| News of Maharishi's Global Country of World Peace in Great Britain | |||||||||||||||||
|
Agence France Presse reports on success of Enlightened Sentencing Project12 Nov 2001
Subject: Worldwide wire service release by Agence France Presse reports on the successful use of Maharihshi's Transcendental Meditation programme to rehabilitate criminal offenders in Missouri, USA. This initiative is part of The Enlightened Sentencing Project organised by Farrokh and Ruffina Anklesaria. See also http://www.enlightenedsentencing.org Agence France Presse November 5, 2001 Monday 7:35 AM Eastern Time SECTION: Domestic, non-Washington, General News LENGTH: 612 words HEADLINE: ENLIGHTENED SENTENCING: DEEP BREATHING FOR SMALL-TIME CONS BYLINE: LOUISE DALY DATELINE: VEDIC CITY, Iowa, Nov 5 When US circuit judge David Mason was first approached about using transcendental meditation T to rehabilitate offenders, he scoffed at the idea. But five years later Mason is a roving ambassador for what some have called "the enlightened sentencing project," extolling the benefits of TM as far afield as Australia. At a conference here last weekend, Mason described how TM could help keep petty criminals on the straight and narrow, giving them the skills to deal with the everyday stress that might otherwise spark criminal tendencies. "It's really important to get a grasp of the relationship between stress and criminal behaviour," he said, noting expert testimony of psychologists pointed repeatedly to stress as a trigger for criminal behaviour. The alcohol and drug addictions that often go hand in hand with crime often stem from weak "coping abilities," he told the conference hosted by the Maharishi University of Management (MUM) -- the nexus of the TM community in this southeastern corner of Iowa. Frustrated by seeing the same faces parade through his courtroom, Mason reckoned he would not be drastically changing his probationary regime with the addition of transcendental meditation. After developing a curriculum that "passed constitutional muster," he began what was essentially a privately-funded experiment in 1996, with petty criminals taking a six-week course of TM sessions as a condition of their probation. Encouraged by Mason's results, three other judges on the 22nd Circuit Court embarked on the experiment, all of whom have been pleasantly surprised by the results. An informal study showed recidivism among the 120 offenders was markedly lower than might be expected-just 10 percent committed crimes within three years, compared to the state average of 50 percent. "I was confident there would be some benefits, but I was surprised at the degree of success," among individuals "who have spent their lives using drugs, selling drugs, prostituting themselves to get money to buy drugs, stealing to get money to buy drugs," Mason said. One woman was so impressed by the change in one of her son's friends that she made her own son turn himself into the law. "The woman brought her son to the police station and made him confess to some minor drug possession charges on the understanding he would come up before me, just so he could get in the program," Mason said. And while the judge was preaching to the converted Saturday at the MUM conference, aimed to promote TM as a way for US schools to tackle school violence, the establishment has begun to take note. Just last month, Mason, his colleagues on the bench and some program graduates were asked to share their experiences with a panel of state lawmakers seeking alternatives to incarceration. "I was impressed by the presentation," said Esther Haywood, vice chair of a Missouri House of Representatives committee on alternative sentencing. "To be honest, I would like to try it for myself." The jury is still out, according to Haywood, but with more information the panel could recommend the relaxation technique for first-time offenders to keep them out of Missouri's overcrowded prison system. Mason hopes official interest, currently funded by grants from charitable foundations, could mean public funding for the two full-time TM practitioners devoted to the program. "I am pushing for it to be used in all domestic violence cases," said Mason-in no small part because of the letters he has received from women reporting their partners were less angry and less physically and verbally abusive after taking the meditation course. Copyright 2001 Agence France Presse |
||||||||||||||||
Contact us at: info@globalcountry.org.uk