Showing posts with label Kabbalah Centre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kabbalah Centre. Show all posts

Oct 17, 2019

The Kabbalah Connection: Insiders say a celebrity-centered religious sect deeply influenced how Adam Neumann ran WeWork before its spectacular collapse

David X Prutting/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images; WeWork Summit 2015/WeWork/Vimeo; Samantha Lee/Business Insider
Becky Peterson, Meghan Morris
Business Insider US
October 16, 2019

  • As Adam and Rebekah Neumann built WeWork into a $47 billion coworking giant, the couple relied on the teachings of the Kabbalah Centre, a spiritual organization whose high-pressure donation tactics have drained multiple former members’ bank accounts, sources told Business Insider.
  • Kabbalah Centre Rabbi Eitan Yardeni was a regular sight at WeWork offices, where former employees said he helped put together at least one deal, met with company executives, and, in at least one instance, spoke with the entire company as a “spiritual counselor.”
  • In conversations with Business Insider, former Kabbalah Centre members said Yardeni pressured them into making large donations to the religious sect, telling them that their spiritual health depended on it.
  • Because of their wealth and social connections, Adam and Rebekah Neumann were privileged members of the New York Kabbalah Centre, where their special status earned them unique privileges and proximity to Kabbalah Centre leadership. However, Adam Neumann left the center in 2017 during an exodus of frustrated teachers and students.
  • A spokesperson for the Neumanns said the couple does not practice Kabbalah but that Rebekah Neumann is friends with Yardeni.

With his angular features, fashionable stubble, close-cropped salt-and-pepper hair, and chunky glasses, Eitan Yardeni didn’t look out of place at WeWork’s New York City headquarters, where he was a familiar presence to staffers. But the 55-year-old Yardeni is no tech guru: He’s a spiritual one.

Yardeni is a longtime confidant of WeWork cofounder Adam Neumann and his wife, Rebekah. He is also a high-ranking rabbi within the Kabbalah Centre, an organization claiming thousands of members founded around tenets of Jewish mysticism. Though Kabbalah has been around for centuries, the Kabbalah Centre is a uniquely modern phenomenon – it marries intense spiritual guidance, high-pressure fundraising tactics, and a focus on wealth and celebrity. Some former members have likened the group to a religious cult and say it’s designed to enrich the family that founded it. Yardeni has counseled such high-profile acolytes as Madonna, Guy Oseary, Demi Moore, Ashton Kutcher, and Roseanne Barr.

As the Neumanns’ spiritual adviser, Yardeni enjoyed extraordinary access and influence over the coworking startup as it soared to a $47 billion valuation – before its dramatic crash in a botched initial public offering planned for September. Yardeni ran weekly meetings at WeWork that were frequently attended by the Neumanns and other top executives, including WeWork cofounder Miguel McKelvey, Chief Operating Officer Jen Berrent, and the now ousted executives Roni Bahar and Zvika Shachar, according to people familiar with the meetings.

On at least one occasion, Yardeni addressed the entire company as a “spiritual counselor” at WeWork’s 2015 employee all-hands conference. In a video of the event, Yardeni is seen wearing a black yarmulke and a WeWork branded T-shirt.

The Neumanns’ interest in Kabbalah is publicly known, and Adam Neumann has gone as far to openly credit the Kabbalah Centre as the inspiration for his company. “I noticed that in the Kabbalah community, people were really helping each other,” he told The Real Deal in 2013. “I wanted to translate that into business.”

But a Business Insider investigation has found that Kabbalah was intimately intertwined not just with the Neumanns’ spiritual lives but also with WeWork itself, including coinvestments, business referrals, and previously unreported financial and professional connections between the startup and people affiliated with the Kabbalah Centre. According to interviews with 10 current and former WeWork employees and Kabbalah Centre members, the Neumanns were deeply involved in the center’s leadership and wove Kabbalah teachings and symbolism into the very fabric of the company they built. And former Kabbalah Centre members described the organization as relentless in its efforts to control the social and financial decision-making of its most devout members.

Adam Neumann left Kabbalah in 2017, according to former members of the organization. Laurie Hays, a spokesperson for the Neumanns, said neither Adam nor Rebekah practice it but acknowledged that Rebekah and Yardeni remain friends.

WeWork declined to comment on the record for this story. The Kabbalah Centre did not respond to requests for comment sent directly and through an attorney.
Kabbalah faces allegations of ‘fraud’ and being a ‘cult’

The Kabbalah Centre was founded by Philip Berg, the late husband of matriarch Karen Berg, in the mid-1980s as an offshoot of Orthodox Judaism that focused on an ancient book of Jewish mysticism known as the Zohar. By the late 1990s, it had opened its doors to non-Jewish members and gained a following with celebrities like Madonna, who adorned their left wrists with red string, which followers believe will keep them safe from the “evil eye.”

Former Kabbalah Centre members contacted by Business Insider described a tight-knit spiritual community that combined elements of Judaism with self-help and astrology, where seekers of enlightenment rubbed shoulders with intense and magnetic leaders who relentlessly encouraged members to give as much money as they could possibly afford. Most members and staff were based in Los Angeles and New York, though the organization claims to have centers in 40 cities globally.

At the heart of the community for many years were Karen Berg and her sons Michael and Yehuda. While Karen and Michael still maintain control over the center’s operations, Yehuda was forced out in 2015 after a jury found him responsible for inflicting emotional distress on a former student who accused him in a civil lawsuit of plying her with alcohol and prescription drugs with the intent of raping her. Yehuda and the Kabbalah Centre were ordered to pay a total of $177,500 to the accuser; the judgment was affirmed on appeal.

Between 2011 and 2019, the center was sued at least three times over fraud accusations, each complaint alleging that the Bergs and its teachers – known as “chevre,” a Hebrew word meaning close friends – solicited hundreds of thousands of dollars in donations from Kabbalah Centre members for projects that ultimately never materialized. Two of those lawsuits alleged that the Bergs trained teachers “to extract as much money as possible” from members. The center prevailed in both cases, and the plaintiffs were ordered to pay the organization’s legal costs.

A class-action lawsuit filed in July on behalf of former chevre at the center alleges that the Bergs “operate a cult that preys upon those seeking to improve the world through the performance of good works.” The chevre allege that they were required to work up to 16 to 20 hour days for just room, board, and $300 in spending money, while doing personal chores for the Berg family and soliciting donations from the members that met with them for spiritual guidance. The complaint alleges the process involved meticulously documenting “details such as students’ personal finances, their family relationships, their sexuality, and their hopes, dreams, fears, and anxieties.”

“Teachers receive no religious or spiritual training from the Centre,” according to the complaint. “Instead, the purpose of these meetings is for the teacher to gather specific, intimate information about the student as the first step in determining how and what to persuade the student to donate to the Centre.”

The Kabbalah Centre has told the court that it intends to file a motion to dismiss the case, arguing that it is protected by the First Amendment’s religious-liberty provisions.
The Neumanns were Kabbalah VIPs thanks to Gwyneth Paltrow

Adam Neumann was introduced to Kabbalah in 2009 by Rebekah, who, in turn, was recruited by her celebrity cousin, Goop founder Gwyneth Paltrow. The couple were soon VIPs in their own right within the organization.

Yardeni was often seen nearby while the WeWork CEO was indulging his notorious Don Julio 1942 tequila habit, and when people were smoking weed, according to one former employee. An unidentified rabbi was also spotted on a June 2015 trip to Mexico City, where members of Adam Neumann’s small entourage spat tequila at one another, dislodged furniture, and at least one guest ultimately vomited in the cabin and the bathroom, The Information reported. (It’s not clear whether the rabbi on the plane was associated with the Kabbalah Centre.)

The Kabbalah Centre barred members from contradicting Adam Neumann in any capacity, according to one ex-member, who described getting kicked under the table by Karen Berg after disagreeing with Adam Neumann in a conversation. When Adam and Rebekah Neumann’s five kids ran wild during quiet and contemplative Torah readings, another member said, members were told there was nothing that could be done.

For the Jewish New Year of Rosh Hashanah in 2017, a few months before Adam Neumann publicly left the center, followers met at the Hammerstein Ballroom in Manhattan for a four-day party, filled with lively dancing and singing. At one point, Adam Neumann joined a small group of teachers and other religious leaders on stage, where he danced wildly for thousands of audience members to see.

“There’s always a lot of singing and a lot of dancing. We raised the roof in these events,” one former member said. “Usually on the stage would be the VIPs: the teachers and people who are very wealthy.”

Insiders say the Neumanns were close to elite members, including Paltrow, the actor Lucy Liu, Moore, Kutcher, and Madonna. Though Paltrow has distanced herself from the organization, she famously brought Kabbalah to the Hamptons in summer 2010 and still publishes the occasional advice column from Michael Berg’s wife, Monica, on Goop.

