good exercise, it seemed if anything to strengthen my
anger rather than vent it, so I said I'd rather do
something real, such as go to a newspaper. I had earlier
'phoned the Independent after reading their rape article,
to be told that Penny Jackson, the editor of the 'Living'
page, was the best person to speak to; but she was on
holiday for a fortnight. Next I tried explaining my story
to a lady on the newsdesk at the Observer, but she said 'Oh
I don't think that's the kind of story we would do.'
I felt at a bit of a loss and unsure of my credibility
and so it seemed well worth pursuing when NM said he knew
two journalists who might be interested. One was from the
Sunday Mirror and had written a sympathetic article on 'Survivors',
and the other freelance. I said I'd prefer say the
Guardian, but NM suggested that a paper like the Guardian
would tend to 'wring it's hands and say 'Oh isn't this
awful'', while the Mirror was more likely to actually do
something. Its true that the Mirror has in the past had a
reputation as a campaigning newspaper, for example
against Hitler in the 1930's, and at that time employed
journalists such as Paul Foot, but I was a bit wary of a
possible 'Bonking Buddhists' treatment, partly for fear I
might end up a laughing stock myself. Nevertheless I
arranged via NM to meet Frances Rafferty from the Sunday
Mirror (she has subsequently worked for the Telegraph and
the TES) the next day, and after a cautious start warmed
to her. So I told her my story and later sent some F.W.B.O.
literature and photocopies. Initially her boss in the
Features department gave her the go-ahead, but the story
was subsequently transferred to Investigations, where it
seems to have become lost. I did at one stage speak on
the phone to Tony Frost, who I think was fairly senior in
this department, but I had by then become doubtful about
the Mirror's attitude to the story, and so didn't pursue
it.
(It seems that the Mirror told the FWBO about my contact
with them, and this is probably why no-one from the FWBO
would speak to me after about Dec 1988, and probably also
why I was expelled from the order by Sangharakshita in
Jan 1989. Its highly unlikely that any of the small
number of friends I had told about my contact with the
Mirror would have tipped off the F.W.B.O. About a year
later, in Dec. 1989 I spoke to Steve Bailey at Mirror
Investigations, and he said he couldn't imagine that any
of their staff would have alerted the FWBO. He apologised
for the story having been 'lost between departments' and
wanted to send a reporter to see me; I said no, as I had
developed doubts about the way the Mirror might handle
the story.)
After speaking to Frances Rafferty, I met P.B, an old
school friend, for lunch and told him some of what I had
been up to and it was on this occasion that he reminded
me that I had told him in 1972 that Sangharakshita was
after me and that I wasn't happy about this.
Frances Rafferty had given me the phone number of the 'Cult
Information Centre', and I spoke a couple of times to the
organiser, Ian Howarth. He had been involved in a
psychotherapy type cult in Canada some ten years
previously, and after extricating himself had been
involved full time in trying to counter the activities of
various cults. He was initially cautious of me, fearing I
might be a cult member trying to elicit information, but
I told him my story and he seemed to believe me. We
discussed the nature of 'cults' and he said there were
estimated to be several hundred cults of varying sizes in
the U.K. the majority being fundamentalist Christian
types such as the Moonies (or Unification Church). He
didn't know (at that time) of any other ex-F.W.B.O.
members having contacted his organisation, but he had
heard of one set of concerned parents. He promised to
send me some information about cults. Rather as with the
rape article, I hadn't really thought of the F.W.B.O. as
a cult in a formal sense, although I had used the terns
brainwashing and cult in a more colloquial sense in my
May 1987 Shabda article. On reading the Cult Information
Centre's material however, I formed the impression that
the F.W.B.O. at least came pretty close and I've
subsequently come to the view that they are in fact a
cult (for the reasons given in section 2, What is a cult?).
In May '89 I attended the inaugural meeting of The Ex-Cult
Members Support Group, near Kew Gardens in London. There
were about 30 people present and we each gave a brief
resume of our respective involvement in cults. I
particularly remember one young man of about 17 who had
recently been entangled with The Central London Church of
Christ; he seemed almost in a state of shock and didn't
say all that much. I was feeling quite churned up myself
- a mixture of excitement, anger and sorrow, rounded off
with a headache. I didn't really increase my
understanding of cults as such, but was left with a
feeling of nausea and revulsion towards them. I should
also say that the F.W.B.O. seemed relatively mild
compared with some of the other cults.
