Entertainment
Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
And he said: 'let there be enlightenment'
DIANE BONDAREFF / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Enlarge Image
Chopra's latest role as a political commentator has led some critics to label him anti-American.
DEEPAK Chopra has been called many things during his decades-long quest to integrate cutting-edge Western science with ancient Eastern spiritual wisdom to heal the world -- one ageless body and enlightened mind at a time.
Often the labels, laudatory and otherwise, will play off his Indian roots, making him the guru of this or the swami of that.
Mike Myers has openly admitted that he modelled the The Love Guru's titular fame-seeking spiritualist, Pitka -- who even trademarked his mantra -- after Chopra.
The real New Age celebrity guru not only played along by lampooning himself in a cameo, he publicly defended the 2008 film, which sparked protests from Hindu groups who accused it of ridiculing their faith.
"No one is more thoroughly skewered in Love Guru than I am -- you could say that I am even made to seem preposterous," Chopra wrote in an online essay.
"...If I don't take offence and some Hindus do, that doesn't make me superior or more mature or even innately tolerant. I just know the difference between a belly laugh and a diatribe."
Chopra's latest role, political commentator, has elicited more of the former than the latter. And it has attracted a new label -- anti-American.
Rupert Murdoch-owned Fox News and the Wall Street Journal lambasted Chopra over his comments on CNN that the U.S.-led war on terrorism is turning more moderate Muslims into religious extremists.
In a December op-ed piece, WSJ editorial writer Dorothy Rabinowitz called Chopra a "digestion guru" and "advocate of aromatherapy and regular enemas" who naively "blames America" for the Mumbai terrorist attacks last July.
Chopra, who will be at the Centennial Concert Hall Sunday, says he has become more political in recent years to address the deeper causes of global instability -- namely the "radical poverty" that has half the world's population living on less than $2 a day, and 35 global wars that are mostly being fought "in the name of God."
"The outside world is always a reflection of our inner world," the New Delhi-born physician turned spiritual teacher and one-man publishing empire said during a recent phone interview from New York.
"God is as we are," said the Hindu-raised Chopra, 62, author of more than 50 books on everything from mind-body medicine and quantum physics to world peace and fictionalized biographies of Jesus, the Buddha and (coming soon) Mohammed.
"If we are in fear mode, then God is judgmental and punishes us like a dysfunctional parent. If we are in control mode, God is the ultimate control freak. If we reach our highest self, then God becomes the archetypal God of miracles."
And if we're in greed mode?
"We created the world economic collapse," he says. "It started with the United States, but because everything is so global, it spread very fast. It had to.
"We had $2.9 trillion circulating in the world's market, only two per cent of which was actually providing goods and services. The rest was derivatives, which became the toxic assets that caused the collapse of Wall Street and now this great global economic meltdown."
Chopra, who writes weekly columns for the Washington Post and the San Francisco Chronicle and is a regular contributor to the Huffington Post news website, says it's time to "forget the bad guys" and move on.
"They brought us here, but it was a culture of greed, cronyism, power-mongering, influence-peddling, corruption and bureaucracy to some extent. Now we have to move on and we have to say 'how can we create a new economy?'"
People have to stop creating a climate of fear -- fed by the news media and our "collective conversations" -- and realize this is an opportunity for personal and collective transformation, says the man Time magazine named one of the top 100 heroes or icons of the 20th century.
"I think we are gradually reaching a critical mass of people seeking self-awareness who want to translate it into action in the arenas that are troubling the world," says Chopra, who spearheads the campaign itakethevow.com, which has a goal of getting 100 million people around the world to take an anti-violence vow.
"If we reached the tipping point, we'd actually have peace."
Chopra, who last visited Winnipeg in 2005, says his Sunday appearance, sponsored by the Victoria General Hospital Foundation, will cover the basics of mind-body connection -- the nature of the human soul, how to go beyond fear of old age, disease and death, etc. But he wants to move to a "deeper level" this time.
He says, "I'm going to talk about what I see as the future potential of our personal and collective consciousness and discuss how we can begin to turn this world into a more peaceful, sustainable place."
carolin.vesely@freepress.mb.ca
Lecture preview
An Afternoon with Deepak Chopra
Sunday, 3 p.m., Centennial Concert Hall
Tickets, $35 to $150, available at Ticketmaster
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition April 21, 2009 C3
- Rate this

-
-
We want you to tell us what you think of our articles. If the story moves you, compels you to act or tells you something you didn’t know, mark it high. If you thought it was well written, do the same. If it doesn’t meet your standards, mark it accordingly.
You can also register and/or login to the site and join the conversation by leaving a comment.
Rate it yourself by rolling over the stars and clicking when you reach your desired rating. We want you to tell us what you think of our articles. If the story moves you, compels you to act or tells you something you didn’t know, mark it high.
Post Your Comment
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. Comments are moderated before publication. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.
-
Flu Fight
News about the world's battle against the H1N1 flu pandemic
-
Winnipeg Blue Bomber Report
All of the latest on the Big Blue
-
Buy the Bowl
If dogs can paint, you can fight world hunger
-
Follow the Way!
Join United Way on its journey toward lasting change and better lives.
-
Winnipeg road closures
Check if your commute is affected
-
Editor's Bulletin
Sign up for daily bulletins
-
Blogs to Watch
We pick our favourite local blogs for you to follow
-
Breaking News Widget
Create and embed a Winnipeg Free Press breaking news widget on your site or blog
- Back to Top
- Return to Entertainment
Advertisement
Most Popular
- $50-million lottery ticket bought in Manitoba
- No more jail time for tot's death
- Tire problem factor in plane's belly landing
- Doer the diplomat
- Your weekend weather
- Tears and fears
- Orlando engineer suspected of shooting 6 at company that fired him says 'they left me to rot'
- It all comes down to Bishop
- Police seek aid in locating missing teen
- Bomber ticket sales picking up the pace
- $50-million lottery ticket bought in Manitoba
- No more jail time for tot's death
- Police seek aid in locating missing teen
- CFS officials paid themselves first, audit finds
- City water rates to rise next year
- Child-porn offender Golden gets jail term
- Former Crocus directors to answer to allegations
- Bomber ticket sales picking up the pace
- New police station moves a step closer
- Big prize or bust for Blue and Kelly
- $50-million lottery ticket bought in Manitoba
- Tears and fears
- His turn to confront mortality
- Manitoba couple gets juices flowing
- Bay Street abuzz about MTS
- How I found my dad's grave: A SON'S STORY
- Tire problem factor in plane's belly landing
- Province, feds to improve Trans-Canada west of Winnipeg
- US man accused of killing ex-son-in-law in New Jersey to tell jurors he was too fat to kill
- The killer never left
Ads by Google



PREVIOUS

2 Comments
Posted by: Ben
April 21, 2009 at 12:49 PM
Up to $150 to watch a lecture on how to combat poverty and greed in the world, by a man who claims that God is as we are. As a dog returns to its vomit, a fool will return to his folly.
Posted by:
April 21, 2009 at 12:21 PM
Speaking of greed in the world,Dr.Chopra has carved out a pretty nice life for himself with his home base beside a California golf course. It's more than ludicrous how the peace gurus come to live comfortably in the U.S. and make their living writing anti-American trash.Huffington Post indeed!