Sheena Govan
Sheena Govan (
1912–
1967) was the daughter of
evangelist John George Govan, and an early influence on what would become the
Findhorn Foundation.
Said to have had a difficult childhood, her unconventional
spirituality was something of a challenge to the
Faith Mission founded by her father. She met Dorothy Maclean while the two were working as secretaries in
New York in the early 1940s, and met
Peter Caddy on a train in
England in
1947. By this time Sheena was living in
London, apparently drawing on a family inheritance, and receiving inner guidance on behalf of those around her. Says
Peter Caddy: “Her flat was like a magnet. Throughout the day people came for help and guidance. Sheena believed that at this time many people were going through an initiatory experience that she called the birth of the
Christ within. She was like a midwife helping them to go through that process.” Dorothy Maclean, now also living and working in
London, says: “She’d know what stood between you and your divinity, what you put before the divine.”
Eileen Caddy (who had met
Peter Caddy in 1952 at RAF Habbaniyah) joined them in
London in
1953. Sheena Govan taught her students to do everything perfectly and with great love, “unto the Lord.” She also coached them in the practice of receiving, and living by, divine guidance. As she became more directive of the lives of those around her, her informal group received some coverage in the
Scottish newspapers (
Daily Record,
Sunday Mail,
Scottish Daily Express) in
1957. She died in
1967.