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Each year in Britain, prestigious national awards are given by the
British Association for Urban Regeneration (BURA), the country’s leading
independent organization for the regeneration of towns, cities and
regions. The awards for "best practice in urban regeneration"
highlight the most successful approaches so that they can be reproduced
throughout the country
This year, one of the winners is the Maharishi European Sidhaland,
whose "best practices" include a Maharishi School, Maharishi
Sthapatya Veda architecture and design, and a coherence- creating group
practicing the Transcendental Meditation technique and the advanced
TM-Sidhi program (from which the name "Sidhaland" is derived).
"We’re delighted to receive this award, which guarantees serious
attention for Maharishi’s programs in the field of community
development," says director John Collins. Out of sixty applicants,
there were just six award winners in the "Best Practice"
category. The Maharishi European Sidhaland in Skelmersdale shared the
limelight with other such recipients as the multi-agency rebuilding of
Manchester city center.
BURA, a highly respected organization which brings together a
cross-section of members from public, private and community sectors, will
send a description of the award-winning projects to every developer and
council in Britain.
"An Outstanding Example"
Commenting on the Maharishi European Sidhaland, the judging panel said:
"This is a most unusual project and an outstanding example of best
practice in many ways which are totally different from any other project
submitted for a BURA award. The School is particularly impressive, and the
architectural principles of Sthapatya Veda should be more widely
disseminated. It represents an unconventional joined-up approach which
addresses education, health and crime in a positive and unusual way. It
has a qualitative impact on the surrounding area and promotes regeneration
by motivating the individual within the community."
Earlier this year, Governor of the Age of Enlightenment Keith Laycock
invited representatives of BURA to visit the Maharishi European Sidhaland
in Skelmersdale, and they were over-whelmed with what they found.
David Scougall, a senior board member of BURA who has studied urban
development projects in Japan, Russia and America, said that what the
meditating community had achieved "was one of the most significant
things I’ve ever seen. It was so exciting—the Sthapatya Veda,
everything to do with orientation of buildings, the new center, the
educational attainment. I was very, very impressed with the whole process.
It’s really where we need to go."
Mr. Scougall then reported to his awards committee that, yes, it is an
unusual project. "But I said to them, ‘just tell me why it’s not
best practice, if you can?’ And there wasn’t any answer to that!"
After two further visits from equally impressed BURA representatives, the
award was granted.
Twenty-Year Success Story
The Maharishi European Sidhaland was set up 20 years ago in response to
Maharishi’s desire to increase coherence in world consciousness by
establishing permanent groups of Yogic Flyers in every country. "We
will make a consolidated effort from one place, but every country must do
something," Maharishi said. "The accumulation of coherence from
every country is very vital."
Skelmersdale, a small town in the county of Lancashire, is central to
Britain as a whole, and is within a half-hour drive of several million
people in the nearby cities of Manchester and Liverpool. Yet it is also
within easy reach of some of Britain’s most beautiful scenery, in the
mountains of Snowdonia, the English Lake District, and the Yorkshire
Dales.
Communication and transportation resources are excellent, with a major
international airport 40 minutes away. Since 1980, over 350 Governors,
Citizen Sidhas and Meditators from all over Britain and Europe have moved
to Skelmersdale, with many of them setting up their own businesses.
Creating Coherence, Prosperity and Progress
In 1988, a Maharishi Golden Dome was constructed for group practice of
Yogic Flying, modeled on the success already achieved in Fairfield, Iowa.
More than 1,100 Yogic Flyers from 24 countries attended the inaugural
ceremony for this beautiful 120-ft diameter building. It was opened on
behalf of Maharishi by Kenneth Hind, Member of Parliament for West
Lancashire. "I have watched with admiration the TM Movement in
Skelmersdale grow on a day-to-day basis," said Mr. Hind at the
opening ceremony. "They came to a community which, when I was
elected, was very much in retreat, but which is now booming."
