The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Brazil’s #metoo moment: Spiritual guru accused of sex abuse

- By Diarlei Rodrigues, Mario Lobao and Peter Prengaman

ABADIANIA, BRAZIL >> For over 40 years, spiritual healer Joao Teixeira de Faria drew people from all over the world to this small city in central Brazil, offering treatment for everything from depression to cancer.

His work was both praised — Oprah Winfrey called de Faria “inspiring” while visiting in 2012 — and heavily scrutinize­d. Now, de Faria, who goes by the name “Joao de Deus,” or “John of God,” is in trouble with the law.

Since December, more than 250 women including his daughter have come forward to allege abuse that ranged from being felt up during treatments to rape. The mounting accusation­s are turning the 77-year-old spiritual guru into Brazil’s first major figure to go down in the #metoo era, which has been slow to take off in Latin America’s largest nation despite myriad problems with gender equality.

Meanwhile, the people in Abadiania, about a twohour drive west from the nation’s capital of Brasilia, are in disbelief. They also fear for their futures without de Faria.

“All of Abadiania depended on the work of Joao,” said Claudio Pruja, the owner of a small inn who also sometimes worked as an assistant to de Faria. “We don’t have a beach. This isn’t Copacabana.”

Indeed, de Faria’s pull was so strong that the much more affluent “new” part of the town, built in the years since the healer opened his clinic in 1976, stands in sharp contrast to the older, run down part of town: There are brightly colored houses, swept streets, hotels with ATM machines inside — a rarity in small Brazilian cities — as well as specialty boutiques that cater to tourists and police constantly patrolling.

By some estimates, his “casa spiritual,” or “spiritual house,” attended to 10,000 patients a week. It was there that de Faria, who over the decades came under sharp scrutiny from critics who deemed him a charlatan, performed “psychic” surgeries that he said could heal a wide range of maladies.

Sometimes treatments were based on prayer, and sometimes they involved minor cutting into the body.

In 2012, Winfrey visited de Faria’s center and interviewe­d him for her talk show, writing about the experience of seeing him cut into the breast of a woman without anesthesia.

“An overwhelmi­ng sense of peace” is how she described the experience in a column that has since been deleted on oprah.com.

 ?? ERALDO PERES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo, a woman places her hands in prayer on a wooden triangle, between framed images of spiritual healer Joao Teixeira de Faria and Jesus Christ,
ERALDO PERES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo, a woman places her hands in prayer on a wooden triangle, between framed images of spiritual healer Joao Teixeira de Faria and Jesus Christ,

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