THE MYSTERIOUS DR.TUESDAY LOBSANG RAMPA
By Dr.V.S.Gopalakrishnan Ph.D.,IAS Retd.
In the 1960s, the talk of the town in
At that time the identity of the author was a mystery and not revealed. ‘The Third Eye’ was supposed to be autobiographical but there was not a single photo of the author Lobsang Rampa. The author said that he lived in
The contents of the book were highly mystical and magical and took the reader into an altogether different mind-world. Rampa said that astrologers predicted that he would take up priesthood (lama-hood) at the age of seven. And that came true. The poor youngster then lost complete touch with his parents and people.
Rampa describes at length the Lhasan brand of Buddhism which would strain our credulity. It seems that monks were asked to do kite-flying and kill themselves! A third eye is fixed to a lama by a painful process of drilling in the forehead by which he acquires special spiritual powers which can be channeled for the welfare of humanity. New-born Tibetan babies were washed in ice-cold flowing river waters so as to ensure that the physically weak were eliminated and only the babies who could take the rigour of ice-cold water and thereby judged to be fit, could form the Tibetan community!
The book mentioned no social customs of the Lhasans except that the dead bodies were disposed off in the open air! There is no description of the love-life of the inhabitants. There is a chapter on Yeti, the mysterious snow-man which is yet to be captured. The author’s sighting of and encounters with Yetis, raises interesting questions! The author’s theory about ‘invisibility’, and his writings on clairvoyance and levitation, would have greatly interested the western readers. The author talks about the alleged superstition of Tibetans about “wheels”. We all regard that the wheel was a great invention of the man in ancient times, and we always talk about “wheels of progress”. Yet, it is stated by the author that the Tibetans believed that ‘wheels’ would drive away peace! The author practically and in a round-about manner would have seemed to want us to think that the men who drank yaks’ milk also inherited yaks’ properties!
No wonder that while the book was fascinating to read, the critics and the media believed that Rampa was a fraud, a fake, a charlatan. The piqued author therefore gave no interviews to media-men except thrice in his lifetime.
After this book, Rampa went on to write 17 more books, thus eighteen in all, before he died in 1981 at Calgary, Canada. Now, with the internet revolution, we can get fabulous information about the nature of contents of the remaining 17 books. In this connection, readers may access:
http://www.karenmutton.com/rampa/intro.htm
Presently, many facts stand revealed about Rampa. He was an Englishman who spoke with a
Rampa’s photographs can be accessed through google. He had a shaven head and grey beard. He had two cats. Rampa claimed that he could talk with them by telepathy. Rampa claimed that he was a born lama, and he studied medicine in Lhasa and Chunking,

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