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Sep 5, 2025

Robert Jay Lifton, Psychiatrist Drawn to Humanity’s Horrors, Dies at 99

His work led him into some of history’s darkest corners, including the role of doctors in the Nazi era and the torture of Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib.

Douglas Martin
NY Times
September 4, 2025

Robert Jay Lifton, a psychiatrist who peered into some of the darkest corners of contemporary history, including Hiroshima, the Holocaust and the Vietnam War, in search of lessons about individual and collective consciousness, died on Thursday at his home in Truro, Mass. He was 99.

His death was by confirmed by his daughter, Natasha Lifton.

Dr. Lifton was fascinated by “the reaction of human beings to extreme situations,” as the psychiatrist Anthony Storr wrote in The Washington Post in 1979. That interest began with his study of brainwashing by the Chinese Communists in the 1950s and continued through his analysis of the American fight against terrorism after Sept. 11, 2001. He wrote, helped write or edited some two dozen books and hundreds of articles about the meanings of what The Times Literary Supplement of London called “the seemingly incomprehensible.”

Dr. Lifton’s often somber quest was inspired and guided by mentors and friends like the psychologist Erik Erikson, the anthropologist Margaret Mead and the sociologist David Riesman.

It led him from troubled Vietnam veterans to the trial of Patricia Hearst, at which he was an expert witness on thought control — testifying, as he wrote in The New York Times in 1976, on “the crucial question of her voluntary or involuntary participation” in an armed bank robbery by a politically radical group that had abducted her. He examined the Japanese cult that released deadly sarin gas in the Tokyo subway in 1995 and the torture of Iraqi prisoners by American troops at Abu Ghraib during the Iraq war.

Perhaps his most vivid work concerned the role of medical doctors in the Nazi genocide. Reviewing Dr. Lifton’s book “The Nazi Doctors: Medical Killing and the Psychology of Genocide” (1986), Bruno Bettelheim, the psychoanalyst and Holocaust survivor, worried that the empathy Dr. Lifton displayed in illuminating the psyches of the killers might seem tantamount to forgiveness.

“I believe there are acts so vile that our task is to reject and prevent them,” Dr. Bettelheim wrote in The Times Book Review, “not to try to understand them empathetically as Dr. Lifton did.”

Dr. Lifton countered in a letter to The Book Review that his purpose in writing the book was to reveal the broader potential for human evil. “We better serve the future by confronting this potential than by viewing it as unexaminable,” he wrote.

Other critics questioned the usefulness of the approach he called psychohistory, the study of historical influences on the individual — not least because of the fuzziness of the term. Some, including both supporters and critics, suggested that psychohistory amounted to mass psychoanalysis.

Perhaps his sharpest critics were those who found his scholarship inextricably entwined with his passionate leftist and antiwar views. Reviewers used phrases like “transparently polemical” to describe his work.

Dr. Lifton responded that he could not be the sort of godlike figure that he believed people expected a psychiatrist to be. “I believe one’s advocacy should be out front,” he said in an interview with Psychology Today in 1988.

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“What we choose to study as scholars is a reflection of our advocacies, our passions, spoken or otherwise,” he wrote in his 2011 memoir, “Witness to an Extreme Century.”

Early on, Dr. Lifton focused on nuclear war as the ultimate catastrophe, suggesting that the new possibility of humankind’s sudden, perhaps total annihilation fundamentally changed the way people thought about death. His book “Death in Life: Survivors of Hiroshima” (1968) won the National Book Award for its penetrating study of 90,000 people who survived the explosion of the first atomic bomb dropped on a population.

That the bomb could be used again at any time amounted to an “ill-begotten imagery of extinction” pervading man’s consciousness, he wrote in “The Broken Connection: On Death and the Continuity of Life” (1979).

Dr. Lifton suggested that a new kind of person was emerging, with new tools for adaptation, a product of the breakdown of traditional institutions and the threat of human extinction. He christened this new being Protean Man, named for Proteus, the Greek god who constantly changed forms.

The title is rendered in a stylized font suggestive of Japanese lettering. It is superimposed over an image of Japanese calligraphy. 
“Death in Life” won the National Book Award for its penetrating study of 90,000 people who survived the bombing of Hiroshima.Credit...Random House
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Dr. Lifton hated heavy-handed prose, and among his delights were the cartoons of long-necked birds he doodled to express his sense of the absurd. In 1969, he published a book of them, titled simply “Birds.”