Kutcher, himself a tech investor, has known Adam Neumann for more than 11 years and is close to WeWork. In January, the pair went on CNBC to discuss WeWork’s Creator Awards, an event that Kutcher judged. Adam Neumann and Kutcher were also photographed at a WeWork event in 2018 with another Kabbalah devotee, Madonna’s talent manager Oseary. Just one year before, Oseary married his longtime partner, Michelle Alves, in a Brazilian ceremony co-officiated by Yardeni.

Even from his earliest days in the organization, members remember Adam Neumann as egotistical but charming – a man with a lot of charisma and ambition, even though he had little to show for it when he first joined the Kabbalah Centre a decade ago.

“When I met him, he introduced himself as someone who’s destined to greatness,” one former member said. “Adam is really one of a kind. He thinks in a different way than others. And he’s a very generous man.”
‘This is how a lot of businesses fail’

At the Kabbalah Centre, gifts and donations were inextricable from enlightenment. As is common among many religious organizations, members are encouraged to donate 10% of their after-tax income directly to the center. But former members said they were often pressured into going beyond that in order to attract what the Bergs described as “the light.” For many wealthy members, six-figure donations meant special treatment and perks, from reserved seats at services to more time with the chevre.

A spokesperson for the Neumanns declined to answer questions about how much, if any, money they donated to the Kabbalah Center. But by the end of their time at New York center, they were among the wealthiest and most celebrated members.

Ex-members said it was common for the Bergs and teachers from the center to attend intimate dinners with VIPs, and even to join their families on luxury vacations. The Neumanns were no exception.

When Karen Berg needed new clothing, or when a chevre needed a new iPhone, they turned to students, who were taught that it was a privilege to pay for such goods, the ex-members said.

Often, members made major donations at the recommendation of their teachers or the Bergs to correspond with big life events – the idea being that donating to Kabbalah would ensure success. Former members said many followers felt that their donations protected them from harm and were taught that they are invincible if they give enough money to the center.

“It’s a false feeling of protection, and this is how a lot of businesses fail,” said Tatiana Ganopolsky, who left the New York center in 2012 after the collapse of her own business, Taya Jeans.

By the same token, former members said, the Bergs warned members that misfortune would come to those who didn’t give enough money. One former member said that after her husband was diagnosed with cancer, Karen Berg told her it was because they had not donated enough money, despite them having donated millions of dollars over the course of their membership.

Karen and Michael Berg could not be reached for comment.
Former student says Yardeni misled him into a $101,000 debt

For many members of the Kabbalah Centre, the chevre’s influence over their decision-making extended well beyond the realm of the spiritual, from dating and marriage to the timing and frequency of their sexual activity to the management of their business affairs.

As Adam Neumann’s spiritual guru, Yardeni sometimes showed up places that made WeWork employees uncomfortable. He even helped negotiate deals, one WeWork employee said, including Adam Neumann’s controversial investment in Manhattan’s 88 University Place, which Neumann made with the Kabbalah Centre member and fashion designer Eli Tahari for $70 million in 2015. The Wall Street Journal first reported on the relationship between Kabbalah, WeWork, and Tahari on Wednesday.

By 2019, that building was at the center of a major scandal for Adam Neumann after reports that he had made millions by leasing it back to WeWork. The building was put on the market in August, The Real Deal reported.

Ganopolsky, who ran her clothing business with her brother, said she was involved with the Kabbalah Centre for 10 years when Yardeni and another Kabbalah chevre in Moscow, where her brother lived, began pressuring them to increase their donations. Ganopolsky balked, but her brother wanted to comply, she told Business Insider. She said Yardeni drove a wedge between the pair, and eventually, their company, which was earning $25 million in annual revenue, collapsed.

“Eitan Yardeni was my teacher. I considered him like a friend,” Ganopolsky said. “But he was a traitor.”

Yardeni did not respond to multiple emailed requests for comment.

Several former members said they had seen members take out large loans, sell property, or run up credit cards in order to make donations to the center.

Roger, whose name has been changed for this story, was Yardeni’s student for eight years before leaving the center in 2017. Roger said the spirituality and community at the Kabbalah Centre changed his life for the better. But he left the organization after coming to believe that Yardeni was required to meet a quota for donations to maintain his position as a high-level teacher.

Roger said he had been with the center for just six months when Yardeni asked him to donate $52,000 to help print copies of the Zohar, a common request inside the community. Roger said he felt pressured into making the donation, particularly when Yardeni called one of Roger’s close friends and asked them to convince Roger that he would spread the “light” if he made the donation.

A few years later, Roger said, he donated $101,000 to the center using a line of credit on his house after Yardeni told him it would improve his business, which was struggling at the time. Roger said his wife vehemently objected to making the donation, but he did it anyway.

After he left the center, Roger wrote a letter to Yardeni, which he shared with Business Insider, accusing Yardeni of tying spiritual development to money. “You told me that you were thinking about me and that you got revelation, a divine one, as you called it,” Roger wrote. “You said that [I needed to donate] in order for me to clean ‘all my sins and improve my financial situation. … After realizing what you did to me and to other students I want to ask you Eitan do you believe in God? Did you believe in God at the moment you dialed my number and started telling me how it will clean and improve, knowing that it’s a lie? I do not think so.”

Roger estimates he donated more than $300,000 to the Kabbalah Centre, in addition to a plane ticket to Israel for Yardeni, jewelry, $10,000 family trips to center events, time spent volunteering, and various purchases to fix infrastructure around the center.

“I know someone who donated half a million dollars, and he had to sell his apartment,” Roger said. “I don’t know anyone who left to the center in a better financial situation than they came.”
The Neumanns are known for their philanthropy

Inside the Kabbalah Centre, the Neumanns’ wealth was a constant source of speculation. According to at least three former members, it was widely believed within the Kabbalah community that the Neumanns made donations worth millions of dollars.

When the center opened up a new Manhattan location at 16 West 17th St., rumors spread that the Neumanns paid for the lease because they wanted a center within walking distance of their downtown apartment. Others understood that he was financially involved in obtaining a separate location in Brooklyn, which opened around the same time.

Business Insider was not able to independently confirm any of these donations. As a religious organization, the Kabbalah Centre is exempt from filing tax returns with the IRS, so little is known about where its money comes from and how it’s spent.

While it’s unclear how much money the Neumanns donated over the course of their membership, public records give a sense of the scale of the couple’s general philanthropy. WeWork’s filing for the aborted initial public offering says the Neumanns have donated 15% of the value of the stock they have cashed out from WeWork and that they have committed to donating more than $1 billion to charity over the next 10 years.

A spokeswoman said the couple has donated $100 million to charity over the years. She declined to say where the money went.
Elevating the world’s consciousness

Former Kabbalah members said they saw the impact of the Bergs’ spiritual teachings in many of WeWork’s more unorthodox business practices. The company’s unique stated mission of “elevating the world’s consciousness,” as well as the focus on “energy” that Rebekah Neumann reportedly brought to the hiring process both appear to be derived from Kabbalah Centre ideas, insiders said.

Daniel Matt, a scholar from the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, California, who teaches courses on the Zohar, said Kabbalah’s most direct link to WeWork was through WeGrow, the company’s recently shuttered private elementary school, which claimed to focus on “unleashing every human’s superpowers.”

“Every human has a spark of God in her and him,” Matt said, describing kabbalistic beliefs. “If you have qualities or powers or talents, then you are conveying divine qualities. Your talent is channeling divine energy.”

Spirituality has infused the messaging of other Neumann projects, including a feature-length film produced by a now defunct entity called WeWork Studios.

In 2010, Rebekah Neumann wrote and starred in a short film called “Awake,” in which “a woman in the depths of the American nightmare is forced to become enlightened or die.” Adam Neumann is credited as an executive producer.

Business Insider obtained a copy of the short film, in which Rebekah Neumann’s character resolves her depression, vaguely linked to the terrorist attacks on 9/11, after stumbling upon a spiritual guru in the forest. That guru, played by Sean Lennon, instructs Rebekah Neumann to reflect on her life.

In one scene, Rebekah Neumann’s character positions herself on a pillow next to a fireplace where she writes a detailed account of her life. Photographs from the life of the real Rebekah Neumann flash on the screen, including one with Yardeni on what appears to be Adam and Rebekah Neumann’s wedding day. Visible on a pillow next to the fireplace is a copy of the Zohar.

“Awake” turned out to be a warm-up for their much larger ambitions. In 2014, WeWork Studios produced the feature-length film “I Origins,” a sci-fi romance about a biologist who uncovers evidence of reincarnation.

The only explicit reference to a formal system of beliefs in the film is to the eye of Horus, a protective symbol from ancient Egypt. But the narrative pits its scientifically minded protagonist against his ultraspiritual fiancée, who is ultimately cut in half by a faulty elevator after a fight over spirituality with her betrothed. Ultimately, the biologist discovers that his late bride-to-be was right about the spiritual world.

The film has a score of 51% on Rotten Tomatoes.
WeKabbalah

The Neumanns weren’t the only Kabbalah followers at WeWork. The couple offered jobs and investment opportunities to other members of the center.

