"With tender hearts we share that Ram Dass (born Richard Alpert)
died peacefully at home in Maui on December 22, 2019 surrounded by
loved ones," according to his official Instagram account.
"He was a guide for thousands seeking to discover or reclaim their
spiritual identity beyond or within institutional religion."
The man who would become a serene, smiling forerunner of the New Age
movement and play a leading role in bringing Eastern spirituality to
the West grew up as Richard Alpert in a Jewish family in Newton,
Massachusetts.
He considered himself an atheist, and after graduating from Tufts
University and earning a Ph.D. from Stanford University, was an
up-and-coming psychology professor and researcher at Harvard
University in the early '60s.
Ram Dass would later describe himself at the time as a driven
"anxiety-neurotic" who had an abundance of knowledge but lacked
wisdom. Things began to change when Leary joined the Harvard faculty
and the two became close friends.
He had been introduced to marijuana in 1955 by his first patient
while working as a health services counselor at Stanford University
but Leary took him farther with psilocybin, the compound that gives
certain mushrooms hallucinogenic qualities. In his first psychedelic
experience, "the rug crawled and the picture smiled, all of which
delighted me," Ram Dass wrote in "Be Here Now."
Ram Dass and Leary wanted to open the mind to a deeper consciousness
and conducted experiments that included giving the drug to "jazz
musicians and physicists and philosophers and ministers and junkies
and graduate students and social scientists." Afterward, they had
them fill out questionnaires about their experiences.
Ram Dass said the subjects found bliss, heightened physical senses,
accelerated thought processes, a relaxing of biases and
hallucinatory experiences, such as seeing God.
Ram Dass and Leary began including the hallucinogenic drug LSD,
which like psilocybin was legal at the time, in their experiments
but Harvard was upset that they were using students as subjects and
fired them in 1963.
The two former professors later moved to a mansion in Millbrook, New
York, made available to them by heirs to the fortune of
industrialist Andrew Mellon, and continued their experimentation
there. Anti-war protest leader Abbie Hoffman and Beat Generation
writers Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac were among those who dropped
in.
In an effort to avoid the disappointment of "coming down" from a
drug experience, Ram Dass said he and five others locked themselves
in a building at the estate for three weeks and took LSD every four
hours.
"What happened in those three weeks in that house no one would ever
believe, including us," he wrote in "Be Here Now," but they were not
able to avoid the inevitable return to reality.
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As the hippie movement grew, Ram Dass and Leary were among the
counterculture luminaries at the Human Be-in, a 1967 gathering of
some 25,000 people in San Francisco where Leary spread his "turn on,
tune in, drop out" credo. Poets such as Ginsberg and Michael
McClure, anti-war activists Dick Gregory and Jerry Rubin and rock
acts Janis Joplin, the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane also
took part.
ENLIGHTENMENT IN INDIA
In search for a more permanent enlightenment, later that year Ram
Dass went to India, as members of the Beatles would in 1968. He
found what he was looking for in the form of Hindu mystic Neem
Karoli Baba, also known as Maharaj-ji. Alpert said that through
Maharaj-ji he found a spiritual love deeper than anything he had
experienced.
Ram Dass had taken a batch of LSD with him to India to share with
holy men in order to get their opinion of it. At Maharaj-ji's
request, Ram Dass gave him a super-sized dose of LSD but said there
was no discernable effect on him, nor was there three years later
when they repeated the experiment.
The guru gave him the name Ram Dass, which means servant of God, and
he returned to the United States with long hair, a beard and
instructions from Maharaj-ji to "love everyone and tell the truth."
Drugs would no longer be a major factor in Ram Dass' life.
He wrote about his conversion in "Be Here Now," which became popular
in the 1960s and provided a road map for the burgeoning New Age
movement of spirituality.
Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, who used LSD in his younger years, said
the book "transformed me and many of my friends" and George Harrison
used the title and general philosophy for one of his post-Beatles
songs.
"I was a sort of spiritual uncle to a movement - to a consciousness
movement bringing the East and West together," Ram Dass told the San
Francisco Chronicle in 2004.
Ram Dass spread his interpretation of Eastern philosophy as an
author and lecturer, advising acolytes to be loving ("we're all just
walking each other home") and to sublimate the ego for the sake of
the soul ("the quieter you become, the more you can hear").
In 1978 Ram Dass co-founded the Seva Foundation, a charity to fight
blindness and other health problems around the world.
Ram Dass suffered a near-fatal stroke in 1997 that partially
paralyzed him and hampered his speaking ability but left him feeling
more compassionate and humble. In 2007 he moved to Hawaii and used
the internet to deliver lectures.
In his later years he focused on aging and dying without fear.
"(I'm) an uncle to the Baby Boomers, teaching them about illness and
aging," he told the San Francisco Chronicle in 2004. "Not to be
frightened of aging. That it's OK."
(Writing by Bill Trott; Editing by Diane Craft)
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