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Michael Roach
Michael Roach
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Michael Roach (born December 17, 1952) is an American businessman, spiritual leader, and former Buddhist monk by the name Geshe Lobsang Chunzin, and scholar who has started a number of businesses and organizations, written books inspired by Buddhism, and translated Tibetan Buddhist teachings. He has at times been the center of controversy for his views, teachings, activities, and behavior.[1][2][3][4][5]

Key Information

Early life and education

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Michael Roach was born on 17 December 1952 in Los Angeles, California to traditional Episcopalian parents. He grew up in Phoenix, Arizona along with three brothers. After his high school graduation, he received the Presidential Scholars Medallion from U.S. President Richard Nixon,[6] then attended Princeton University in 1972.[6] He traveled to India in 1973 to seek Buddhist instruction, while still in college. He returned to the United States and received a scholarship to return to study in India in 1974. While in India, Roach learned about a Tibetan Buddhist monastery in New Jersey led by a Lhasa born lama, Sermey Khensur Lobsang Tharchin. Roach returned to Princeton, living at the monastery from 1975 to 1981.[7] In the year before his graduation in 1975, both of his parents died due to cancer and then his brother committed suicide.[8] In 1983 he was ordained as a Gelugpa Buddhist monk at Sera Monastery in South India, where he would periodically travel and study.[9] In 1995, he became the first American to qualify for the Geshe degree.

Career

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From 1993 to 1999, Roach developed and taught 18 courses on Tibetan Buddhism in New York City. These courses were based on the training monks receive in Tibetan monasteries, but organized to be taught by laypeople .[10][11][12]

From 2000 to 2003, Roach organized and led a three-year silent retreat in the Arizona desert with five other participants, including Christie McNally with whom Roach had a relationship and shared a room with during this time. The retreat was run along guidelines that fall outside of what is taught in the open teachings of Tibetan traditions.[13][14]

In 2004, Roach established Diamond Mountain Center, a retreat center in Arizona.[15]

In 1981, Khen Rinpoche, the teacher of Roach, challenged him to apply Buddhist values to the "dirtiest business and make it clean".[16][17] Since then, Roach has helped to found and develop the corporation Andin International, a jewelry manufacturer based in New York. The activities of Andin International started with a loan of $50,000 and three employees. By the time Roach left the firm in 1999 as vice president, the company's annual turnover was $100 million per year.[17] In 2009, Andin achieved a turnover of more than 200 million dollars, and was acquired by Richline Group Warren Buffett. He used the money from his work to create funds to finance various projects, such as food fund Sera Mey.[18] For seventeen years, and while studying Buddhism, Roach commuted to a day job in Manhattan.[16]

In 1999, the publishing house Doubleday Corporation, which is now part of Penguin Random House, invited Roach to write a book about the style of management he used for business and life. In "The Diamond Cutter: The Buddha on Managing Your Business and Your Life", Roach explains how to apply the lessons of the Sutra of the Diamond Cutter (Diamond Sutra) in the context of business.[19]

Charity

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In 1987, Roach founded the Asian Classics Input Project (ACIP).[20] He founded this project in order to create a complete and accessible version of Kangyur and Tengyur in electronic form along with related philosophical commentaries and dictionaries. ACIP contains more than 8500 texts - almost half a million pages, which he provided for free, and has digitized 15286 books over the course of 31 years. It is one of many non-profits that sell Roach's teachings to the public.[21][22]

ACIP donates to many causes.[23] The Asian Classics Institute (ACI) pursued multiple projects to foster the learning and preservation of Tibetan Buddhism and meditation. These projects include organizations such as the Asian Legacy Library (ALL) and the Diamond Cutter Classics organization, and platforms like “The Knowledge Base” which offer free courses in a variety of subjects in multiple languages. The Asian Legacy Library alone has digitized over 16 million pages, according to Roach. In 2021, ACI launched the Castle Rock Fund as a vehicle to acquire the Castle Rock Mini Storage to finance the cost of ACIP's headquarters in Sedona, Arizona, and to ensure the financial stability of the organization.[24]

Controversies

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Diamond business

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Beginning in 1981, Roach helped found and run Andin International, a jewelry manufacturer based in New York. He used proceeds from his work to set up financial endowments to fund various projects, in particular the Sera Mey Food Fund.[13]

In his 2015 book "A Death on Diamond Mountain",[25] journalist Scott Carney wrote:

As for the chief diamond procurer at Andin International, Michael Roach selected Surat in the Indian state of Gujarat as his primary source for diamonds.

Marriage

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In 1996, Christie McNally became Roach's student and they began a "spiritual partnership", a Buddhist practice that encourages both partners to reach extraordinary goals. The experiment included vowing to never be more than 15 feet (roughly 4.5 meters)[16] apart, eating from the same plate, reading the same books together.[15] They were married in a Christian ceremony in Rhode Island in 1998. The marriage was kept secret. When news of the marriage emerged in 2003, Roach explained to the New York Times that they had wished to honor their Christian heritage and that he wanted McNally to be entitled to his possessions if something happened to him.[26] He also argued that the future of Buddhism in America relies on being more inclusive of and welcoming to women.[15][27][5]

When Roach proposed to teach in Dharamshala in 2006, the Office of the Dalai Lama rebuffed his plan, stating that Roach's "unconventional behavior does not accord with His Holiness's teachings and practices";[15] the teaching took place in nearby Palampur instead.

