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Sex Gods — Exposing India’s Rapist Gurus – Finally!

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At the time that my two ex-gurus were exposed as rapists and child molesters in 2007, India was not yet willing to face the crisis within its culture—a crisis that was hiding behind orange robes, tilaks, and fancy temples. For too long Indian society had willfully denied or ignored the fact that 99 percent (a figure given to me by an Indian man) of its gurus are fake—and many of them were taking sexual advantage of their followers.

How many of them are engaged in illicit and illegal sex acts with followers is yet to be determined. But if you work from a simple supposition that whoever has opportunity and desire will take advantage of others sexually (think: Hollywood stars and moguls), you could conclude that a large percent of “gurus” are raping and molesting their followers.

Flash forward just a decade later and we’re seeing today that fraudulent and rapist gurus are finally being exposed. A recent expose titled “Goddamn!” in a September issue of Outlook India (the equivalent of Time magazine in the U.S.) reported on the arrest and conviction of Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh “Insaan” of Dera Sacha Sauda—aka, the “baba of bling.” He was sentenced to 20 years for the rape of two former devotees. Sidebars in the article include reports on other gurus arrested for sex crimes—including one of my ex-gurus, Kripalu Maharaj of Jagadguru Kripalu Parishat in North India.

The Outlook’s in-depth coverage of one guru represents only the tip of the iceberg. There’s a long way to go to root out all of the sex abuse committed in the name of God by these spiritual conmen.

I asked the lead investigative reporter of the expose, Ushinor Majumdar: “Why is your publication exposing these gurus now when the abuse has been going on for decades?”

He told me that India is finally arresting and prosecuting some of the “godmen.” As a result, more arrests beget more media exposure.

The first of the gurus to be exposed was Asaram Bapu in 2014 (real name: Asumal Sirumalani). He was arrested and put behind bars after a spate of allegations of rape and other crimes against him. His family members were also charged, because they aided and abetted his sexual abuses.

By July of this year, several others had been arrested. An article published in India featured the headline: “Asaram Bapu to Gurmeet Ram Rahim—10 Godmen who are Facing Sexual Harassment Charges.” It reported on self-styled “gurus,” “babas,” “sadhus,” or godmen who found themselves embroiled in sex scandals. My ex-guru, Kripalu, was once again included in the bunch in the sidebars.

Interesting side note: I’ve been getting tons of negative commentary from Asaram supporters on my Facebook page for posting this article. Like most devotees of these conman gurus, they are rabidly invested in trying to prove their masters are innocent of all crimes and, in fact, are God realized saints living on earth. These people have invested so much, including their hearts, minds, souls, and money, to these fake gurus. They cannot accept the fact that they made a monumental mistake. As a result, obsessed devotee fans of these conmen are a huge part of the problem, because they help the gurus commit the crimes—knowingly or unknowingly.

Asaram was arrested after my two ex-gurus had been arrested—and one of them convicted of child molestation in Texas USA. Kripalu, who got off of his rape charges in Trinidad & Tobago (under questionable circumstances — think: huge payoffs), returned to India a free man. However, he was never again free in his mind. From then until he died (at the hand of his own followers, who were sick of him and the threat he posed to the rest of them), he was obsessed with two things: the fear of being arrested and the need to make more money to pay off as many people as possible to stay out of jail.

With Asaram’s arrest, Kripalu realized that India’s former hands-off policy for its “gurus” was not as strong as it used to be. Now, gurus were not necessarily above the law. At the end of every day, he would obsessively compulsively ask his money collection person: “How much did we make today (in donations)?” That’s how “high” of a person he was! Sex. Money. Power. The “holy” trinity of all “gurus.”

Now, it’s way past time for all of the sex abusers hiding behind orange clothes and other religious costumes to be arrested and exposed across India. It’s time for the people of India to demand widespread exposure and reform. It’s time to give all of the many victims hiding in silence and pain our support and their voice.

It’s time India.

NOTE TO DESSENTERS — I’ve been reporting on my ex-gurus’ sex abuse for so long that I’m used to the responses I’ll get. One line of attack will be: “Why are you picking on India when sex abuse is rampant in America in Christianity?” The reason is that I was in a Hindu cult for 16 years, so that is my direct experience. I was never a “Christian.” Furthermore, just because sex abuse occurs in the Christian religion doesn’t mean that it doesn’t occur in Hinduism and should not be exposed. Christian abuses have been exposed for years. Please refrain from this ridiculous line of reasoning, which does nothing but protect sex abusers. Get out of the way. Let all of India’s sex abusers finally be exposed. If they are truly God realized, then they can take care of themselves. Or don’t you have enough faith to believe that?