After WeWork filed its IPO registration in August, investors and critics expressed concern over the company’s succession plan, which charged Rebekah Neumann and the WeWork board members Bruce Dunlevie and Steven Langman with the power to choose a new CEO if Adam Neumann were killed or incapacitated within 10 years of the IPO.

Like the Neumanns, Langman is a familiar face at the Kabbalah Centre, with a regular seat at the head table. Langman spent his career in investment banking at Goldman Sachs and Lazard Freres before founding the investment firm Rhone Group. Langman, who joined WeWork’s board in 2012, represents his own interest on the board, rather than Rhone’s, and personally owns less than 1% of WeWork overall.

According to The Wall Street Journal, which first reported Langman’s connection to Kabbalah on Wednesday, Adam Neumann met Langman and another Kabbalah member, the real-estate investor Marc Schimmel, through Michael Berg. Both became WeWork investors.

A spokesperson for Langman declined to comment on the record. Schimmel did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Adam Neumann has also found jobs for several members of the community, insiders said.

Last year, two active Kabbalah members, Jason Bauer and Avi Voda, were brought into WeWork to start WeWork Space Services, a pilot brokerage directed at small to midsize companies.

Bauer was the founder and CEO of Crumbs Bake Shop, a publicly traded bakery that took off in the early 2000s before dramatically closing all of its shops in 2014. Bauer and Voda also ran a real-estate firm named Voda Bauer Real Estate. Their third employee, Jacob Sussan, joined WeWork Space Services last year, according to his LinkedIn profile.

In January, Menachem Katz, the former executive chef at the New York Kabbalah Centre, joined WeWork as head of operations for WeWork Food Labs, according to his LinkedIn profile.

In addition, Kabbalah members found Adam Neumann to be a generous supporter of their own entrepreneurial endeavors. The Kabbalah Centre member Michael Patterson told other members that Adam Neumann invested in his energy-storage company, Romeo Power, one person said. In May, Romeo Power reported to the Securities and Exchange Commission that it had raised $88 million from 31 undisclosed investors.

Patterson did not respond to a request for comment.
Adam Neumann left the center in 2017

Shortly after Rosh Hashanah 2017, after more than seven years in the organization, Adam Neumann left Kabbalah. The split came in the middle of a crisis at the center that saw six chevre, and many members, leaving in quick succession.

Adam Neumann’s departure caused a stir in the tight-knit community, where many members feared that losing his donations could have a substantial effect on the success of the organization.

Business Insider obtained a recording of a town-hall-style meeting in NYC from the end of 2017, lasting more than two hours, in which the center leaders Karen and Michael Berg, as well as Yardeni, took questions from the community about the group’s finances, how it compensates teachers, how it handles controversy, and, most pressingly, why most of its New York teachers had left all at once.

In an emotional moment, one woman described how the leadership stopped saying hello to her at the beginning of Shabbat and instead focused all of their time on greeting higher-profile members.

“It is true in the past we have given more time to those who are bigger supporters of the center,” Michael Berg said. “I think it’s also important to understand the history. The reality is, the reason the center exists as it is today is because there are people who have supported the center financially.”

It was one of three meetings held in close succession to address the community’s concerns. In the middle of the second meeting, sources said, Adam Neumann stood up and left.

Shortly after that meeting, Adam Neumann made a show of his departure. At a social event, a source told Business Insider, Adam Neumann was overheard describing the center as a “cult.”

In the months that followed, the Neumanns hosted a few Shabbat dinners at their home in New York with other ex-members, led by the former Kabbalah Centre chevre who had also split from the Bergs.

Nearly a year later, in a December speech, Adam Neumann publicly linked himself to an Orthodox rabbi in Crown Heights by the name of Rabbi Heller.

“As WeWork was growing and growing, and we were taking more and more of the concepts of our spiritual practice and in putting them into the business, things worked better and better,” Adam Neumann said in a speech at the UJA-Federation of New York fundraiser. He was introduced by the outgoing Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein. “Until one day, I think it was somewhere around the $5 billion valuation; that’s where trouble starts. I was catching myself not being able to control my ego.

“The moment you think you are better than other people, you can’t help them,” he said. “I realized I need a new practice. I need something even bigger.”

To people familiar with Kabbalah, the message was clear: Adam Neumann had a new rabbi and a new denomination. Kabbalah’s golden child had really left the center.

But the break wasn’t clean. Insiders spotted Adam Neumann in videos of Yardeni’s second wedding on May 15, 2018, months after his split from Kabbalah and around the same that WeWork started negotiations with SoftBank on a funding round that would double the coworking startup’s valuation.

Though Hays, the Neumanns’ spokesperson, said the Neumanns don’t practice Kabbalah, multiple former Kabbalah Centre members said they have heard from center insiders that the Neumanns have reestablished contact with the center’s leadership.

“The Kabbalah Centre uses the best part of people, their desire to become better and to become spiritual. They take beautiful people and screw them up,” Ganopolsky, one of the former members, said. “I am absolutely sure that all of this mess, they create it.”

https://www.businessinsider.sg/wework-adam-neumann-kabbalah-centre-2019-10/

Jan 12, 2018

Ever had this dream where you scream but no voice comes out?

Ever had this dream where you scream but no voice comes out?
To make a long story short -
I can finally admit to myself - I was a cult member.
I feel so stupid, it took me 20 years to realize that.
For the last 2 years, I've been in the process of healing from the dreadful outcomes of being in a cult for 20 years.
As in most respectful cults, changing your name (for spiritual reasons of course) is optional, and inevitable...
Just before 2018 begins, I want to get back to my original name, Ofer.
It's the beautiful name my parents gave me at birth.
My cult of choice? oh, it was kabala center
(The rav used to say - it doesn't matter what they write about us, as long as they spell our name right...)
If you, the reader, are still a part of the kabala center, that first line I wrote is for you.
There's almost no chance you will understand what I am talking about, but I will say it anyway (you know, "he who saves one soul, it is as if he saved the entire world").
I plan to continue my healing-process journey by sharing my experiences and insights.
2018, it's going to be fun!
Stay tuned,
Ofer Shaal
Translation to Hebrew:האם אי פעם חלמת את החלום הזה שבו אתה צועק אבל שום קול לא יוצא?
תקציר הסיפור -
סוף סוף אני מצליח להודות בזה - הייתי חבר כת.
אני מרגיש כזה טיפש, לקח לי 20 שנה להבין את זה.
בשנתיים האחרונות, אני בתהליך של ריפוי מן התוצאות הנוראות של להיות בכת במשך 20 שנה.
כמו ברוב הכתות שמכבדות את עצמן, שינוי השם (מסיבות רוחניות כמובן) הוא אופציונלי, אך בלתי נמנע...
אבל לפני ששנת 2018 מתחילה, אני רוצה לחזור לשמי המקורי, עופר.
זה השם היפה שהוריי נתנו לי בלידה.
הכת שבחרתי? אה, זה היה מרכז הקבלה
(הרב נהג לומר - זה לא משנה מה כותבים עלינו, כל עוד הם מאייתים את השם שלנו נכון...)
אם אתה, הקורא, עדיין חלק ממרכז הקבלה, השורה הראשונה שכתבתי היא בשבילך.
אין כמעט סיכוי שתבין על מה אני מדבר, אבל אני אומר את זה בכל מקרה (ככתוב, "כל המציל נפש אחת כאילו הציל עולם ומלואו").
אני מתכנן להמשיך את תהליך הריפוי שלי על ידי שיתוף בחוויות ובתובנות שלי.
2018, זה הולך להיות כיף!
עדכונים בהמשך,
עופר שעל

Jul 21, 2017

Kabbalah Centre buying Fine Arts Building for $60M

Greek hedge funders have owned the Midtown showrooms since 2013
Mark Maurer
The Real Deal
July 21, 2017

The Kabbalah Centre International is in contract to acquire the Fine Arts Building in Midtown from a group of Greek hedge funders for about $60 million, or north of $1,000 per square foot, sources told The Real Deal.

The Los Angeles-based nonprofit, which offers courses on Jewish mysticism also known as Kabbalah, entered contract this week for the seven-story, 58,000-square-foot property at 232 East 59th Street, sources said. The deal is slated to close in the next three months.

The Kabbalah Centre would not occupy the building, which is almost fully leased – just yet at least. The property houses 12 showrooms, mostly for architecture and design firms – at floor plates averaging 8,600 square feet.

The Greek businessmen, who control the entity Fine Arts New York LLC, bought the cast-iron property from the Battaglia family for $34 million in 2013, property records show. It was constructed as a carriage house for Bloomingdale’s in the early 1900s, and then converted to showrooms in 1962. Tenants include the Chinese Porcelain Company, Bennison and Gerald Bland. Average asking rents are $75 per square foot.

The Kabbalah Centre also owns the six-story, 21,400-square-foot building at 153-155 East 48th Street, which it uses for a learning center.
A Colliers International team led by Richard Baxter, Stephen Shapiro and Jason Gold is handling the sale.

