Putin’s Holy Man Pushed for the ‘Eradication’ of Ukraine










Putin’s Holy Man Pushed for the ‘Eradication’ of Ukraine
Provided by The Daily Beast Photo Illustration by Thomas Levinson/The Daily Beast/Getty
Beneath the gold onion domes of the Danilov Monastery a few miles south of the Kremlin, Vladimir Putin’s chief shaman explains why Russia is hell-bent on destroying Ukraine.
“If we see [Ukraine] as a threat, we have the right to use force to ensure the threat is eradicated,” Russian Orthodox Patriarch Kirill recently preached to his church’s 90 million faithful followers. “We have entered into a conflict which has not only physical but also metaphysical significance. We are talking about human salvation, something much more important than politics.”
The wartime coalition between Putin and his patriarch is called symphonia, an ironclad alliance between church and state that assures reciprocal reverence, with neither institution presuming to dominate the other. Theologians have spent centuries bickering over the fine points, which have now impaled 44 million Ukrainians as the victims of a bloodthirsty land-grab that Putin and the Patriarch have packaged as a holy campaign to cleanse souls.
“A new world order is born before our very eyes,” is how Putin described the relationship in a statement published at the start of the war, later warning those who disagreed with him “inflict maximum damage on people.” He said: “The Russian people will be able to distinguish true patriots from scum and traitors and spit them out like a midge that accidentally flew into their mouths.”
To be sure, the only lingering question is how far into repression and hideous cruelty can Putin and his patriarch descend before the means no longer justify the ends.
Byzantine and Orthodox church historian Henry Hopwood-Philipps reckons NATO and all those who stand against Putin’s klepto-theocratic regime are in for a long wait. “The information war, the military war against Putin looks to be effective,” Hopwood-Philipps says. “But for all the West’s digital gunpowder, we’re up against nearly 700 years of a deeply entrenched otherworldly belief system.”
As the patriarch sees it, Ukrainians are sinners. “Many people out of weakness, stupidity, ignorance and most often a willingness to justify sin condemned by the Bible is a test of our ability to profess faith in our Savior,” Kirill has told his flock.
In Western capitals, Hopwood-Philipps says, Kirill’s muscular significance has been either disregarded or lost in translation. “Putin would execute any Russian churchman who disagrees with Kirill,” he says. “Putin and Kirill are attached at the hip, and they’ve shaped religion to offer the Russian people spiritual nourishment instead of physical sustenance.”
Putin’s scheme to resurrect symphonia and leverage it to gain influence beyond Russia’s borders reached its crescendo at a ceremony in Moscow in 2007, when Putin hosted the signing of the Act of Canonical Communion with the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad. Kirill was appointed Patriarch of Moscow and All Rus’ in 2009, heading a a global congregation of more than 140 million.
Since then, about 100 of the 340 clergymen who administer the Church Abroad community have swapped cassocks to join Orthodox churches not affiliated with Putin, according to Dr. Stratos Safioleas, spokesman for the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of New York. A further 145 U.S. Church Abroad parishes have so far followed suit.
A Russian Orthodox Church in Amsterdam has also left the parish over threats it’s received for condemning Putin’s invasion of Ukraine. “It is no longer possible for [us] to function within the Moscow Patriarchate and provide a spiritually safe environment for our faithful,” the parish council of St. Nicholas of Myra said in a statement.
As for the rebel priests left behind in Russia, history could offer a lesson on what to expect next from the Kremlin.
According to the diary of Johann Korb, the Austrian secretary of the Legation to the Court of Peter the Great, the Ukraine-born Exarch Stefan Yavorsky begged the tsar to stop torturing those who disagreed with him. “What business is it of yours to come here,” the Romanov tsar shouted. “It is a duty that I owe God, to save my people from harm and to prosecute with public vengeance crimes that lead to the common ruin.”
So what would it take to defenestrate Putin and the patriarch from further wrecking Russia and annihilating Ukraine?
“We need Frodo,” sighs Sergey Buntman, the program director for the now-muzzled Echo Moscow Radio, eyeing to the Hobbit who toppled Mordor in The Lord of the Rings as the only liberator with the mystical wallop to save both countries.
And Buntman was not being flippant.
