Showing posts with label Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh. Show all posts

Jun 18, 2026

CultNEWS101 Articles: 6/18/2026

Culture & Media

New Publications

In a new book, Sarito Carroll describes how she traded sex for adult male affection as a young teen living communally with followers of this infamous Indian guru.

Updates

Legislative & Legal

High-profile legal actions targeting fraudulent psychic operations, mass-mailing scams, and individuals using spiritual claims for extortion or defamation have led to several major rulings and lawsuits in federal and state courts over the past year.


The notable cases from 2025 and 2026 include:


1. United States v. Georg Ingenbleek (April 2026)

  • The Case: A federal judge in New Jersey sentenced German national Georg Ingenbleek to 70 months in prison and ordered a massive $`13.6 million forfeiture for orchestrating a multi-million dollar psychic mail fraud scheme.

  • The Fraud: Between 2011 and 2016, Ingenbleek ran a predatory mass-mailing operation targeting vulnerable individuals across the U.S. The letters claimed to be personalized insights from well-known psychics offering "free" services and items to bring good fortune. Once victims engaged, the operation sent aggressive follow-up billing notices demanding money and falsely threatening legal action and prosecution if they didn't pay. Ingenbleek was indicted in 2020, captured as a fugitive in Italy in 2024, and extradited to the U.S. in 2025.


2. Rebecca Scofield v. Ashley Guillard (February 2026)

  • The Case: A federal jury in Boise, Idaho, ordered a viral TikTok "tarot card reader" to pay `$10 million in damages to a University of Idaho history professor in a massive defamation lawsuit.

  • The Fraud: Self-proclaimed psychic Ashley Guillard posted over 100 videos to TikTok claiming her "spiritual intuition" and tarot readings proved the history department chair was responsible for ordering the tragic 2022 stabbings of four Idaho college students. Chief U.S. Magistrate Judge Raymond Patricco ruled the claims entirely defamatory, stating they relied purely on "spiritual intuition" with zero objective basis. The February 2026 trial ended with a unanimous jury awarding $`7.5 million in punitive damages alone to punish the behavior and deter similar online "psychic" accusations.


3. United States v. Gina Rita Russell (Late 2024 / Ongoing Impact)

  • The Case: Sentenced to over 10 years (125 months) in federal prison, self-purported psychic Gina Rita Russell was penalized for masterminding an elaborate fraud, extortion, and money laundering ring.

  • The Fraud: Operating out of New York and Los Angeles, Russell weaponized her position as a spiritual advisor to psychologically coerce a Maryland man. Through extortionate spiritual threats and manipulation, she forced the victim to embezzle more than `$4 million from his Washington, D.C., employer to fund her lifestyle.


4. Pennsylvania Record Civil Filing: Spells & Blackmail Action (August 2025)

  • The Case: A civil lawsuit was filed against an individual operating as a psychic and spiritual practitioner, alleging severe financial exploitation.

  • The Fraud: The lawsuit outlines a classic multi-layered psychic fraud mechanism. It charges the defendant with civil RICO violations, extortion, unjust enrichment, "theft by fortune-telling," and practicing medicine without a license. The plaintiff alleges the psychic manipulated her into paying exorbitant fees for personalized spells, using emotional distress and eventual blackmail to extract funds.


Common Red Flags Identified in Recent Litigation


Civil and criminal court filings from these cases highlight a distinct pattern used by fraudulent spiritualists to exploit victims:


  • The "Personal Vision" Mass Mailer: Automated form letters sent to thousands of elderly or isolated individuals simultaneously, falsely claiming a famous psychic had a specific, individualized vision of their upcoming wealth or tragedy.

  • Karmic and Legal Extortion: Demanding escalating fees to "cleanse" a curse or prevent a tragedy, often shifting into aggressive legal threats or spiritual blackmail if the victim attempts to stop paying.

  • Unsubstantiated "Intuition" as Fact: Using spiritual tools (like tarot cards or mediumship) to publicly fabricate criminal allegations against innocent individuals for internet clout or financial gain via social media monetization.


Research & Academic

Researchers Need Your Input: A New Tool to Assess Religious and Spiritual Trauma


A graduate researcher at the University of Illinois Springfield is developing the first standardized assessment tool for religious and spiritual trauma — and is looking for participants to help validate it.