The deal would be the one of the first closed by the new Colliers team since the brokers left from JLL in December and January. The brokers declined to comment. Representatives for the Kabbalah Centre and the Greek businessmen could not be reached.

https://therealdeal.com/2017/07/21/kabbalah-centre-buying-fine-arts-building-for-60m/

May 21, 2017

Why Celebrities Stopped Following Kabbalah


Madonna (center), Guy Ritche (left), and former Kabbalah Centre co-director Yehuda Berg (right). Photo by Sara Jaye/Getty Images
Everyone from Madonna to President Donald Trump's ex-wife Marla Maples dabbled in the mystical religion, but over the last few years, the trend has fallen out of style.


Emalie Marthe
Broadly Vice
May 21, 2017


Before Cartier Love bracelets or Yeezys, there was a time you couldn't open an Us Weekly without seeing one covetable accessory: a red string Kabbalah bracelet. The religion was the celebrity spiritual moment du jour during the 2000s, and everyone from Madonna to Ashton Kutcher to Lindsay Lohan dabbled in the mystical religion. But in the decade since its heyday, the spiritual movement has all but faded from the forefront of popular culture, suffering major blows along the way.

"Kabbalah is an ancient wisdom that provides practical tools for creating joy and lasting fulfillment. It's an incredible system of technology that will completely change the way you look at your world," reads the website of the Kabbalah Centre, the organization that introduced many celebrities to the practice.

Experts believe the Kabbalah Centre should be distinguished from Kabbalah itself. "There is no uniform way of studying Kabbalah in the traditional sense," says Elliot Wolfson, a Professor of Religious Studies at University of California, Santa Barbara focusing on Jewish Mysticism. "There are various texts that have achieved a canonical status, most importantly, the Zohar and the so-called Lurianic texts, but other Kabbalistic works are studied as well in traditional settings, such as the works of Moses Cordovero, Shalom Sharabi, or the Vilna Gaon."

According to Wolfson, these mystical texts are more esoteric than the Torah and Talmud and explore supernatural aspects of Jewish spirituality, but are traditionally limited to men over 40 who have spent years studying Jewish scripture and are deemed ready to understand these larger mysteries (though Wolfson adds that this tradition is often broken).

Although it takes some a lifetime to fully study and understand Kabbalah, Rabbi Philip Berg founded the Kabbalah Centre to make its teaching available to all. A former insurance salesman, Berg discovered the teachings of the Kabbalah on a trip to Israel and began teaching classes out of his insurance office with his second wife Karen, his former secretary. The Bergs hoped to make Kabbalah accessible to groups that were traditionally excluded from its study, such as non-Jews and women, but the center struggled for years.

Berg interpreted the Kabbalah more as a new-age self-help book than as a traditional Jewish text. He relied on his charisma to bring in new followers. Rick Alan Ross, executive director of the Cult Education Institute and author of the book Cults Inside Out, told Broadly that many of the Kabbalah Centre's teachings have no basis in Jewish text: "Berg's teachings represent his own idiosyncratic combination of beliefs. For example, that scanning the pages of the Zohar, even when you cannot read Hebrew, somehow will imbue you with supernatural power." According to Walter Martin's book The Kingdom of the Occult, Berg also claimed that by chanting God's Hebrew name, followers would be able to change their cells and alter their immune systems. A spokesperson for Kabbalah Centre denied this: "With regard to the cell/immune system, Rav Berg did not make such a claim or promise to students.."

"I do not stand in judgement of individuals who study at the Kabbalah Center, but what it taught there is far from the traditional Kabbalah," Wolfson says. "The Kabbalah Center has popularized the Kabbalah and removed from it any sense of secrecy. Allegedly, the mysteries are fully disclosed. The imparting of secrets to those who have no background, or who might not even be Jewish, is foreign to the predominant spirit of traditional Kabbalah."Many experts on Jewish mysticism are less generous than Wolfson. Many members of the Orthodox Jewish community rejected Berg's teachings, and the families of Rabbis Yehuda Ashlag and Avraham Brandwein—renowned rabbis Berg claimed to study under—have denounced his claims that he was the heir to their tradition. A spokesperson for the Kabbalah Centre told Broadly that the opinions of these Rabbis' families do not reflect their own beliefs: "Rav Brandewein's family disagreed with the Rav's designation of Rav Berg, and that is why there is controversy over the matter. "

But the Bergs' fortunes reversed when Madonna joined their followers. Comic Sandra Bernhard had introduced the queen of pop to the Centre's message, and she made it part of her brand. "The Kabbalah Centre really took off when Madonna became involved," Ross says. "The Kabbalah Centre became trendy through Madonna. Many people were intrigued and wanted to find out about whatever form of spirituality interested the 'Material Girl.'"

A legion of celebrities—like Ashton Kutcher, Demi Moore, Donna Karan, and President Donald Trump's former wife, Marla Maples—soon followed the singer to the many Kabbalah Centres the Bergs opened on both coasts. (None of these stars responded to my request for comment.) Maples told Vanity Fair that the teachings of the center helped her heal in the wake of her divorce from the future president: "During that period of time, you think you've cleared out a lot of the pain by the time you decide to move on. But, as I started looking deeper at myself, I realized there were still places inside where I held anger, or had blame. [Kabbalah] helped me learn to take responsibility for my own choices and no longer be the victim."

Kabbalah followers wore a red string bracelet to ward off the evil eye, and it became a status symbol during the Bush era. Paparazzi photographed Paris Hilton, Linsday Lohan, and Nicole Richie all wearing the red string. (You can still buy one for $26 from the Kabbalah Centre's store.) "I would never steal anyone's boyfriend," Lohan told Elle in 2006. "It's bad karma, and I'm a big believer in karma—hence the fact that I've studied Kabbalah." The Bergs played into the cultural climate of the period, even holding an event at the definitive mid-2000s clothing store Kitson.

Broadly reached out to the Kabbalah Centre to ask why so many celebrities and influencers flocked to their centers. Karen Berg respond to the email herself: "Kabbalah is a study that expands consciousness and understanding... Kabbalah also helps us to, without any trace of shame, recognize the part of us that is perhaps not as enlightened, a part of ourselves that we are not always proud of, and gives us the tools to transform that quality within us. The more we can become the person that our soul wants us to be, the more complete we feel. I think this applies to you and me and to the most powerful people in the world."

The organization has employed new techniques to bring in money, like the $26 strand of red string and the infamous $4 a bottle Kabbalah water that Madonna allegedly tried to fill a swimming pool with. An undercover Telegraph reporter with cancer once visited the London Centre to investigate whether he could be "healed" through Kabbalah; he was charged £860 for a copy of the Zohar and a few cases of the water that would "cure" his illness.
"I have received many complaints about excessive and repeated financial demands for donations, courses and services," Ross told me."[The] demands made by the Bergs and their staff that caused students to max out their credit cards, not pay their rent or mortgage and in some situations end up evicted or foreclosed on. Others complained that the demands made of their time caused them distress, lost them a job or sidelined their career, education, and family life."

Financial pressure wasn't limited to civilian members who could not afford to donate their salaries to the Centre. Famous model Jerry Hall left the religion after she found its financial demands too intense. "We had a fantastic time with the Kabbalah Centre for about a year," she told Index Magazine. "They give very practical advice on day-to-day stuff, like how to be a better parent. But we couldn't go through the Door of Miracles unless we gave the Kabbalah people ten percent of our money, so we couldn't study it any more."

Unfortunately, money corrupts everything, even spirituality.
As the Bergs' fortunes increased, so did the scrutiny of their organization. The Centre has faced a number of scandals, the most damaging of which came to light, ironically, because of Madonna. According to a Newsweek expose, the singer raised $18 million dollars through her Raising Malawi Foundation, which she cofounded with Rev Berg's son Michael. They planned to build a girls' school in the small African country's capital, before folding the project after wasting $3.8 million on construction.

According to the report, $3 million of the money actually spent on the project was spent at the Los Angeles Kabbalah Centre and not in Malawi; the Centre also reportedly collected money earmarked for the Malawi charity that was never actually turned over to the foundation. The issues faced at the Malawi school eventually caused Madonna to scrap the organization's board and take over oversight along with her manager and accountant. The Centre soon came under investigation by the IRS for tax fraud, after more allegations came to the surface of the Berg family using the foundation for their personal enrichment. According to the Los Angeles Times, the Kabbalah Centre was accused of taking more than $600,000 from a widow with dementia for the Centre.

The allegations against the Bergs are not just financial. A former student successfully sued Berg's son Yehuda, who had taken a leadership role with his brother at the Centre after Philip Berg's death in 2013. She alleged that Yehuda had attempted to drug and sexually assault her in 2014. A judge ordered Yehuda and the Kabbalah Centre to pay $177,500 in damages in 2015. A Kabbalah Centre spokesperson told Broadly, "Yehuda has not been involved with the Kabbalah Centre since he resigned in 2012. When Yehuda left the Centre, he made clear that he was doing so because his departure was in the best interests of the Centre and in the best interest of his own personal effort to change his life. The Centre respected Yehuda's decision at that time, and we continue to wish him well." Yehuda did not respond to a request for comment.

