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Origins
– About Swami Rama

The Himalayan Institute was founded in the United States by the
sage Swami Rama, who was born in 1923 and brought up from an early age by
the great Himalayan master Bengali Baba. He studied with other sages and
adepts in the Himalayas and Tibet, and distinguished himself at the
University of Allahabad in northern India. In his late teens, the
unconditional infinite love he had been receiving from his master and the
other sages led him to a spontaneous state of ecstasy, which he described
in these words;
“One lovely evening, it seemed to
me as if a ray of light all of a sudden broke through the mist, and I
wondered what it might mean. The same evening thou gavest me a glimpse of
the love divine. And then I heard His name uttered from thy lips,
shedding new light over my destiny.”
After more years wandering with Himalayan sages and intensifying his
practices, he was, in the late 1960s, sent by his master to the West with
the words;
“Now you are ready to create a
bridge between East and West, between spirituality and science. Go to the
West and share with them the wisdom of the sages, remembering that you
are simply an instrument of the tradition. Your job is to deliver the
message of the sages, create bridges, and help people connect the body,
breath, mind and soul.”
He reached the USA and quickly attracted many followers, who by the
end of the 1970’s, had established the Himalayan Institute in a 400-acre
residential campus at Honesdale, a small town in eastern Pennsylvania. As
Swami Rama began delivering the message of the sages, the Institute
became a centre of spirituality and holistic living. He trained
physicians, psychologists, and philosophers to run seminars helping
people overcome their mental traumas, depression, loneliness and anxiety.
His audiences were drawn by his innate compassion and down-to-earth
understanding of the difficulties people faced in bringing order and
happiness to their lives. He taught them to discover the secret of
breath, to unlock the potential of the mind by meditation, to grease
their duties with love to overcome friction, and keep their spiritual
practices within their capacity to avoid hurting themselves and others.
(Read about Swami Rama’s life in his book ‘Living with Himalayan
Masters’- see bookshop).
Himalayan Institute
in
the UK
The UK branch of the Himalayan Institute in London was started in 1991
by Peter Glover, who had studied meditation and spirituality since the
late 1950’s, and met Swami Rama in 1989. Based in West Ealing, the UK
branch runs weekly classes in yoga, breath, relaxation, meditation and
philosophy. It holds weekend and week-long retreats and also sells books,
and yoga materials, as well as distributing ‘Yoga Plus’ (the Institute’s
bi-monthly magazine) to about 250 subscribers.
The Institute is a registered charity, and mostly relies on voluntary
effort. Each year its members elect a Principal and Executive Committee
to run its affairs. Enrolments, book sales, advertising etc. are dealt
with by a part-time paid administrator based in Ealing, while bookings
for retreats and subscriptions for ‘Yoga+’ are handled by volunteers in
Sussex and Lancashire.
The Institute respects all faiths and religions, and makes no attempt
to convert those who come to it. It aims at a practical blend of the
traditional philosophy and psychology of the East with the discoveries of
science in the West.
HIMALAYAN INSTITUTE (Reg Charity 1048336). 020 8567 8889
Tribute
to Peter Glover
Founder and Late
President of the Himalayan Institute of Great Britain.
The
Himalayan Institute of GB owes its existence to Peter’s vision and
inspiration, and many other individuals and organisations benefited from
the uniquely fine influences that he received and lovingly passed on to
others during his full and eventful life.
From an early age Peter was inspired to search for the hidden meanings
behind scriptures and church teachings. In the late 1950’s he was
attracted to the School of Economic Science in London, where, over the
next thirty years, working with others to ask and examine the real
questions of life, he was given considerable responsibilities. He came to
understand, in an extremely practical way, the importance of refining
attention, studying scripture, meditating and serving others.
Meeting Swami Rama in the late 1980’s added new dimensions to his
understanding, particularly of the way breath, relaxation and hatha yoga
enhanced meditation and peace of mind, and this led him to found the
United Kingdom branch of the Himalayan Institute in Ealing. Courageously
for his age, he trained as a yoga teacher and began giving classes
locally. He also toured Britain, encouraging other yoga teachers and
their groups to learn meditation and the philosophy of yoga.
Peter Glover was a lesson for us all in practical spirituality. To be taught
by him was to experience someone with inner peace, grounded in his own
being, radiating a firm yet kindly authority. Even the most difficult
question was invariably met with a gentle smile, a deep pause, and a
self-evidently appropriate answer. He had cultivated that quiet welcoming
awareness dedicated simply to the reality of the present – the state that
leads one naturally to know Oneself - about which the Bhagavad Gita says;
“In the still mind the Self reveals itself.
From the depths of meditation a man draws the joy and peace of
complete fulfilment.”
After a long illness, borne with
great patience and cheerfulness, Peter Glover died on the 10th November 2006.
Tasmai shri gurave namah.
John Howell
Principal
Himalayan Institute of GB
January 2007
About John
Howell
John
Howell has been Principal since 2004. He studied meditation, philosophy
and karma yoga during a 30-year association with Peter Glover, as well as
attending Swami Rama’s last seminar at Honesdale in August 1993, and
other retreats there since. From 1995 he assisted Peter by taking weekly
philosophy and meditation groups for the Institute in London, and leading
retreats, especially since 2004.
His vision for the Institute is encapsulated by the famous lines from
Plato’s ‘Theatatus’;-
“We seek for wisdom, not in sense experience at all, but in that
other way of knowing, whatever called, in which the mind is alone and
engaged in being.”
John is a retired schoolteacher, married to Sylvia, a psychotherapist.
They have two children and three grandchildren and live in Richmond,
London.
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