In one cartoon, a bird says: “All of a sudden I had this wonderful feeling: ‘I am me!’”

“You were wrong,” says the other.

Robert Jay Lifton was born in the Crown Heights section of Brooklyn on May 16, 1926, to Harold and Ciel (Roth) Lifton. His grandparents on both sides were born in shtetls in what today is Belarus, and soon after they emigrated to the United States, his parents were born. Dr. Lifton said in a 1999 interview that he had been greatly influenced by the liberal views of his father, a businessman who sold household appliances.

At 16, Robert won a scholarship to Cornell University to study biology in its premedical program. He continued his studies at New York Medical College, received his M.D. in 1948 and interned at the Jewish Hospital of Brooklyn.

During that time he was drawn into a social circle revolving around the lyricist Yip Harburg (“Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?,” “Over the Rainbow”), a friend of his father’s. He was soon mingling in Harburg’s Central Park West apartment with the iconoclastic journalist I.F. Stone, the actor and singer Paul Robeson and Henry A. Wallace, the former vice president and progressive presidential candidate.

From 1949 to 1951, he studied psychiatry at Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn. (He said he chose to specialize in psychiatry in part because he was afraid of blood.) He also met Betty Jean Kirschner, a Barnard graduate who was working in the nascent television industry. They married in 1952. By then, Dr. Lifton had enlisted in the Air Force, which sent him to Japan, where he and his new wife learned Japanese. She went on to write and lecture widely on adoption reform before her death at 84 in 2010.

Dr. Lifton spent six months in Korea, where he studied the effects of what the Chinese called thought reform — and what others characterized as brainwashing — on American prisoners of war. He was discharged from the military in 1953, and he and his wife embarked on a trip around the world.

They got only as far as Hong Kong, where he began to hear stories about more intense versions of brainwashing. Through interviews, he ascertained that this technique involved a combination of external force and evangelical exhortation. His research led to his first major publication, “Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism: A Study of ‘Brainwashing’” (1961).

Dr. Lifton was on the faculty of the Washington School of Psychiatry from 1954 to 1955 and worked as a research associate at Harvard from 1956 to 1961. He also taught at Yale.

At Harvard, Erik Erikson became his friend and mentor, and Dr. Lifton became immersed in Erikson’s theories of human identity, as well as his pioneering work in bringing psychological insights to historical figures like Martin Luther and Gandhi. Dr. Lifton veered from Erikson, however, in applying psychology not just to influential individuals but also to people in general. And he began to think about death’s place in psychological theory, something that he felt psychologists from Freud to Erikson had neglected.

With another Harvard professor, Dr. Riesman, Dr. Lifton grew active in protesting against nuclear weapons. He said these concerns impelled him to go to Hiroshima to see firsthand the bomb’s destruction.

There, he found people suffering a range of psychological traumas. They were most damaged by their realization that they had been used as guinea pigs to test a terrible new weapon, he wrote. Describing their response, he developed his concept of psychological “numbing.”

Dr. Lifton published his study on Hiroshima in 1968, the same year he published “Revolutionary Immortality: Mao Tse-Tung and the Chinese Cultural Revolution.” That book offered a psychohistorical look at the upheaval in China, and suggested that Mao and other leaders had been motivated by an unconscious sense of personal immortality.

He published books of essays, lectures and cartoons before turning his attention to Vietnam veterans. Drawing from intense rap sessions with 35 veterans, he examined their bitter, contradictory emotions. Some critics contended that Dr. Lifton’s personal opposition to the Vietnam War obscured his scientific objectivity.

After arriving at theories about death, symbolic immortality and the horror of nuclear war in several books, Dr. Lifton came to focus on the Holocaust. He explored how doctors could turn against their training and do things like select which prisoners in a Nazi concentration camp would die. His explanation was that the doctors had developed “double” personalities. (His quest to understand them was explored in a 2009 documentary film, “Robert Jay Lifton: Nazi Doctors.”)

He later identified the same phenomenon in the murderous Japanese cult Aum Shinrikyo, whose release of sarin gas in a Tokyo subway in 1995 killed 13 people and injured thousands. He wrote that Ikuo Hayashi, a surgeon and a member of the cult that carried out the attack, had formed “two selves that are morally and functionally antithetical although part of the same psyche.”