The Multidimensional Religious and Spiritual Trauma Assessment (MRSTA) is designed to measure how religious and spiritual experiences affect mental and emotional well-being, including intergenerational trauma, family and religious culture, and organizational harm. The goal is to give therapists and educators better tools for working with survivors of religious harm.


The study is conducted by Takouhie Jensen under the supervision of Dr. Huijuan Li, Assistant Professor of Counseling at the University of Illinois Springfield, and has been reviewed and approved by the university’s Institutional Review Board (IRB).


Who can participate? Anyone 18 or older with current or past involvement in any religious or spiritual group.


What does it involve? An anonymous one-time online survey of approximately 130–150 items, taking 20–30 minutes. No personal identifiers are collected. You may skip any question.


Survey link: https://uisits.co1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_3EkKLn3QtpOOJWm


Questions can be directed to Takouhie Jensen at tjens@uis.edu or Dr. Huijuan Li at hli254@uis.edu.


Ongoing Focus

WRSP: Clearwater City Council approves giving street to Church of Scientology to build L. Ron Hubbard Hall

"Clearwater City Council gave the green light Thursday night for the Church of Scientology to take over a short city street that’s key to building L. Ron Hubbard Hall, a 3500-person venue named after its controversial founder.


The decision came after more than an hour of public comment that councilmembers cut short. Hundreds of Scientologists and dozens of their critics once again packed the downtown library where council meetings are held.


“My wife and I have personally contributed millions of dollars toward the L. Ron Hubbard Hall since the inception of this project because we believe in what it will mean for future generations of parishioners and for downtown Clearwater,” said Scientologist Stu Sjouwerman, the billionaire tech founder of KnowBe4, the world's largest integrated security awareness training and simulated phishing platform. “It's the completion of a vision that has been discussed for decades and the final piece to complete [Scientology’s] downtown campus.”


This is not the church's first attempt. In 2025, Scientology withdrew a similar application shortly before a final city vote, saying it intended to revise and resubmit the proposal. It did exactly that in 2026.


Critics argue that South Garden Avenue is public land and should remain open to everyone. They believe transferring the roadway would further consolidate Scientology's already extensive influence over downtown Clearwater. The church and affiliated entities own a large share of downtown property. Many former Scientologists who showed up at the meeting say the church commits human rights abuses and uses child labor."


"... In late 2025, Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier issued an opinion siding with Scientology's position that the church could pursue its planned development and that the city lacked certain grounds to block it. That opinion strengthened the church's case but did not automatically settle the matter politically.


Thursday night, three councilmembers, David Allbritton, Mike Mannino, and Ryan Cotton, said they were supporting the vacation request because they are routine and have never been rejected."


Group Profile

International Society of Divine Love (ISDL)

The International Society of Divine Love (ISDL), incorporated in 1975 by the Hindu guru Swami Prakashanand Saraswati (a disciple of Jagadguru Shri Kripalu Ji Maharaj), underwent a severe institutional collapse and complete rebranding following a major criminal scandal involving its founder.


The trajectory of the organization and its ultimate fate unfolded through several key developments:


  1. Expansion and the Creation of Radha Madhav Dham

Originally founded in India, the ISDL expanded internationally to New Zealand and eventually to the United States. In 1990, the organization established its international headquarters on a massive 200-acre property in Austin, Texas, known as Barsana Dham (later renamed Radha Madhav Dham). The site became one of the largest Hindu temple complexes in the Western Hemisphere, attracting thousands of followers and visitors for religious festivals.


  1. Criminal Charges and Conviction of the Founder

The organization's trajectory shifted abruptly between 2007 and 2011 due to severe criminal allegations against its founder, Prakashanand Saraswati:

  • 2007–2008 Arrest: Three former residents of the Texas ashram came forward to law enforcement, reporting that they had been subjected to chronic sexual abuse by Saraswati when they were minors (ranging from ages 12 to 14) during the 1990s. Saraswati was subsequently arrested.

  • 2011 Trial and Conviction: In March 2011, a Texas jury found Saraswati guilty on 20 counts of indecency with a child.

  • Flight and Fugitive Status: Following his conviction but before the sentencing phase, Saraswati fled the United States while out on a $10 million bond. He was sentenced in absentia to 280 years in prison and a $200,000 fine. Federal authorities later determined he had used a fraudulent passport to escape to India, where he remains a fugitive.


