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The
White Lotus Foundation began with the opening of the Center for Yoga in
Los Angeles in late September, 1967 at 5355 Sunset Boulevard. The impetus
to start the Center came after Ganga had studied Yoga for a year and had
just returned from intensive residential training at the Sivananda Ashram.
Ganga, Billy Bahr and Radha McGowan were the original team assisted by
Ganga's brother, Stan
White. There were no start up funds so Ganga worked his old electronics
job; and Radha her Union Bank job; in order to pay the bills. The first
and second members of the Center
were Yogi and Mrs. Ernst Haeckel, original builders of our present retreat
in Santa Barbara.
The
Center was located in a former beauty school with business and living
quarters so the staff could live onsite creating a warm and homey atmosphere.
Walls were knocked out, flyers posted, and hundreds of hairpins pulled
out of the carpeting. Ganga had attained a high level of mastery of the
asanas and his lecture-demonstrations given around town quickly filled
all the classes. For the first few months of operation only a donation
bowl was put
out. Very often with a class of twenty there would only be a few dollars
in the bowl. Donations rarely averaged over $1 per person. Charles Hobby,
Jim Ellis and Tom DeSilva were three very early members who helped form
the Foundation. Charlie donated furniture and often brought food when
finances were low, Jim set up the bookkeeping and Tom DeSilva, an attorney
at the time, formed our nonprofit corporation. Were it not for the support
of people like these the Center would have closed.
The
Center grew very quickly and after six months the small first quarters
were not sufficient. Ganga scoured the town and located a space at 115
N. Larchmont that was being used as a John Birch Society book warehouse.
The
owner didn't want to rent it "to a group of Hindu hippies" but
after a favorable
front page article in the L.A. Times
on the Center he relented. A place of darkness was changed to a place
of light. The staff worked day and night cleaning the warehouse. They
found that the facility had once been a dance hall and uncovered wonderful
hardwood floors! They set about knocking out walls and refinishing the
floors. A Yoga deck was built on the roof and classes boomed with standing
room only. The Center was the first stopping place of
visiting Yoga dignitaries. This was the turbulent sixties! Yoga was exploding
and taking root in America. Ganga gave demonstrations at the Human
Be-in and the first Love-Ins. He also flew in Swami Vishnu's
peace plane over the War Moratorium demonstration in San Francisco dropping
flowers and peace leaflets. Times were exciting.
Ganga became vice president of the Sivananda
Organization
and the Center was host to a constant stream of Yoga luminaries. Yogis,
Swamis, Rimpoches, Tibetans and spiritual leaders from many traditions
were
regular speakers at the Center. In 1968 Ganga organized and led what was
most probably the first Yoga Teacher training in the US - The In-Depth
Yoga and Teacher Training. In 1969 a national tour was
organized and he gave
Yoga lecture-demonstrations at universities, new thought churches, and
centers. Yoga was often called yogurt and fun was poked at yogis in pretzel
positions. The
Foundation opened centers in Washington D.C. and later in San Francisco,
and in 1970 the Yoga Farm Retreat, in Grass Valley, California. In
the early 70's tours were conducted to Europe and study groups were taken
to India. Peter Sellers and other celebrities were amongst the hosts and
students. Ganga was often featured in TV interviews, stories and in Hollywood
films. During this time the Foundation also broke its direct
ties with India and the Sivananda organization and became independent.
This was partially precipitated when
numerous financial and other duplicities of the head Swami in America
came to light. The
Swami tried to sue and take over our organization
but in a legal meeting his own attorney
agreed
with our side and convinced the
Swami to withdraw his case. The
Swami then was
forced
to pay back several bad loans to students he had borrowed money from,
at which time, except for the Center for Yoga in Los Angeles, the other
centers Ganga started were given to local staffs and the Swami's organization.
Similar things of this nature happened in other Yoga organizations.
White Lotus became Dedicated to the development of the total human
being and to elucidating a free, open and contemporary approach to
Yoga.
In
1976 the Foundation hosted BKS Iyengar and began a long series of workshops
that introduced Iyengar Yoga to the greater Los
Angeles area. During this year the Foundation began a search for a property
suitable for creating a Yoga ashram retreat. We nearly acquired a large
ranch house on the San Marcos Pass in Santa Barbara but the Board decided
not to close escrow because of improper zoning. Then, with the help of
our generous friend, Clarence E. Minnerly, Paradise Kutir, a house-retreat
in the national forest, was purchased instead. Classes, workshops and
regular weekend retreats were held. In 1977 the L.A. Center
moved and expanded into a former Masonic Lodge building. Again massive
renovations were done
by the staff. It was a large brick building with a 40 x 65 foot asana
room with 24 foot ceilings and maple floors. It became one of the most
beautiful,
influential and dynamic centers in the US. In
1978 Double Yoga was published introducing a new system - Yoga
asanas with a partner. The Center hosted K.