McNally and Roach separated in the middle of 2009.[26]

Sid Johnson's memoires

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In 2005, during a tantric initiation practice, retreatant Sid Johnson, a musician who was briefly on the board of directors of Roach's organization Diamond Mountain, recalls that Roach invited him to lie down in his and Christie McNally's bed. She then began to massage him from his head down to his penis before finishing with a kiss on the lips.[28] Roach was part of a handful of Western Tibetan Buddhist teachers facing such allegations in the 2000s including Surya Das and Ken McLeod.[29] Some[a] claimed he had had sexually promiscuous relationships while still donning monk's robes, however until now these claims were never proved to be accurate.[30]

Death of Ian Thorson

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Ian Thorson was a close student of Roach and McNally and served as their attendant after he began attending lectures at Three Jewels Outreach Center in New York City in 1997.[31] In 2000, Thorson's mother hired anti-cult investigators to stage an intervention after her suspicions grew.[28] In 2010, one year after the dissolution of her marriage to Roach, McNally married Thorson.[15] A few weeks later, they entered a three-year retreat at the Diamond Mountain Center; McNally was appointed as the retreat director and guiding teacher.[32] After reports emerged of a series of erratic and even violent episodes between Thorson and McNally, and bizarre behavior by McNally in talks to the community, the Diamond Mountain board of directors asked McNally and her husband to leave the retreat, giving them $3,600[33] and offering them airfare to any desired destination.[34] Thorson and McNally left the Diamond Mountain property on Monday, February 20, at 5 am and were picked up on a public road according to an email from their assistant to the board of the university.[33] They set up a camp in a cave on Bureau of Land Management property within the retreat boundaries, secretly supplied by a number of retreat participants who felt themselves loyal to the pair.[35][36] Thorson, aged 38, died in April 2012 of dehydration and exposure while McNally, then 39, would recover from dehydration and exposure.[4][1][2][3][37][32] Authorities said that there was no suspected foul play in his death, and that there was no criminal responsibility on behalf of Roach.[38] However, several journalists have claimed that Roach's unorthodox teachings through ACI may caused dangerous outcomes.[39][40] The whereabouts of McNally have been unknown since this deadly incident.

Teachings

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Roach has fielded critiques of cult like behavior after his many controversies. In an interview with NBC News, Robert Thurman, Columbia University Professor of Buddhism, says Roach's organizations have "a lot of good learning in it".[41] Roach has been uninvited to teach at FPMT centers across the globe in addition to being publicly rebuked by the office of the Dalai Lama.[42] When asked in an interview about his admission of realizing emptiness, Roach says, "if a lot of people thought I was being a bad person or a bad monk or even a corrupt person, that was less important than doing what I felt a divine being wanted me to do, even if everyone thought it was crazy. And I’ve never had a doubt about that. I think that it's more important for me to get enlightened and to follow what I perceive to be direct divine instructions than to be thought of as a bad person."[43]

Bibliography

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Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Michael Roach (born December 17, 1952) is an American Tibetan Buddhist monk, scholar, and author recognized as the first Westerner to earn the degree—a rigorous doctorate in —after more than 20 years of monastic study at Sera Mey Monastery in .
Roach graduated with honors from before entering monastic life, where he integrated Buddhist teachings on karma and ethics into secular pursuits, notably during his tenure at Andin International, a trading firm that experienced rapid growth under principles outlined in his seminal book The Diamond Cutter: The Buddha on Strategies for Managing Your Business and Your Life. He channeled business profits into philanthropic efforts, including the Asian Classics Input Project aimed at digitizing and preserving endangered Tibetan texts. Roach's innovative fusion of ancient tantric practices with modern self-improvement has drawn both acclaim for its practical applications and sharp criticism for deviations from traditional Gelugpa norms, particularly his public relationship with a consort while retaining vows, which prompted excommunications from Tibetan lineages. These tensions peaked during a three-year he led at Diamond Mountain in , where participant Ian Thorson died in 2012 from exposure and dehydration after becoming , an incident that fueled allegations of and cult-like dynamics within his organization.

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Family Background

Michael Roach was born on December 17, 1952, in Los Angeles, California, and raised in Phoenix, Arizona. As a student in Phoenix, he was an honors pupil with early interests in religion and social issues. Roach's family background included a Catholic upbringing, as evidenced by his service as an altar boy for fifteen years and participation in choir for twelve years during his youth. In 1974, the year before his graduation from Princeton University, both of his parents died from cancer, an event he has described in his teachings as occurring alongside his brother's suicide within the same period. These losses marked a profound personal tragedy during his early adulthood, though details of his siblings or parental identities remain limited in public records.

Academic Pursuits and Introduction to Buddhism

Michael Roach, born on December 17, 1952, in Los Angeles and raised in Phoenix, Arizona, demonstrated early academic promise as an honors student with a keen interest in religion and social issues. He secured a scholarship to Princeton University, where he studied at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, graduating with honors around 1975 and earning the McConnell Scholarship Prize. Additionally, Roach received the Presidential Scholar Medallion from the President of the United States, recognizing his scholarly achievements. Following his undergraduate studies, Roach turned his attention to , initially training under Khen Rinpoche Geshe Lobsang Tharchin at Rashi Gempil Ling, a Tibetan Buddhist center. This marked his formal introduction to Tibetan Buddhist philosophy and practice, drawing on his prior interest in religious traditions. He subsequently relocated to Sera Mey Monastery in , entering a demanding monastic that emphasized scriptural study, debate, and meditation. Roach's monastic education spanned over two decades, culminating in 1995 when he became the first American—and the first Westerner in the monastery's 600-year history—to receive the degree, equivalent to a in Buddhist , after completing rigorous examinations in the Gelugpa tradition. This accomplishment involved mastery of vast texts on , philosophy, and monastic discipline, conducted primarily in Tibetan.