After Sept. 11, 2001, Dr. Lifton wrote extensively about terrorism, counterterrorism and the war in Iraq, including in his book “Superpower Syndrome: America’s Apocalyptic Confrontation With the World” (2003). His vision was exceedingly dark.

“The war on terrorism is apocalyptic, then, exactly because it is militarized and yet amorphous, without limits of time or place, and has no clear end,” he wrote in The Nation in 2003. “It therefore enters the realm of the infinite.”

In one of his last books, “The Climate Swerve: Reflections on Mind, Hope, and Survival” (2017), he examined what he called “the powerful shift in our awareness of climate truths.”

“The swerve forces us to look upon ourselves as members of a single species in deep trouble,” he wrote in The Times.

In addition to his daughter, Dr. Lifton is survived by his partner, Nancy Rosenblum; his son, Kenneth Lifton; and four grandchildren.

His last academic position was as visiting professor at Harvard Medical School. Before that, he taught for many years at John Jay College of Criminal Justice at the City University of New York.

In an interview with Newsweek in 1970, Dr. Lifton said that people who studied death were complicated, but were “not without humorous dimensions.” His cartoon birds told the jokes.

“Now that you have completed your thirty-year investigation of human mortality, could you tell us some conclusions?” one bird says.

“When you’re dead,” the other replies, “you’re dead.”

Ash Wu contributed reporting.

CultNEWS101 Articles: 9/5/2025


Korea, JMS (Christian Gospel Mission, 3HO
"Maple, who exposed JMS (Christian Gospel Mission) through Netflix's "I'm God" and "I'm a Survivor," left a lengthy message expressing her feelings.

On the 26th, Maple said, "I don't know how to describe myself when introducing myself, but my title might be 'the woman who revealed the truth about the cult JMS,' right? Most people who know me got to know my story through the Netflix documentary "I'm God" or "I'm a Survivor." I filed a lawsuit against JMS when I was 28 years old, which was three years ago, and I disclosed my face, real name, and details of my victimization. That's how I was able to bring down that large group with a 40-year history."

Maple, who escaped from JMS and exposed their sexual crimes, causing a stir in Korean society, recently published a book titled "Trace" containing her story.

She noted, "The story is already known, so why would I publish a book to tell that story again? After watching the documentary, you might still have many questions. You might think that cults or sexual victimization are far from you. I think it's because you don't know in detail what I went through." She continued, 'In the book, I detailed the process from when I was 16 or 17 years old, when I was evangelized, through the brainwashing process, departure, and the lawsuit. My personal meaning is to write about that pain to整理 my thoughts and heal. I hope that seeing my footprints helps you realize, 'Oh, if I go that way, I could end up on the wrong path' and serves as a warning so you can avoid such harm.'"
"The boarding schools were just one part of what several people born into 3HO describe as a nearly 50-year-long child-rearing experiment gone horribly wrong"

"During the monsoon season in the fall of 1981, a group of American children, some as young as five years old, traversed deep puddles full of leeches on a treacherous walk to their new school in the Himalayan foothills. They had travelled thousands of miles away from their parents; white Sikh converts and followers of Yogi Bhajan, a former customs inspector in New Delhi who arrived in the United States in 1968 and transformed himself into a yoga guru.  

Norman Kreisman, then known as Baba Nam Singh, helped escort the children to Guru Nanak Fifth Centenary School in Mussoorie, India. He remembers the children crying a lot and needing help with everything.

"They were totally shell-shocked, like basket cases," he recalls. "One of them said their parents didn't even say goodbye."

That year marked the beginning of a practice where children raised in Yogi Bhajan's Healthy, Happy, Holy Organization (3HO) were sent to residential boarding schools in India."


"3HO Reparations with Philip and Stacie
Philip and Stacie wrote about a recent reparations program meant to address complaints made for decades against 3HO (Happy, Healthy, Holy Organization), led by the late Yogi Bhajan, who started Kundalini Yoga.

Join us for a discussion with these two writers about the second generation of 3HO. The children of those who joined the organization felt like they were screaming into a void about the abuses they had suffered, especially when they were sent off to boarding schools in India.

The complaints reached a crescendo in 2020, and 3HO offered a reparations program to its former second generation members who reported neglect and psychological, physical, and sexual abuse.