Ross believes that the Kabbalah Centre's many scandals have driven most of its celebrity followers away, but a few core adherents still remain. Some moved on to more trendy religions, while others became disillusioned by the Centre's financial demands. A few members of the new generation of celebrity it girls, like Ariana Grande, have experimented with the Centre, but its membership has dropped sharply. (None of the Centre's celebrity members responded to Broadly's response to comment.) Ross estimates that the Centre only has 3,000 to 5,000 core members. When asked about current membership, a Kabbalah spokesperson told me simply, "There are more than 40 [Kabbalah Centre] locations around the world.")

Berhnard, one of the Centre's first celebrity members, who introduced Madonna to Kabbalah, told Women's Wear Daily, "I went in 1995 before there was any hoopla and I got the best out of it. Then the wheels started to fall off. I'm not nearly as involved with that place as I was. Unfortunately, money corrupts everything, even spirituality. And it's hard not to get caught up in the excitement of glamour and fame."

When Broadly asked the Kabbalah Centre what they say to those who allege the group is more of a money-making enterprise than spiritual movement, a spokesperson simply directed me back to Karen Berg's statement about the spiritual benefits of Kabbalah: "Many people are attracted to learning more about Kabbalah for the reasons outlined in [Berg's] answer."

Ross believes that regardless of actual membership numbers, the Kabbalah Centre will continue to thrive: "The Bergs are rich and the Kabbalah Centre continues to be well financed through their many wealthy members," he says. "Madonna and Donna Karan have each given the Kabbalah Centre millions of dollars and continue to support the Bergs. Other celebrities seem to have left due the excessive control attempted by the Bergs and their continuing demands for financial support and large donations. But the Bergs continue to run the Kabbalah Centre much like a family business, even though it has tax-exempt charitable nonprofit status." Ross even believes the Bergs may have opened a new Centre in Washington, DC to get closer to the Trump administration through their connections to Marla Maples. A Kabbalah Centre spokesperson denies his claim.

The Bergs recently hosted a large event for Passover called "Pesach 2017: Live From Los Angeles With Karen and Michael Berg." Those who couldn't afford the flight to Los Angeles were offered to tune in for a live stream with a Kabbalah University Premium Plus Account for the low price of $42 a month.

https://broadly.vice.com/en_us/article/mbqvmy/why-celebrities-stopped-following-kabbalah

Mar 4, 2017

Karen Berg And The Kabbalah Centre Announce An Hour Of Spiritual Unity On Monday Evening, March 27, 2017

Using Technology to Organize and Unite, Berg and The Kabbalah Centre Seek to Spread #hourofspiritualunity Around the World

NEWS PROVIDED BY
Kabbalah Centre
February 28, 2017, 10:00 ET

LOS ANGELES, Feb. 28, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- Karen Berg, the Spiritual Director of The Kabbalah Centre, has announced her plans to present An Hour of Spiritual Unity on the evening of March 27, 2017. On that evening people from all over the world will read from a holy scripture or another text that awakens their consciousness. The readings will be chosen by the individual: the Old Testament, the New Testament, the Zohar, the Quran, the Yogi Sutras, the Bhagavad-Gita, the Pali Canon, even poetry will be a part of An Hour of Spiritual Unity. Those who prefer not to read can engage in meditation, contemplation, yoga -- anything that personally awakens the spirit. Participants are encouraged to post #hourofspiritualunity on the platform of their choice to share with others how they plan to spend their hour.

"It has been my dream that one day barriers will be removed between people, and that we will find the commonality that exists within each other's spiritual practices and beliefs," said Karen Berg, The Kabbalah Centre's Spiritual Director. "This year, the New Moon of Aries (Rosh Chodesh Nissan) begins on the evening of Monday, March 27th. The kabbalists teach that this is the lunar New Year, the seed level of the coming 365 days, the start of a new cycle. There is no better time to use the technology available in our generation to do what has never been done before – to come together regardless of our individual paths.

Kabbalah Centre's Spiritual Director Karen Berg is inviting people from all over the world to join together for An Hour of Spiritual Unity on the evening of March 27, 2017.

Kabbalah Centre's Spiritual Director Karen Berg is inviting people from all over the world to join together for An Hour of Spiritual Unity on the evening of March 27, 2017.

For those who are interested in participating, the details are simple, according to Berg: "All we ask is that you join us any time on the evening of Monday, March 27th. The book and the hour can be of your choosing. It can be as you get home from work, or perhaps just before you go to sleep.

"To give shape and form to all the spiritual energy of this unity, I would like to encourage those who will be joining us on March 27th to tell us now how you plan to spend your hour by using #hourofspiritualunity on any social media platform. In this way, we tie our individual choices in one sentiment, and give form to all our many spiritual expressions. This is the beauty of social media, as it brings everyone together like never before in history, with no boundary of geography, language, or other such barriers. Let us create a wave of peace that will ripple throughout the digital landscape."

The Kabbalah Centre will provide additional details at https://kabbalah.com/hourofspiritualunity.

About Karen Berg and The Kabbalah Centre

Over four decades ago, Karen and her husband, Rav Berg, set out to make Kabbalah understandable and relevant to all people. Their goal was to teach the spiritual wisdom and tools of Kabbalah, without exclusion.

Under their leadership, The Kabbalah Centre has grown from a single location into one of the world's leading sources of spiritual wisdom, with locations around the globe.

"One of the things we believe at The Kabbalah Centre is that there are many roads to awaken consciousness. At any given connection at The Kabbalah Centre, you might see a Jewish person praying next to a Christian next to a Muslim next to a Buddhist, and maybe even a contemplating atheist," said Karen Berg. "We believe that every path is part of a Divine plan. Though holy books of different faiths may contain different words, the message remains the same: To love each other, to love ourselves, and to grow our love and awe for the Infinite force that is all around us and gave us life. Indeed, difference can be the foundation of our unity."

As the spiritual director of The Kabbalah Centre, Karen Berg is devoted to an enduring vision— within each person is a spark of God that can be bound together to create transcendence beyond all differences.

Karen is certain that peace is possible and foresees a world free of hatred and intolerance. She works untiringly to cultivate a new paradigm of Global Spirituality through which people from diverse beliefs and no beliefs at all can work together to bring the world to a better place through mutual respect, dignity, and love for humanity.

To this end Karen has:

Created the international children's program Spirituality for Kids, an online children's educational program that supports children to find the spark of Light within themselves, within others, and within all things.

Founded Kids Creating Peace (KCP), a program designed to help children discover for themselves a place of peaceful coexistence in the Middle East. For the International Day of Peace in 2010, teenage KCP participants were invited to make a presentation on behalf of peace in the Middle East to the French National Assembly. In 2014, teenage KCP representatives attended the United Nations Youth Assembly at the UN in New York City, where Karen gave the keynote address.

Discussed human dignity and peace with many spiritual leaders including:His Holiness the Dalai Lama; Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, founder of the Art of Living Centres; Imam Mohammed Ali Elahi, spiritual leader of the Islamic House of Wisdom; Michael Bernard Beckwith, founder and CEO of the Agape Centre International; Bawa Jain, Secretary-General of the Millennium World Council of Religious Leaders; Mabel Katz, authority on the ancient Hawaiian healing method, Ho'oponopono; and Ilchi Lee, founder and developer of Brain Education and Dahn Yoga. Karen has also spoken with political and thought leaders including: President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian National Authority; Hilary Rantisi, director of the Middle East Initiative at Harvard University; In London in 2011, Karen spoke alongside Dr. Jehan Sadat, human rights activist and widow of former Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, and later that year, hosted an event in honor of International Women's Day with Ibtisam Mahameed, co-founder of the Women's Interfaith Encounter, and Professor Galia Sabar, chair of African Studies at Tel Aviv University, both recipients of the Dalai Lama Peace Prize.

Authored four groundbreaking works: Finding the Light Through the Darkness: Inspirational Lessons Rooted in the Bible and the Zohar; Simple Light: Wisdom from a Woman's Heart; To Be Continued: Reincarnation and the Purpose of our Lives; God Wears Lipstick; and Karen's first and most revolutionary title, Kabbalah for Women.

Following Rav Berg's passing in 2013, Karen continues to passionately lead and nurture the Kabbalah Centres around the world. She has expanded her efforts to bring peace to the world through spiritual unity and travels extensively. Karen meets with people daily, both personally and online, serving a worldwide community of more than 300,000 souls.

Karen has four children, sixteen grandchildren, and considers everywhere there is a Kabbalah Centre her home.

SOURCE Kabbalah Centre

Mar 12, 2016

Madonna stops Guy Ritchie's Kabbalah documentary

Entertainment News
March 16, 2016

'Rebel Heart' star Madonna has demanded ex-husband Guy Ritchie leave their sons out of a documentary about his family and Kabbalah.

The 57-year-old pop legend has scuppered her ex-husband's and his new wife Jacqui Ainsley's plans to release the film which would reveal the family's connection to the religion, after she refused to allow Rocco, 15 and David Banda, 10, to be a part of it.

