Feature
Reports |
Can
Meditation Solve The Crime Problems In Prisons?
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By Brother Initiate Jeen-Fong,
Taipei, Formosa
America
has more prison inmates than any other nation in the world. Specifically,
its jailed population is five times the number in other industrialized
nations. In 1970 there were fewer than 200,000 prisoners in the U.S.
Today, less than 30 years later, the number has increased almost tenfold.
The states are spending an annual average of US$100 million on building
new prisons to accommodate the growing inmate population.
Although
new educational methods such as vocational training and psychotherapy
are frequently introduced, they have been ineffective in reducing
recidivism. Two-thirds of those jailed for felonies commit criminal
offenses within three years after release.
Judge
Mason, in his fifth year as a St. Louis Circuit Court judge handling
major criminal and civil cases, grew up in tough neighborhoods in
Tennessee and New York City where he was exposed to drug abuse, violence,
and crime every day. He saw friends suffering from drug abuse thrown
behind bars. Even his own family members were addicted to drugs and
engaged in violent acts. When Judge Mason found that not one study
indicated that the crime rate could be lowered by increased incarceration,
he decided to introduce meditation into the prison system. To date,
seven people found guilty of criminal offenses have been sentenced
to learning a stress-reducing meditation technique. Mason plans to
increase the number to a hundred in a preliminary study in which convicts
are assigned to meditation practice during probation. Placing much
hope on having meditation become an alternative to imprisonment and
thereby relieving the prison shortage problem, he has been called
a "crime fighter".
In
other prison systems, a meditation program has been used whereby practitioners
sit comfortably in a chair with their eyes closed twice a day for
15 to 20 minutes. Thousands of inmates and correctional officers have
learned this technique. The following are brief reports of the experiences
by those who have practiced this method:
1.
Bill McCuistion, correctional counselor, San Quentin Prison, California,
U.S.:
I
have observed positive changes among inmates who meditate. Initially,
the inmates were apprehensive about keeping their eyes closed for
20 minutes while they were together with inmates of other backgrounds.
But now when these people gather together, we see that alienation
has been replaced by a sense of cohesiveness. I have seen hostility
give way to congeniality over the past few years.
2. John
G., inmate, San Quentin Prison, California, U.S.:
"For
years, life meant nothing to me but drugs and penitentiaries. These
things had eaten up my mind. Who would have thought that I would find
inner peace at a place called San Quentin. Meditation gives a person
something that no one can take away. That something is inner peace
and a discovery of one's inner self."
3. A.W.,
inmate, Senegal, West Africa:
Meditation
has changed my attitude toward correctional officers and my fellow
inmates. Now I am more self-confident and filled with a spirit of
peace and harmony. I behave better. Frankly, I confess that when the
program started, I did not fully agree with it. But now I can only
say that I have been quite fortunate. My only regret is that I started
too late.
4. Victor
R., inmate, Vacaville Prison, California, U.S.:
"I
feel very conscious and am more active about communicating with others.
Work has become easier and I can do it in a more orderly way. People
are responding to me with warmth and sincerity. They have noticed
how full of life I am."
Studies on
meditation have demonstrated that prison inmates gain many benefits
from the technique. Some of these benefits include:
1. Improved mental
and spiritual health, and reduced drug abuse. Meditation
helps to maintain a more balanced and stable physiological functioning.
This, in effect, brings about significant changes in the long-standing
aberrant behavior patterns of drug abusers. Homeostasis in physiological
functioning is correlated with positive behavior that carries over
into life upon release from prison.
2. Better sleep
patterns, relief from insomnia, more involvement in positive activities,
and better psychological conditioning. A cross-validation
study of 150 inmates in California's Folsom State Prison indicated
that meditation significantly reduced state and trait anxiety, insomnia,
neuroticism, and behavioral infractions.
3. Less stress
and anxiety. Meditation has
been shown to reduce the level of stress in prisoners as measured
physiologically by their spontaneous skin resistance responses. Studies
have shown that regular meditation practice is proportionately related
to self-discipline and stability.
4. Fewer visits
to the hospital and doctor, and decreased use of prescribed drugs.
5. Reduced violence
and fear of violence. Senegal's
President Abdou Diouf introduced meditation programs in 31 prisons
nationwide. More than 11,000 prisoners and 900 correctional officers
learned the method. Prison violence has since decreased markedly and
recidivism rates have plunged from 90 percent to 8 percent.
