La Semana

Lanzarán un tema en inglés que dejó grabado Jenni Rivera

India Oxenberg talks about being branded with a symbol from Keith Raniere.

- Bykelly Mccarthyvi­agma

NXIVM was initially billed as a self-help group with 16,000 members, and it promised people the tools for personal success and empowermen­t.

The massively popular group attracted Hollywood stars and millionair­es, but it all came crashing down after allegation­s of a secret sex cult surfaced. The leader and several high-ranking members landed behind bars as a result.

"Dynasty" actress Catherine Oxenberg fought for years to free her daughter India from the group and, for the first time, broke her silence after breaking free from the so-called cult NXIVM in an exclusive interview with ABC News.

"What I thought I was learning was self-help and personal growth. What I was learning was the opposite. It was inhumane," India Oxenberg said,

At just 19 years old, she joined the group run by Keith Raniere, a self-proclaimed guru who bragged about what he described as superior intellect.

Initially, the mother-daughter duo went to the first meeting together, but the group almost immediatel­y tried to break that connection, Catherine Oxenberg said.

"Yeah. And that was all strategic. And we were unaware of why they were doing that at the time," the mother and actress told ABC News. "But it's actually something that I learned later on called parental alienation."

India Oxenberg spent nearly seven years in the organizati­on and paid them nearly $100,000, now saying that she had been slowly brainwashe­d but at the time couldn't see it while it was happening.

"That's years of grooming. And when you're unaware, it's so easy to be led astray, especially by people who are masters at manipulati­on," she said. "And these people were that, especially Keith Raniere. He's a master at manipulati­on."

India Oxenberg continued, "If there's one thing he's intelligen­t at, it's that. And he's a predator."

Prosecutor­s said Raniere was a con man and predator who took advantage of women. They said Raniere, who called himself Vanguard, created a secret sorority inside the group where women were made to be his slaves and have sex with him.

Raniere, according to prosecutor­s, blackmaile­d those women with what they called "collateral" like family secrets and nude photos.

India Oxenberg said that "Smallville" actress Allison Mack was the first person to introduce her to the society under the guise of female empowermen­t.

"It was a trap," she said bluntly. "And it was a ploy for Keith to enslave women for his own sexual desires."

Her own relationsh­ip with Raniere, she said, "took a different turn and became sexual when -- I was commanded to do a seduction assignment."

"That was the beginning -- of continual sexual abuse. And I didn't see it as that at the time," India

Oxenberg explained.

"I would describe that sexual relationsh­ip as rape," she continued.

Because of the nature of the relationsh­ip, she explained that she felt like she could not turn down what was being asked of her.

"I had given collateral, which automatica­lly removes my choice," India Oxenberg said. "So I did not have the option to say no. Saying no meant hurting my family or hurting my friends. And I wasn't gonna do that."

In the new STARZ documentar­y, “Seduced: Inside the NXIVM Cult," that premieres on Sunday, Oct. 18 at 9 p.m. ET, India Oxenberg returns to the house where she said that she and others were held down and branded with Raniere's initials.

"It was horrible," she said when asked about the night she was branded.

Her mother chimed in adding, "And you had no idea that it was Keith's initials. I remember."

"That's the real thing is that we were told that it was a symbol of the elements and that this was gonna be a bonding experience," India Oxenberg explained. "And we were sleep deprived. We were starved. We were coerced."

She continued, "You don't just decide to be branded. You're coerced into being branded."

For years, her mother publicly and privately fought to free India Oxenberg from the group.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States