Professional and Business Career

Founding and Success of Andin International

In 1981, Michael Roach co-founded Andin International Diamond Corporation in , New York, at the direction of his Tibetan Buddhist teacher, who instructed him to enter the diamond trade to generate revenue for supporting Tibetan refugees and monastic institutions. The venture began with a $50,000 and a staff of two or three employees, specializing in importing rough , cutting and polishing them, and manufacturing jewelry for wholesale distribution. Roach served as , applying principles derived from on karma and ethical conduct to operational decisions, which he later claimed contributed to the firm's expansion amid the competitive New York . Andin achieved rapid growth during the and , earning recognition as one of New York's fastest-growing private companies for multiple years. By , annual reached $130 million, with the company developing a global that integrated Eastern diamond sources with Western and retail outlets, including expansions into mall-based jewelry . Roach reported that the scaled to over $250 million in annual by the late , attributing this trajectory to "karmic " techniques—such as addressing employee grievances and fostering transparency—which he contrasted with conventional strategies. Profits from operations funded Roach's monastic studies and donations exceeding several million dollars to Tibetan projects, including monastery renovations. Roach managed Andin for 17 years until 1998, when he resigned to commit fully to and retreat, amid reports of acquisition interest from investors like , though the firm was ultimately sold to Michael Anthony Jewelers for approximately $70 million. Critics have questioned the extent of Roach's founding role, suggesting primary establishment by partners like the Azrielant family and potential embellishment in his accounts, but biographical sources consistently credit his strategic oversight for the company's profitability and ethical framework.

Karmic Management in Business Practices

Michael Roach's karmic management framework posits that business outcomes arise from karmic causes—intentional actions imprinting potentials on seemingly empty phenomena, as derived from interpretations of the . He attributes the rapid expansion of Andin International, a diamond trading firm he co-founded in the early , to these principles, with the company achieving $250 million in annual sales by the late 2000s without advertising or layoffs, before its acquisition around 2009. Roach implemented practices such as generous profit-sharing with employees, suppliers, and partners—distributing bonuses equivalent to full salaries annually—and responding to setbacks with ethical rather than retaliation. Central to this approach is mind training to actualize positive potentials: viewing challenges like or disputes as manifestations of one's own unresolved karma, then countering them through , which Roach claims generates loyalty and unforeseen opportunities. For instance, during a at Andin triggered by a supplier's million-dollar error, Roach recounts forgoing legal action in favor of empathetic dialogue, resulting in the supplier's voluntary restitution and a deepened alliance that boosted future deals. He prohibits , exploitation, or stinginess in operations, arguing these plant "seeds" of scarcity, while virtues like transparency and yield via word-of-mouth and repeat business. In Karmic Management (2009), co-authored with Lama Christie McNally, Roach systematizes the method into four steps: clarifying a specific vision, diagnosing obstacles rooted in karmic "hot spots" (e.g., aversion or ), remedying via targeted positive actions, and maintaining momentum through daily reflection and ethical commitments. Exercises include logging interactions to trace causal links between intentions and results, emphasizing that short-term metrics pale against long-term karmic accrual. Roach presents these as universally applicable, drawing from Andin's trajectory—from a fledgling operation importing rough diamonds to a major wholesaler—as empirical validation, though outcomes hinge on consistent implementation rather than isolated tactics.

Spiritual Development and Ordination

Monastic Training and Geshe Attainment

Michael Roach began his formal engagement with after graduating from in 1974, when he received a to study in . There, he encountered Tibetan Buddhist teachings and commenced preliminary studies. He later resided and trained at Rashi Gempil Ling, a Tibetan Buddhist center in , under the guidance of Khen Rinpoche Geshe Lobsang Tharchin. In 1983, Roach was ordained as a fully ordained Gelugpa (gelong) at Sera Mey Monastery in , committing to the traditional monastic vows of , non-violence, and renunciation of worldly possessions. His training involved intensive study of the Gelugpa curriculum, including philosophy, debate, and the Five Great Texts (logic, epistemology, monastic discipline, , and ), conducted through residential periods at Sera Mey and periodic returns to the . Roach's monastic regimen spanned approximately 22 years, culminating in his successful completion of the rigorous examinations in 1995 at Sera Mey Monastery, making him the first American to attain this doctoral-level degree in . The Lharampa degree requires mastery of scriptural , public debate defenses, and composition, typically achieved after decades of monastic immersion. During this period, he also learned Tibetan and languages essential for primary source study.

Key Retreats and Personal Practices

Roach completed a traditional Tibetan Buddhist three-year, three-month, and three-day silent retreat from March 3, 2000, to June 6, 2003, in , focusing on intensive and study of advanced Gelugpa texts such as those on and . This retreat, conducted in isolation with a small group including four female practitioners, emphasized unbroken sessions and periodic teachings on topics like second sight, adhering to protocols derived from Sera Mey Monastery's curriculum. During his earlier monastic training at in from the 1980s to 1995, Roach participated in preliminary retreats as part of the curriculum, involving daily practices of and debate preparation under Khen Rinpoche's guidance. Central to Roach's personal practices are the gelong vows of a fully ordained , taken in 1983, which include celibacy, non-possession, and ethical conduct as outlined in the . He integrates these with tantric practices, such as consort , claiming realization levels allow maintenance of vows through non-emissive union—a interpretation rejected by many traditional Gelugpa authorities like the Dalai Lama's office. Roach's daily routine incorporates meditation on , emptiness via Nagarjuna's , and karmic visualization techniques applied to worldly activities, as detailed in his teachings on the bodhisattva vows. At Diamond Mountain Retreat Center, founded post-retreat, Roach leads ongoing programs like the Medicine Buddha and Nagarjuna's Wisdom Retreats, which blend silent , scriptural study, and group practices aimed at wisdom and healing. These emphasize experiential verification of doctrines, with participants undertaking vows of silence and ethical commitment during sessions.