To learn the whole story of my experience in a sex cult, read Sex, Lies, and Two Hindu Gurus. Available on U.S. and India Amazon.
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Actor Aayush Shah lodges a complaint against the founder of an OTT platform regarding bounced cheques

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Actor Aayush Shah and his business partner have accused the founder of an OTT platform of sending them checks totaling over Rs 1 crore that have been returned, and they have lodged numerous complaints against him in this court.

Aayush Shah and his business partner, Mausam Shah, co-founders of the PR firm Maars Communicates, recently filed complaints in a magistrate court under the provisions of the Negotiable Instruments Act.

The accusations concern a number of checks that the Shah pair received from Akshay Bardapurkar, the proprietor of the OTT platform.

Bardapurkar had given Aayush and Mausam nine signed checks under the complaints. When the checks, totaling Rs 1,14,30,400, were presented, they were refused.

Bardapurkar owes Aayush Shah Rs 87 lakh of the total, and Mausam Shah the remaining sum. Since May 2024, interest of Rs 3,61,500 has been payable each month.

According to their attorney Krishnagopal S. Tripathi, Aayush Shah has lodged three complaints against Bardapurkar and the Planet Marathi Seller Services firm. He stated that Mausam Shah had lodged a single complaint against the defendant.

He stated that the two plan to sue Bardapurkar in civil court to get damages and more accountability.

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Actor Aayush Shah files complaints against OTT platform founder over bounced cheques

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Mumbai: Actor Aayush Shah and his business partner have filed multiple complaints in a court here against the founder of OTT platform  for allegedly issuing them cheques of more than Rs 1 crore which have been dishonoured.

The matter will be heard in due course.

Aayush Shah and his business partner Mausam Shah, co-founders of the Maars Communicates PR agency, filed the complaints before a magistrate court a earlier this month under relevant provisions of the Negotiable Instruments Act.

The complaints pertain to a series of cheques issued by the OTT platform’s founder Akshay Bardapurkar to the Shah duo.

As per the complaints, Bardapurkar had issued nine signed cheques to Aayush and Mausam. The cheques, with a total amount of Rs 1,14,30,400, were dishonoured upon presentation.

Out of the total amount, Bardapurkar owed Rs 87 lakh to Aayush Shah and the remaining to Mausam Shah, with a monthly interest of Rs 3,61,500 accruing since May 2024.

Their lawyer Krishnagopal S Tripathi said Aayush Shah has filed three complaints against Bardapurkar and the Planet Marathi Seller Services company. Mausam Shah has filed one complaint against the accused, he said.

The duo also intend to file a civil case against Bardapurkar to seek damages and further accountability, he added.

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Another setback for Paytm: Shares fall 9% on Sebi notice to Vijay Shekhar Sharma

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Paytm shares drop 8.88% as Sebi investigates IPO compliance; stock down 18.17% this year.

Paytm share price today: A QR code for the Paytm digital payment system at a store in Mumbai.(Bloomberg)

Paytm share price plunged to the day’s low ₹505.55 per share on the NSE today (August 26) after company’s founder Vijay Shekhar Sharma and board members faced show-cause notices from Sebi over IPO breaches.

The markets regulator issued show-cause notices to Vijay Shekhar Sharma and board members who served during its initial public offering (IPO) in November 2021 for alleged misrepresentation of facts, Moneycontrol reported.

One person in the know told the outlet, “Sebi is taking the view that Sharma should have been classified as a promoter, and it was also the fiduciary duty of board members of the company to verify the accuracy of the claims made by the founder and attest the same.”

The source added, “Although Sebi has gone after directors of a company in the past, they have been mostly cases of financial fraud. This is one of the rare cases where Sebi is trying to hold the directors responsible for a potential compliance lapse, which was also not pointed out either by bankers or statutory auditors.”

Paytm share price dropped 8.88 per cent to ₹505.55 apiece on the NSE.

This year, Paytm’s stock has dropped 18.17 per cent as per BSE. In the last one year, it gave negative returns of 41.20 per cent.

This comes after the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) imposed restrictions on PPB due to “persistent non-compliance and ongoing significant supervisory concerns” on January 31 this year. The RBI directed PPBL to close most of its operations, including deposits, credit products, and digital wallets, by March 15 this year.

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