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Wild Wild Country is a Netflix documentary series about the controversial Indian guru Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh (Osho), his one-time personal assistant Ma Anand Sheela, and their community of followers in the Rajneeshpuram community located in Wasco County, Oregon, US.
2012 documentary produced by Oregon Public Broadcasting "Wild Wild Country". Netflix Official Site. February 28, 2018.. A 2018 Netflix documentary series on Rajneesh, focusing on Rajneeshpuram and the controversies surrounding it. [1] "Rajneeshpuram, An Experiment To Provoke God" 1991 documentary film by M. R. Hilow
In 2005, the Oregon State Land Board agreed to sell 480 acres (1.9 km 2) of Wasco County, including Rajneeshpuram, to the Colorado-based youth ministry Young Life. [54] [55] On February 18, 2005, Court TV aired an episode of Forensic Files about the incident, "'Bio-Attack' – Oregon Cult Poisonings". [56]
Jim Jones and his wife, Marceline, in an image taken from a pink photo album left behind in the village of the dead in Jonestown, Guyana. Jones led more than 900 members of his cult to a painful ...
Their stories come to light in the new documentary series, The Program: Cons, Cults, and Kidnapping, out March 5 on Netflix. Katherine Kubler, a survivor of Ivy Ridge, directs the three-episode ...
In 1981, Rajneesh appointed her as his personal assistant. In the same year, she convinced Rajneesh to leave India and establish an ashram in the United States. [8] [9] In July 1981, Rajneesh Foundation International purchased the 64,000-acre (260 km 2) Big Muddy Ranch in Wasco County, Oregon, which became the site for the development of the Rajneeshpuram commune.
The Program: Cons, Cults and Kidnapping. (Netflix / Courtesy of Netflix) Kubler included other survivors in the documentary, including some who "actively resisted the program," to show the breadth ...
The Rajneesh movement is a new religious movement inspired by the Indian mystic Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh (1931–1990), also known as Osho. [1] They used to be known as Rajneeshees or "Orange People" because of the orange they used from 1970 until 1985. [2] Members of the movement are sometimes called Oshoites in the Indian press. [3]