Official Website of the
International Academy of Ikologiks & Advanced Studies, Inc.
*We have created this page because the focus of IKOLOGIKS and the IAIAS, Inc. is the celebration of "Life" or "Ankh Consciousness."  We inner-stand that those that depart from this
plain of consciousness due to illness, accident or old age have not really departed. The ancestors remain always with us in our hearts and minds, until the day comes when we join them
in the transition. These pages will celebrate the lives of those leaving us since 2005, and beyond, rather than throughout history.  
In Tribute to the
Ancestors, Heroes & Martyrs of Human Rights, Liberation, and Transformation
Some Personal Reflections ...
The time, was the winter of 1986 and it was a mere
coincidence that we met. Dr. Sinha maintained a
small modest room in the attic of the house.
Although, he was vehemently opposed to "gurism"
and mystical traditions he was also an unapologetic
realist and pragmatist. Consequently, few residents
would have realized how strong his positions were
until the publication of his book -- "The Gita As It Was
..."  

In December 1986 I became a student of Dr. Sinha to
obtain a Diploma In Yoga Therapy as a certified
Yoga Therapist. The intensive course was at times
gruelling and the pace a bit overwhelming for me,
because we were trying to learn in six months what
might normally take one to two years of training.
Sinha readily embraced me as his favorite student
and our personal relationship flourished. He secretly
shared many insights into Seeded Meditation,
Dharana Healing and Yoga Science that was not
shared with other class members. I was amazed at
his energy despite suffering from having throat
cancer which resulted in the removal of his voice
box. Sinha had been a chain smoker in his youth
and as a student at University of Chicago, where he
obtained his PhD. I remember the mechanical
robotic voice as we strained to understand his
lectures as he spoke through an electronic amplifier
at his throat. I taped almost all of our sessions and
hope to edit and prepare them as a library collection
available to members of the AUM-IAIAS, Inc. with the
opening of the ICGS in 2009.

After my graduation ceremony in May 1987 I
continued to work with Dr. Sinha on several of his
projects as an administrative assistant/secretary. I
typed letters, manuscripts and even made
appointments for him along with being his personal
chauffeur. We would chuckle as we drove in my
outdated Chevy Malibu whose floor board had rotted
away so that you could see the road surface as your
drove. I felt he had become the "father" I never had
and I confided in him my deepest thoughts and
feelings. But, as I began to share with him my own
works (Ikologiks) he seemed to reject anything that
would not service his own agenda. So after helping
him with a grant proposal being submitted to NIH and
the American Diabetes Association on the efficacy of
treating diabetes with Yoga Therapy, we slowly went
our own ways. However, I would always check-in on
him at his apartment in Arlington, Virgina from time to
time. We had dinner together often and I was often
surprised he ate chicken, meat (I was a strict
vegetarian at the time) and even drank some wine. I
often felt torn between what I had been taught by
other Indian spiritual masters (Gurus) and this
essentially atheistic teacher of Samkhya Darshan and
Yoga Science.  Sometimes, we even had heated
arguments over these teachings and their contrast
with the Vedic and Brahman teachings.
Because, I was also a close associate of Swami
Krsnapad (BT Swami, who recently passed away--
see tribute page) whose own spiritual teacher wrote
the "Gita As It Is" -- the Hare Krsna "Bible" I would
feel constantly torn. However, inside these apparent
conflicts and contradictions were easily reconciled
when I returned to the great wisdom bestowed to me
in the Ikologiks: Nine Principles of Life."  Ikologiks
theory, although rejected by both Sinha and BT
Swami actually transcended them both and helped
me to understand what a unique and powerful tool
had been imparted to me back 1977 when I received
the Nine Principles of Life.

As the years progressed, our personal relationship
grew increasingly turbulent, because Sinha wanted
to "clone" me as a representative of his own
teachings. Whereas, I already had been developing
my own teachings (Ikologiks) years prior to meeting
Sinha. Consequently, prior to the publication of UMP
in 1999 we lost contact and as I went overseas to
South Korea, we would not talk or meet again. I
always felt that it was as it should be, because a true
teacher wants his student to become a teacher not a
mere follower.

