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81
Research Needed / Re: Jason Michaud, CEO of Stardust
« Last post by Sparks on December 08, 2023, 03:10:14 am »
As CEO of Stardust, Jason organizes the Stardust Festival in Timmins, ON, Canada.

The Websites:  https://www.stardustinc.ca   —   https://anangokaa.space
 
From his LinkedIn biography:
Kind of … awesome? — Anyway, it's here: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasonlmichaud/

He's also on 'X' (Twitter): https://twitter.com/JasonLMichaud
And on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jasonlmichaud92
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jasonlmichaud
And here: https://www.behance.net/jasonmichaud
And: https://spaceq.ca/in-conversation-jason-michaud-stardust-technologies/
Also: https://play.acast.com/s/the-space-economy/jason-michaud-stardust-technologies

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kpN3dvIsDBo
Quote
Interview with Mr. Jason Michaud -- CEO of Stardust Technologies & Tech Galaxy -- FUTURE OF SPACE!!!

Most important for the kind of investigations NAFPS members carry out:
http://jasonmichaudspace.com
Quote
Space Fraud Watch : Jason Michaud

There have always been people in business and in the space industry who have misrepresented themselves. One such person is Jason Michaud of Cochrane, Ontario who has violated contracts, failed to pay employees/contractors, and most recently identity fraud by claiming to be indigenous and obtaining benefits specifically for the indigenous community.

This website will be a list of people with claims against Jason Michaud to let the victims be aware that they are not alone and to help facilitate eventual justice.

Anything unconfirmed will labeled as such. If someone is on here falsely, feel free to send a message to the tips email address. If you are listed here as unconfirmed it is because at least two separate individuals provided your name and some evidence to support what was listed but you didn’t respond when asked if you would speak to the investigator or provide more evidence. Two of you have instead chosen to threatened the 20 year old woman whose idea it was, who maintains the site, and is our “tips” person instead of being adults and asking for your information to be removed.

If you too have had issues with Jason Michaud and would like to be listed on here, please email: tips @ jasonmichaudspace.com with your complaints (bonus for sending evidence to make our lives easier) and we will investigate and put you on the list!

The list presently contains 13 names. One example:
http://jasonmichaudspace.com/metis-first-nation-awaiting-confirmation/
Quote
Metis First Nation

Jason Michaud has claimed to be part indigenous, while currently claiming Metis. He has also claimed to be a part of the Michipicoten First Nation. Requests for his identity have been met with resistance.

His close friends have stated that he is not indigenous. (His step father was, but he was not.)

Evidence : Emails, screenshots, LinkedIn profile, multiple eye witnesses (AW, KS, MSM, RR)

Confirmed – Metis First Nation has refused to officially confirm or deny his membership citing privacy concerns which is impeding this investigation further however individual members of Metis First Nation with access to the files have stated he is not a member – Aug 21, 2023.
82
Research Needed / Jason Michaud, CEO of Stardust
« Last post by niigankwe on December 07, 2023, 09:31:43 pm »
Hello,

As CEO of Stardust, Jason organizes the Stardust Festival in Timmins, ON, Canada. He claims to be "of French and Métis heritage." In Canada, Métis are considered an Indigenous group. The controversial part is that many Métis groups are organizations and not communities and certainly not governed by something like the Indian Act as Status Natives are in Canada. There is a growing controversy in Canada about many Eastern Métis groups who are trying to gain the same Treaty rights as Status Indian people without (a) belonging to a Native nation, and (b) their people ever signing a Treaty. Many of whom claim Indigenous ancestry through a single ancestor as much as 13 generations in the past. Much of this is part of Dr. Darryl Leroux's research (https://www.raceshifting.com/). At least Jason is a "descendent" of Metis ppl and not trying to claim to be one. But, is he?