Kabbalah, the religion beloved by celebrities in the noughties








Kabbalah, the religion beloved by celebrities in the noughties
In the early 2000s, it was rare to see celebrities like Madonna, Ashton Kutcher and Lindsay Lohan without a piece of red string tied around their wrists. The bracelet signalled that they followed the mystical religion known as Kabbalah.
The religion appeared to reach its cultural peak during the first decade of the 21st century, which is when Rebekah Neumann, WeWork’s former chief brand and impact officer and wife of WeWork co-founder, Adam Neumann, joined.
In WeCrashed, the new Apple TV+ series which depicts the rise and fall of the co-working giant, you can see Rebekah (played by Anne Hathaway) wearing the thin red string around her wrist while guiding a meditation class.
Rebekah and Adam met in 2007, when she was still Rebekah Paltrow (she is the first cousin to Gwyneth), and she quickly introduced Adam to the religion.
And while the Neumanns incorporated their Kabbalah beliefs into the WeWork empire, over the ensuing decade, many other celebrities fell out of love with the religion.
Provided by The Independent Adam Neumann in 2016 (left) and Rebekah Neumann in 2010 (right) both wear Kabbalah’s red string on their left wrists (Getty)
What is Kabbalah?
Kabbalah has long been associated with Judaism. The word itself comes from the Hebrew word meaning “received knowledge” or “tradition”.
Kabbalah followers, or Kabbalists, say their beliefs date back to the origins of the Torah and they have been an accepted part of Judaism since the 12th century.
Kabbalist’s beliefs have been described as “mystical” as the practice focuses on direct communication with God through solitary study.
According to the Kabbalah Centre’s website, Kabbalah is “an ancient wisdom that provides practical tools for creating joy and lasting fulfilment. It’s an incredible system of technology that will completely change the way you look at your world”.
When did Kabbalah become popular?
The practice became popular in the US in the sixties when a rabbi, Philip Berg, began studying the religion during a trip to Israel in 1962.
Berg subsequently opened the Kabbalah Centre, which saw Kabbalah in the US focus more on personal improvement and spiritual happiness. He ran meditation classes and launched a Kabbalah 101 self-study class.
The way Berg ran his Kabbalah centres meant it was more easily digestible, as it didn’t require people to learn Hebrew in order to practice the religion. Instead, he published his interpretations of ancient Kabbalah texts.
However, Berg’s teachings had many critics. Rick Alan Ross, executive director of the Cult Education Institute, told Broadly that most of the Kabbalah Centre’s teachings have “no basis” in Jewish text.
He added: “Berg’s teachings represent his own idiosyncratic combination of beliefs. For example, that scanning the pages of the Zohar, even when you cannot read Hebrew, somehow will imbue you with supernatural power.”
Which celebrities followed Kabbalah?
As well as Madonna, other celebrities that have followed Kabbalah include Ashton Kutcher and ex-wife Demi Moore, Lindsay Lohan, Monica Lewinsky, Ariana Grande, James Van Der Beek and Donald Trump’s ex-wife Marla Maples.
Other celebrities who have been associated with the religion include Britney Spears, Mick Jagger, Naomi Campbell, Mary-Kate Olsen, Paris Hilton and Elizabeth Taylor.
Provided by The Independent Guy Ritchie and Madonna in 2008 (left) and Adam Kutcher and Demi Moore in 2007 (right). Both Madonna and Moore wear red string on their left wrist (Getty)
In 2014, Grande told the Telegraph that she turned to Kabbalah after her brother was “rejected by the Catholic church” for being gay.
“When my brother was told that God didn’t love him I was like, ‘OK, that’s not cool.’ They were building a Kabbalah centre in Florida so we both checked it out and really had a connection with it,” the singer said at the time.
“Since then, my life has unfolded in a really beautiful way, and I think that it has a lot to do with the tools I’ve learned through Kabbalah, I really do.”
In 2003, Madonna spent £3.5 million on a London townhouse she intended to turn into a Kabbalah centre.
“I think Kabbalah is very punk rock,” she said at the time. “It teaches you that you are responsible for everything. We don’t realise there is a bigger system at work. Everything that comes to you is for a reason – and I think that’s pretty revolutionary.”
When Berg died in 2013, the singer sent an email to The New York Times which read: “I learned more from him than any human I have ever met.”
