Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Fake "Kabbalah Center International" Facing Federal Investigation that Madonna's "Raising Malawi" Charity Funnelled Money to Cover Bergs' Luxurious Lifestyle

B”H

I am glad that the fake “Kabbalah Center” with their Insurance Salesman “rabbi” (who left his wife and eight children for his secretary), is finally getting the exposure it deserves.  It appears “Raising Malawi” has finally brought down Berg.

I’m sorry if it hurt Madonna.  She seems to be a truly innocent bystander who sincerely wanted to help people and was taken by some very smooth con artists.  The Bergs and their ilk pose as holy people, and poach what they want from Jewish holy texts to sell to
gullible
(mostly) gentiles who would have found much more substance and power in simple Judaism rather than this quasi-magical fakery posing as spirituality.

Seriously, if you want to find the key to living a spiritual life, you must first start with the basics of following Jewish law: keeping kosher, keeping the Sabbath, and keeping the festivals.   All spirituality starts with the physical world, with how we conduct ourselves.  At Sinai we said, "We will do, THEN we will understand." 

Then, after you have mastered those laws as well as you can, start studying.

Study day and night and night and day and learn Hebrew, learn all the Jewish texts.  Then, when you are at a level that you can really understand the spiritual, study it with a rabbi who knows what he is saying—not some idiot who is going to sell you “instant access” without any context or understanding!

If you really really want to know, you have to push yourself to learn.  There are no short cuts.

Anyone who says they can give you a short cut is lying.

M

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Madonna's Malawi Disaster 

The star's much-lauded effort to help girls in the African nation of Malawi blew up. Is Kabbalah to blame?
http://www.newsweek.com/2011/04/03/madonna-s-malawi-disaster.print.html
by Wayne Barrett 

 Valerie Bogard, Bryan Finlayson, Christine Pelisek, and Barry Shifrin contributed reporting to this article.

 
One year ago, Madonna squatted in the rust-colored dirt of a sprawling empty lot outside Lilongwe, the capital of Malawi, one of the poorest countries in the world. With curious villagers and invited photographers crowding around, she laid the ceremonial first brick for a planned $15 million girls’ academy, a noble mission in a nation where only 27 percent of girls attend secondary school. In a blog  post on the website of her Raising Malawi foundation, she wrote that the brick, inscribed with the words “Dare to Dream,” was “not just the bedrock to a school—it is a foundation for our shared future.”

Last week it was announced that the future would not be built. Despite the fundraising success of Raising Malawi, which collected a reported $18 million in donations and spent $3.8 million on the planned academy, the girls’ school has been abandoned and the Raising Malawi foundation has imploded.

From its inception in 2006, the pop superstar has been the face of Raising Malawi, generating headlines around the world by adopting two Malawian children, writing and producing a documentary about Malawian orphans, and hosting high-profile fundraisers, including a  star-studded event in 2008 co-hosted by Gucci in a 42,000-square-foot transparent tent on the north lawn of United Nations headquarters. “I want credibility as a philanthropic organization,” Madonna told the $2,500-a-plate crowd.

To understand what went wrong, one has to look at Madonna’s partner in the foundation, a mysterious and controversial organization called the Kabbalah Centre International, which is now a focus of federal investigators. The center is a Jewish mystical organization that follows a set of esoteric teachings called Kabbalah, which adherents believe explains the relationship between humans and their creator and our true purpose in the universe. Madonna has said that she turned to Kabbalah in 1996 when she was pregnant, exhausted from Evita, and looking for an anchor. Since then she has reportedly donated at least $18 million of her personal fortune to the Kabbalah Centre.

The center was founded by Philip Berg, a Brooklyn-born New York Life insurance agent whose first wife happened to  be the niece of a famous Kabbalist, Rabbi Yehuda Brandwein. Berg sired eight children with her, but soon after the rabbi’s death in 1969 he left his wife for his former secretary, Karen. Two years later they launched their own idiosyncratic brand of Kabbalism, popularizing what had until then been teachings reserved for advanced Talmudic scholars. The Bergs eventually expanded to 77 centers and study groups around the world.

The Kabbalah Centre’s impressive growth has been paralleled by the volume of its detractors, some of whom have labeled it  “Jewish Scientology.” Disaffected followers have accused Berg and his family of treating congregants like personal servants, housing them four  to a bedroom, paying them a $35-a-month stipend, and advising them to apply for food stamps. One prominent critic, Rabbi Immanuel Schochet, has said, “They are distorting Kabbalah . . . taking some of our sacred books and reducing it to mumbo-jumbo, all kinds of hocus-pocus.”