Teachings and Philosophical Contributions

Core Doctrines and Innovations

Geshe Michael Roach's teachings adhere to the core doctrines of the Gelugpa school of Tibetan Buddhism, particularly the lamrim tradition systematized by (1357–1419), which outlines progressive stages from initial ethical conduct and renunciation to the cultivation of , superior insight into , and tantric practices for rapid enlightenment. Central to his exposition is the Madhyamaka-Prasangika view of , asserting that all phenomena lack inherent existence and arise as projections of the mind influenced by karma, as derived from Nagarjuna's interpretations and the Diamond Cutter Sutra (Vajrachedika Prajnaparamita Sutra). Roach emphasizes karma's causal mechanism, where volitional actions imprint latent potentials that ripen as future experiences, underscoring personal responsibility for outcomes without fatalism, as actions can be purified through ethical conduct and wisdom. A primary innovation lies in Roach's application of these doctrines to secular domains, notably through "karmic management," which posits that business success stems from selfless service to others, generating positive karmic returns rather than competitive . In this framework, workplace problems reflect unresolved past karma manifesting as mental projections; resolution involves internal transformation—cultivating to dissolve attachments and performing altruistic acts to seed beneficial results—rather than solely external fixes. This approach, detailed in his 2000 book The Diamond Cutter: The Buddha on Managing Your Business and Your Life, integrates a verse-by-verse commentary on the Diamond Cutter Sutra with practical strategies, such as identifying karmic debts through recurring issues and repaying them via , drawn from his experience directing Andin International from near-bankruptcy to multimillion-dollar valuation between 1981 and 2002. Roach further innovates in by adapting Gelugpa's rigorous monastic curriculum for lay Western audiences via the Asian Classics Institute (ACI), founded in 1995, which offers 18 foundation courses translating over 20,000 pages of texts into structured, self-paced modules mirroring Sera Mey Monastery's seven-year training. This includes teachings on the "six great books" of the tradition, emphasizing logical debate and scriptural analysis to realize , while incorporating modern tools like audio recordings of his commentaries. Through the Diamond Cutter Institute, established to disseminate these principles, he extends karmic management into formal management education, training professionals in ethical decision-making grounded in Buddhist , as evidenced by programs blending study with case studies from his business career. These methods prioritize empirical verification of karmic effects through observable life results, aligning doctrinal insight with pragmatic testing.

Major Publications and Dissemination

Roach's most prominent publication is The Diamond Cutter: The Buddha on Managing Your Business and Your Life, first released in 2000, which draws on the Buddhist concept of emptiness as interpreted from the Sutra of the Noble One Freed from Attachment to the Three Realms to explain success principles derived from his experience growing Andin International from inception to over $250 million in sales. The book has been revised multiple times, including a 2009 edition and a 20th anniversary version in 2020 incorporating additional material on mental cultivation for business outcomes. It emphasizes causal mechanisms in karma as drivers of material prosperity, rejecting conventional motivational strategies in favor of internal ethical adjustments. In 2009, Roach co-authored Karmic Management: What Goes Around Comes Around in Your Business and Your Life with Lama Christie McNally and Michael Gordon, published on September 1, framing business challenges as manifestations of unresolved karmic debts and advocating purification through ethical action to generate returns. The work extends The Diamond Cutter by applying similar principles to organizational crises, using case studies from Roach's business background to illustrate how mental imprints precede external events. Other notable publications include How Works (2005), a commentary on Patanjali's Yoga Sutras integrating monastic discipline with , and The Essential Yoga Sutra (2005), which condenses yogic philosophy for daily application without ritualistic elements. Roach also authored The Tibetan Book of (2009), presenting Buddhist tantric practices as yogic methods for physical and mental transformation. Dissemination of Roach's teachings occurs primarily through the Asian Classics Institute (ACI), established by him in 1993 to deliver structured curricula mirroring traditional Gelugpa monastic studies in accessible formats. ACI provides 18 foundation courses online, covering topics from basic Buddhist tenets to advanced Lam Rim meditations, drawn from Roach's recorded lectures and translations of texts like Tsongkhapa's works, with audio and video archives enabling global access. These materials, including seven-year formal study programs under Lobsang Tharchin's oversight, emphasize empirical verification of karmic causality over doctrinal acceptance, and have been expanded digitally to include ongoing series like "Sunlight on Suchness." Publications and ACI resources have reached audiences via print translations, audiobook narrations by Roach himself, and live teachings in formats such as the "30/30/30 Plan" aiming for 101 Lam Rim video meditations by 2030.

