Irish Daily Mail

Women ‘branded and made slaves by self-help cult’

- From Tom Leonard in New York news@dailymail.ie

A SECRET sisterhood which once tried to set up in Ireland has been accused of branding recruits in a bizarre initiation. New members – found through their link to selfimprov­ement organisati­on Nxivm – must submit to a ‘master-slave hierarchy’ and provide compromisi­ng images of themselves, it is alleged.

These can apparently be used against them if they try to disclose the group’s existence, according to a New York Times investigat­ion.

Nxivm (pronounced Nexium)has offered New Age-style coaching since the 1990s and has boasted 16,000 members – many of whom are actresses and millionair­e heiresses.

It claims to foster self-fulfilment by eliminatin­g emotional and psychologi­cal barriers.

Critics have dubbed it a cult – a charge the group denies. But while most clients take a few courses and leave, recently it has allegedly drawn some women into a clandestin­e all-female inner circle.

Nxivm has chapters in the US, Canada and Mexico, and has tried to expand to Ireland, running ‘executive coaching programmes’ here in the early 2000s. The training courses were run by an associated company called Executive Success Programs (ESP).

The group reportedly held introducto­ry meetings in Dublin’s Burlington Hotel – now the Clayton Hotel Burlington Road – in 2004.

Actress Sarah Edmondson, a member for ten years, told the New York Times she and other initiates were told to get a tattoo and were taken to a house near Albany, New York, Nxivm’s HQ.

She said they were held down by three women, as her ‘master’ – a senior woman in the group – told them to repeat: ‘Master, please brand me, it would be an honour.’

A female doctor used a cauterisin­g tool to sear a 2in sq symbol below each woman’s hip in an agonising half-hour, she claimed, adding: ‘I wept the whole time.’

Members are told the group is dedicated to ‘being a force for good’ and empowering women, and that the branding is designed

Disclose the group’s existence

to strengthen them. Two women allege they took part in an exercise run by a doctor and were shown film clips – including of women being murdered – as a brainwave monitor and video camera recorded their reactions.

The brand allegedly incorporat­es the initials of Nxivm founder Keith Raniere, 57. Ex-members have accused him of manipulati­ng his usually young, attractive recruits.

Critics say the secret sisterhood operates like a ‘bondage pyramid scheme’ in which each ‘master’ must recruit six ‘slaves’, who can then become ‘masters’ by recruiting slaves.

In drills, slaves allegedly had to respond to a master’s text messages within 60 seconds. If they failed, they faced enforced fasting or other physical punishment.

They were expected to add compromisi­ng material about themselves each month to an internet ‘dropbox’, it was reported.

Critics claim the group targets impression­able daughters of affluent families. Dynasty star Catherine Oxenberg said she ‘felt sick’ after learning her daughter India, 26, had been initiated.

When she confronted her she said ‘it was character-building’.

No criminal charges have been filed over the brandings as officials concluded they were voluntary.

The New York Times said Nxivm and Mr Raniere had ignored repeated requests for comment.

 ??  ?? Ex-member: Actress Sarah Edmondson who says she was branded, inset
Ex-member: Actress Sarah Edmondson who says she was branded, inset
 ??  ?? Nxivm founder: Raniere
Nxivm founder: Raniere

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