Looking back: The Bhagwan and Rajneeshpuram in Eastern Oregon

Media Watch

Photographer Chris Pietsch remembers visiting our commune, published in The Eugene Register-Guard, Eugene, Oregon, August 2, 2025 – with 21 photos from their picture gallery

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Drive-by
Followers of the Rajneesh movement line a road for a November 1984 [or 1983? ed.] drive-by appearance of Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh at the Rajneeshpuram commune in central Oregon. The Bhagwan, a spiritual leader from India, amassed a fleet of more than 90 Rolls-Royce cars that he would drive that he would drive through the city for the daily ritual.
George Millener/The Register-Guard

One of the most bizarre periods in Oregon history began over 40 years ago in a remote part of the state still populated by more cows than people.

In 1981, devotees of a then little known religious leader from India, Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, purchased a 64,229-acre property in Eastern Oregon called The Big Muddy Ranch.

Rajneesh and his personal secretary, Ma Anand Sheela, soon established a commune they called Rajneeshpuram that drew thousands of devotees. These devotees called themselves Sannyasins and dressed in red-hued colors to symbolize “the sunrise of the inner world.”

What followed — questions of religious freedom, property rights, accusations of attempted murder and ultimately a bio terror attack on the people of Wasco County that sicken over 700 people — brought law enforcement and international news media scrutiny to Oregon.

As a 28-year-old photographer working for the Lewiston Morning Tribune in Lewiston, Idaho, I was among the media that traveled to Rajneeshpuram in the 1980s. Reporters and photographers from The Register-Guard also journeyed to the ranch over the years.

I was excited to see the commune with my own eyes. The place was a feast for the eye and camera. The sight of thousands of Sannyasins dressed in purple, red and orange, a doe-eyed holy man in flowing robes holding court, all staged on a picturesque ranch in sagebrush country was bizarre enough, but the blissful devotees dancing day and night while being guarded by semi-automatic weapon-carrying commune police made the scene otherworldly.

When I visited in 1985, little did I know that the commune was falling apart from within. An internal battle between Rajneesh and Sheela came to a head that year as evidence of a conspiracy to murder and poison members of the nearby communities was revealed. The audacious plan was to install loyalists in public office in Wasco County.

Sheela and her confidants fled to Europe one step ahead of the law and Rajneesh emerged from his silence, changed his name to Osho and tried to rally the remaining disciples. But it was too late. Federal and state law enforcement were closing in.

Rajneesh was eventually deported, some of his followers including Sheela were jailed and Rajneeshpuram was abandoned. It has since found new life as a Christian summer camp called Washington Family Ranch.

The story of The Bhagwan and commune in Eastern Oregon has filled books and provided material for hour-long documentaries, but here are the highlights.