The program just concluded and Stacie and Philip wrote about it recently for Baaz News in an article titled 3HO's Boarding Schools Were A Living Hell"

"Sat Pavan Kaur was born into the 3HO community and Sikh Religion. She spent her childhood moving around to various 3HO communities. At the age of 8, she was sent to India with 120 other children to go to boarding school leaving her family back in the US. At 16, she would be taken out of school and join Yogi Bajan's personal staff. In the last couple of years, she has left the Cult but stayed within the greater Sikh community. She is one of the many women that was abused by Yogi Bhajan. She has had to unravel her life, the good, the bad, and the horror that she experienced growing up in the 3HO community; the abuse she was subjected to, the toll it took on her and her husband, and the clear choices she made to raise her children differently from how she was raised.

Sat Pavan now lives with her two children and husband of 27 years, raising her family and working hard to be a good person and do good in the world around her. She has been teaching and performing dance for the last 30 years to people of all ages and backgrounds, and is passionate about teaching and inspiring creativity, confidence, and individuality in her students, especially the younger generation which has been a hugely positive outlet for her. Satpavan is also a musician who plays Kirtan and has played Sikh religious music since she was a young girl and continues to do so. Her music, along with dance has kept her going by providing a sense of healing throughout her life. In this intimate conversation, Sat Pavan shares a full portrait of her life being born into the 3HO cult, from how her parents were pulled in to her childhood development as she was whisked away from one unsafe situation to another. Sat expertly points out the key moments of indoctrination, suffering, and red flags she experienced throughout her decades involved with 3HO and it's monstrous guru."


Sep 4, 2025

CultNEWS101 Articles: 9/4/2025


The Kingdom of God Global Church, Legal, His Way Spirit Led Assemblies
"The FBI today arrested the leaders of Joshua Media Ministries International (JMMI) in a series of raids across several states for allegedly using psychological and physical abuse to coerce victims into soliciting millions.

According to the U.S. Department of Justice, JMMI leaders, David Taylor and Michelle Brannon, ran a forced labor organization and a multi-million-dollar money laundering conspiracy. The department called the arrests a "nationwide takedown" of a human trafficking scheme that operated in Michigan, Florida, Texas, and Missouri.

Taylor, 53, and Brannon, 56, were taken into custody this morning in North Carolina and Florida, after a federal grand jury in the Eastern District of Michigan returned a ten-count indictment.

Additionally, the FBI raided JMMI properties in Tampa, Houston, North Carolina, and Michigan this morning, according to reports from multiple news sites."
"The FBI's response Wednesday at a mansion in the Avila neighborhood of Tampa is linked to the arrest of church leaders on federal forced labor and money laundering charges.

A federal grand jury returned a 10-count indictment against 53-year-old David E. Taylor and 56-year-old Michelle Brannon —leaders of "The Kingdom of God Global Church" — for their alleged roles in a forced labor and money laundering conspiracy that spanned Florida, Michigan, Texas and Missouri.

In addition to the response in Tampa, the FBI confirmed it conducted an operation early Wednesday morning at a property in Houston owned by Joshua Media Ministries International, the former name of Kingdom of God Global Church.

Taylor, who calls himself the church's "apostle," and Brannon, the church's "executive director," were arrested Wednesday in "a nationwide takedown of their forced labor organization," according to a release from the U.S. Attorney's Office.

Taylor and Brannon are accused of coercing victims to work at call centers soliciting donations for the church and to work as personal servants or "armor bearers" for Taylor.

The DOJ says Taylor and Brannon controlled "every aspect" of their victims' daily lives, including forcing them to sleep in call centers or "ministry" houses.

"Taylor demanded that his Armor Bearers transport women from ministry houses, airports, and other locations to Taylor's location and ensured the women transported to Taylor took Plan B emergency contraceptives," the document reads.

Taylor and Brannon are accused of requiring victims to work long hours in the call center without pay, forcing them to follow orders and setting unattainable monetary donation goals.

"If victims disobeyed an order or failed to reach his monetary goals, Taylor and Brannon punished the victims with public humiliation, additional work, food and shelter restrictions, psychological abuse, forced repentance, sleep deprivation, physical assaults, and threats of divine judgment in the form of sickness, accidents, and eternal damnation," the DOJ release says.