Local Council leaders echoed Mr. Hind’s praise for the impact of the
Maharishi European Sidhaland. Council leader Robert Hodge praised the TM
practitioners as having qualities "of reliability, of energy, of
honesty and integrity, of service to the community." He thanked them
"for what you are doing, for what we know you will continue to do,
and for the great contribution that your Movement is already making to the
quality of life here in West Lancashire."
Research Documents Rise in Positivity
That contribution was further emphasized seven years later, with the
publication of research by Dr. Guy Hatchard in the prestigious,
peer-reviewed journal Psychology, Crime and Law. The study revealed that
group practice of Yogic Flying in the Maharishi Golden Dome was correlated
with an unexpected and dramatic reversal in crime trends in nearby
Merseyside. From being the second-most crime-ridden metropolitan area in
Britain, Merseyside became one of the safest, with a 60 percent drop in
crime compared to national trends. In economic terms alone, this
represented a saving of nearly two billion dollars during the five years
of the study.
Benefits extended beyond a revitalized economy and reduced crime. A
Maharishi Ayurveda Health Center was opened in 1988, which has since
treated people from all over the world and attracted much favorable
publicity. More recently, the Maharishi European Sidhaland has pioneered
the introduction of Maharishi Sthapatya Veda architecture and design into
Britain, with the construction of the country’s first public building in
accord with Natural Law, a sports and arts center which will be shared by
the local community.
Education for Enlightenment The Maharishi School was founded in 1986 by
parents at the Maharishi European Sidhaland, and is the first educational
institution in Britain to offer Consciousness- Based education. The School
is housed in a refurbished eighteenth century stone building a short walk
from the Maharishi Golden Dome, on the edge of meadows and villages which
stretch to the sea eight miles away.
The great success of the Maharishi School is no secret in British
educational circles today. "Everywhere I go, teachers want to talk to
me about the Maharishi School and Transcendental Meditation," says
Deputy Head Cliff Yates. Cliff has launched a government-funded initiative
to improve the teaching of poetry in schools throughout England, and his
pupils at the Maharishi School have won a host of major national poetry
prizes.
The creativity stimulated by Maharishi’s educational approach and
reflected in these poetry successes is carried over to the rest of the
curriculum. Four times in recent years, the Maharishi School has been at
the top of the academic league tables for examination results in
Lancashire, and is one of the most successful schools in Britain as a
whole.
A New Model for Community Development
All of these achievements taken together—in business, public safety,
health, architecture and education—provide a proven blueprint for
genuine regeneration of any community.
On the announcement of the award, Dr. Geoffrey Clements, Chairman of
Britain’s Maharishi Foundation, gave congratulations to all members of
the community for their achievements, in particular the maintenance of a
strong group practice of the Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi
programs in the Maharishi Golden Dome. This regular group practice, Dr.
Clements said, "ensures the coherence that is the foundation-stone
for success for all the activities of the community. The BURA
representatives must have felt the glow of coherence when they visited,
and this is essentially what has led them to make their glowing
recommendation."
Glowing recommendations were very much in evidence on October 4th, when
Maharishi European Sidhaland directors John Renwick, John Collins and
Simon Cohen received the BURA Award from the Rt. Hon. Hilary Armstrong MP,
Minister of State at the Department of the Environment. The award has
triggered a huge wave of media and professional interest in the Maharishi
European Sidhaland, which will lead to further implementation of Maharishi’s
programs in Britain during the months to come.
As John Renwick says, "We feel we have an effective approach to
community regeneration which includes buildings, business, education,
health, and quality of life. The ideas are clearly adaptable to other
urban situations and we are ready to offer our help and expertise to
anyone wishing to implement them. We hope that this BURA Award will
inspire many to take up our offer." David Hughes is editor of Britain’s
national Transcendental Meditation program magazine.
David Hughes is editor of Britain's national Transcendental
Meditation program magazine.
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