  1. Reorganization and Rebranding

Following the founder's conviction and flight, the International Society of Divine Love faced immense legal, financial, and public relations crises. To survive the fallout, the organization systematically distanced itself from Prakashanand Saraswati and restructured its governance:

  • Institutional Scrubbing: The organization stripped Saraswati’s name, images, and writings from its official materials, websites, and temple gift shops.

  • The Rebrand: The U.S. nonprofit entity underwent a total rebranding. The Texas ashram officially changed its name from Barsana Dham to Radha Madhav Dham to signal a fresh start.

  • New Leadership Alignment: Globally, the broader movement shifted its primary alignment away from the disgraced founder and placed itself directly under the umbrella of its parent organization in India, Jagadguru Kripalu Parishat (JKP), which is managed by Kripalu Maharaj's daughters.

Today, the physical infrastructure built by the International Society of Divine Love still operates in Texas as Radha Madhav Dham, a community temple and cultural center. However, it is now under a completely restructured local management designed to sever ties with its history of coercive control and abuse.


References


The Criminal Case and Conviction: The details surrounding the arrest and subsequent trial of the founder, Swami Prakashanand Saraswati (often referred to as "Shree Swamiji"), are extensively documented in Texas legal archives and in media outlets such as The Austin American-Statesman and KXAN-TV. In 2011, a Hays County jury convicted him on 20 counts of indecency with a child stemming from a pattern of abuse against minors at the Texas ashram during the 1990s.

Fugitive Status: Following his conviction, Saraswati skipped his $10 million bond and fled the country, an escape that led to appearances on law-enforcement broadcasts, including CNN’s The Hunt with John Walsh and Fox's America's Most Wanted.

Documentation regarding the transition from Barsana Dham to Radha Madhav Dham comes from the organization's corporate restructuring filings in Texas and official public relations statements. This shift placed the remaining physical complex directly under the administrative wing of Jagadguru Kripalu Parishat (JKP) in India, an entity listed in repositories such as the Association of Religion Data Archives (ARDA).


International Society of Divine Love (ISDL)

Following the 2011 conviction and subsequent flight of its founder, Prakashanand Saraswati, the organization overseeing the 200-acre Texas ashram faced severe legal, financial, and existential crises. To survive the fallout and address lawsuits from victims, the management implemented a series of dramatic structural, legal, and leadership changes designed to stabilize the community and insulate it from its founder's criminal legacy.


The specific changes implemented include:

  1. Reconstitution of the Board and Local Leadership

The organization dissolved the insular governance structure that had previously been controlled by or directly answered to Prakashanand Saraswati.

  • Appointment of New Leadership: The ashram appointed new, public-facing spiritual and administrative leaders who were distinct from the inner circle active during the 1990s abuse period. Sushree Diwakari Devi was appointed President of Radha Madhav Dham, overseeing administrative, organizational, and spiritual outreach alongside other Western-based preachers such as Swami Nikhilanand.

  • Separation of Management: Day-to-day operations and public relations were handed over to a restructured board of directors and a dedicated management team. Spokespersons (such as Vrinda Devi) were designated to explicitly communicate to the public and the media that the ashram was actively "moving forward" and severing historical ties.


  1. Legal Restructuring and Incorporation Changes

To manage the immense financial liabilities stemming from civil litigation—including major vicarious liability and negligence lawsuits brought by survivors of the abuse—the entity underwent formal corporate restructuring.

  • Asset Insulation: The nonprofit entity stepped away from the "International Society of Divine Love" (ISDL) corporate identity in the United States.

  • The "Radha Madhav Dham" Rebrand: In addition to renaming the physical site from Barsana Dham to Radha Madhav Dham, the corporate entities were restructured to operate under this new moniker, aiming to separate the physical temple assets and community operations from the legal entity directly tied to Saraswati’s 1975 incorporation.


  1. Direct Subordination to Jagadguru Kripalu Parishat (JKP)

Previously, the international branches of the ISDL operated with a high degree of autonomy under Saraswati's personal dictate. Following his flight, the Texas ashram shifted its organizational alignment to become a direct, subordinate international wing of Jagadguru Kripalu Parishat (JKP), the parent charitable trust headquartered in Mangarh, India.

  • Oversight by the "Pracharikas": JKP India was established by Kripalu Maharaj (Saraswati's own guru) and is explicitly administered by his daughters (Sushri Dr. Shyama Tripathi and Sushri Dr. Krishna Tripathi). By integrating tightly into JKP’s international governance, Radha Madhav Dham effectively placed its theological and structural oversight in the hands of the Indian parent trust's leadership, bypassing the authority of its fugitive founder.