Organizations and Charitable Efforts

Establishment of Diamond Mountain and ACI

The Asian Classics Institute (ACI) was established in 1993 by Geshe Michael Roach to disseminate the foundational texts of Tibetan Buddhism through structured courses, drawing from the Gelugpa tradition's core curriculum. Under Roach's direction and the spiritual guidance of Khen Rinpoche Geshe Lobsang Tharchin, ACI developed 18 foundational courses covering philosophy, meditation, and ethics, initially offered via correspondence and later expanded to in-person and online formats for global accessibility. This initiative aimed to preserve and teach classical Indian and Tibetan Buddhist works, including those by Tsongkhapa, without requiring monastic commitment. Diamond Mountain Retreat Center, located in the Santa Rita Mountains near , was founded by Roach in 2000 as a physical hub for advanced Buddhist study and , incorporating ACI's into residential programs. Registered as a 501(c)(3) religious nonprofit in 2001, it emphasizes eco-friendly practices and immersion in Gelugpa teachings, opening to students in 2004 for three-year focused on ethical , , and scriptural analysis. The center's establishment reflected Roach's vision of integrating worldly success principles, derived from his business background, with monastic training to foster enlightenment through communal living and rigorous practice. Unlike accredited institutions, Diamond Mountain operates as a non-traditional , prioritizing over formal degrees.

Preservation and Digitization Projects

The Asian Classics Input Project (ACIP), established by Michael Roach in 1988 as a , focuses on locating, cataloguing, digitally preserving, and disseminating endangered classic texts from , with a primary emphasis on Tibetan Buddhist literature. Operating from , ACIP employs teams of scholars and input specialists to transcribe and encode texts into digital formats compatible with preservation and translation efforts. ACIP has partnered with Tibetan monastic institutions for on-site , including the establishment of a computer center at Sera Mey Monastery's library in , funded by philanthropist , to scan and preserve rare manuscripts at risk of deterioration. The project's technical approach involves transliterating Tibetan scripts into Romanized formats and preparing data for broader accessibility, aiming to compile the complete —encompassing thousands of volumes—onto such as CD-ROMs for distribution and study. Through collaborations with the Asian Legacy Library (ALL), Roach has contributed to preservation initiatives involving input teams, such as those led by Thupten Pelgye, Jampa Namdrol, and Ngawang Kheatsun, which catalog and digitize collections from institutions like the Library of Tibetan Works and Archives. These efforts extend to establishing input centers in staffed by Asian Classics Institute personnel, enhancing the project's capacity to handle vast archives. In , ACIP proposed a research center in , , to further support the digitization and study of related Indic texts integral to Buddhist traditions. Roach has utilized these digitized resources for his own translations and teachings, underscoring their role in making ancient materials available for contemporary scholarship.

Personal Life

Relationships and Vows

As a fully ordained in the Gelugpa tradition of , Michael Roach was bound by the Pratimoksha vows, which include celibacy as one of the four root precepts prohibiting sexual intercourse for monastics, with no exceptions permitted under orthodox interpretations even in practices. Roach met Christie McNally, a 20 years his junior, in 1996 when she was 23 and recently out of ; by 1998, they had entered into a committed spiritual partnership undeterred by his monastic precepts, taking personal vows to remain never more than 15 feet apart at all times and to practice what they termed "celibate intimacy." These vows were presented as a modern adaptation of tantric principles, with McNally regarded by Roach as an embodiment of the deity , but they diverged from standard Gelugpa monastic discipline. During a three-year retreat from 2000 to 2003, the pair shared living quarters and engaged in practices Roach later described in interviews as involving spiritual sexual union aimed at generating bliss for enlightenment, which he maintained did not constitute a violation of his vows. This relationship drew sharp criticism from traditional Tibetan Buddhist authorities, including a 2006 statement from the office of the Dalai Lama rebuking Roach's conduct as incompatible with monastic celibacy and urging him to disrobe to reflect his non-celibate status, advice he publicly rejected while continuing to wear robes. Roach and McNally were secretly married sometime after 1998, a fact revealed publicly in 2012 following their divorce, which an Arizona court finalized on December 1, 2010. McNally subsequently ended the partnership and married another student, Ian Thorson, in 2010, though no further long-term relationships for Roach have been documented in available accounts.

Health and Lifestyle Choices

Roach maintains a monastic lifestyle centered on intensive meditation and yogic disciplines, which he presents as integral to physical vitality and mental clarity. In his teachings and writings, such as The Tibetan Book of Yoga, he draws from ancient Buddhist sources to describe yoga not merely as exercise but as a comprehensive system fostering health through breath control, postures, and ethical living. These practices, rooted in texts like the Yoga Sutras interpreted through a Buddhist lens, aim to cultivate energy and focus, as Roach has stated in public addresses where he links them to sustained well-being. A distinctive aspect of his personal discipline involved a tantric vow taken in 1995 with his spiritual partner Christie McNally, committing them to remain no more than 15 feet apart at all times, a practice they upheld for over a decade during travels, teachings, and retreats. This proximity rule shaped daily routines, limiting independence and requiring constant in living arrangements, from urban settings to remote sites, until its dissolution amid controversies in the late 2000s. Roach frames such s as advanced ethical commitments enhancing karmic purity and inner stability, though they imposed physical and logistical strains. His retreats, including extended silent periods exceeding three years, incorporate ascetic elements like isolation in arid environments and minimal material comforts, which Roach promotes as purifying for body and mind but have drawn for potential risks under extreme conditions. Daily practices taught by Roach emphasize on impermanence and karma to support long-term resilience, aligning with traditional Gelugpa monastic routines adapted for lay followers.

