cover image THE MYSTIQUE OF ENLIGHTENMENT: The Radical Ideas of U.G. Krishnamurti

THE MYSTIQUE OF ENLIGHTENMENT: The Radical Ideas of U.G. Krishnamurti

, . . Sentient Publications, $14.95 (159pp) ISBN 978-0-9710786-1-1

Although U.G. Krishnamurti claims that enlightenment can neither be described by language nor attained by practices or preparations of any sort, this book—ironically enough—offers his ideas on the subject. Krishnamurti prefers the term "natural state" to "enlightenment" because it occurs in spite of, not because of, spiritual devotions. No guru, religion or belief can induce the natural state, he says, and therefore spiritual leaders are false in dictating practices. Still, Krishnamurti claims that the natural state is the same as that attained by the Buddha, Jesus and even Socrates. As a precursor to the natural state, Krishnamurti experienced a physically torturous period that he calls "the calamity," a deathlike process characterized by headaches, swelling at the chakras and intense heat like an explosion that destroys "the illusion that there is continuity of thought, that there is a center, an 'I'...." U.G. Krishnamurti takes pains to distance himself from J. Krishnamurti—no relation, although the two did travel in similar circles and knew each other informally—a spiritual leader whose own enlightenment was presaged by a physically torturous period known as the "Process." Indeed, the philosophy of U.G. Krishnamurti is not radically different from that of many other gurus. Metaphors of death and acausality are hardly exclusive, and the heart of his experience—the dissolving of the "I"— belongs squarely within the realm of nondualistic Hindu tradition. What typifies this book is the unfortunate way U.G. Krishnamurti dismisses other practitioners while offering little more in their place. (Apr.)