  1. Total Institutional Erasure of the Founder

From a structural policy standpoint, the new management enacted a strict "scrubbing" protocol across the entire organization to dismantle the cult of personality surrounding Saraswati:

  • Removal of Material: The board ordered the immediate removal of all photographs, portraits, and statues of Prakashanand Saraswati from the Shree Raseshwari Radha Rani Temple and the surrounding grounds.

  • Literature and Media Sanctions: All books, audio recordings, and philosophical commentaries authored by Saraswati were permanently pulled from the ashram’s gift shops, libraries, and online distribution channels. The organization shifted entirely to using orthodox texts and materials produced directly by Kripalu Maharaj or the JKP trust. 


AI Research Disclosure: To bring you the most relevant stories, parts of this newsletter utilize artificial intelligence (AI) tools to search the web, source articles, and assist with content curation. This content is for informational purposes only; we recommend verifying critical facts independently.


News, Education, Intervention, Recovery


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Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.

CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families make the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.

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Nov 4, 2025

CultNEWS101 Articles: 11/4/2025


Iglesia De Dios Ebenezer, Clergy Sexual Abuse, Legal, Australia, Podcast, Rajneeshpuram

" ... Carlos Ramirez Valdez was sentenced to 45 years to life for molesting girls as young as 4 from 2012 to 2019.

Valdez exploited his position as an Orange County church leader to gain access to victims, whom he assaulted in a basement, his van, and a backyard shed, prosecutors say.

A former Orange County pastor will spend decades behind bars after he used his trusted position as a spiritual leader to molest girls as young as 4 over the course of eight years, according to authorities.

Carlos Ramirez Valdez, 61, assaulted three children in places such as a church basement, his van, and a backyard shed, according to the Orange County district attorney's office.

Prosecutors say he met the victims while he was a church leader at Iglesia De Dios Ebenezer in Santa Ana and was hired as a pastor at another Santa Ana church, International Mission Church USA, before he was arrested in 2021.

His abuses took place from 2012 to 2019, prosecutors said.

One girl was molested by Valdez for seven years, starting when she was just 4 years old, prosecutors said. Valdez was accused of repeatedly assaulting the girl in a church basement and in his van.

She ultimately reported the abuse to a school counselor.

In 2020, another girl came forward to police in Garden Grove and reported that Valdez had sexually abused her in 2014 and 2015 when he offered to give her a ride home from church, prosecutors said. She was 9 years old at the time of the abuse.

A third victim reportedly told Riverside police in 2020 that Valdez had repeatedly sexually assaulted her in a backyard shed for eight months when she was 7 and 8 years old, prosecutors said.

Valdez was convicted this summer of 11 felony counts of lewd acts with a minor under 14 and three felony counts of oral copulation or sexual penetration of a child 10 or younger, prosecutors said. He was sentenced on Friday to 45 years to life in prison.

Investigators shared some of the tactics they say Valdez used to lure his victims into vulnerable places during testimony at his preliminary hearing, according to City News Service. He told one victim to come into his van because he needed to comb her hair or required help with something, authorities said, and then would proceed to molest her.

He was also accused of showing one of the victims an adult film while he assaulted her at his Riverside home, according to City News Service.

"Churches should be safe sanctuaries, not hunting grounds for child molesters," Orange County Dist. Atty. Todd Spitzer said in a statement. "These young girls were subjected to unimaginable abuse by someone in a position of trust. The sexual exploitation of children will never be acceptable, and predators will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law."

The Guardian: Australia's growing cult crisis
"Guardian Australia's daily news podcast examines why more people are falling prey to cults and whether the current laws are strong enough to help vulnerable people who might be lured in.

Victoria correspondent Benita Kolovos speaks to Reged Ahmad about why more 'modern' cults are using new methods to recruit and promising 'simple answers to complex problems'."

WGTC: A cult in Oregon tried to sway a local election with a bioterror attack, giving hundreds of locals food poisoning
The Rajneeshee cult hatched a plan to rig a local election by using Salmonella.

"In the 1980s, a commune was set up in an isolated region of Oregon. Followers of the spiritual leader Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh moved from India to a 64,000-acre plot of farmland and soon developed their own community, much to the locals' vexation. Over time, tensions arose between the two groups, leading to an incident which has since been dubbed the Rajneeshee bioterror attack.