According to the website anangokaa.space: "Experience the groundbreaking Anangokaa Festival 2024, the largest Indigenous STEM+ festival in Timmins, Ontario, from May 27th to June 1st, empowering regional outreach and fostering local economic growth." However, the vast majority of people that are acting as "Storytellers" for the Indigenous students that he brings are non-Native. https://anangokaa.space/storytellers

From his LinkedIn biography:
Quote
Jason Michaud was raised in Dubreuilville, a lumber village. With a blend of French and Métis heritage he grew up amidst the rich cultures of both the French and Anishnawbe communities, on the traditional lands of Michipicoten First Nation.

Overcoming the challenges of growing up in an isolated community, Jason tenaciously pursued his passion for a career in STEM. Despite the obstacles faced, he became the first in his family to graduate from high school, a testament to his unwavering determination and resilience. Jason then went on to pursue his education in computer sciences at Collège Boréal.

In 2014, Jason founded Stardust with a vision to advance the space industry through technological innovation and scientific breakthroughs, ultimately making space more accessible to humanity.

Through Stardust, he has successfully established several international projects in collaboration with partners worldwide. Notable among these ventures is the renowned Anangokaa Festival, the largest space festival in Canadian history.

With over 80 parabolas of experience in zero-gravity, lunar, and Martian gravity flights, Jason Michaud has accumulated substantial expertise as a crew member. He has worked closely with esteemed institutions such as the Canadian Space Agency and the National Research Council of Canada in the development of the SERENITY project. Jason's aspirations extend to the establishment of a lunar city in the future.

The SERENITY project will allow space explorers to embrace their loved ones from space during the ARTEMIS missions. Jason's Anangokaa initiative aims to empower indigenous sovereignty in space, particularly for the people of Turtle Island, through the establishment of the first indigenous space agency. In 2026, the Robotic Arm One For All, which shall be developed in conjunction with ispace, will enable future generations to remotely experience the sensation of touching the moon's soil during its flight.

Additionally, Jason's latest endeavor, THEIA, is the world's first lunar analog habitat, designed to accommodate a crew of 20 or more individuals. THEIA will focus on studying crew dynamics, and well-being, and conducting comprehensive research on various aspects of human civilization, with the ultimate goal of paving the way for humanity as a multi-planetary species.
83
Etcetera / Re: Bob Dylan (Robert Dylan) AKA Robert Allen Zimmerman
« Last post by Sparks on December 06, 2023, 12:27:14 am »
I looked for Bob Dylan1s possible involvement with Native American themes, and found this:

https://journal.oraltradition.org/wp-content/uploads/files/articles/22i/Desveaux.pdf

Amerindian Roots of Bob Dylan’s Poetry
[By] Emmanuel Désveaux (Trans. from French by Valerie Burling)

[An article in the journal Oral Tradition, 22/1 (2007): 134-150]

A fascinating and interesting read, which I hope more people than me will enjoy.
84
Etcetera / Bob Dylan (Robert Dylan) AKA Robert Allen Zimmerman
« Last post by Sparks on December 05, 2023, 07:48:18 pm »
Quoting excerpts from this article: https://www.duluthnewstribune.com/lifestyle/arts-and-entertainment/front-row-seat-bob-dylan-buffy-sainte-marie-and-reckoning-over-folk-revival

Front Row Seat: Bob Dylan, Buffy Sainte-Marie and reckoning over folk revival
CBC News has produced evidence that Buffy Sainte-Marie has been untruthful about her purported origins. There are echoes in the story of Bob Dylan, a fellow folkie born in Duluth the same year.
By Jay Gabler — November 23, 2023 at 6:00 AM

DULUTH — Music fans around the world are grappling with a recent report by CBC News, which uncovered a birth certificate indicating that folk singer Buffy Sainte-Marie was biologically born to white parents in Massachusetts and not, as she has long claimed, adopted by that couple from birth parents of the Piapot First Nation in Saskatchewan.
The revelation comes amid a reckoning with the practice of Indigenous identity fraud, in which people falsely claim to have Native ancestry. While Sainte-Marie forged close ties with a Piapot family, the doubt over whether her journey to Saskatchewan literally constituted a homecoming has caused sorrow and anger among generations who have embraced Sainte-Marie as an icon of Indigenous music and culture.