Today  I can see that some of Sinha's  other former
students are writing books, establishing yoga
centers or developing websites mimicking
Phulgenda Sinha's works. Most have done this
without any innovation of their own. Some even have
exploited Sinha's works for their own profit. While I
implicitly support the right of others to benefit from
the teachings they invested in studying,
nevertheless, it is sad to see that few have offered
any memorial or tribute to this great teacher.

I'll always remember that robotic voice saying "hello,
hello, ohh, Adisa --- how are you?" I'll forever
remember his gently pats on the back and his pure
child-like joy and excitement when he realized I
understood an aspect of Samkhya Darshan that was
hard to explain. I know a great part of him is inside
me and is manifesting in all my books and teachings
about yoga, meditation and healing.
HE IS A SELF-MADE MAN! SADGURU!
A young Phulgenda Sinha,PhD
practicing Yoga Asanas.

Former Students, Associates and the
General Public are welcome to share their
own memories, views and condolences for
our beloved SadGuru, Phulgenda Sinha PhD
on this website. Please use the below
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Phulgenda Sinha, PhD
1924 - 2006
Indian Institute of Yoga Graduation
Ceremony May 10, 1987 - Wash., DC
Phulgenda Sinha awards Roger Davis (Adisaji)
with his Diploma in Yoga Therapy (1987)
Magnetic, inspiring, disciplined, heroic, defiant, and magnanimous...
these are just some of the words I could use to describe this great
intellectual sage of wisdom and knowledge.

"Dr. Sinha" as we affectionately called/knew him whenever he taught us at his Indian Institute of Yoga was a
man who did not conform to our traditional notions about Yoga Masters or teachers. Sinha was soundly opposed
to the unbridled religiosity or the mystification of what he called "
Yoga science."  He was a frank and diligent
teacher that made no compromises in his desire to rid Indian society of the plague of "gurism" and the
mystification of the ancient books of India such as the Bhagavadgita and Yoga Sutras of Patanjili by the Brahman
religious elites.

Sinha was a devoted student of the ancient Indian sage Kapila (700 BC), who was responsible for
introducing the powerful philosophical school known as Samkhya (Sankhya) Darshan or
Philosophy. Sinha was inspired to write a monumental book in the late 1989s entitled "The Gita As
It Was: Rediscovering the Original Bhagavadgita" which has enshrined the importance of Kapila,
as a precursor to Buddhism and Patanjili. I fondly remember working with Dr. Sinha during the
final stages of him writing the book. I would shuttle him daily to the Library of Congress (where he
maintained a reserved "cage") and assisted him with preparing the indexing of the book prior to
publishing. We would have lunch afterwards and he would always spend time answering my
many questions about yoga therapy, seeded meditation and Dharana Healing. He deeply
influenced my own monumental literary work published in 1999 - titled Ultimate Mental Power,
which in some ways was a tribute to my beloved mentor and guide. Although, he did not
personally support my independent efforts or the Ikologiks theoretical method, he did always
suggest I do what was in my heart.
his guidance, but to the world. Because, the world has increasingly silenced those that would dare
challenge the orthodox teachings and views of their times. But, Sinha planted many "seeds" and
the work I perform through Ikologiks and the IAIAS, Inc. is just one manifestation of the legacy that
Sinha has left to the world.
In Loving Memory of
My Yoga Teacher & Mentor
Phulgenda Sinha
- by Adisaji -
    Biography & Memorial
    Phulgenda Sinha, PhD
Phulgenda Sinha was born in a rural village in the Indian State of Bihar,
called Patna under rather humble beginnings. The village was located near
the Indian border with Nepal. The area was well known for being the
birthplace of several notable Indian sages such as Kapila and Siddharta the
Buddha, which may have had an influence upon the young Sinha. As a
boy, Sinha was very slender and almost malnourished due to the
impoverished state of his family. However, in alignment with Indian customs
and cultural traditions he took his wife barely past his teen years.