Picture Gallery

Drive-by
Followers of the Rajneesh movement line a road for a November 1984 drive-by appearance of Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh at the Rajneeshpuram commune in central Oregon. The Bhagwan, a spiritual leader from India, amassed a fleet of more than 90 Rolls-Royce cars that he would drive that he would drive through the city for the daily ritual.
Air Rajneesh
The airport in Rajneeshpuram in 1983.
Sannyasins gather in a giant large meditation center at Rajneeshpuram in 1983.
Sannyasins gather in a giant large meditation center at Rajneeshpuram in 1983.
Rajneesh’s personal secretary Ma Anand Sheela in 1983.
Rajneesh’s personal secretary Ma Anand Sheela in 1983.
Dan Bates/The Register-Guard
Jon Bowerman
Jon Bowerman, owner of the ranch across the John Day Rover from Rancho Rajneesh, looks out across the land in 1983.
Teenagers in Antelope
Children of the followers of Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh walk though Rajneesh, formally Antelope, in 1983.
Dan Bates/The Register-Guard
Mandir with armed guard
Two hand-chosen devotees dance with Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, center right, as he arrives for a prayer meeting and lecture as an armed security guard keeps watch on the crowd of thousands in a grand covered hall at Rajneeshpuram in Eastern Oregon in 1985.
Celebration in Mandir
Thousands of devotees gather in a huge covered structure in Rajneeshpuram for morning prayer in 1985.
Osho
The doe-eyed spiritual leader Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh breaks his vow of silence to speak with media in the months before the commune imploded in scandal and criminal charges in 1985.
Mala with bead
Devotees of the guru changed their names, dressed in clothes the color of the sunrise and wore necklaces called “Malas” to honor Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh in 1985.
Surdas Farm
Formally The Big Muddy Ranch, Rajneeshpuram had water rights from the nearby John Day River and used them to established a huge agricultural operation on the 64,229-acre site during the 1980s.
Reaping the crops
A Sannyasin brings in the crops from the extensive gardens on the ranch. The commune had the goal of eventually being self-sufficient in the 1980s.
Gachchhamis
Sannyasins gather to pray early in the morning before beginning their work in the fields of Rajneeshpuram in Eastern Oregon in 1985.
Osho dancing with sannyasin
An enthusiastic Sannyasin dances with Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, right, as he arrives for an interview in 1985.
Townhouses
Followers of Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh had built extensive housing and other buildings by 1985.
In Mandir
Devotees pray and sway during a gathering in Rajneeshpuram in 1985.
Paul Carter/The Register-Guard
In Mandir
Devotees pray and sway during a gathering in Rajneeshpuram in 1985.
Departure from Rajneeshpuram
Members of Rajneeshpuram say goodbye as the commune begins to fall apart in 1985.
reporter Mike Stahlberg
Register-Guard reporter Mike Stahlberg covering the Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh in 1985.

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Timeline of Rajneeshpuram in Oregon

1981 — John Shelfer, husband of Ma Anand Sheela signed a purchase contract to buy The Big Muddy Ranch that spread across two counties (Wasco and Jefferson). The group changed the name to “Rancho Rajneesh.”

1982 — The new residents, all followers of Rajneesh, voted to incorporate as a city they called Rajneeshpuram. Concerns from neighbors, rural land use advocates and politicians soon lead to negative publicity, law enforcement scrutiny and lawsuits against the commune.

1983 — Rajneesh swore a vow of silence and reportedly passed on day-to-day leadership responsibilities for the commune to Sheela.

1984 — As tensions with neighbors escalated, devotees bought property in the nearby town of Antelope, elected their own officials and changed the name of the town to Rajneesh.

1984 — Known as the “sex guru” while in India, as the AIDS epidemic became more
widespread in the U.S., Rajneesh began promoting a “Noah’s Ark of consciousness,” advocating for the use of rubber gloves and condoms among his followers.

1984 — In an apparent effort to sway the Wasco County election and bolster their workforce on the ranch, the commune began recruiting people, some homeless, from nearby cities to join the commune. As the fall elections neared, a Salmonella outbreak occurred in The Dalles, the Wasco County seat, that sickened 751 people. It was later [allegedly, ed.] revealed to be a bio terror attack by members of the commune under the direction of Sheela, aimed at discouraging voter turnout.

1985 — Sheela and her associates fled to Europe. Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh renounced his vow of silence, publicly denounced his former secretary and changed his name to Osho [sic].

A subsequent criminal investigation, the largest in Oregon history, confirmed Sheela and secretive group of loyalists engaged in a variety of criminal activities, including a widespread poisoning in The Dalles along with attempted poisoning of two public officials, attempted murder of Rajneesh’s physician, wiretapping within the commune and arson. Sheela and several associates were extradited, tried, convicted and sentenced to prison in the U.S.

As immigration officials investigated Rajneesh’s legal status in the U.S., he and several others tried to flee the country in two rented Learjets. He was arrested, convicted of immigration fraud and later agreed to leave the country.

1990 — Rajneesh, known as Osho [from 1989, ed.], settled back in India and died at the age of 58 while living in an ashram in Pune, India.

Contact photographer Chris Pietsch at chris.pietsch@registerguard.com, or follow him on Twitter @ChrisPietsch and Instagram @chrispietsch

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