The community, named Rajneeshpuram, had a population of roughly 2,500; however, the population would often swell to around 15,000 during festivals. On the land were a hospital, water and sewage services, a police force, and even a shopping mall. However, local Oregonians took issue with how land on the former ranch was being used.

Paranoia within the commune grew as both sides became increasingly antagonistic towards each other. The cult grew, taking over more land and conquering the nearby town of Antelope, renaming it Rajneesh. They also drove out older residents with higher taxes and intimidation.

The Rajneeshee cult continued to expand, but the Oregon Supreme Court put a dent in their plans by canceling Rajneesheepuram's incorporation as an official city in Oregon. The cult decided that the best solution was to continue their expansion, but this time they would be a lot more aggressive.

After taking control of Antelope, the Rajneeshees realized they could control the entirety of Wasco County if they won two of the three judgeship positions on the three-member governing board. Of course, the Rajneeshees would be hugely outnumbered by the locals, so a plan was hatched to rig the election.

In 1984, the plan was hatched to make voters too ill to head to their nearest polling station. The Rajneesh Medical Corporation within the commune turned its resources into developing a strain of Salmonella.

They tested it by giving contaminated water to Oregon officials who visited the ranch, with one county judge becoming so sick he was hospitalized and almost died. Salmonella was also spread on doorknobs, urinals in government buildings, and even sprinkled over food in salad bars.

In September 1984, several teams were assembled to infiltrate restaurants across the county and infect as many people as possible. The first cases of food poisoning were recorded on September 9, but the link between the Rajneeshee cult and the sickness wasn't discovered until much later."


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Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.

CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families in making the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.

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Please forward articles that you think we should add to cultintervention@gmail.com.

Aug 7, 2025

CultNEWS101 Articles: 8/7/2025

Book,  Osho,  Rajneesh, Obituary, John Huddle, Word of Faith Fellowship, Tibetan Buddhist, Book, Asaram Bapu

" In the by Sarito Carroll of Enlightenment is the gripping story of Carroll's childhood inside the Osho Rajneesh cult—one of the most controversial spiritual movements of the 20th century. While in the commune, Sarito was submerged in a world where devotion and freedom clashed with manipulation, sexual misconduct, and neglect. This was the life she knew until the movement collapsed amid scandal and criminal charges in 1985, when sixteen-year-old Sarito was thrust into a society she knew little about.

Now, decades later, after battling shame, fear, and self-doubt, Sarito breaks her silence to expose the abuse, exploitation, and disillusionment she endured in the Rajneesh community. She stands up against this formidable spiritual institution that promised liberation while concealing dark secrets behind its facade of love and joy. With raw honesty and heart-wrenching clarity, she recounts her fight to reclaim her identity, confront the community's betrayal, and heal on her own terms. It is a powerful story of survival, resilience, courage, and hard-won freedom."
John Huddle lived in Western North Carolina. In addition to writing his blog, religiouscultsinfo.com, He serves as a board member of the "Faith Freedom Fund," a non-profit group helping survivors from high demand religious groups. Since publishing "Locked in," John has become a prominent figure in leading the fight to expose the practices of Word of Faith Fellowship (WOFF) in Spindale, NC. Labeled an "activist" and "critic" of this group by media sources, he has continued to take on new challenges such as organizing and speaking at public meetings, questioning government officials and chronicling the legal troubles for this controversial church. The journey continues with State and Federal investigators now conducting investigations on several fronts involving the leaders of this church. Look for John's next book revealing the struggles and victories after leaving WOFF, expected to be published by December 2018.
" ... After nearly thirty years as a Tibetan Buddhist, Chandler snapped out, and realized she was part of a thousand-year-old Lamaist cult that uses mindfulness, and other contemplative practices, along with ancient and sophisticated techniques, to recruit, commit and entrap westerners into the Tibetan Lamaist medieval world.

Chandler had a front row seat to the Tibetan Lama hierarchy and how it operates, having taken care of the son of Chogyam Trungpa, the notorious 'crazy wisdom guru.' This gave Chandler exposure to not only Chogyam Trungpa's Vajradhatu Shambhala inner workings, but also to dozens of other, interconnected Tibetan lamas, whose ideas and amoral values have been infiltrating our western institutions, by stealth, for the last forty-plus years.

