ONCE UPON A time in India, a man lived. He would go on to become one of the most influential thinkers in new-age thought, but at this time \u2014 the early 1960s \u2014 he was merely a philosophy teacher, and one of thousands of gurus living and discoursing in that land of gurus. His name was Chandra Mohan Jain.\n\nBut even then, just a few years out of graduate school, Jain was different. \n\nTo call him charismatic would be a colossal understatement. By all accounts, this man could look into your eyes and speak to you for a half hour, and you would hurry home to sell all your earthly possessions to stay near him. \n\nHe was charismatic enough that, by 1966, he was drawing big enough crowds and making fat enough cash on the speaking circuit to quit his teaching job at the University of Jabalpur, seven years after taking it, to focus on his \u201cside hustle\u201d as an independent guru. (Near Antelope, Wasco County; 1980s) (For text and pictures, see https://offbeatoregon.com/23-08.rajneeshpuramPart1of5.html)