Controversies

Deviations from Orthodox Gelugpa Teachings

Michael Roach's practices and teachings have been criticized for departing from the strict monastic discipline and doctrinal orthodoxy of the Gelugpa tradition, particularly regarding vows and tantric application. As a lharampa, Roach was bound by the pratimoksha vows emphasizing celibacy and restraint in interactions with women, yet he entered a secret with Christie McNally in 1998 and maintained a consort relationship with her, including shared living quarters during a three-year retreat from 1999 to 2002, actions that directly violated these root vows. He refused requests from associates, including , to disrobe and publicly acknowledge his non-celibate status, continuing to wear monastic robes despite these breaches. In tantric practices, Roach and McNally deviated by attempting to adapt highest yoga for lay Western contexts without sufficient practical training beyond academic studies and ritual empowerments, leading to improvised methods that incorporated non-Buddhist elements such as Hindu influences, eternalist views of karma as inherently divine, and concepts like "pure magic" or "angels," which contradict Gelugpa's emphasis on and subordination of to . Their approach ignored traditional prerequisites, such as mastery under qualified gurus, and promoted living tantric unions publicly while Roach retained monastic status, fostering confusion among students unprepared for such advanced practices. This culminated in retreats enforcing extreme visualizations of "pure creation," where mundane harms were reframed as illusory, contributing to unsafe conditions like a student's death in 2012. Institutionally, these deviations prompted expulsion from Sera Mey Monastery, a ban from teaching at over 140 FPMT centers, and a rebuke from the Dalai Lama's office warning against following Roach due to his unconventional conduct. Roach's 2003 letter claiming advanced realizations, including tantric attainments, further alienated orthodox figures like his teacher Khen Rinpoche, who distanced himself during tantric teachings. Critics, including scholars like Thurman, describe Roach's overall framework as an idiosyncratic "American pop-religion knockoff" diverging from Gelugpa's rigorous philosophical lineage on key points such as ethical causality and emptiness.

The Ian Thorson Death and Retreat Conditions

In 2010, Michael Roach initiated a three-year, three-month, and three-day silent retreat at Diamond Mountain University and Retreat Center in the remote desert near Bowie, involving 39 participants, including Thorson, a 38-year-old Stanford graduate serving as retreat assistant to Roach and his partner Christie McNally. The retreat enforced strict vows of silence, prohibiting verbal communication, phones, , and , with interactions limited to written notes and biweekly postal contact with family; participants resided in rustic cabins they often built and funded themselves, at costs ranging from $100,000 to $300,000 per unit, amid a regimen of intensive and aimed at restructuring mental processes. These conditions imposed significant physical demands, including labor in harsh desert terrain, and psychological isolation that carried documented risks of mental dissociation or from prolonged and meditative focus, as observed in similar practices. Tensions escalated in March 2011 when McNally stabbed Thorson three times in the abdomen during what she described as a "playful" tantric exercise inspired by the goddess , an incident treated on-site by a retreat doctor without external medical intervention; rumors of domestic abuse circulated among participants, though it was not immediately reported to authorities. In February 2012, following McNally's public lecture disclosing the stabbing as a tantric teaching, Diamond Mountain's board—including Roach—expelled both Thorson and McNally from the retreat, citing violations of communal harmony. After expulsion, Thorson and McNally relocated to a cave approximately 7,000 feet up a nearby mountain in the Chiricahua region, subsisting on limited resources in rattlesnake- and drug-trafficking-infested wilderness. On April 22, 2012, McNally activated an emergency SOS beacon; rescuers arrived hours later to find Thorson deceased from dehydration and malnourishment, his body severely emaciated at around 100 pounds, likely exacerbated by consuming polluted runoff water, while McNally was delirious and hospitalized. The Cochise County Sheriff's Office and Medical Examiner's autopsy ruled the death accidental due to exposure, with no evidence of foul play despite prior suspicions from the stabbing—deemed accidental by McNally—and the remote body's positioning; the case was closed without charges. The retreat's austere isolation and expulsion protocols drew scrutiny for potentially contributing to Thorson's vulnerability, as participants lacked immediate access to external aid, and the prior physical toll—evident in Thorson's —highlighted risks of under self-imposed without medical oversight. Roach addressed the incident in an , attributing events to karmic dynamics rather than institutional failures, while ex-participants and investigators like questioned whether the program's psychological intensity and hierarchical deference enabled unchecked extremes.

Accusations of Cult-Like Dynamics

Critics have accused Michael Roach's organization, particularly Diamond Mountain University founded in , of exhibiting cult-like dynamics through excessive devotion to Roach as an infallible leader and enforced isolation during retreats. Ian Thorson's mother described Roach as a leader whose courses begin accessibly and free of charge before escalating to intense commitments that draw participants deeper into the group's structure. Supporters of Roach have occasionally acknowledged elements of this, with one stating that if following a spiritual leader into the defines a , then the group qualifies, referencing the remote retreat site. A key example cited is the three-year silent retreat program at Diamond Mountain, where approximately 40 devotees in 2007-2010 isolated themselves in fenced housing, emerging only rarely and often blindfolded to avoid worldly sights, fostering psychological dependency and detachment from external reality. This culminated in cases like Thorson's 2012 death during an extension of such isolation in a mountainside cave, where participants rejected conventional aid, believing in supernatural self-sufficiency such as mind-purified water, amid reports of secrecy and inadequate supplies. Roach's teachings emphasized radical self-awakening, which critics argue promoted tunnel-visioned obedience, neglecting physical health and safety in favor of unverified spiritual claims. Professor , a scholar of , characterized Roach's group post-2004—after the death of Roach's teacher Khen Lobsang Tharchin—as having "become a kind of " due to its lack of institutional structure and reality checks, despite containing valid teachings, leading to deviations like blending non-traditional elements without oversight. Accusations extend to emotional control, including Roach's vow to remain within 15 feet of his partner Christie McNally, whom he portrayed as a incarnation, requiring followers to mirror such extreme relational vows and accept without question. McNally's later introduction of aggressive practices, inspired by Hindu deities like and involving reported violence such as an "accidental" stabbing of Thorson, further fueled claims of manipulative dynamics prioritizing leader directives over participant welfare. While some analyses, such as investigative journalist Scott Carney's, note distinctions from classic cults like —such as absence of total family isolation or financial extraction—the persistent pattern of unquestioning loyalty, secrecy around practices diverging from Gelugpa norms, and tolerance for high-risk isolation has sustained these accusations among former associates and observers.