Deep inside the Lamaist Tantric net, Chandler found that all Tibetan lamas teach from the same Vajra-master, coercive plan; whether they call it Shambhala, Mahamudra, Vajrayana, Dzogchen or Mahayana Buddhism. It is all the same: a Tantric cult of mass manipulation and thought-control, designed to undermine the reasoning abilities of educated westerners, change their values, perceptions and behaviors, and turn them into obedient devotees and change agents for the lamas; no longer able to think and act for themselves.

If someone leaves Tibetan Buddhism and dares to be publicly critical, that person is labeled as 'crazy' or a 'liar'; their articles or books discredited; until their message is drowned out. Inside the Lamaist groups, they are vilified and called out as a "heretic." This seals any negative information from getting in or out.

Chandler takes the reader through her own experiences, from her first mindfulness meditation weekend at a Boston Shambhala meditation center through her next decades; studying with many celebrity Tibetan Lamas and their western inner circles; drawn deeper and deeper into their Tantric net. When she finally breaks free, she realizes educated westerners have been purposely targeted to give the lamas currency and cover, as they are slowly turned into irrational members of a regressive, medieval and dangerous cult, while simultaneously believing they are at the cutting edge of enlightened consciousness."

World Religion And Spirituality Project: Asaram Bapu
" ... Asumal Sirumalani Harpalani was born in Birani, Sindh Province (currently in Pakistan) on April 17, 1941. His father founded a coal and wood selling business. In 1947, following the partitioning of India and Pakistan, Asumal's parents moved to Ahmedabad. After Asumal's father died, he dropped out of school and took up odd jobs. In 1956, he married Laxmi Devi, and the couple had two children, a son Narayan and a daughter Bhartishree.

During the 1960s Asumal's life moved in a more spiritual direction. He began learning meditation and Yoga from Leelashah Baba, a respected sadhu in Adipur (Gujarat), although it is unclear whether he ever formally became a disciple. During this period he also assumed the name Asaram. He settled in Ahmedabad in 1971 and created an Ashram by 1973. He quickly attracted a large following and began building a network of ashrams, gurukuls and mahila kendras (camps to educate women on their rights). His following included poor villagers but also celebrities and political leaders. By 2013, he claimed a network of 400 ashrams, forty resident schools in eighteen nations, and 40,000,000 followers. His following developed most rapidly in northern India, in part because his discourses were delivered in Hindi. He adopted the title of Sant Shri Asharamji Bapu.

While Asaram's organizational network and his personal popularity were growing rapidly, so was his controversiality. There were allegations of sexual impropriety that stretched back to the late 1990s and ongoing controversy over land-grab schemes by his followers as they built his organizational network. There were controversial deaths of two students at one of his schools. He also made comments about a brutal rape case in 2012 that gained him national notoriety. However, it was in 2013 when he himself was arrested on rape charges that Asaram and his organization faced a transformative moment."

Jul 3, 2025

CultNEWS101 Articles: 7/3/2025

Legion of Christ, Internal Family Systems, Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh


The takeaway of the most recent cases of clergy sexual abuse at the Legion of Christ: their zero-tolerance promises are nothing but a slogan.

"This year, one case of clergy sexual abuse in Spain and another in Mexico, both from priests associated to the Legion of Christ, offer a painful reminder of how far the Catholic Church is from achieving its stated goals of a "zero-tolerance" policy on clergy sexual abuse.

Marcelino de Andrés and Antonio Cabrera are both Spaniard Catholic priests and both belong to cohorts of the order who went through seminary formation while Marcial Maciel was a key figure in Rome. His position there allowed him to expand his order's and its supplemental organization, the Regnum Christi's reach, where both male and female members are able to join and where abuse, sexual and otherwise, has also been reported.

After Maciel's death in 2008, De Andrés's career happened mostly in Spain, while Cabrera's was primarily in Mexico. Cabrera, ordained in 1988, is a bit older than De Andrés, who was ordained in 1996, but their paths followed similar trajectories. Their cases emerge as the Legion attempts to portray itself as less disloyal to Rome than its Spaniard and Peruvian counterparts, Opus Dei and the suppressed Sodalitium of Christian Life.

Despite the new cases, the Legion has been boasting its adherence to a zero-tolerance policy as it happens with too many other orders and dioceses in the Catholic Church ever since the early years of this century.

