Global Times

Mystic malfeasanc­e

Scandals-hit Indian gurus, suspected cults scam Chinese followers

- By GT staff reporters Page Editor: huyuwei@globaltime­s.com.cn Scan to read and share story on your phone

If you see a man wearing a maroon waistcloth and bead necklace sitting next to a yoga mat in a secluded meditation room in China, chances are he may not be a graced spiritual leader. China has become a hotspot for Indianborn disgraced “gurus” and cult organizati­ons scamming people by selling them so-called spiritual lessons.

Some of such Indian spiritual groups advertise with labels like “spiritual guidance,” “yoga culture,” “longevity” and “business success” that cater to Chinese consumers, and use their ostensibly mysterious spirituali­sm to deceive and ultimately control its members, which experts concluded falls in line with the definition of a “cult” in China, and is likely illegal. Infamy of these

“holy men” has spread globally, as various media have reported them participat­ing in criminal cases both in India and other countries, including China.

Experts call on Chinese people to not blindly worship the guru culture, and to especially beware of dubious claims and “anti-science” messaging in the name of religion.

“Chinese people have to be wary of imported cults, which might become a sort of crime if not well-managed,” said Wang Dehua, head of the Institute for South and Central Asian Studies at the Shanghai Institutes for Internatio­nal Studies.

“We welcome healthy cultural exchanges with India, such as Indian food, Bollywood films and yoga classes which have been proven popular among Chinese, but we don’t welcome faulty spiritual masters who cheat money under the guise of religion,” Wang told the Global Times on Tuesday.

Cult warning

China’s Ministry of Public Security (MPS) and the China Anti-Cult Associatio­n (CACA) have issued a warning against Indian-imported religious threats like disgraced spiritual “gurus” in January 2019, asking residents to stay alert about some spiritual courses with extravagan­tly colorful descriptio­ns offered by some Indian religious groups, and to stay off “suspected religious cults.”

The warning came after a famous Taiwan actress Yi Nengjing, also known as Annie Yi, posted a Sina Weibo post promoting controvers­ial spiritual courses offered by Kalki Bhagavan and his wife Amma, creators of the Oneness University based in Chittoor, India.

The 70-year-old founder of Oneness University and his wife were investigat­ed for a large amount of unaccounte­d wealth by India’s Income Tax department in a tax raid in November 2019, dampening many followers’ faith in his teaching, Indian media reported.

The university, whose name has been changed into O&O Academy, was taken over by the couples’ son. The organizati­on has continued attempts to attract more Chinese trainees through opening social media accounts like those on WeChat, the Global Times found out.

According to a broker in charge of organizing Chinese trainees to India for the physical and spiritual training programs, a team composed of more than a dozen team organizers, some 200 lecturers and volunteers has been working on

providing counseling, registrati­on, planning, and administra­tion work for Chinese who would like to go to India for training programs, which last for at least a week.

The broker reached by the Global Times, who asked for anonymity, said her team is not a company but a group of individual­s passionate about the training courses who would like more people to join. The team works in cooperatio­n with O&O Academy. She has organized more than 10,000 Chinese to India for the training program in the last seven years. An anonymous Chinese web user shared her experience on Zhihu, China’s Quora-like Q&A platform, after attending a two-day course in 2017 held by the Oneness University in Beijing. She said the course was sold in six Chinese cities with the price of 3,600 yuan ($515) per person, and a venue was only open to 250 people. The 250 seats in Beijing were sold out in two days, and the class was held via livestream by Indian lecturers with interprete­rs translatin­g the class into Chinese.

“We welcome healthy cultural exchanges with India, such as Indian food, Bollywood films and yoga classes which have been proven popular among Chinese, but we don’t welcome faulty spiritual masters who cheat money under the guise of religion.”

Wang Dehua head of the Institute for South and Central Asian Studies at the Shanghai Institutes for Internatio­nal Studies

Indian lecturers spent two hours to explain oneness, which is “unconditio­ned love and joy for no reason,” and in the following classes they told attendees some problems can only be solved by “external power” like oneness.

The lecture was intermitte­nt with meditation-like mantra, and some attendees, including volunteers hired by the sponsor, were immersed in their emotions, hysterical­ly laughing, singing or crying.

She recalled that a lecturer introduced them the concept of gold ball, which was shown in a picture. Many attendees claimed they saw various illusions under the help of background music and the lecturer, including seeing the gold ball telling them they would get everything they wanted.

The web user noticed the price of the course in the Chinese mainland rose to 10,000 yuan some days later.

At the end of the class, attendees were peddled a seven-day course in India with prices ranging from $3,600-100,000 for one phase, and an entire course contains 15 phases, which means that it would cost as much as 10 million yuan ($1.4m) to finish all 15 phases of the course.

Another trainee recalled the course was full of brainwashi­ng.

“I was told that one could be saved from samsara cycles after touching their gold chariot, which is absurd,” said the trainee on his social media account.

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 ?? Photo: AFP ?? Anti-cult education held in Danhua primary school in Bozhou, East China’s Anhui Province. Photo: cnsphoto
In the box: Followers of the controvers­ial Indian guru Ram Rahim Singh walk outside an ashram in Sirsa, India, on August 27, 2017.
Photo: AFP Anti-cult education held in Danhua primary school in Bozhou, East China’s Anhui Province. Photo: cnsphoto In the box: Followers of the controvers­ial Indian guru Ram Rahim Singh walk outside an ashram in Sirsa, India, on August 27, 2017.
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