Business Ethics and Financial Practices

Roach entered the diamond trade in the late 1980s at the direction of his Tibetan teacher, joining Andin International, a New York-based jewelry wholesaler founded in February 1981 by Israeli immigrants Ofer and Aya Azrielant. He rose to a managerial role, attributing the company's expansion to annual sales exceeding $100 million by the late 1990s to applications of Buddhist principles from the , including mind training on to address business challenges without attachment. These practices, outlined in his 2000 book The Diamond Cutter: The Buddha on Managing Your Business and Your Life, emphasize ethical conduct—such as non-harm, generosity, and karma-based decision-making—as causal drivers of commercial success, contrasting with conventional strategies reliant on competition or cost-cutting. Financially, Roach directed his share of Andin profits toward charitable causes, including support for Tibetan refugee aid, the Sera Mey Monastery, and the Asian Classics Input Project for digitizing , providing seed capital estimated in the millions for these initiatives. This model extended to Diamond Mountain University, established in 2000 on 320 acres in , where initial funding combined business earnings, grants like one from the Packard Foundation, and subsequent revenues from book sales and teachings. Proponents view these practices as exemplifying "right ," transforming worldly activity into support without personal enrichment, as Roach maintained monk's vows of . Critics, however, contend that Roach's narratives overstate his foundational role at Andin, portraying parables in The Diamond Cutter as direct personal feats while downplaying the Azrielants' prior expertise in jewelry retail and supply chains, which independently propelled growth to nine-figure revenues by 1999. Such depictions have been accused of misleading audiences on the efficacy of karmic methods versus standard entrepreneurship, potentially ethical lapses in authenticity for promotional gain. Additionally, the fusion of monastic authority with wealth-generation teachings has prompted concerns of commercializing Buddhism, akin to prosperity doctrines, despite Roach's defense that material success serves ethical ends like global dharma propagation. No formal allegations of financial impropriety, such as fraud or misappropriation, have been substantiated in court or regulatory records.

Responses to Criticisms and Ongoing Influence

Defenses from Supporters and Roach Himself

In an open letter dated April 26, 2012, Geshe Michael Roach expressed profound sorrow over the death of Ian Thorson, offering condolences to Thorson's family and to Lama Christie McNally, Thorson's partner and fellow retreatant. Roach explained that he and Diamond Mountain staff had no knowledge of the couple's specific location after they left the main retreat area, as they had requested privacy, and that upon McNally's report of a medical emergency on April 22, 2012, staff immediately initiated a rescue effort. Roach defended the retreat conditions by noting that Diamond Mountain provides medical support including an M.D., nurse, and physician's assistants, along with emergency phone access and approved shelters equipped with heating, solar power, and water, on its 960-acre property built by volunteers. He highlighted the low attrition rate, with only three of 39 retreatants departing after 1.5 years, as evidence of the program's supportive nature. Regarding prior allegations of violence involving Thorson and McNally, Roach stated that the organization upheld a strict non-violence policy rooted in the lineage's principles, investigated the claims, and required the couple to leave campus for to safeguard the community and future practitioners. He quoted, "Our entire lineage is of course founded upon the principle of non-violence, and the sacredness of all life." Roach acknowledged personal responsibility, likening his role to that of a for students' actions, while framing institutional responses as necessary protections rather than judgments on individual spiritual paths. He advocated for enhanced safeguards, such as requiring personal mentors and foundational preparatory courses, to mitigate risks in advanced retreats. Supporters, including ongoing students at Diamond Mountain, have pointed to the voluntary nature of the retreats and Thorson's agency as an adult practitioner committed to extreme ascetic practices as countering claims, though specific public statements from named individuals remain limited in mainstream sources. Roach has elsewhere defended his interpretive approaches to Gelugpa teachings, including tantric elements and karmic business applications, as derived from direct study of ancient texts and personal realizations during his 22-year , positioning them as innovative yet faithful adaptations rather than deviations.