A source shared: ''Madonna is the one who introduced Guy to Kabbalah and she doesn't want it to go ahead. It was top secret, but she found out about it because David told her.

''She doesn't want Rocco or David to be in it, and they are having to rework it. It's caused a big problem.

''Now the whole thing could be shelved. It's caused a lot of added stress.''

Guy doesn't follow the religion which derives from Judaism, though the film - shot at Guy and Jacqui's Wiltshire home - was set to explore the whole family's interest in spiritualism.

The source added to the Daily Mirror: ''This has been a very special project for Guy and Jacqui, something they have worked very hard on. They hope they can work it out.''

Meanwhile, Rocco left Madonna's 'Rebel Heart' tour late last year to stay with his father and subsequently defied a court order to return to his mother and siblings which also include Lourdes, 19, and Mercy, 10, for Christmas.

Now the former couple are in a court battle and a ruling is expected soon on whether the teenager should return to his mother's care.

http://www.tv3.ie/xpose/article/entertainment-news/195568/Madonna-stops-Guy-Ritchies-Kabbalah-documentary

Nov 24, 2015

Kabbalah Centre Follower Wins $177,000 in Sexual Misconduct Suit

Reuters
November 24, 2015

Los Angeles — A woman who brought a sexual misconduct suit against the former co-director of the Kabbalah Centre, a spiritual group whose brand of Jewish mysticism has drawn many celebrity devotees, was awarded $177,500 in damages by a jury on Tuesday.

The Los Angeles County Superior Court jury found Yehuda Berg, 43, known in Hollywood as "a rabbi to the stars," liable for inflicting emotional distress on a former follower, Jena Scaccetti, according to her lawyer, Alain Bonavida.

The center has attracted such stars as Madonna, Lindsay Lohan, Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher among its followers, who are often identified by red-string wrist bracelets worn as a talisman.

The case marked the latest controversy faced over the years by the Kabbalah Centre, a non-profit organization founded in 1965 by Berg's late father, Philip, a rabbi who espoused teachings rooted in metaphysical principles of Jewish belief.

Scaccetti accused Berg, who is married, of inviting her to an apartment and giving her alcohol and pain pills before groping her legs as he tried to overpower her.
Berg acknowledged in trial testimony that he offered Scaccetti a drink and some Vicodin, saying she had complained of painful kidney stones, and that he touched her leg to see if "anything intimate" might happen.

He denied forcing himself on her.

The jury awarded Scaccetti $135,000 in compensatory and punitive damages from Berg and also found that the center supervised him negligently, Bonavida said.

Scaccetti was awarded another $42,500 to be paid by the organization, he said.

Attorneys for Berg and the Kabbalah Centre could not be reached for comment late on Tuesday.

Critics in mainstream Judaism accuse the Kabbalah movement of corrupting the ancient, esoteric mystic traditions of the faith by taking them out of context and repackaging them with a popular new-age bent.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-california-kabbalah/kabbalah-center-follower-wins-177000-in-sexual-misconduct-suit-idUSKBN0TE0CM20151125

Nov 17, 2015

Former co-director of Kabbalah Center accused of groping in California trial

Diana Crandall
Reuters
November 17, 2015

Los Angeles -- The former co-director of the Kabbalah Center, a spiritual group whose brand of Jewish mysticism has drawn numerous celebrity adherents but also controversy, went on trial on Tuesday in a lawsuit brought by a follower who says he groped her.

Yehuda Berg, 43, son of the late rabbi who founded the organization, was called as the first witness in the trial, testifying he struggled with drug and alcohol addiction that led to his resignation from leadership in the group in 2014.

But he denied any sexual wrongdoing.

In a lawsuit filed last year in Los Angeles Superior Court, Jena Scaccetti accused Berg of inviting her to his mother's apartment in 2012, plying her with alcohol and narcotic painkillers and making an unwanted sexual advance that included hugging her and fondling her leg.

"It was an attempt to get her drunk and render her unable to make an informed decision," her lawyer, Alin Bonavida, said in opening statements to jurors on Tuesday.

According to the lawsuit, Berg, who is married, reacted to Scaccetti's look of shock by threatening to kill her if she told anyone about his behavior, and she left the apartment.

Berg's attorney John Cline acknowledged that his client, believing Scaccetti might be attracted to him, had invited her to the apartment for a drink but denied that he forced himself on her.

"It turned out that Ms. Scaccetti had no interest at all in having sex with Mr. Berg," Cline told jurors. "She told him, 'no,' and he stopped."

The lawsuit seeks tens of millions of dollars in damages from Berg and the Kabbalah Center for battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress and negligence.

The case marks the latest controversy faced over the years by the Kabbalah Center, a non-profit founded in 1965 by Berg's father, an ordained rabbi who espoused teachings rooted in metaphysical principles of Jewish belief.

The mystical leanings of the center have attracted the likes of Madonna and Lindsay Lohan, seen with the red-string wrist bracelets many followers wear as a talisman. Berg himself officiated the 2005 wedding of actors Ashton Kutcher and Demi Moore.

Critics in mainstream Judaism have accused the Kabbalah movement of corrupting the ancient, esoteric mystic traditions of Jewish faith by taking them out of context and repackaging them as a popular new-age form of superstition.

Oct 27, 2015

Preaching to the converted: how Kabbalah keeps on growing

Harriet Sherwood
The Guardian
October 26, 2015

Marcus Weston strides into his office, housed in an elegant Georgian house in the West End of London, clutching a bottle of slime-coloured water. It's made from lemon, ginger, cucumber and super greens powder, and West drinks 1.5 litres of it a day. "It gives me an extra gear, cleans me inside and makes my thinking clearer," he says.

Weston, a former investment banker, devotes this clarity to studying and teaching Kabbalah. Commonly described as a mystical offshoot of Judaism, it has grown exponentially in the UK since its London headquarters opened in 2002. Now 1,100 students cram into its premises, which are next door to the upmarket Oriental Club, each week, with waiting lists for some classes and events, and it teaches spiritualism to businesses, diplomats, charities and local authorities. Weston has been invited to a Whitehall meeting to discuss the idea of incorporating emotional intelligence content into the national curriculum. "We're inundated," he says.

But recently two people came to the London Kabbalah centre who were not seeking to fill a spiritual void in their lives. Knocking on the door at 5am on a Sunday morning were a pair of council officials investigating a call from a local resident, who complained about 36 hours of continuous loud chanting that had emanated from the centre. "I guess it was too noisy for one person, for which I apologise," says Weston, with a shrug and a smile.

The complaint about the chanting over the Jewish holiday of Sukkot drew fresh attention to a movement whose many reported celebrity adherents include Madonna, Gwyneth Paltrow and Demi Moore. Princess Eugenie, currently eighth in line to the throne, has been photographed apparently wearing the distinctive red thread that devotees ties around their left wrist, although Weston declines to be drawn on this, saying only that he has "many connections with many royal families around the world".

Weston is a charming man, wearing a smart suit, perfectly judged stubble and an almost-continuous smile. He is happily expansive on the spiritual meaning of Kabbalah, with only a slight clench of the jaw betraying irritation at questions regarding the financing of the movement and claims by some that it is a cult. Brought up in a "very un-observant but culturally Jewish" family, he embarked on a career in investment banking before chancing upon Kabbalah 16 years ago.

"I wasn't looking for anything spiritual, but felt there was more to life than sitting on the tube. I came to a class and sat at the back, thinking, 'What on earth am I doing?'. But the more the guy talked, the more it made sense, it resonated."

Now he is the full-time lead teacher at the London Kabbalah centre, living with his wife and small children in Kabbalah accommodation, eating Kabbalah food and drawing on his savings for all other necessities or pleasures. He says he is entitled to a salary or allowance, but chooses not to take one.

"When I started, there were maybe 10 people in a class. Now we have around 1,100 active students. There are waiting lists, we don't have enough teachers." The centre – a branch of the Kabbalah Centre International, founded in New York in 1969 by Rabbi Philip Berg – has secured planning permission to double its size with a £5m extension that will take up to two years to complete – a plan unlikely to endear the Kabbalists to their noise-sensitive neighbours. Weston attributes the growth in interest to "a void that religion can't fill, but is still needed in society. That void can be filled with something universally spiritual."

Asked to be more specific in defining Kabbalah, his response is at times hard to follow. "Kabbalah is original spiritual teaching before religion was on the scene. It's where all monotheistic religions have common ground," he says. Later he adds: "When we say Kabbalah is a spiritual wisdom, it sits diametrically opposed to religion. In religion, you can blame someone, or God, because ultimately God … is a punishing or rewarding energy or person. In spirituality, it doesn't exist. In spirituality, it is 100% a spiritual fabric of causes and effects, meaning that each word, thought and action that you plant has an energy to it."