Pattabhi Jois as well a series of workshops introducing
Ashtanga Yoga to the greater Los Angeles area.
1983
was a major milestone for the
White Lotus Foundation when Tracey Rich brought her grace, insight,
artistry and vision to the Foundation. Nine months later our retreat-ashram-headquarters
in Santa Barbara were acquired from Yogi and Mrs.
Ernst Haeckel, our first and second members back in 1967! It had long
been Yogi Haeckel's wish to have Ganga on board with him
and see the Center completed during his lifetime. White Lotus began to
pour all of its energy and resources into fulfilling this
mutual dream. It took three years of clean up, renovation, construction
and love to bring the Center into full operation. Ruth
and Yogi Haeckel lived at and were taken
care of by the
center, watching
its growth and fruition until their
passing in 1990. The retreat now enjoys an international reputation
for excellence.
Yoga students come from around the world for courses and to learn a broad
vision of Yoga and to be trained as teachers.
The nineties
started
off with a blaze. The biggest fire in Santa Barbara
history began near the entrance to our retreat during a teacher training
program.
Within a couple of hours 600 homes were reduced to ashes. The fire blazed
for
three days and
burned up to, and stopped at, two of our property lines without serious
damage to the Center. The retreat was used as a base for firefighters.
Our
program continued at a nearby hotel and the center was back in operation
within a few
weeks. Landslides and floods also accompanied this decade. We were able
to make many improvements to the retreat during this era,
some nudged by the not so gentle hand of nature.
Paul Cooke, noted English sculptor and one of our original builders, spent
the better part of this decade with us. His touch graces every nook and
cranny of the center. Beatrix Rohlsen, executive chef, joined the staff
in the nineties, making the retreat's cuisine legendary. Beverly Messenger
signed on as office choreographer bringing her beautiful flow and creative,
loving energy to White Lotus.
During
the mid nineties White Lotus participated in Amazonian Rainforest preservation
efforts, the Brazilian Earth Summit, and hosted a series of gatherings
and sacred ceremonies with rainforest Shamans and Maestros. The first
Yoga workout video, The Flow Series, was released and helped create the
wave of yoga videos. The Flow Series is practiced and taught around the
world. In 1994 our Total Yoga I was
produced and later became the number one Yoga video worldwide and in the
USA with sales now approaching 1.5 million and still going strong. In
2002 the first high definition videos, Earth, Water and Fire, were released
by Time-Warner and quickly received critical acclaim setting a new standard
for detail, quality and beauty in Yoga videos. The Foundation also continues
to host numerous celebrities and prominent leaders, as well as retreats
and events with leading teachers in the Yoga community.
As
we move into the new millennium White Lotus hopes to continue to realize
its goals and dreams on higher, more effective levels. New improvements
to the retreat are being planned. Ganga is in the final stages of completion
of a book that will present
a broad and contemporary vision of the teachings of Yoga
for the 21st century. We look forward to your continued participation
and support.

Board of Trustees:
Ganga White, Founder
Tracey Rich, Trustee, Co-director
Tom DeSilva, Esq., Founding member WLF, Founder Erewhon Natural Foods
Jon Solish, Esq., Legal scholar
David Gordon White, PhD, Author, Sanskrit/Hinduism Professor, UCSB
Advisory Board:
Diana Alstad, PhD, author, social critic, speaker
Chuck Blitz, activist
Hyla Cass, MD, author, integrative medicine expert
Evelyn de Buhr, painter, artist, activist
Marguerite Gaffney, artist, designer
Richard Glantz, Esq., mediator, philosopher
Charles
Grob, MD, psychiatrist, professor, entheogenic researcher
Sandra Hay, film producer, artist
Sven Holcomb, musician, recording engineer, yoga teacher
Jerry Isenberg, producer, professor cinema-TV, USC
Carl Lauten, director, producer
Joel Kramer, international yogi, author, philosopher
Caroline MacDougal, herbal products designer, founder Teeccino Caffe
Dennis McKenna, PhD, ethnobotanist, author
Hale and Anne Milgrim, music producers, environmentalists, activists
Travis Price, environmental architect, designer
Frank Rothschild, Esq., author, judge, artist, surfer
Mark Schlenz, PhD, environmental philosopher, UCSB
Jason Saleeby, PhD, geo-physicist, Cal-Tech University
Sting, CBE, musician, environmentalist, yogi
Allen Thomashefsky, MD, orthopedics, sports medicine
Andrew Ungerleider, founder of Natural Nectar, environmentalist
Andrew Weil, MD, author, longevity expert, integrative medicine
Catherine Weinberger-Thomas, PhD., author, professor, indologist

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