Saturday, December 29, 2018

Joao de Deus affair will reach all the Brazilian Spiritism movement


ALLEGED MEDIUM JOAO DE DEUS WAS CHICO XAVIER'S DISCIPLE.

The Joao de Deus affair makes Brazilian Spiritism to life under tense sensations.

It brings the possibility of emerging new scandals which are not necessarily sexual.

Joao de Deus is accused of other several crimes: charlatanism, illegal medicine exercise, illegal weapon possession and ilicit enrichment.

Everything else was possible because Brazilian Spiritism became a spree of permissiveness.

Since the early years, when Brazilian Spiritism preferred Jean-Baptiste Roustaing against Allan Kardec, this religion chosen the path of "they do what they want".

Fake literature was massively produced, taking a "dead of the moment" to attribute messages written by the alleged mediums themselves.

Allan Kardec was the first name used in fake messages, with a text produced by Grupo Espirita Fraternidade, in February 9th 1889, in Rio de Janeiro.

Strangely expressing as a priest and not an educationalist as Kardec was in his life, the fake message can be found here, in portuguese text.

The false Kardec was "awfully religious" than he really was and he asked the readers to know "the revelation of the revelation".

It was the subtitle of The Four Gospels, a book published by Roustaing, Kardec's disaffected.

It is so strange, because Allan Kardec, despite so gently, reproved the Roustaing's book, for going against the real essence of Spiritism's lessons.

Roustaing found in Brazil a good territory for the Spiritism's deviation.

Brazilian Spiritist Federation (FEB) took Roustaing primarily.

However, when Roustaing turned to be a problem, a hillbilly guy was found to translate his ideas.

This young man, Francisco Candido Xavier, aka Chico Xavier, was an opportunist that disfigured the Spiritism in several aspects, but became the demigod associated to the apparent simbology of charity, love and peace.

Since Chico Xavier, the Spiritism in Brazil turned to be a chaotic and promiscuous religion.

Fake literature was freely produced. Spiritism became catholicized, running away from Kardec's lessons, and a lot of unholy fantasies and old-fashioned catholic values were adopted.

Spiritism, in Brazil, turned to be a terrible spree. The mediums, in addition to their fake activities, left behind the intermediary mission between the living and the dead and made themselves to be the center of the attention, being a mixture of clargymen and popstars.

Most of people think now that the Joao de Deus affair is isolated to the rest of Brazilian Spiritism.

But it's wrong. It's a part of a terrible and worrisome spectacle that alleged mediums do what they want because they think they can do mistakes and be later forgiven and go to Heaven after death.

Other alleged mediums make several errors and worrisome fails that cannot be underestimated.

Chico Xavier made fake literature, supported materialization frauds - the main case involved the tricky Otilia Diogo, in mid 1960s - and defends the darkened moralism based on Theology of Suffering, Middle Age's Catholic chain.

Divaldo Franco also made fake literature, but he probably used the charity money, with the add of sponsorful money from the riches, to travel around the world to diffuse the Spiritism deviation made in Brazil, trying to spread the lie in the developed world, even in Kardec's France.

Jose Medrado made fake paintings and fake literature attributed to dead authors, instaled the Cidade da Luz (City of Light) in a illegally taken ground and, in his speeches, he usually makes coarse jokes against the blonde women and fat people.

Other minor alleged mediums are associated to other fake works.

Nelson de Moraes transformed Raul Seixas to a ingenuous idiot spirit, throught the fake literature using the name Zilio, supposedly attributed to the brazilian rocker in spiritual life.

The Zilio's book, Um Roqueiro no Além (A Rocker After Death), shows a strange advice that is unappopriate to Raul Seixas's thoughts: the idea to "fight the enemy of yourself", that suggests the condemnation of individuality, the opposite of the ideas emphatically supported by the musician.

Wanda Canutti used the name of portuguese writer Eça de Queiroz in works that never remember the agile and bustling style that the famous author left in his life.

One of Wanda's book, Getulio Vargas em Dois Mundos (Getulio Vargas in Both Words), is a ridiculous combination of press-researched informations about the former Brazilian president's life and a tiresome narrative of the alleged spiritual world.

This pretense spiritual world is similar to Nosso Lar (Our Home) and the narrative became a dull pamphlet of moralism preaches that not remember anything about Eça's original style.

Famous people easily are used to alleged spiritual messages. There's always a dead of the moment associated to an alleged message produced usually half year after his respective death.

Late actor Domingos Montagner, from Velho Chico soap opera, was associated to a fake message attributed to his spirit and diffused even in a YouTube video file.

He died drowned in Sao Francisco's river (ironically, the "Velho Chico" itself) when he was 54 years-old, in 2016. The fake message was sent one year later, and it was only a religious mershandising.

The Brazilian Spiritism is so prudish that their members think they have the right to betray Allan Kardec and pretend themselves the absolute fidelity to the legendary educationalist.

The cinicism of some Kardec's traitors is so bigger and serious that they have the courage do ask the others to "not only learn about Kardec", but "live Kardec every single day".

There's so much hypocrisy in Brazilian Spiritism that the episode involving Joao de Deus is just a little part of the next scandals to rise and the old scandals, including Chico Xavier's ones, to be withdrawn to oblivion.

There's so much fear inside the Brazilian Spiritsm backstage. The Abadiania's "tsunami" will reach Uberaba and other places when Kardec's treasons are freely worked.

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