And again: "Kabbalists say that creation was a point in time when a higher power gave everything of it to the building and creation of the physical world. Since that point, that higher power is out of the game. And therefore the whole revelation of that light or fulfilment, happiness, joy, peace is of our doing. In other words, our actions can reveal or conceal that light. That light sits in our potential."

Central to Kabbalah is the reading of the 23-volume Zohar, or Book of Splendor, which explains the secrets of the Bible and, indeed, every aspect of life. That it is written in ancient Aramaic is not an insurmountable problem: devotees are instructed to scan the text with a finger in order to absorb the teaching of the book.

Weston now describes himself as a "fully observant Jew", and indeed wears a yarmulke, a Jewish skullcap. This he describes as a "source of energy", a conduit for an "infinite light power" that "streams through the cosmos". But, he swiftly adds, despite Kabbalah's associations with Judaism, it is "not a Jewish study centre", but an inclusive, cosmopolitan university.

A request to observe an introductory Kabbalah class is declined by Weston's PR man, Andrew Michael – whose email announces him as "senior celebrity publicist" – on the grounds that "for some people, spirituality can be quite a private thing". Instead, Michael offers a list of students willing to be interviewed.

One is Gavin Juniper, a 51-year-old entrepreneur, who first came to the centre in May. Recently separated from his wife, Juniper decided to take his life in hand: give up drinking, lose some weight and find a spiritual dimension that he'd been aware of lacking for some time. In his first class, "there was definitely a connection"; by the time he was on to his sixth class, "I felt like I'd come home." Kabbalah, he says, makes him feel less stressed and "softens ego. Ego is really the dark side of everything. If you can lose your ego, you become more spiritual."

Another student, Nimrit Chahal, 40a non-practising Sikh, began attending in June after spending a weekend with other Kabbalists for a wedding. "I wanted to make myself a better person. Kabbalah can give you tools to help with day-to-day life, like how to deal with a situation at work. It's practical and spiritual." And, she repeats several times, it is fun.

Not everyone agrees. Claims abound that Kabbalah is a cult that exploits people financially and psychologically, with many of the allegations documented by the Cult Education Institute. These include threats of violence, claims to cure cancer, misuse of funds, legal action against the global Kabbalah movement,fraud and tax evasion. Inform, the London School of Economics-based Information Network on Religious Movements, has produced an analysis of Kabbalah, which records "criticism from a variety of people and organisations who have accused Berg's centre of 'indiscriminate outreach, aggressive recruitment methods and exploitative treatment of devotees'".

It cites exposés of financial aspects of the centre, including allegations of pressure on students to make big donations and of forcing volunteers to work long hours without pay. A BBC documentary in 2005 showed an undercover reporter being charged £860 for "Kabbalah water", books and a meal, amid suggestions that his cancer could be cured. Weston brushes off such claims. The London Kabbalah centre is a registered religious charity, financed by course fees, its bookshop and donations from students and benefactors, he says. Its West End headquarters are owned by the charity. It offers an introductory 10-class course for free, encouraging participants to contribute to its "scholarship fund". Other courses and classes are charged at around £10 an hour. "Kabbalah water" costs £2 for a one-litre bottle; a pack of seven red wrist-strings costs £18. The string is to ward off the "evil eye", says Weston, and the water is "not snake oil, just plain water which hopefully has some energy because it's around good people".

He confirms that Kabbalah teachers are unpaid, working full-time in return for accommodation, food and a modest allowance. "I don't think it's necessary to state what the allowance is, and it's different for every person, but it's more than enough to enjoy London," he says.

Questions about finances and celebrity supporters are his "main frustration", he says. "We have 1,000 people a week, we see all sorts of miracles, and all anyone wants to know about is Madonna and Kabbalah water." Ah, yes. Madonna is a regular visitor to the centre when in London, he says. "She'll walk into a class or event and sit next to a random person – who might text a friend to say, 'Guess who's sitting next to me?'. But everyone here is respectful." To his knowledge, no one has ever attempted a selfie with her.

Celebrities are attracted to Kabbalah, he says, because of their "false sense of fulfilment which is very dependent on external energy. The definition of a fickle life is when your source of happiness is external. They come to Kabbalah, and find the source of real fulfilment and happiness is internal."

Public and private institutions are apparently queueing up to have Weston and other Kabbalist teachers share their insights. Weston says he has taught in "most investment banks in town, many of the Fortune 500 companies internationally, in Switzerland for private equity companies" as well as at public-sector bodies. "I've done some actually extraordinary things."

Can he name names? No, but he promises to email with more details when he's cleared his client confidentiality lines. The information never comes.

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/oct/26/kabbalah-religion-marcus-weston-madonna

Oct 21, 2015

Kabbalah Centre accused of misusing more than $1 million in donations

Los Angeles Times
Kim Christensen

Suits allege the spiritual organization pressured donors to 'give money until it hurts' for projects that were never carried out.
December 3, 2013
Former supporters of the Kabbalah Centre have sued the Los Angeles-based spiritual organization for fraud, alleging the misuse of more than $1 million they contributed to a building fund and charitable causes.
"Kabbalah Centre has engaged in a pattern and practice of raising funds … for the purpose of enriching itself and others associated with Kabbalah Centre," according to a complaint filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court by Carolyn Cohen, a San Diego County real estate broker and president of the Solana Beach Chamber of Commerce.
Cohen's complaint alleges that she and one of her companies, Here We Grow Inc., lost about $810,000 in contributions and interest on loans she secured to cover her giving. A similar complaint filed by Randi and Charles Wax, who own a San Diego sanitary supply business, alleges losses of more than $326,000.
Both lawsuits were filed Nov. 27 and claim that Kabbalah Centre employees pressured the plaintiffs "to give money until it hurts" in order to receive "the light" and win favor with the center's leaders, Karen Berg and her adult sons Yehuda and Michael.
Neither the Bergs nor their lawyers responded to a request for comment made through a spokesman.
The donations by Cohen and the Waxes were earmarked for construction of a new Kabbalah Centre building in San Diego and for a children's charity, the complaint states. But the center was not built and the charity abruptly ceased operation, according to the lawsuit, which alleges the nonprofit organization has a history of raising money for projects it never carries out.
"My clients have, bravely, decided to not allow themselves to become another of Kabbalah Centre's many silent victims and look forward to resolving this matter at trial wherein they will not only seek compensation for their financial losses but also look forward to exposing the Kabbalah Centre's true nature," said Alain Bonavida, the plaintiffs' lawyer.
The lawsuits seek damages totaling more than $40 million from Kabbalah Centre, the Bergs and a couple who worked for the center as teachers and spiritual advisers to Cohen and the Waxes.
Karen Berg's husband and the sons' father, Philip Berg, died in September, nine years after suffering a debilitating stroke.
The Kabbalah Centre, founded by Philip Berg, known as the Rav, drew famous followers with its lucrative, New Age take on Jewish mysticism. His rendition of the ancient wisdom of the Torah was embraced by many gentiles and celebrities, including his most famous student, Madonna, but his approach was derided by mainstream Judaism as superficial and inauthentic.
After a boom in popularity driven by its association with celebrities including Demi Moore, Ashton Kutcher and Britney Spears, the center in recent years has been dogged by controversy.
The Times has previously reported that the organization made millions through merchandise sales and cash donations it aggressively sought from adherents. The Bergs enjoyed a lifestyle of private jets, designer clothes and gambling trips, including one to Las Vegas when Philip suffered a stroke that left him unable to speak clearly or walk.
In 2010, amid questions about the center's assets and spending, the Internal Revenue Service and federal prosecutors in New York opened a tax-evasion investigation. The government has declined to discuss its case and the current status of the probe is not known.
Kabbalah Centre officials said previously they were cooperating with authorities.
http://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-kabbalah-20131204,0,4429725.story#ixzz2maao7Q4A

Jan 21, 2014

Woman Says 'Rabbi to the Stars' Drugged & Threatened To Kill Her

Matt Reynolds
Courthouse News Service
January 21, 2014

Los Angeles -- Kabbalah Centre International Rabbi Yehuda Berg plied a student with Vicodin and alcohol, then felt her up and tried to have sex with her and threatened to kill her if she told anyone, the woman claims in a $40 million lawsuit.
Berg, a teacher at the Kabbalah Centre International, is a bestselling author of books, including "The Power of Kabbalah" and "The 72 Names of God."

Berg's mother Karen Berg, father Rav Berg and brother Michael Berg also teach at the center, where Madonna, Ashton Kutcher and other celebrities have studied.

In her Superior Court complaint against Yehuda Berg and the center, Berg's former student Jena Scaccetti claims that after molesting her the father of five warned that he would "fucking beat the whole right side of you until you are blue" and "'fucking kill'" her if she told anyone what had happened.

Scacetti says in the lawsuit that Berg invited her to his mother's house on Oct. 25, 2012 to "heal" her of kidney stones.

After arriving at the house, Scaccetti says that Berg badmouthed two other teachers, called his sister-in-law a "'cunt'" and "'starfucker,'" and vented his concerns about a IRS investigation of the Kabbalah Centre.

