1 1•111•1111111M11111N1 AVA CARMEL ISRAEL Meditating at Kibbutz Yahad. Special to The Jewish News f one percent of the population of a country practiced transcendental meditation, there would be 15 to 20 percent fewer road ac- cidents and incidents of crime, arson, rape and di- vorce," claims Helen Doron, a teacher of the technique in Israel. Israel's transcendental me- ditation movement reached its peak in the early 1970s. Says Israel Dvir, 38, "We us- ed to hold weekend courses and feel so wonderful to- gether, that every time a course ended, it broke our hearts to separate. The idea of forming a nucleus group slow- ly evolved and we began look- ing for a place to live together." In 1980, Hararit, the first TM communal settlement in Israel, was established. The site was Mount Netufa in Lower Galilee, where the air is clear, the environment unspoiled and the panoramic view magnificent — a very conducive environment for meditation. David Doron says, "We were naive then. We thought we could earn our living as TM instructors, but everyone in Hararit already knows how to meditate?' Doron now grows organic herbs on the Galilee hills surrounding Hararit while Helen, his wife, teaches children English using a pro- gram of tapes and workbooks I Deep Thought Israel's two Transcendental Meditation communities will soon re-unite. she created. Other members work in computer software, insurance, clothing manufac- turing and several are artists. In 1983, the single members broke away to form their own settlement, a kib- butz named Yahad, which means "together." Since that time they have been living in caravans in a valley about 30 miles from Hararit; "a tran- sit camp," members jokingly call it. Many have since mar- ried and there are now 20 children in Yahad. In Hararit, the emphasis is on individuality. In Yahad, togetherness is definitely the key word. The 70 members meditate together twice dai- ly, eat their vegetarian meals in a communal dining hall and work together in an elec- tronic and computer factory, a CAD (computer aided design) studio, a ceramic jewelry workshop and a health clinic employing the Maharishi Ayurvedic medical In 1980, Hararit, the first TM communal settlement in Israel, was established. The site was Mount Netufa in Lower Galilee. techniques, which include vigorous massage and herbal remedies. One would think so much togetherness would get on each other's nerves, but the members claim otherwise. Dvir, head of the CAD studio, says, "Everyone here is very tolerant. There are no ex- plosive arguments and people don't speak badly of their neighbors. Coming to a kib- butz of meditators was a corn- promise in my life. I knew I could forget about a well-paid job in the city, but I decided to go in the direction of spiritual development." While Yahad was searching for a permanent home, the Jewish Agency's settlement department offered them a site adjacent to Hararit, assuming that the only two TM settlements in Israel would want to be neighbors. Members of both com- munities, however, are ap- prehensive about the pending marriage. Although they will share municipal services, each settlement will be economically independent. One reason that both set- tlements have agreed to this unique symbiosis is that after morning and evening medita- tion, many members practice siddhi techniques. These are advanced practices, the most controversial of which is "fly- ing," effortless hopping crosslegged on a soft mat- tress. The aim of the techni- que is to "strengthen the stability of pure con- sciousness" and adherents profess to occasional levita- tion. A "flying dome" is to be built to serve both communities. "If the square root of one percent of a population prac- tices the siddhi techniques under one roof on a regular basis," they claim, "it will bring peace, harmony and prosperity to the country." This adds up to 200 peple in Israel. More than this number of Israelis have already learned the techni- que, but the problem is how to attract them to come live on an isolated mountaintop in Galilee. With the combined popula- tions of Yahad and Hararit, there will be about 70 siddhis. Members hope that the twin settlements will attract enough aspiring siddhis to reach the 200 necessary to improve the political situa- tion in the volatile Middle East. May they succeed. ❑ World Zionist Press Service THE nFTROIT LIEWISH_NEWS 159