Reading this news in Duluth, I couldn't help but think of Sainte-Marie's peer, Bob Dylan. I'm not the only one — in the CBC News article, Dylan's is the first name mentioned among fellow members of Sainte-Marie's 1960s musical circles.

Dylan and Sainte-Marie both rose to prominence during what became known as the "folk revival" in American music. Both were born in 1941, and both took stage names: Dylan was originally named Robert Zimmerman, while Sainte-Marie was born Beverly Jean Santamaria.
[…]
Early in Dylan's career, he took considerable creative license in discussing his origins. Journalists eventually discerned that Dylan grew up in northern Minnesota, but when the artist first started getting press, he would answer questions about his origins obliquely and would often add wild untruths.

He'd describe living on the Great Plains and in the desert Southwest as a child, then traveling with a carnival in his teen years. Dylan acknowledged being born in Duluth, but cast a bit of doubt even between the Twin Ports. "Maybe it was Superior, Wisconsin, right across the line," he said to Shelton.

Dylan was casting himself in the mold of his itinerant Okie hero Woody Guthrie. Dylan's dissembling was in the spirit of a long history of artists obscuring their origins so as upend expectations surrounding their work. It also, though, spoke to the highly contested notion of authenticity during the folk revival.
[…]
While Dylan has never publicly claimed Indigenous ancestry, it seems he was not entirely averse to wrapping ersatz Native identity into the web of stories he wove in his early years. The young Dylan told some of his New York friends that he was of Sioux descent, fellow musician Dave Van Ronk recalled.

"One night he spent something like an hour showing a bunch of us how to talk in Indian sign language, which I'm pretty sure he was making up as he went along, but he did it marvelously," wrote Van Ronk in his memoir. "And when we found out that a lot of his stories were bull---t, that didn't really lower his stock all that much."
[…]
The reality of Dylan's own origins is that he was born to middle-class parents in Duluth and came of age in Hibbing. While Dylan, Bruce Springsteen and others have movingly sung of the plight of the largely white working-class Minnesota miners exploited by industrial titans, popular musicians have had much less to say about the Indigenous history of regions like the Iron Range.

"The land from which the mines were carved was coercively taken from the Ojibwe, largely for its mineral resources," wrote scholar Joseph Whitson in a 2019 article about the erasure of Indigenous history on the Iron Range. "The white ethnic immigrant workers' 'sylvan wilderness' was only created by the coercive, and often violent, removal of the Ojibwe to reservations."
85
Frauds / Re: Gregorian Bivolaru AKA Magnus Aurolsson
« Last post by Sparks on December 04, 2023, 01:28:17 am »
Then there was Harbhajan Singh Puri, a Punjabi customs inspector … Calling himself Yogi Bhajan
[…]
Perhaps the most infamous teacher of all is the Speedo-wearing, waxed-chested Bikram Choudhury, the inventor of so-called “hot yoga”.
[…]
In 2017 Sogyal Rinpoche, the founder of Rigpa … was forced to resign in disgrace …
[…]
Narcis Tarcau, the founder and leader of the Agama yoga centre on the island of Ko Pha Ngan in Thailand …

Each of the four gurus bolded above have their own topics here in the NAFPS Forum:

http://www.newagefraud.org/smf/index.php?topic=4846.0 [Sat Nam Fest, Yogi Bhajan, Kundalini, 3HO Cult]

http://www.newagefraud.org/smf/index.php?topic=4968.0 [Bikram Choudhury]

http://www.newagefraud.org/smf/index.php?topic=5268.0 ["... Inside the dark world of Buddhist teacher Sogyal Rinpoche"]

http://www.newagefraud.org/smf/index.php?topic=5259.0 [Narcis Tarcau AKA "Swami Vivekananda Saraswati"]
86
Frauds / Re: Gregorian Bivolaru AKA Magnus Aurolsson
« Last post by Sparks on December 03, 2023, 11:58:17 pm »
Earlier mentions of Gregorian Bivolaru here in the NAFPS forum:

More about the Romanian connection:

Tarcau, who is from Romania, set up Agama in Koh Phangan after leaving Rishikesh in India when it is understood his visa was revoked . Tarcau had studied under Gregorian Bivolaru, another Romanian guru who was on a publicised mission to sleep with 1,000 virgins as the path to enlightenment. Bivolaru went on the run in 2004 after being sentenced for having sex with an underage girl, was arrested in Paris in 2016 and was later released. He remains on Europol’s most wanted list, accused of human trafficking.