6. Reduced recidivism.
A study of more than 100 maximum security inmates at the Massachusetts
Correctional Institution showed that those who meditated became less
aggressive and suffered less from mental disorders as compared to
those in the wait-list control group and four other rehabilitation
programs. Meditation was found to significantly reduce anxiety, aggression,
tension, and introversion. The recidivism rate for those who meditated
was 30 to 35 percent lower than for those in the other four treatment
groups.
For those released
after completing their jail sentences, the following benefits have
been seen:
1. Lower drug and alcohol intake rates
2. Lower recidivism rates
3. Greater success at work
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Members
of the Supreme Master Ching Hai
International Association pay frequent visits to
prisons around the world to express their
concern and hope that the inmates will seek
freedom for their souls.
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These
studies indicate that while prison life causes a build-up of physiological
stress and in effect leads to violent and antisocial behavior among
inmates, concomitant use of meditation techniques may help to alleviate
or significantly decrease tendencies toward violent behavior. The
evidence tends to indicate that meditation is more effective than
other correctional methods in bringing about positive behavioral changes
in inmates. In October 1996, Judge Sherri Sullivan of Missouri's 22nd
Circuit Court inaugurated a meditation center that can house 300 to
400 probationers. The opening of this center marks a new trend in
ideology toward resolution of the crime issue.
Postscript:
The
mediation methods implemented in the cited studies are widely divergent
from the Quan Yin Method, nevertheless, their effect on prisoners'
rehabilitation and the results from scientific research prove that
mediation has been greatly beneficial to the inmates. This is indeed
admirable.
In
studies of meditation in 48 cities, researchers found that in those
cities with more than one percent of the population practicing meditation,
there was a 16.6 percent lower crime rate as compared with those cities
that had less than one percent of the population practicing meditation.
These results substantiate our Master's teachings that the practice
of meditation changes the atmosphere of the environment and improves
the quality of life of those in our surroundings whether or not they
practice meditation. Master Ching Hai said that one of the best ways
to usher in the Golden Age and change the Earth into a paradise is
to increase the meditating population of the world. This is the way
to purify the environment of our Earth planet.
Reference:
(1) Julie Hirschfeld,
"Judge Tries Thoughtful Sentence, Frequent Meditation Called Crime-Fighter,
"St. Louis Post-Dispatch Sunday, July 21, 1996.
(2) http://www.miu.edu/rehabilitation/
(3) Robert Roth, Scientific Research on the Maharishi Transcendental
Meditation and TM-Sidhi Programs: A Brief Summary of 500 Studies,
Maharishi University of Management Press.
(4) Robert Roth, Scientific Research On The Mahasrishi Transcendental
Meditation And TM-Sidhi Programs: Collected Papers, Volume 1-5.
(5) D.W. Orme-Johnson, J. Kiehlbauch, R. Moore, And J. Bristol, Personality
And Autonomic Changes In Prisons Practicing The Transcendental Meditation
Technique, University Of Texas At El Paso, El Paso, Texas, U.S.A.,
1971.
(6) P. W. Gelderloos, D. W. Orme-Johnson, And C.N. Alexander, "Effectiveness
Of The Transcendental Meditation Program In Preventing And Treating
Substance Misuse: A Review," The International Journal of the Addictions
26 (3), pp.293-325, 1991.
(7) Abrams And Siegal, "The Transcendental Meditation Program And
Rehabilitation At Folsom State Prison," Criminal Justice And Behavior,
Vol. 5, No. 1, pp.3-20,1978.
(8) Alexander, Ego Development, Personality And Behavioral Change
In Inmates Practicing The Transcendental Mesitation Technique Or Participating
In Other Programs: A Cross-Sectional And Longitudinal Study, Harvard
Doctoral Dissertation, 1982.
(9) Colonel Mahadou Diop, The Maharishi Unified Field Based System
of Rehabilitation in Senegalese Prisons, Annual Seminar, Dakar, Senegal,
Feb. 1998.
(10) Chris and Janet Attwood. "Hope for Rehabilitation Missouri Judge
is First to Sentence Probationers to TM." Fairfield, Iowa, Maharishi
International University, Dec./Jan., 1996/97.
(11) Bo Lozoff, Prison-Ashram Project, from http://www.humankindness.org/project.html/
(12) M.C. Dillbeck, G. Landrith III, And D.W. Orme-Johnson, "The Transcendental
Meditation Program and Crime Rate in a Sample Forty-eight Cities,
"Journal of Crime And Justice 4, pp.25-45, 1981.
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