Hello Readers
I am Hinaba Sarvaiya, this blog based on my Sunday task thinking Activity. It's given by Yesha Bhatt ma'am. This blog is about My daughter Joined a Cult. This is a documentary series by Nityanand. Here we can see how people blind faith in a sadhu, who is not a good person and playing on other people's emotions.
Who is Nityanand:-
Nithyananda, (born Arunachalam Rajasekaran;[a] 1 January 1978) known among followers as Nithyananda Paramashivam or Paramahamsa Nithyananda, is an Indian Hindu guru and "godman". He is subject of an Interpol Blue notice and a court-issued non-bailable warrant relating to allegations of rape.
He is the founder of the trust Nithyananda Dhyanapeetam, which has temples, gurukulas, and ashrams in many countries.
Following accusations and charges of rape and abduction in Indian courts, Nithyananda fled India and went into hiding. He subsequently announced the founding of his own self-proclaimed island nation called Kailaasa.
DOCUMENTARY FILMS AS A TOOL FOR SOCIAL CHANGE:-
Documentary films tell important, often unknown stories and bring awareness to a wider audience, and are some of the best resources for information, inspiration and entertainment.
They have also become core elements and prompters of social issue campaigns. Indeed, the social impact aspect is what makes many documentaries now so successful.
This documentary is not just a story about how women suffer from the powerful person not only by money but by their reputation in society. This shows how society respects Sadhu and Gujuji and there is blind faith in them. In today's world is more updated, more innovate or create a more new technologies and science is touch on the sky but other side we have to more thinking of faith life or superstitious things and not believing in science.
Here we can see how Nityanand used the woman's body or how he fulfils your desire based on believing in spiritual life
My daughter Jointed a Cult:-
Honestly, this documentary is an honest attempt to bring the fraudster in him to life.
At first glance, My Daughter Joined a Cult – a three-part docuseries by Naman Saraiya – looks like yet another rise-and-fall-of-fake-godman account at a time when this non-fiction "genre" is all the rage.
In terms of narrative coverage, it offers little new, simply piecing together the famous and infamous events of a two-decade-long timeline to reveal a fuller picture. The insider-outsider balance is apparent: Disillusioned ex-devotees, survivors and victims speak of the guru and their experiences with him with clarity and candour, as if a spell has been broken, while journalists and reporters paint a more public view of how the man's legacy unfurled over the years.
My Daughter Joined a Cult does not have a luxury of distance from its subject. The Rajneesh Osho story was hidden in plain sight, with many of us learning about the audacity and truth of his legacy three decades later: The information itself was half the entertainment. That a cultural heist like his was even logistically possible defined our fascination with the smartly crafted documentary.
But most of us are already familiar with the Nithyananda story. It's happening as we speak. Nithyananda is essentially Osho in the internet age. His dealings have been widely and luridly reported, and much of the country has looked on with a mix of bemusement and bravado. The surprise and sensationalism factors have ceased to exist. There is no shock value. It's precisely this desensitisation and digitisation of the human condition – through meme culture, parody videos, sardonic sharing, hashtag jokes – that the docuseries tries to reveal through its journalistic and relentlessly pensive treatment. It has the luxury of not distance or hindsight but real-time perspective.
In the third and final episode, some of the talking heads all but spell out the fact that social media has reduced the crimes of a notorious predator to a punchline about the incompetence of Indian authorities – and that Nithyananda has preyed on this exact levity to hide the darkness of his 'cool' cult in broad daylight. This is a worthy angle for any documentary that exists at the intersection of historical reading and current affairs. By being deadly serious across its three episodes, it may not be the most engaging or illuminating thing to watch. But by doing so, it also attempts to reclaim the old-school gravitas of personal and communal trauma from the clutches of modern discourse.
How do we learn from this documentary?
This documentary gives awareness on how to protect ourselves on those Baba's and Saints who are not good men also and the intentions are wrong. We know that speaking skills are more important to communication media and that the point is that we listen to sweet language and we attract them. But we do not think about their intentions and how they are working on language and use of sweet words to attract people. Be aware of those people who intentionally attracted your life. Nityanand always talked that he was a god and we have to blindly follow them and see as a god figure. Those are tales we have to believe and follow and not think about what is right or what is wrongs? In this documentary it is very helpful to be aware about the people beware.
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