Jonathan Spollen | |
---|---|
Born | Leonard Jonathan Spollen 1983 |
Disappeared | 3 February 2012 (age 28) Lakshman Jhula, Rishikesh |
Status | Missing for 12 years, 5 months and 25 days |
Nationality | Irish |
Height | 6 ft (1.8 m) |
Leonard Jonathan Spollen [1] (born 1983) disappeared on 3 February 2012 while working as a journalist for the International Herald Tribune newspaper; he was formerly Assistant Foreign Editor of The National in Abu Dhabi.[ citation needed] He went missing from the northern Indian tourist attraction of Rishikesh, sparking an international campaign to locate him, [2] which included his local TD, Eoghan Murphy, raising the issue in the Irish Parliament. [3] It is believed by several analysts that he may have joined a cloistered and extreme Hindu religious cult. [1] [2] [3] Others speculate that Spollen died in 2012, either as a result of drowning in the River Ganges [4], or after having been attacked by a wild animal. [5]
Spollen has worked on stories including the Iranian nuclear programme, [4] the Hijab controversy in Ireland [5] and the 2009 Iranian Elections. [6] He read Philosophy and Politics at University College Dublin, before commencing postgraduate studies in 2004 focusing on the Near and Middle East at London's School of Oriental and African Studies. [7]
Some commentators have speculated that Spollen may have fallen prey to a supposed condition increasingly described as the India syndrome, which shares similarities with the alleged form of spiritual hysteria known as the Jerusalem syndrome. [2] [8] Scott Carney, for example, states that Spollen: "fits the profile of the fervent young enthusiast of yoga, meditation, and Eastern thought who becomes lost—or worse—on a journey of spiritual self-discovery." [9] [8] However, this claim has yet to be substantiated.[ citation needed]
Placing this within the history of negative perceptions of non-Western cultures said to be characteristic of much Western analysis as contended by Edward Said, Hammmerbeck further states:
"This point of view parallels Said and other critics’ rather orthodox Orientalism, a clear thesis/antithesis between home and foreign cultures with no possible synthesis. The foreign other, in this case the guru as embodiment of Hindu mysticism, functions as a negative of Western values, consistent with the approach that Said and others propose as being the historical epistemology of Orientalism." [6]
On the fifth anniversary of his disappearance, the BBC News website published a major feature on Spollen, written by his former colleague and now BBC journalist Roland Hughes. [7]
Spollen is still considered a missing person. [10] Indian police and Irish authorities are calling for any information as to his whereabouts, [1] with the former also reportedly investigating Spollen for breaching Indian visa regulations [8], in the event that he has remained in the country. Overstaying a visa carries a maximum penalty under The Foreigners Act, 1946 of five years imprisonment with a fine and subsequent deportation from India. [9]
Jonathan Spollen | |
---|---|
Born | Leonard Jonathan Spollen 1983 |
Disappeared | 3 February 2012 (age 28) Lakshman Jhula, Rishikesh |
Status | Missing for 12 years, 5 months and 25 days |
Nationality | Irish |
Height | 6 ft (1.8 m) |
Leonard Jonathan Spollen [1] (born 1983) disappeared on 3 February 2012 while working as a journalist for the International Herald Tribune newspaper; he was formerly Assistant Foreign Editor of The National in Abu Dhabi.[ citation needed] He went missing from the northern Indian tourist attraction of Rishikesh, sparking an international campaign to locate him, [2] which included his local TD, Eoghan Murphy, raising the issue in the Irish Parliament. [3] It is believed by several analysts that he may have joined a cloistered and extreme Hindu religious cult. [1] [2] [3] Others speculate that Spollen died in 2012, either as a result of drowning in the River Ganges [4], or after having been attacked by a wild animal. [5]
Spollen has worked on stories including the Iranian nuclear programme, [4] the Hijab controversy in Ireland [5] and the 2009 Iranian Elections. [6] He read Philosophy and Politics at University College Dublin, before commencing postgraduate studies in 2004 focusing on the Near and Middle East at London's School of Oriental and African Studies. [7]
Some commentators have speculated that Spollen may have fallen prey to a supposed condition increasingly described as the India syndrome, which shares similarities with the alleged form of spiritual hysteria known as the Jerusalem syndrome. [2] [8] Scott Carney, for example, states that Spollen: "fits the profile of the fervent young enthusiast of yoga, meditation, and Eastern thought who becomes lost—or worse—on a journey of spiritual self-discovery." [9] [8] However, this claim has yet to be substantiated.[ citation needed]
Placing this within the history of negative perceptions of non-Western cultures said to be characteristic of much Western analysis as contended by Edward Said, Hammmerbeck further states:
"This point of view parallels Said and other critics’ rather orthodox Orientalism, a clear thesis/antithesis between home and foreign cultures with no possible synthesis. The foreign other, in this case the guru as embodiment of Hindu mysticism, functions as a negative of Western values, consistent with the approach that Said and others propose as being the historical epistemology of Orientalism." [6]
On the fifth anniversary of his disappearance, the BBC News website published a major feature on Spollen, written by his former colleague and now BBC journalist Roland Hughes. [7]
Spollen is still considered a missing person. [10] Indian police and Irish authorities are calling for any information as to his whereabouts, [1] with the former also reportedly investigating Spollen for breaching Indian visa regulations [8], in the event that he has remained in the country. Overstaying a visa carries a maximum penalty under The Foreigners Act, 1946 of five years imprisonment with a fine and subsequent deportation from India. [9]