Berg, who is now 81 and referred to by insiders as “the Rav” (an honorific meaning teacher), is still very much the patriarch of the Kabbalah Centre, despite a stroke in 2004. But day-to-day operations are controlled by his wife, Karen, 68, and their two sons, Michael, 37, and Yehuda, 38, all of whom share the title of codirector.

It’s unclear when Madonna, a famously savvy businesswoman, learned about the internal problems in her foundation or the degree to which she is aware of what appear to be a litany of questionable practices at the center. (Madonna declined to speak directly to NEWSWEEK for this article.)

Kabbalah means “receive” in Hebrew, and that’s certainly what it has meant to the Bergs. Four of the five Berg families live in Beverly Hills mansions owned and remodeled by the center. Building permits alone  on three of the Berg homes total $1.4 million. Karen and Philip’s house, the third the center has provided for them in the past decade, boasts a $30,000 swimming pool. The center routinely pays the expenses accumulated on Karen’s credit cards, which include a personal AmEx card with a $31,000 limit and, in the past few years, three Bank of America cards with a combined $81,000 limit. The center covers the Berg families’ food, furniture, clothing, gas, nannies, tutors, gardeners, housekeepers, personal assistants, and more exotic indulgences such as luxury cars, first-class flights, and spas. The Bergs’ lavish lifestyle,  one executive says, is “100 percent subsidized.”

Kabbalah Centre tax attorney Shane Hamilton contends that the Bergs include ordained rabbis who are “treated as ministers of the Gospel” and are thus entitled to “a parsonage as part of their compensation.” Hamilton says some household services are provided by chevre, center members who take a vow of service and are supplied with basic necessities in exchange for 12-hour days of labor. Hamilton will not “confirm or deny the taxability of any of the specific services” and also declines to say whether the chevre, or the Bergs, pay any income taxes.

The Bergs’ lifestyle seems extraordinary, especially in light of the application the center filed with the IRS in 1998 seeking tax exemption as a church. To the question of whether “any funds or property of the organization” were to be used by any minister or officer “for his or her own personal needs and convenience,” the center answered that members of the religious order (including the Bergs) “have taken a vow of poverty” and look to the center “for their meals, lodging and other subsistence.” Paradoxically, while the center takes full advantage of tax laws benefiting religious organizations, its  website states that “Kabbalah is not a religion.”

Nelson Boord, the center’s CFO until 2009, has written that its six nonprofit and three for-profit entities collectively earn annual revenues of $60 million, own a $200 million real-estate portfolio, and manage a $60 million investment fund. Where does all this money come from? Boord says the center warehouses a $10 million inventory of Berg-blessed items, including $72 candles, $63 astrology sets, and $12.99 Divine Sex CDs. For $24.95 you can also buy the Rav’s book Immortality, which explores “the origins of death and the spiritual tools necessary for its final disappearance from the world.”

A recently filed bankruptcy lawsuit has alleged that the Kabbalah Centre was a beneficiary of a $70 million Ponzi scheme  perpetrated by Goldan, LLC, that ended with the criminal prosecution and conviction of Mark Goldman, a Goldan principal. Goldman was often seen at the Manhattan temple, introduced as an attorney by millionaire garment businessmen. His scheme defrauded and looted investors in a string of Long Island real-estate deals, leaving names off mortgage documents and funneling sales profits to others, such as the Kabbalah Centre, which came out $2.9 million ahead. Goldman pleaded guilty to the  scheme and made recent proffers to cooperate with the government. A bankruptcy trustee has sued the Centre to recover the $2.9 million in funds that his complaint says were “wrongfully conveyed” to the Centre. The Centre’s answer to the lawsuit is not yet due.

There have also been several civil suits filed recently alleging that the Kabbalah Centre had exploited the trust of wealthy followers in order to pillage their bank accounts. Two of these revolve around Don Nay, a two-time convicted felon. According to one complaint, filed in California superior court, Nay ran a study group affiliated with the Kabbalah Centre and also owned a local real-estate firm that granted the center a 10 percent equity position at no cost. A higher-up at the center allegedly advised a wealthy Kabbalist, Courtenay  Geddes, to liquidate an $815,692 trust portfolio and invest it in Nay’s  company. The real-estate firm then failed to file a tax return, indicating it was a dissolved corporation and wiping out Geddes’s investment.