Gregorian Bivolaru has been mentioned several times here in this forum, in two different topics:

Biven Momonta: "Ancient Russian Wisdom" (27 hits on Bivolaru):
http://www.newagefraud.org/smf/index.php?action=printpage;topic=466.0

"Goddess" temples busted in prostitution sting - many arrests & charges (6 hits):
http://www.newagefraud.org/smf/index.php?action=printpage;topic=3435.0
87
Frauds / Re: Gregorian Bivolaru AKA Magnus Aurolsson
« Last post by educatedindian on December 03, 2023, 09:32:49 pm »
Their own site lists their defense of Bivolaru. Basically, the commies are behind it all, plus smearing of one woman as a literal demon.
https://gregorianbivolaru.net/

https://www.yahoo.com/news/yoga-leader-promised-followers-enlightenment-152948728.html
A yoga leader promised followers enlightenment. But he's now accused of sexual abuse
THOMAS ADAMSON
Updated Fri, December 1, 2023 at 1:20 PM EST·

PARIS (AP) — To his followers, he was “Grieg,” their guide through tantra yoga toward enlightenment and a higher state of consciousness. For European police, Gregorian Bivolaru represents a far more sinister figure: a master manipulator accused of sexual abuse and exploitation.

The arrest this week in the Paris region of the 71-year-old Romanian yoga guru and 40 others marked the culmination of a six-year manhunt involving Interpol. The raid, led by 175 officers of a French police unit that combats sect-related crime, also freed 26 people, who were described by authorities as sect victims that had been housed in deplorably dirty and cramped conditions.

Bivolaru went before a judge Friday and could be handed preliminary charges, along with 14 other suspects. French police have for months been investigating a range of suspected crimes, including rape, human trafficking, illegal confinement and preying on followers as part of a sect.

It wasn’t possible to reach Bivolaru, who remains in custody, and it wasn’t immediately clear if he had legal representation.

Accounts from alleged victims detailed in the French media portray Bivolaru as a guru who coerced women into sexual relationships under the guise of spiritual elevation spanning decades and continents.

A German woman recounted her alleged entrapment aged 21 when she was in the Indian city of Rishikesh in 2019 in search of spiritual enlightenment. She described to Liberation newspaper a grooming process that allegedly included being photographed and filmed naked before her abduction and coerced sexual encounters in a Parisian house.

The group also fostered deep mistrust among its followers against the external world, especially the medical community, urging them to reject COVID-19 vaccinations and other medical procedures, according to her account. Another victim, a French woman, told France Info about a five-year ordeal where tantra yoga was fused with astrology and parapsychology to allegedly manipulate members into non-consensual sex under the pretext of spiritual practices.

Bivolaru’s group, initially known as MISA (“Mouvement pour l’Intégration Spirituelle vers l’Absolu”) and later as the Atman yoga federation, allegedly engaged in non-consensual sexual activities under the facade of tantra yoga teachings, according to a French judicial official who spoke on condition of anonymity because she wasn't authorized to discuss the ongoing investigation.

Despite expulsion from international yoga federations and legal scrutiny for prostitution, sexual slavery and human trafficking, the group's “ashrams” were centers for indoctrination and sexual exploitation disguised as spiritual enlightenment, according to the official.

One of these supposed ashram’s appeared to be exclusively dedicated to satisfying his desires, with women transported there from other places, the official added.

MISA said in a statement on its website in Romanian that Bivolaru had been targeted by media campaigns since the 1990s to “discredit and slander” him, calling any charges against him in France “absurd accusations.”

The Atman federation meanwhile described the situation to The Associated Press in an email as a “witch hunt,” disclaiming responsibility for the private lives of students and teachers at its member schools. They also highlighted that some member schools had successfully won cases at the European Court of Human Rights, demonstrating human rights violations against them.