Berg told Scaccetti to take two Vicodin, ostensibly to help ease her pain, and "plied her with alcohol," according to the lawsuit.

"Yehuda sat close to Jena and started hugging her and touching her legs," the complaint states. "As Yehuda engaged in this wholly inappropriate and criminal behavior he proceeded to place his hands on Jena's legs and stated to her that they could engage in sexual activity with the promise that she would not get pregnant. Jena was deeply offended and tried to get up, Yehuda persisted in touching Jena without her consent including hugging her while telling her that she 'was very weak and not strong.'"

Scaccetti says that the rabbi, "larger than her-by at least 100 pounds," took her cellphone, found an image of her, "zoomed in on her crotch area and showed her this magnified image while asking her if her genital region '... was Brazilian or shaved.'"
"Yehuda, seeing Jena's reaction to his disgusting and outrageous behavior threatened Jena by telling her that, should she tell anyone about what occurred between them this evening or what he told her, that he would 'fucking beat the whole right side of you until you are blue' and 'fucking kill you,'" the lawsuit states. "Yehuda handed Jena two additional Vicodin and demanded that she take them. Jena pretended to do so as Yehuda took some himself and she left the apartment."
Scaccetti claims that other women have been victims of Berg's "unwanted touching of a sexual nature."

When Scaccetti complained to another teacher about the incident he told her that "'Yehuda has a problem'" and that he would "confront" the rabbi, according to the lawsuit.

Scaccetti seeks at least $40 million in damages for each count of battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress and breach of fiduciary duty.

She is represented by Alain Bonavida of Beverly Hills.

Kabbalah Centre International did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment.

Two donors sued the Kabbalah Centre in December 2013, claiming in separate lawsuits that it had defrauded them of $904,000 for projects that never happened.

Dec 5, 2013

Kabbalah Centre sued for fraud, misuse of funds by former followers

Haaretz
December 5, 2013
Los Angeles -- The Los Angeles-based Kabbalah Centre is being sued for over $1 million by former followers in two lawsuits alleging fraud and misuse of funds.

Both suits were filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court on Nov. 27 and claim that the Centre pressured the plaintiffs “to give money until it hurts,” in order to receive “the light” from its leaders, Karen Berg and her adult sons Yehuda and Michael.

Carolyn Cohen, a San Diego real estate broker, said that she and one of her companies lost some $810,000 to the Centre, which, she claimed, “engages in a pattern and practice of raising funds … for the purpose of enriching itself.”

San Diego business owners Randi and Charles Wax, the other plaintiffs, alleged losses of $326,000.

In both cases, the plaintiffs said they were told that the donations were earmarked for a new Kabbalah Centre building in San Diego and for a children’s charity.

But, they said, the new center was never built and the charity abruptly ceased operation.

Neither the Berg family not their lawyer responded to requests for comments, the Los Angeles Times reported.

The late Rabbi Phillip Berg established the initial Kabbalah facility in Jerusalem and the first American operation in New York in 1965. Since 1984, the Centre’s worldwide operations, with 50 branches, have been headquartered in Los Angeles.

Over the past years, the Centre has been the target, as well as the originator, of numerous lawsuits in the United States and Britain. In 2010, the U.S. Internal Revenue Service launched a tax evasion investigation, but the outcome is still pending.

Traditional rabbinical authorities repeatedly have denounced the Centre’s teachings and methods as a perversion of the Kabbalah’s profound mysticism. However, the Berg family has received worldwide publicity by attracting such Hollywood followers as Madonna, Britney Spears, Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher.

https://www.haaretz.com/jewish/kabbalah-centre-sued-for-fraud-1.5297500

Dec 4, 2013

Lawsuits target LA Kabbalah Centre

The Associated Press
December 4, 2013

Los Angeles -- Former supporters of the Kabbalah Centre have sued the Los Angeles-based spiritual organization, claiming more than $1 million in contributions was used fraudulently.

The Los Angeles Times reported Wednesday that two lawsuits filed last week claim the center, which attracted Madonna and other celebrities, raised money to enrich itself instead of using the funds to build a new facility in San Diego and for a children's charity.

The lawsuits say the center was never built and the charity abruptly stopped operation. More than $40 million in damages are being sought from the center and its leaders.
After a boom in popularity due in part with its association with celebrities, the center in recent years has been dogged by controversy. A federal tax-evasion investigation was launched but the current status of the probe isn't known.

Oct 24, 2013

Money and magic: Madonna's huckster kabbala guru

Haaretz
Arthur Green
September 30, 2013

Philip Berg, who died last week, retooled kabbala as a cultish, superstitious self-help movement - but his commercial success and celebrity following hardly enhanced the reputation of Jewish mysticism.

Some two hundred years ago, just as Jewish emancipation was moving into high gear, Judaic scholars developed a new concept called mainstream Judaism. (Classical Hebrew has no way to express such a notion.) The mainstream was created in order to exclude anything that modern westernizing Jews might find embarrassing in Judaism. This meant, first and foremost, the entire mystical tradition.

Now, two centuries later, Jews are scrambling to reclaim this lost part of our legacy. Many factors come together to create this resurgence of interest in kabbala and Hasidism. The general Western quest for exoteric spiritual truths, the effect of the Gershom Scholem-led academic effort to make the sources accessible, and the unique character of Jewish history in the past 70 years have all played a role. Few people doubt any more that great power and profundity are to be found within these texts and traditions; the 19th-century notion that the kabbalists were mere obscurantists, rebels against the light of reason, has been mostly set aside.

The question is not whether, but how, to reclaim this part of our heritage. What is the best of the kabbalas teaching, and what might well be left behind? How do we retool a religious language conceived in the Middle Ages to inspire the religious lives of contemporary seekers?

Philip Berg, founder of the Kabbalah Centers, who died last week in Los Angeles, had a clear answer to those questions. It turns out, Berg discovered, that modern Western people, living in a seemingly skeptical and enlightened age, are just as frightened and insecure as our ancestors were back in the ghettos and mellahs of centuries ago. They will tie red threads around their wrists, drink specially blessed bottles of kabbala water, and buy sets of books they cannot read, all as talismans against the evil eye. This most popular level of kabbala, verging close to magic, he also discovered, could be a great commercial success. Wrapped up in a garment of self-empowerment and personal growth teachings of the sort one can find in airport bookstores, and combined with a dose of enthusiastic new-age piety, it could be a source of endless seminars, retreats, and programs that people would pay hefty fees to attend.

Berg, an ordained Orthodox rabbi, was indeed a student of kabbala in a serious way. He came out of the school of Yehudah Leib Ashlag (1886-1955), a Polish Jew who settled in Jerusalem in the 1920s and revived what was left of the old, mostly Sephardic, kabbalistic heritage. He had some interesting ideas, including a tendency toward communism in his social views. His essential teaching is that we humans need to return energy to its single divine source, to become givers rather than receivers in the cosmic economy. It was this radiating of divine energy that kabbala was to help one achieve. But Ashlag dived headlong into the endlessly complex morass of latter-day kabbalistic symbolism, where the great ideas tended to get lost in the myriad details of the system.

Berg, a second-generation disciple of this school, saw a way to turn it into a self-help teaching. The more superstitious pieces, never much to Ashlags liking, were picked up from other kabbalists. Berg, with the help of his wife and sons, engaged in a tremendously successful marketing campaign and brought this heady brew to the attention of Hollywood personalities, among many others, capturing headlines that expanded their market ever farther. He scandalized Orthodox kabbalistic circles by opening his teachings to both women and gentiles, unheard of in their world. Critics assumed, however, that this bit of liberalism was mostly a commercial decision. His movement, perhaps getting beyond his own intent, even saw its form of kabbala as transcending Judaism altogether, becoming a religion of its own.

As the movement expanded and the commercial stakes grew higher, there were accusations of cultish behavior and mind control coming from former disciples who had left Bergs circle. At the same time, there were others who claimed to have been helped by his teachings, to have found real religious community within the centers precincts, and to have attained great spiritual growth. Some said that Judaism was first made attractive to them through Bergs approach and they then had moved on toward a deeper and more learned connection to the tradition. None of these claims can be ignored; religious movements are always complex in the effects they have on different personalities and people coming to them with different sets of needs.

In recent years, with Berg crippled by a stroke, the centers have also faced charges on the fiscal front and in general seem to have seen better days. Most of the Hollywood personalities have come and gone. In retrospect, it would be fair to say that while the Berg enterprise surely increased the fame of kabbala, and may have been beneficial to some seekers, it did not enhance the reputation of Jewish mysticism among the worlds spiritual traditions. Kabbala does indeed contain great wisdom and a proper popularization of its teachings could have much to say to our world. We denizens of the first world especially need to be taught that there are some worlds above us, and learn how to become givers rather than just receivers or consumers. Religion has no more urgent task. But the job still needs to be done, and without the commercialization and hucksterism that too often made it appear seamy rather than profound.

Arthur Green serves as rector of the Rabbinical School and professor of Jewish philosophy and religion at Hebrew College in Newton, Mass.

http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.549688