She added: ‘“This one concept that he taught me, and that Kabbalah teaches, is that you have to take responsibility for your life. You can’t blame other people for what happens. You are in charge of your destiny.”
Kutcher and then-girlfriend Mila Kunis were also present at the funeral. It’s not known which celebrities, if any, still follow Kabbalah or attend the Kabbalah Centre.
What does the red string Kabbalah bracelet mean?
The red string worn around the wrist is the most recognisable sign of the Kabbalah movement.
It’s often worn on the left wrist and is said to ward off any “evil and misfortune” that could be “caused by the evil eye”.
What scandals was the Kabbalah Centre involved in?
Model Jerry Hall revealed in a 2005 interview with Index magazine that Kabbalah Centre followers who went through the “Door of Miracles” were expected to hand over 10 per cent of their income.
She said: “We had a fantastic time with the Kabbalah Centre for about a year. They give very practical advice on day-to-day stuff, like how to be a better parent. But we couldn’t go through the Door of Miracles unless we gave the Kabbalah people ten percent of our money, so we couldn’t study it any more.”
Money was one of the reasons why Madonna seemingly cut ties with the Centre too. According to a NewsWeek investigation in 2011, Madonna and Berg’s son Michael raised $18 million (£13.6 million) through their joint Raising Malawi Foundation.
They had planned to build a girls’ school in Malawai but the project folded after $3 million (£2.2 million) was spent at the LA Kabbalah Centre instead. This led to Madonna taking oversight of the foundation.
The Centre also saw a former student successfully sue Yehuda Berg, Philip Berg’s son.
The student alleged that Yehuda had tried to drug and sexually assuault her. Yehuda and and Kabbalah Centre were ordered to pay $177,500 (£134,450) in damages in 2015.
At the time, a Kabbalah Centre spokesperson told Broadly: “Yehuda has not been involved with the Kabbalah Centre since he resigned in 2012. When Yehuda left the Centre, he made clear that he was doing so because his departure was in the best interests of the Centre and in the best interest of his own personal effort to change his life.”
What is Rebekah Neumann’s history with Kabbalah and how was it introduced at WeWork?
It’s unsure when Rebekah Neumann began taking classes at the Kabbalah Centre in Los Angeles, but it’s thought to be when she moved out there to try and make it as an actor in the early 2000s.
It was Rebekah who introduced Adam to the school of thought, and it was at the Kabbalah Centre where Adam met Kutcher, an early investor of WeWork.
A close friend of Rebekah’s told Bustle in a 2020 profile: “There’s this saying in Kabbalah that the woman is the CEO of the relationship, and she was 100 per cent the CEO of the relationship.”
As chief brand and impact officer, Rebekah funnelled the religion into the WeWork offices too. The Bustle report says Adam “expected deputies to show up for Kabbalah meditation classes”.
A separate report from the Wall Street Journal claimed that Adam would bring teachers from the Kabbalah Centre to company offices and retreats to teach executives. Adam was also thought to have formed WeWork’s company values from what he learned through the religion.
In a 2013 interview with The Real Deal, Adam said: “I noticed that in the Kabbalah community, people were really helping each other. I wanted to translate that into business.”
A spokesperson for Adam later denied that Kabbalah had influenced WeWork’s philosophy, mission or business decisions.
Reference: Independent:
What did St Patrick do? How the saint drove snakes from Ireland, where he was from and what he’s the patron of











What did St Patrick do? How the saint drove snakes from Ireland, where he was from and what he’s the patron of
Marked every year on 17 March, it is an occasion to mark Ireland’s patron saint with shamrocks, parades and copious amounts of Guinness.
St Patrick is famous for driving snakes from Ireland, but what else did he do to achieve such prominence? Here’s everything you need to know.
Where was St Patrick from?
Born at the end of the fourth century in Roman Britain, he was the grandson of a priest – though was not particularly devout as a boy.
His life changed at the age of sixteen when he was kidnapped by raiders and taken to Ireland as a slave.
The saint spent six years working as a shepherd and praying, developing a deeper relationship with God, until one day he was said have heard a voice.
“Look – your ship is ready,” it said, according to the account of the saint himself in his “Confession”, which tells his early life story.
Fleeing his master, he found a ship to take him back to Britain, where he returned to his family and continued to study Christianity there and in France.
Then came a vision in which a horde of Irish appeared to him and said: “We appeal to you, holy servant boy, to come and walk among us.”