I also felt initially unclear as to whether I had
suffered from sexual abuse or brainwashing, or both, or
neither; I now think both, to some degree. Possibly
systematic emotional manipulation or brainwashing by a
cult could be described, metaphorically at least, as a
form of spiritual rape. And there appear to be certain
similarities between the cultish methods of
Sangharakshita and the FWBO, and the 'befriend - preen -
seduce' methods used by paedophile abusers, who similarly
may be outwardly respectable and plausible, and who also
sometimes have powerful positions within institutions.
Subsequently, I have continued to develop my
understanding of cults and how they are able to
manipulate their members, but to date this doesn't seem
to have helped me much on a personal level.
In general, I feel that people are dismissive of my
experience, and I tend to feel I have no credibility as a
person. Having no family doesn't make things any easier.
I have made efforts to start a new life, including
beginning a Technology Access course at college, and
renting a workshop for 18 months and trying to start a
boatbuilding business, but all to no avail. I can deal
with impersonal things, like buying groceries, but I find
social interaction extremely stressful, and avoid it as
much as possible. I feel unwelcome and socially excluded;
if I mention anything about how I feel, or anything
related to the FWBO or to cults, people seem to regard me
as strange and obsessive. If, on the other hand, I say
nothing of these concerns, but try and make
politeconversation, I get stomach pains, which, if I do
not leave the social situation and go home, may develop
into shortness of breath, hot and cold flushes, pounding
heartbeat, and, on one occasion, dizziness and blurred
vision.
I continue to feel deeply frustrated at my inability to
do anything much to counter the FWBO, and I experience
anxiety and depression about my inability to explain to
people what goes on within the group or to persuade
people to take my concerns seriously. I have for example
attended a couple of seminars held by INFORM at the LSE,
and have tried to question the attitude of cult-apologists
like Dr Eileen Barker, who hold that terms like 'brainwashing',
'mind control' and even 'cult' are not valid terms, not
even helpful metaphors, but are simply emotionally loaded
and pejorative terms, which critics deploy in an attempt
to demonise and scapegoat New Religious Movements. I sent
Dr Barker a printed copy of my analysis of the mind-control
process in the FWBO, http://www.fwbo.com/TheFWBOFiles/fwbosection2.htm
- but she simply said 'I have glanced at it, it's a
circular argument', and she declined to elaborate.
I have also contacted the police about Sangharakshita and
the FWBO, but they said that they would only be able to
bring a prosecution for assault against Sangharakshita if
another witness like myself came forward. To the best of
my knowledge no-one else has been willing to come forward
publicly with allegations against Sangharakshita himself,
but, more recently, a few people have made similar
allegations against other senior FWBO members. I have
also contacted the Charity Commission, and sent them
details of how Sangharakshita and the FWBO circumvent
their own governing rules (see Other relevant material
section), which allows them scope to misrepresent the
Buddhist religion, and enables them to shrug off outside
criticism - see the FWBO Files at: http://www.fwbo.com/TheFWBOFiles/
The Charity Commission declined to take any action to
restrict the FWBO in any way; they said that the breaches
of the rules that I had complained of weren't all that
serious, and they also pointed out that they had no
powers to 'interfere in religious doctrine'. More
recently, the Guardian newspaper published a critical
article about Sangharakshita and the FWBO titled 'Bad
karma' (Guardian 27 October 1997). Subsequently a British
Buddhist and former monk (who is now married and
therefore no longer a monk, though still a practising
Buddhist), wrote 'The FWBO Files', which strongly
criticises the ways in which Sangharakshita and the FWBO
have distorted Buddhist teaching. This was published on
the Internet in May 1998. In November 1998, an ex-FWBO
member from San Francisco set up a critical website, www.fwbo.com
(the FWBO's own site is www.fwbo.org) containing the FWBO
Files and other critical material.
This site has probably been fairly effective in warning
some people about the FWBO, but nevertheless the group
itself seems incorrigible. No admissions of unethical
behaviour by any current FWBO member have been made, and
the FWBO continues to deny that the problems at their
Croydon centre, exposed by the Guardian article, have
ever affected other centres or other individuals.
Currently, Sangharakshita and the FWBO are, to the best
of my knowledge, able to continue as before their
manipulation of people wishing to follow a Buddhist path
under their auspices, without any real restriction.
--
Mark Dunlop
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