Throughout his youth, Sinha had a talent for starting various local
enterprises to help support his family and maintain marriage. He also was a
disciplined student and easily obtained grades that made him eligible to go
to college in Patna on the undergraduate level. He had a dream of coming
to America to fulfill his life ambitions and successfully studied at the
University of Chicago, where he obtained his Masters Degree in Political
Science. He later attended American University where he was granted his
PhD degree. It was in Washington, DC during the early 1960s that Sinha
began teaching traditional Hatha Yoga, a practice that started in his youth. In
1965 he founded the Yoga Institute of Washington. However, he had never
pursued the practice seriously until he came to America. He taught Yoga
primarily to support his academic studies. But, his main interest was in
political science and the social transformation of Indian society after British
colonial rule. Sinha was briefly aligned with Praja Socialist Party and was
close friends with other activist like the famous Indian political scientist
George Fernandes. But, his true mentor was Jayaprakash Narayan who
inspired his impassioned mission to find ways to better Indian society.

According to his own autobiographical accounts, Sinha stated that after
receiving his PhD in Political Science from American University he returned
to India to continue his activist work in the empowerment of the Indian
masses that he had championed unselfishly from 1946 to 1957. During
those years he started numerous campaigns and organizations including
the 'Bharat Sundar Banao' or 'Make India Beautiful' campaign.

He ultimately became disillusioned with much of his political work and that
is when he began to see elements in the ancient Yoga and Meditation
sciences of India that might serve to better empower the Indian masses. He
began to realize that Yoga was being taught as part and parcel of secular
Hinduism. However, he gradually studied that Yoga pre-dated Hinduism,
Brahmanism and the mystical style of Yoga that was being spread around
the world by various Indian Swamis and Gurus. It was during this period of
soul-searching and reflection that Sinha began to elucidate his own ideas
about the "true meaning and value" of Yoga and Meditation practices. He
announced to the world that the mysticism and superstition rooted in
Hinduism had affixed itself to Yoga and meditation to such an extant that the
original system of Yoga expounded in the Samkhya Darshan of the Indian
sage Kapila had been lost.

In the 1970s Sinha intensified his knowledge and practice of Yoga and
became an adept in the more advanced teachings held in Raja Yoga.
Sinha began to teach not only Hatha Yoga but also the therapeutic
application of Yoga (Yoga Therapy). It was also in the early 1970s that
Sinha set-forth on his mission to challenge the mainstream advocates of
Yoga and began research which would culminate in 1987 with the
publishing of
"The Gita As It Was: Rediscovering the Original
Bhagavadgita."
This book would be a direct attack on the prominent Hare
Krsna (ISKON) movement of the 1960s and 70s and their founder's (Swami
Prabhupad) book of a similar title
"The Gita As It Is." Following the
publishing of this monumental work, Sinha was attacked ferociously by the
Orthodox Hindu community and especially those that sought to maintain the
practice of Yoga not as a science, but a religion.

Prior to his death, and throughout the 1990s Sinha was semi-retired having
been a victim and survivor of throat cancer. The cancer had taken him
earlier in his life (1970s), which resulted in the removal of his larynx and
vocal cords. He had to use a voice-box amplifier to speak for the
remainder of his life. While living in Arlington, Virginia he co-founded a
community health center in Washington, DC known as the Abundant Life
Clinic where he offered his expertise in Yoga Therapy and teaching Hatha
Yoga to students.

Sinha is survived by his wife (Shanti Devi) and elder son (Vinay Sinha) and
the remaining staff of the Indian Institute of Yoga in Patna, India. He is the
author of the best-selling book Yoga Therapy for Common Heath Problems
(18th Printing) and over 18 other books on Yoga, Meditation and Healing,
including Dharana Healing. His unpublished works include a major treatsie
and commentary  on Patanjili's Yoga Sutras and his own autobiography
"Self-Made Man."
Written by
Roger M. Davis
Copyright 2006, All Rights Reserved.
Comments on Death of Phulgenda, ... by Yatindra,
Dr. Phulgenda Sinha (1924-2006)

He (Sinha) was living in Arlington, Virginia, USA., (and was) admitted in
Arlington hospital on (the) 27th (of) Feb 2006, (he) underwent a
heart operation on 3rd of March, 2006, which was successful. But,
unfortunately (he) passed away on the 18th of March, 2006.

His body was brought to India on the 2nd of April, 2006 and (he) was cremated
on the 3rd of April, 2006 at his village,
Jabdi, Dist.
Sitamadi, State of Bihar, INDIA.

    - Yatindra -