According to the U.S. Attorney's Office, the Kingdom of God Global Church received millions of dollars in donations through the call centers, which Taylor and Brannon used to purchase luxury properties, vehicles, boats, Jet Skis and ATVs.

Taylor has reportedly received approximately $50 million in donations since 2014.

Church donations used to fund lavish lifestyle, FBI says

Court documents emphasize that the millions in donations were collected "under the guise of a religious ministry."

According to the indictment, here are some of the items purchased by Taylor and Brannon:

• Mercedes-Benz — $63,195.94
• Bentley Continental (downpayment) — $70,000.00
• Crownline Boat — $105,595.00
• Bentley Continental (downpayment) — $15,000.00
• Bentley Mulsanne — $50,000.00
• Mercedes-Benz — $14,908.00
• Mercedes-Benz — $13,695.00
• Mercedes-Benz — $12,485.00
• 5 ATVs — $31,805.00
• 2 Jet Skis and 1 Jet Ski trailer — $24,332.00
• 2 Jet Skis and 1 Jet Ski trailer — $24,962.20
• 125 lbs. of super colossal red king crab legs, 6 seafood shears, and 30 crab cutters — $10,353.44
• Rolls Royce Cullinan (lease signing payment) — $123,028.09
• Bulletproof automotive — $33,930.00
• Bulletproof automotive — $32,630.00
• Bulletproof automotive — $37,500.00
• Bulletproof automotive — $18,302.76

Charges for church leaders arrested after FBI search in Tampa

The charges Taylor and Brannon are facing include:

• Conspiracy to commit forced labor, which carries up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine
• Forced labor, which carries up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine
• Conspiracy to commit money laundering, which carries up to 20 years in prison and a $500,000 fine

Brannon will appear today on the indictment in Tampa, while Taylor will appear today on the indictment in Durham, North Carolina.

"Combating human trafficking is a top priority for the Department of Justice," Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon of the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division wrote in the release. "We are committed to relentlessly pursuing and ending this scourge and obtaining justice for the victims."

According to a 2022 article from the Tampa Bay Business Journal, the Kingdom of God Global Church in Taylor, Michigan, purchased the estate from Tampa Bay Buccaneers co-owner Darcie Glazer Kassewitz and her husband for $8.3 million.

The sale reportedly included the 28,893-square-foot main house and a 2,620-square-foot guest house.

Avila is an affluent residential community in North Tampa.

" ... [David E. Taylor and 56-year-old Michelle Brannon —leaders of "The Kingdom of God Global Church] are accused of coercing victims to work at call centers soliciting donations for the church and to work as personal servants or "armor bearers" for Taylor.

The DOJ says Taylor and Brannon controlled "every aspect" of their victims' daily lives, including forcing them to sleep in call centers or "ministry" houses.

"Taylor demanded that his Armor Bearers transport women from ministry houses, airports, and other locations to Taylor's location and ensured the women transported to Taylor took Plan B emergency contraceptives," the document reads.

Taylor and Brannon are accused of requiring victims to work long hours in the call center without pay, forcing them to follow orders and setting unattainable monetary donation goals.

"If victims disobeyed an order or failed to reach his monetary goals, Taylor and Brannon punished the victims with public humiliation, additional work, food and shelter restrictions, psychological abuse, forced repentance, sleep deprivation, physical assaults, and threats of divine judgment in the form of sickness, accidents, and eternal damnation," the DOJ release says.

According to the U.S. Attorney's Office, the Kingdom of God Global Church received millions of dollars in donations through the call centers, which Taylor and Brannon used to purchase luxury properties, vehicles, boats, Jet Skis and ATVs.

Taylor has reportedly received approximately $50 million in donations since 2014."
"Detectives in San Bernardino may have caught a break in a more than two-year-old missing persons case that they are now investigating as a possible homicide.

Emilio Ghanem, 40, vanished in May 2023 while on a trip to the Inland Empire. He was last seen at a Starbucks in Redlands.

At the center of the investigation into Ghanem's disappearance and possible murder, according to the Redlands Police Department, is a Hemet-based religious group known as His Way Spirit Led Assemblies run by a woman named Kathryn Martin who goes by the title "prophetess," and her husband, Pastor Muzic.
A former member of the organization who did not want to be identified explained to KTLA that the group believes the prophetess is God on Earth.

