98/Feature Reports/Can Meditation Solve The Crime Problems In Prisons?
Can Meditation Solve The Crime Problems In Prisons?
By Brother Initiate Jeen-Fong, Taipei, Formosa
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
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.
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.