The accusations against De Andrés and Cabrera are relevant because they come from the cohorts closest to the Legion's discredited founder, and they emerge after 20 years or so of the Legion and the Catholic Church at large talking about zero-tolerance to clergy sexual abuse."
" ... Schwartz was practicing one of the fundamental techniques of IFS therapy, which is to locate specific feelings within the physical body. Through this technique, IFS promises to "heal trauma" and "restore wholeness," while also helping to treat more discernible diseases like addiction and depression. In his 1995 book Internal Family Systems Therapy, Schwartz describes IFS as "a synthesis of two paradigms: the plural mind, or the idea that we all contain many different parts, and systems thinking"—but a more apt description might be that IFS is a combination of Jung, Freud, shamanism, Yogic theory, and Gestalt therapy, all jumbled together and simplified to make it as marketable as possible. Occasionally, Schwartz explicitly taps into other traditions. "In Buddhist terms," he writes, "IFS helps people become bodhisattvas of their psyches in the sense of helping each inner sentient being (part) become enlightened through compassion and love."

While IFS remained something of a niche therapy for much of its existence, it has, in recent years, gained enormous popularity on Instagram and TikTok and with celebrities ranging from the musician Alanis Morissette to Queer Eye's Jonathan Van Ness. ("The whole parts thing is really ferosh," Van Ness writes in his 2019 memoir, Over the Top.) Schwartz, who runs programming at one of Harvard University's teaching hospitals, has himself become a sought-after guest speaker at "healing retreats" around the world, and his books, You Are the One You've Been Waiting For (2018) and No Bad Parts (2021), have become bestsellers. When I reached out for an interview last fall, I was initially told I would have to wait until the third or fourth quarter of 2025."

" ... Some patients swear by the transformative power of this cosmology. "After taking this IFS Self-healing journey with my parts," one patient turned provider writes on her website, "I found my true Self—someone who can show up for me like a hero. Someone who champions my right to be free, spontaneous, seen, cared for, loved, cherished, enjoyed just as I am." For such devotees, IFS offers nothing less than a path to self-empowerment, self-love, and, crucially, through its emphasis on "no bad parts," freedom from shame. It also offers an encompassing, at times even spiritual worldview—or as the patient turned provider writes, IFS is simultaneously a "psychotherapeutic approach, a working model of the mind, and a lifestyle."

Amid this exuberance, however, some have sounded a note of caution. In an article in the Psychotherapy Bulletin, the researchers Lisa M. Brownstone, Madeline J. Hunsicker, and Amanda K. Greene write that "the current expansion of IFS across psychotherapy and social media has moved beyond its evidence base." The authors note that the existing research on IFS excludes people with psychotic symptoms, even as they warn, based on their own observations in clinical settings, of the "overapplication" of IFS to people with such symptoms: "Our concern is that encouraging splitting of the self into parts for those who struggle with reality testing might be disorganizing."

The American Psychological Association has noted the rise of IFS. In an e-mailed statement, Lynn Bufka, the association's head of practice, said, 'APA recently adopted a new guideline on the treatment of PTSD, where scientists reviewed treatment research extensively. IFS was noted as one of the interventions that is currently being used, but is in need of much more research before they could make a recommendation about its effectiveness.'"

"Enlightenment, freedom and belonging were just three of the promises Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh promised his thousands of followers. But in return, they had to pay several thousand dollars to take his courses or for the privilege of living and working at his Oregon ashram.

Rajneesh, also known as Osho, was one of the most famous and controversial spiritual leaders of the past century. Blending an ideology of free love, dynamic meditation and Eastern philosophy in the 1960s and '70s, he attracted worshippers from across the world to his Indian ashram in Pune. Then when the organisation grew to host around 30,000 visitors and faced investigation by the Indian government, a much larger commune was opened in the US.
This vast former ranch in Oregon was transformed into a New Age utopia where the "orange people", as they were called due to the colour of their robes, lived collectively. They worked on the land, grew organic food, raised children, practised meditation and listened to their guru's 90-minute daily discourses. But the idyll they hoped for had turned sinister by the mid '80s, when disputes among the commune leaders led to accusations of conspiracies, widespread poisoning and wire-tapping.

A plot to assassinate Oregon's state attorney was uncovered and Rajneesh – who famously had an incredible fleet of 93 Rolls-Royce cars – came under scrutiny and was deported from the US for immigration fraud. Years later, children who grew up on the commune would tell of widespread sexual abuse by the adult members of what is now widely believed to have been a cult."

Their followers were hoping for enlightenment but were caught up in something far darker."

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