"When the spirit of God comes over her, everything changes in her, like her voice changes, the way she talks changes, and everything has to be quiet," he said.

Martin and her husband reportedly have complete control over the group, which, according to the former member, is always preparing for the end of times, storing enough packaged food, water and other supplies to last for years.

Ghanem had been a member of the California group for more than 20 years and just prior to his disappearance, he'd left the organization and quit the pest control company the group runs to move back to Nashville where his family was."


News, Education, Intervention, Recovery

Sep 3, 2025

CultNEWS101 Articles: 9/3/2025

Premanand Maharaj, India,  Guru Wars, Legal,  ZiziansSingularism, Religious Freedom
Spiritual leader Jagadguru Rambhadracharya has challenged Premanand Maharaj over his knowledge of Sanskrit. In an interview that went viral on social media, Jagadguru Rambhadracharya also said he does not consider Premanand Maharaj a miraculous saint. A viral clip shows Rambhadracharya giving Premanand Maharaj an open challenge and saying that if he is really miraculous, then he should come in front of him and speak in Sanskrit. When asked about Premanand Maharaj, Jagadguru Rambhadracharya told journalist Shubhankar Mishra, "There is no miracle. If there is any miracle, then I challenge Premanand Maharaj to speak even one word of Sanskrit in front of me or explain the meaning of the Sanskrit shlokas that I have said. Today I am openly saying that he is like my child. It is a miracle that he knows the scriptures. He is living on dialysis." As the video moves further, Jagadguru Rambhadracharya says that he considers Premanand Maharaj like his child. "I am neither calling him a scholar nor a miracle worker. Such popularity lasts only for a few days. However, saying that this is a miracle is not acceptable to me. Sing bhajans and read and write," Jagadguru Rambhadracharya added.
"The Justice Department said Thursday it will seek the death penalty against a member of the cultlike Zizians group accused of killing a U.S. Border Patrol agent in Vermont in the latest Trump administration push for more federal executions.

Teresa Youngblut, 21, of Seattle, is among a group of radical computer scientists focused on veganism, gender identity and artificial intelligence who have been linked to six killings in three states. She rented a house in rural Chatham County raided in February by FBI agents.

She's accused of fatally shooting agent David Maland on Jan. 20, the same day President Donald Trump was inaugurated and signed a sweeping executive order lifting the moratorium on federal executions.

Youngblut initially was charged with using a deadly weapon against law enforcement and discharging a firearm during an assault with a deadly weapon. But the Trump administration signaled early on that more serious charges were coming, and a new indictment released Thursday charged her with murder of a federal law enforcement agent, assaulting other agents with a deadly weapon and related firearms offenses.

"We will not stand for such attacks on the men and women who protect our communities and borders," Acting Assistant Attorney General Matthew Galeotti said in a press release."
"Last year, Utah lawmakers passed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which gives people more power to challenge the government if it interferes with their religious beliefs.

Religious freedom is, in many ways, the backbone of the major religion in Utah — the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints — and the Republican-sponsored measure passed easily.

But that law is being put to the test in the courts by an unexpected group — a very small religion that's been targeted by law enforcement for using psychedelic drugs as part of its practices. The religion is called Singularism.

In 2023, police carried out a warrant at its Provo headquarters, seizing its sacramental psilocybin and, later, hitting its founder with criminal charges. Singularism founder Bridger Jensen is suing, and citing this religious freedom law as his argument."



News, Education, Intervention, Recovery

Sep 2, 2025

CultNEWS101 Articles: 9/2/2025


Malaysia, Falun Gong, China, Nazism, Anthroposophy, UK, The Kingdom of Kubala


Free Malaysia Today: Falun Gong exhibits allegedly seized by 'China police' near National Monument
"A Falun Gong practitioner claims that seven men, identifying themselves as policemen from China, removed her group's exhibits near the National Monument in Kuala Lumpur last Friday."

" ... The woman, who wanted to be known only as Yong, told FMT she had set up the booth there three months ago to educate the public about Falun Gong, a spiritual movement banned in China.

"I chased after them and asked for the items to be returned. One of them said, 'We are policemen from China'. They ignored my pleas and drove off," she said.

Yong claimed the men left in a van accompanied by a local tour guide and driver.