However, a 2018 ruling by the court, as seen by the AP, seems more to underscore how Bivolaru's multinational activities have served to hamper efforts to actually apprehend him. He had obtained political refugee status in Sweden, thereby delaying legal proceedings in Romania.

The scope of the alleged abuses spanned across Europe, entrapping young women in a web of sexual and psychological control. Finnish media reported systematic sexual exploitation at Bivolaru’s Helsinki yoga school, and in 2017, Finland’s National Bureau of Investigation issued an international arrest warrant for him for alleged aggravated human trafficking.

In Sweden, despite being granted asylum in 2005, his alleged activities continued unchecked. Investigations by TV2 and the BT newspaper in Denmark in 2013 further exposed alleged exploitation within yoga centers run by Bivolaru and an associate, where young women were sexually exploited and filmed without their knowledge in purported tantra and sex rituals.

A former member of the Natha Yoga Center in Denmark, in an account to the BT newspaper, described women being treated like slaves, overburdened with chores and sworn to silence. The woman revealed that the alleged exploitation and sexual abuse extended to the distribution of films, including one sold at gas stations across Denmark and another shot on a ship in the Black Sea.

In France, similar yoga retreats held in and around Paris and in southern France's Alpes-Maritimes region sought to make followers take part in sexual activities, the French judicial official said. Attendees testified that women were forced to pay for the stays by doing video sex-chats and that men were made to perform manual labor, she added.

Bivolaru’s transition from respected yoga guru to international fugitive is a narrative laced with legal twists.

After fleeing Romania in 2004 amid charges of sexual misconduct with minors, he obtained asylum in Sweden, evading extradition. Romanian authorities later accused him of leading a criminal network within MISA, exploiting followers through extortion and sexual abuse, and using his spiritual influence to control and isolate them.

He was sentenced in absentia in Romania in 2013 for sexual relations with a minor, but wasn't imprisoned until his extradition from France in 2016, leading to a brief imprisonment followed by release on probation. In a twist of irony, the Romanian state was later mandated to compensate Bivolaru with 50,000 euros for delays in his trial.
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Frauds / Gregorian Bivolaru AKA Magnus Aurolsson
« Last post by educatedindian on December 03, 2023, 09:20:28 pm »
Serial rapist puts him directly in Frauds. There are also other frauds and abusers, some already listed, some needing to be added. There are at least half a dozen other frauds who were part of MISA with him.
Bolding is mine.

-----------
https://www.yahoo.com/news/many-yoga-gurus-try-sex-110000318.html
‘So many yoga gurus try to have sex with female followers – I’m amazed women still fall for it’
Mick Brown
Sat, December 2, 2023 at 6:00 AM EST·9 min read

According to the Katha Upanishad, a Vedic text believed to date from between 800BC and 300BC, yoga is a “complete stillness in which one enters the unitive state, never to become separate again”.

Over the centuries, in its migration to the West, what originated in India as a spiritual practice has, for most, transformed into something rather different – a combination of healthy exercise and self-punishment.

But the combination of the pursuit of the body beautiful, and the – often bogus – aura of spirituality around the practice has opened the door to something much more sinister.

This week Gregorian Bivolaru, a Romanian described as a “tantric yoga guru”, and the founder of an organisation called the Movement for Spiritual Integration into the Absolute (MISA), was arrested in France, on charges of rape, kidnapping and people trafficking, accused of running an international sex slave ring, and using “mental manipulation” to sexually abuse his female followers over a number of years.

A former pupil of Bivolaru, Agnes Arabela Marques, who claimed to have lost her virginity to him in 2016 when she was just 15, said that Bivolaru was obsessed with “the Indian myth that said you could get to a high spiritual level if you had sex with 1,000 virgin girls”.

Another female member of MISA was on record as saying “it was an honour to have sex with guru Gregorian, because it meant positive karma and spiritual progress”.

In the past, Bivolaru has denied accusations of criminal activity, with his organisation describing some of the past allegations as “fabricated facts”.