What did St Patrick do in Ireland?
He headed to Ireland again, this time as a missionary. His arrival is dated to 432 AD, and marks a major moment in Irish history. He set about converting the previously pagan, druidic island to Christianity with remarkable success.
Soon after, a monastic system on the continental model popped up in Ireland, and the country became literate, writing in Latin and then in Irish using the Latin alphabet.
Ireland can claim the longest unbroken written record in Europe, stretching through the Dark Ages.
Folk stories say Patrick founded 300 churches and converted 100,000 people.
He’s generally associated with the northern half of the island, and specifically Armagh – where the most senior Catholic and Anglican bishops are based – and Downpatrick, where he is said to be buried.
How did St Patrick drive the snakes from Ireland?
The main miracle associated with St Patrick, and taught to all schoolchildren, is driving the snakes out of Ireland.
Attacked by some serpents while undergoing a 40-day fast on a hill, he drove his staff into the ground and sent them (and all other snakes in the country) into the sea.
As a result, unsurprisingly, he’s often invoked against snakes. There are no native snakes in Ireland to this day, but that could be to do with the climate and the vagaries of the Ice Age thaw.
What is St Patrick the patron saint of?
St Patrick is the patron saint of Nigeria, Puerto Rico, Boston, engineers and – most commonly in the public consciousness – Ireland, and he is commemorated across the world.
His life has been been celebrated since the 1700s in parts of the United States, which has long drawn emigrants from Ireland.
New York’s parade is the biggest on earth, with two million people lining midtown Manhattan to watch on.
In Ireland, every town usually has a parade, and the main parade in Dublin is televised live, with a million people taking part in long-weekend festivities.
Malta has a long tradition of celebrating, initiated by a regiment of Royal Dublin Fusiliers in the early 20th century, while Argentina’s unofficial parade attracts 20,000 revellers to a neighbourhood with several Irish bars in Buenos Aires.
The furthest celebrations afield, however, took place in 2011, when Irish-American astronaut Catherine Molloy played a 100-year-old Irish flute aboard the International Space Station to mark the day.
Reference: Karl McDonald
Pope, in toughest comments yet, calls Ukraine invasion 'armed aggression'









Pope, in toughest comments yet, calls Ukraine invasion 'armed aggression'
Reuters/VATICAN MEDIA Pope attends mass on the 400th anniversary of the Canonisation of St Ignatius of Loyola, in Rome
VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - A sombre Pope Francis on Sunday issued his toughest condemnation yet of the invasion of Ukraine, saying the "unacceptable armed aggression" and "massacre" must stop.
The pope has not used the word "Russia" in his condemnations of the war since President Vladimir Putin ordered the invasion on Feb. 24. But the pontiff's choice of words appear increasingly aimed at rejecting Moscow's justifications for the invasion.
"Faced with the barbarity of killing of children, of innocents and unarmed civilians, no strategic reasons can hold up," he told 25,000 people in St. Peter's Square during his Sunday blessing.
Moscow says its action is designed not to occupy territory but to demilitarise and "de-Nazify" its neighbour. It has also denied targeting civilian areas.
"The only thing to do is stop this unacceptable armed aggression before it reduces cities into cemeteries," Francis said.
"In the name of God I ask you: stop this massacre!" Francis said, before asking the crowd to join him in silent prayer for an end to the war.
He called Ukraine's besieged port of Mariupol a "martyred city" and again appealed for "truly secure humanitarian corridors" to allow residents to evacuate.
Russia bombed a maternity hospital in Mariupol on Wednesday. Ukraine said pregnant women were among those hurt; Russia said the hospital was no longer functioning and had been occupied by Ukrainian fighters.
Francis seemed particularly sombre. After an unusually brief greeting to groups in the square, he left the window on the top floor of the Apostolic Palace and returned to the papal library.
Russia calls its action a "special military operation". Last Sunday Francis implicitly rejected that term, saying it could not be considered "just a military operation" but a war that had unleashed "rivers of blood and tears".
On Sunday Francis also urged people to take in refugees from Ukraine and thanked those who had joined a "great network of solidarity" to help those fleeing war.
The fighting in Ukraine has created more than 2.5 million refugees, with most taken in by Poland.
Reference: Reuters: By Philip Pullella
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