In May, then Kuala Lumpur police chief Rusdi Isa said the arrest of more than 70 Falun Gong followers ahead of Chinese president Xi Jinping's visit to Malaysia was lawful as "Falun Gong is an illegal organisation".

"As such, it is not permitted to carry out any activities," he was quoted as saying at a press conference."

Between Occultism and Fascism: Anthroposophy and the Politics of Race and Nation in Germany and Italy, 1900-1945 by Peter Staudenmaier
"The relationship between Nazism and occultism has long been an object of popular speculation and scholarly controversy. This dissertation examines the interaction between occult groups and the Nazi regime as well as the Italian Fascist state, with central attention to the role of racial and ethnic theories in shaping these developments. The centerpiece of the dissertation is a case study of the anthroposophist movement founded by Rudolf Steiner, an esoteric tendency which gave rise to widely influential alternative cultural institutions including Waldorf schools, biodynamic agriculture, and holistic methods of health care and nutrition. A careful exploration of the tensions and affinities between anthroposophists and fascists reveals a complex and differentiated portrait of modern occult tendencies and their treatment by Nazi and Fascist officials.

Two initial chapters analyze the emergence of anthroposophy's racial doctrines, its self-conception as an 'unpolitical' spiritual movement, and its relations with the völkisch milieu and with Lebensreform movements. Four central chapters concern the fate of anthroposophy in Nazi Germany, with a detailed reconstruction of specific anthroposophical institutions and their interactions with various Nazi agencies. Two final chapters provide a comparative portrait of the Italian anthroposophical movement during the Fascist era, with particular concentration on the role of anthroposophists in influencing and administering Fascist racial policy.

Based on a wide range of archival sources, the dissertation offers an empirically founded account of the neglected history of modern occult movements while shedding new light on the operations of the Nazi and Fascist regimes. The analysis focuses on the interplay of ideology and practice, the concrete ways in which contending worldviews attempted to establish institutional footholds within the organizational disarray of the Third Reich and the Fascist state, and shows that disagreements over racial ideology were embedded in power struggles between competing factions within the Nazi hierarchy and the Fascist apparatus. It delineates the ways in which early twentieth century efforts toward spiritual renewal, holism, cultural regeneration and redemption converged with deeply regressive political realities. Engaging critically with previous accounts, the dissertation raises challenging questions about the political implications of alternative spiritual currents and counter-cultural tendencies." 

"A missing Texas woman found living with the self-proclaimed leaders of a lost "African" tribe in a Scottish forest insists she is there by her own free will, despite her family's fears she is lost to the sect forever.

Kaura Taylor was recently found living in the woods with the group after vanishing from her home three months ago, leaving relatives distraught.

"It is very stressful, and difficult. It breaks our heart. We're overly concerned about Kaura, but she doesn't think anyone is concerned about her," Taylor's aunt Teri Allen told The Independent.

In a message posted to Facebook after 21-year-old Taylor, mother to a one-year-old child who she took with her to Scotland, said that she was not missing and lashed out at reports she "disappeared."

"I'm very happy with my King and Queen, I was never missing, I fled a very abusive, toxic family," Taylor wrote, following up with a video message telling U.K. authorities to leave her alone in the woods in Jedburgh, 40 miles south of Edinburgh. She added that she is "an adult, not a helpless child."

However, Allen on Thursday pushed back stridently against those assertions, describing her niece's younger years as "very sheltered and protected."

She said Taylor "was brought up in church, but not their religion. Not this thing that they got going. It's a bunch of hogwash."

Speaking to The Independent from her Dallas-area home, Allen said Taylor kept it "totally hidden from the family" when she began communicating in 2023 with so-called Kingdom of Kubala leader King Atehene, a former opera singer and PR agent from Ghana whose real name is Kofi Offeh, and his wife Jean Gasho, who now goes by Queen Nandi.

Queen Nandi did not respond to a request for comment. An email seeking comment from King Atehene bounced back as undeliverable.

The Kingdom of Kubala claims to be a lost Hebrew tribe that aims to retake the land they say was expropriated when Queen Elizabeth I expelled native black Jacobites from England in the 1590s.

The trio in Jedburgh hope to add to their numbers by bringing other supposedly lost tribes back to their purported ancestral homeland."



News, Education, Intervention, Recovery


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