.....The list of transgressors is endless. There is Swami Muktananda, the founder of Siddha Yoga, who arrived in the West in 1970, establishing ashrams and meditation centres in numerous countries.

Muktananda was known as “the shaktipat guru”, capable of transmitting spiritual energy and awakening his students simply through the power of his presence. It was only following his death in 1982 that allegations surfaced of him molesting under-age girls and engaging in sexual relations with young devotees.

Then there was Harbhajan Singh Puri, a Punjabi customs inspector who arrived in America with his wife and three children in 1968. Calling himself Yogi Bhajan and telling people he was a renowned holy man in India, he began teaching Kundalini yoga.

Bhajan, who died in 2004, built up a thriving business, marketing Kundalini Yoga, and his own brand of Yogi Tea, ostensibly “rooted in ayurveda”, and which lived on after his death, reportedly exceeding sales of $59 million (£46 million) in 2022. As well as building a huge and adoring following he also cultivated political connections, and was photographed glad-handing with politicians including George Bush and Bill Clinton.

It was not until 25 years after his death that it emerged that Bhajan, contrary to his claims of strict celibacy, had actually raped three women and had sexual relationships with a number of other devotees, as well as being involved with several criminal operations including smuggling 20 tons of marijuana and weapons from Thailand and defrauding people with fake investment scams.

He explained to one devotee that in having sex with her he was “just fulfilling an obligation to you because of past karma. I have no need of any sexual relationship. I am beyond all of that.” He also told her that the only way to “clean” her karma was by “doing his laundry and washing his floors”.

Perhaps the most infamous teacher of all is the Speedo-wearing, waxed-chested Bikram Choudhury, the inventor of so-called “hot yoga”.

Consisting of a series of 26 postures practised in an environment heated to 104 degrees which caused practitioners to vomit or pass out, and which attracted a celebrity following including Shirley MacLaine, Lady Gaga and Gwyneth Paltrow, “hot yoga” made Choudhury a multi-millionaire.

He fell to earth in 2012, amidst a slew of lawsuits accusing him of rape, sexual harassment and discriminatory behaviour against gay people, women and racial minorities.

He fled to India, where he opened yoga studios, unchastened, responding to the accusations by saying “Why would I harass women? People spend one million dollars for a drop of my sperm,” and calling his accusers “trash” and “psychopaths”.

Denying the accusations, Choudhury said in 2014: “I never hurt another spirit. I’m the most spiritual man… you ever met in your life.”

Tibetan Buddhism too has had its own share of scandals.

In 2017 Sogyal Rinpoche, the founder of Rigpa, a prominent Buddhist organisation in the West, and the author of a best-selling book, The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying, was forced to resign in disgrace after allegations of sexual and physical abuse that that had circulated for years – and were reported extensively in The Telegraph in 1995 – came to the surface after devotees published an open letter accusing him of using his role as a teacher “to gain access to young women, and to coerce, intimidate and manipulate them into giving [him] sexual favours”.

Sogyal’s case might stand as a parable of the dangers that can arise when Westerners fall in thrall to esoteric spiritual teachings they may not fully understand, and when Eastern teachers are exposed to the glamour and temptations of celebrity worship.

As is common in so many communities, senior members in Rigpa conspired for years to cover up or turn a blind eye to the allegations, not least because to denounce Sogyal would cast a fatal blow to their own judgement.

Sogyal Rinpoche explained abuse away as an intrinsic part of the path to enlightenment - Fairfax Media via Getty Images
The alleged abuse of his students was explained away as being in the tradition of ancient Vajrayana teachings, in which tantric sexual relations with a consort may be an intrinsic part of the path to enlightenment.

“That was certainly not the case with Sogyal,” says Mary Finnigan, an authority on Tibetan Buddhism, and the author, with Rob Hogendoorn, of Sex and Violence in Tibetan Buddhism: The Rise and Fall of Sogyal Rinpoche.

“In order to be able to engage in sexual union, the practitioner has to have reached a very high level of development through many, many years of yogic practice, and it’s restricted to highly evolved adepts. Sogyal was a total charlatan who was using that ploy in order to pull girls for his own satisfaction, taking advantage of their credulity.