Institutional Rejections and Excommunications

In 2006, the Office of the issued letters to Michael Roach explicitly advising him against visiting Dharamsala, citing his unconventional conduct—including associations with female companions and non-adherence to traditional monastic appearance—as incompatible with Gelugpa traditions and disciplinary rules. On May 24, 2006, Joint Secretary Chhime Rigzin warned that Roach's behavior "does not accord with His Holiness’s teachings and practice," emphasizing the need to safeguard the purity of from perceived endorsements of such practices. On June 5, 2006, Personal Secretary Tenzin Geyche Tethong reinforced this by stating Roach was unwelcome to teach or attend the 's teachings in Dharamsala, due to ongoing controversies over his observance. These communications reflected broader institutional concerns about Roach's spiritual credentials, with the 's secretary later questioning in a letter whether he had attained the advanced realization known as the "path of seeing," a milestone in Gelugpa essential for authoritative tantric instruction. The refused to endorse Roach's teachings, further isolating him from official Tibetan Buddhist endorsement. By this period, Roach's connections to traditional institutions had weakened amid reports of vow-breaking, including violations through his relationship with Christie McNally, which he pursued without formally disrobing. Sera Mey Monastery, where Roach received his geshe degree in 1995 after decades of study and significant financial support for the institution, eventually distanced itself from him. Monastery teachers expressed despair over his deviations, describing him as a renegade who had parted ways from orthodox Gelugpa lineages long before the 2012 death of retreatant Thorson amplified scrutiny. No formal expulsion from Sera Mey is documented, but the institution ceased affiliation, viewing his interpretations—such as secretive tantric partnerships and unconventional retreat protocols—as departures from doctrinal norms. In May 2009, the Dalai Lama's office publicly denounced Roach for misleading attendees at planned teachings by falsely implying official approval, after he had booked venues like the Tibetan Institute of Performing Arts without authorization; this prompted cancellation of his events and reiterated restrictions on his presence in . These rejections extended to the wider Tibetan exile community, where Roach's practices were deemed errant, leading to by Gelugpa authorities and lack of recognition for his Diamond Mountain University as a legitimate extension of .

Continued Teachings and Recent Activities

Geshe Michael Roach has maintained an active teaching schedule through the Asian Classics Institute (ACI) and Diamond Mountain Retreat Center, focusing on Tibetan Buddhist texts such as those by and the Lam Rim tradition. In October 2024, he led the Medicine Buddha & 's Wisdom Retreat from October 11-20 at Diamond Mountain in , combining in-person and online sessions to explore 's writings on and their practical application. Similar retreats occurred in prior years, including October 20-29, 2023, emphasizing and philosophical inquiry. In December 2024, Roach concluded a 14-year series of teachings on the Liberation in the Palm of Your Hand in , , from December 2-7, marking a significant milestone in his transmission of Gelugpa Lam Rim instructions. Throughout 2025, he has delivered online classes, including weekly translation sessions at the Xuanzang's Tower Translation Project on Mondays at 4 PM, dissecting Asian wisdom texts word by word. Notable 2025 events include a Deep Q&A session on March 7 titled "Touching the World," a special class on March 3, and the Five Houses retreat from April 17-27 at Mountain, introducing preparatory practices for advanced Way paths. Roach's recent activities also encompass reflections on personal realizations, such as a 2024 talk in on "49 Years After Seeing Directly," shared via the Knowledge Base platform. He has initiated projects like the Diamond Silk Entrepreneur University and a 30/30/30 Plan aiming to produce 101 Lam Rim video meditations by 2030 through ACI. Upcoming sessions in late 2025, such as classes on October 24 in Phoenix and an open talk on July 18 titled "Wisdom in the Times of Chaos," continue to draw participants both in-person and online. These efforts reflect ongoing dissemination of his interpretations of , primarily through self-affiliated channels.

Bibliography

Primary Works

The Diamond Cutter: The Buddha on Managing Your Business and Your Life (2000) presents Buddhist principles, particularly from the Abhisamayalamkara, applied to business practices, drawing on Roach's experience managing a diamond company that grew from nothing to $250 million in sales. The book argues that ethical actions based on karma lead to professional success, using anecdotes from ancient texts and modern commerce. How Yoga Works: Healing Yourself and Others with the Yoga Sutra (2005) offers a commentary on Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, interpreting them through a Tibetan Buddhist lens to explain yoga's practical benefits for daily life and relationships. Roach frames the sutras as tools for ethical conduct and mental discipline, emphasizing their role in resolving personal and interpersonal conflicts. The Essential Yoga Sutra: Ancient Wisdom for Your Yoga (2005) provides a condensed translation and explanation of the Yoga Sutras, highlighting their compatibility with Buddhist emptiness teachings and applications for contemporary practitioners seeking clarity and compassion. The work underscores the sutras' foundational status in yoga philosophy while adapting them to address modern psychological challenges.

Collaborative and Translated Texts

Geshe Michael Roach has participated in the translation of several classical texts, often in collaboration with other scholars, drawing on his training in Tibetan, , and related languages. These efforts include interpretations that blend Gelugpa Buddhist perspectives with the source materials. One key collaborative translation is The Essential Yoga : Ancient Wisdom for Your Yoga, co-translated with Christie McNally from the original of Patanjali's Yoga , published in 2005 by Doubleday/Three Leaves Press. The work provides a condensed rendering of the 195 aphorisms alongside Roach's commentary emphasizing practical application in daily life and ethical conduct. Preparing for Tantra: The Mountain of Blessings, a translation of Tsongkhapa's foundational prayer text on tantric preliminaries, was produced with Lobsang Tharchin and published in 1995 by Sutra & Press as part of the Classics of Middle Asia series. This 172-page edition includes bibliographical references and serves as a guide for practitioners preparing for advanced practices. In response to the 2020 global pandemic, Roach collaborated with Dr. Eric Wu and Yan Tang on The Two Sutras of the Medicine Buddha, translating the relevant Tibetan sutras focused on healing and protection practices attributed to the Medicine Buddha. This edition was released through Diamond Cutter Press to make the texts accessible for contemporary recitation and study. Roach's broader translation activities, including excerpts from philosophical works by figures like and Tsongkhapa, are documented in online resources associated with the Asian Classics , often derived from his teaching materials and aimed at supporting multilingual dissemination.

References

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