“He was a powerful male who was running a big organisation and within that organisation women were considered to be very special if they were invited into his harem. This is all to do with the abuse of power.” Sogyal, who died in 2019, always denied the allegations, but an independent inquiry upheld many of the complaints.

In this respect, the allure of an exotic teaching, and the surrender to the teacher, is similar to the power exercised by the boss over the powerless employee or the seductive appeal of the celebrity to the fan. The key difference is that the boss or the celebrity is unlikely to be presenting themselves as the embodiment of spirituality or enlightenment, as the guru is.

“The teacher can appear to have some knowledge that the student wants, which gives him power over them,” Finnigan says. “This power can make them feel omniscient, when in truth they’re world class narcissists. So many end up trying to have sex with their female followers, and it’s so widely known that I’m actually amazed women still fall for it.”

Even by the wretched standards of bogus gurus, Gregorian Bivolaru is in a class of his own. In 1977 he was jailed in Romania for distributing pornographic materials. In 1989 he was arrested again and hospitalised, reportedly diagnosed with schizoid personality disorder, and paranoia with “obsessive-phobic elements”.

The following year he founded MISA, ostensibly “to increase the spiritual level of peoples by spreading the yoga knowledge and practices”, but which in actuality became a suspected European-wide cult.

In a judgment by the European Court of Human Rights in 2021, Bivolaru was proclaimed to be a criminal on-the-run for forcing his followers to turn over their life savings to him and have sex with him, and each other, at his command. Young female members said they were forced to work as strippers and appear in hardcore porn films.

Bivolaru is not the first Romanian to have been accused of using his position for sexual abuse. In 2018, Narcis Tarcau, the founder and leader of the Agama yoga centre on the island of Ko Pha Ngan in Thailand, was accused by at least 14 yoga students of sexual assault and rape, allegations he denied.

Tarcau styled himself as Swami Vivekananda Saraswati, a not uncommon ploy to lend bogus credibility – “oriental gloss”, as Finnigan puts it, to fool the credulous.

The tragedy of all this is that it threatens to give yoga a bad name. But rest assured, the friendly yoga teacher in your gym or church hall classes is highly unlikely to be sexually abusing students, smuggling marijuana, or hoarding millions of dollars in precious jewels and gems.

The worst likely to happen is that you sprain a wrist or an ankle.

In 2017, a survey in the Journal of Bodywork and Movement Therapies reported that yoga was the cause of more injuries than all other sports combined, with one in 10 practitioners developing musculoskeletal pain from their practice, and a third of those experiencing pain so severe they were out of action for three months. Practitioners of the sedentary position may afford themselves a smug smile.
89
Etcetera / Re: Buffy Sainte-Marie denies she misled public about Indigenous ancestry
« Last post by ska on December 01, 2023, 04:02:56 pm »
Saskatchewan First Nation chief says Buffy Sainte-Marie should take DNA test


"The chief of a Saskatchewan First Nation that has been thrust into the controversy over Buffy Sainte-Marie’s ancestry says the legendary singer and songwriter should take a DNA test to provide an answer about her heritage. “I do believe that we deserve a definitive answer from her,” Piapot First Nation acting Chief Ira Lavallee said Thursday. . . "

https://ca.yahoo.com/news/saskatchewan-first-nation-chief-says-194613239.html
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Update on Shanti Peshewa:

DOC Number    220037
First Name    SHANTI
Middle Name    N
Last Name    PESHEWA
Suffix    
Date of Birth    02/1982
Gender    Male
Race    American Indian/Alaskan
Facility/Location    Indiana State Prison

Date of Sentence    07/21/2011
Description    CHILD MOLESTING
Term in Years / Months / Days    
30
00
00000
Type of Conviction    FA
Indiana Citation Code    35-42-4-3
Cause Number    45G04-1012-FA-00053
County of Conviction    LAKE
Projected Release Date    09/21/2036

(search through https://www.in.gov/apps/indcorrection/ofs/ofs )
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