Geddes filed a separate lawsuit in the same court alleging that after she came up with the idea of a Kabbalah home-schooling program, which Yehuda Berg expressed “excitement” about, she donated $495,075 to get it started, but no such program ever materialized. “The Kabbalah Centre and the Berg defendants have engaged in a historical practice of defrauding people and business out of great sums of monies.” (The center didn’t respond to NEWSWEEK’s inquiries about these matters and has yet to file a response in these cases.)

Only one Kabbalah Centre entity, Spirituality for Kids, files disclosure forms with the IRS. Spirituality for Kids was Madonna’s pet project before Raising Malawi, and she served as its chairman of the board. According to its filings, it had an offshore account in the Cayman Islands, a tax haven that seems an odd place for an entity that runs children’s programs in L.A. to be banking. Spirituality for Kids has also raised at least $5 million for Malawi.

In 2005 the center was hit with a torrent of bad press about marketing such items as Kabbalah miracle water and a $35 set  of Kabbalah shot glasses. Soon afterward, Michael Berg and Madonna cofounded Raising Malawi. Early the next year, Michael Berg flew to Malawi aboard a private jet provided by the Kabbalist wife of an L.A. billionaire. Joining them were Madonna’s then-husband, Guy Ritchie, and actors James Van Der Beek and Heather McComb. Berg also imported a camera crew to Malawi, which shot the faces of malnourished children under a banner that read “Welcome Kabbalah.”

The center told NEWSWEEK that its Malawi fundraising efforts had brought in $12.5 million in donations and it had  spent $10.6 million to “fund Malawi activities” since 2006. These numbers cannot be verified, and the center’s attorney declined to provide any specifics about how these millions were spent.

The Berg family and Madonna have recently hired top-level spin doctors to help them manage the Raising Malawi blowback. The Bergs brought in Mark Fabiani, a key player on the Clinton White House counsel’s damage-control team during the Monica Lewinsky scandal who has since represented such celebrities in crisis as Lance Armstrong and Kobe Bryant. Simultaneously, Madonna hired Trevor Neilson, another Clinton White House veteran whose Global Philanthropy Group specializes in star donors who need a public-relations face-lift; he has represented  Angelina Jolie, Ashton Kutcher, and Demi Moore. (Disclosure: NEWSWEEK’s  website, THE DAILY BEAST, briefly worked with the Global Philanthropy Group on a philanthropy-oriented website.)

Soon after NEWSWEEK raised questions about ties between Raising Malawi and the Kabbalah Centre in February, Neilson moved to separate the two, replacing the Raising Malawi board of directors with a new board consisting of Madonna, her manager Guy Oseary, and her accountant Richard Feldstein. But Neilson acknowledges that the center actually appointed this new board, as it had appointed the old one, and that Raising Malawi will remain a center subsidiary until “a final IRS determination letter” approving the new structure is issued. Raising Malawi, which had been headquartered in the Kabbalah Centre offices since its inception, finally moved out in mid-March; its two remaining staffers stayed to work for the center.

More recently, Fabiani and Neilson have successfully diverted attention from Madonna and the center by announcing that Neilson’s group has completed a report pinning much of the blame on Raising Malawi academy director Anjimile Oponyo, the sister  of Malawi’s first female vice president. The report accused her of “outlandish expenditures,” including a high salary, a car, housing, and a  golf-club membership. Putting aside the fact that these items were included in her contract by Madonna aides, the actual expenditures seem trivial in the face of the $3.8 million lost on the school project. The golf membership cost a mere $461.27 a year and was offered as an aid to networking with government officials and potential donors. The car that was bought for her was a reconditioned 1996 Toyota. Her salary, $96,000,  was actually a pay cut from previous positions she had held at the World Bank and the United Nations. Oponyo, who was interviewed by Madonna herself, agreed to move to the impoverished country with four of  her six children. (If she had been posted in Malawi by the U.S. State Department, she would have received cost-of-living and hardship allowances, and educational and living-quarters benefits that would have  added $150,000 to her salary.)

The second target of Neilson’s report is Philippe Van Den Bossche, the executive director of Raising Malawi, who was forced out in October. Van Den Bossche is often depicted in news reports  merely as the boyfriend of Madonna’s ex-trainer. In fact, he started dating the trainer only after he assumed his Malawi position. He got the  job through the center, where he was the development director before Madonna hired him to run her charitable activities. Most significantly, according to multiple sources, every dollar he spent was approved by the  center. (Oponyo and Van Den Bossche are bound by strict confidentiality  agreements that prevent them from defending themselves publicly.)

Amid the charges of malfeasance in the report, no one has pointed out that Madonna staged two elaborate ceremonies within six months of each other, a groundbreaking and the bricklaying event, that reportedly cost $106,250—$10,000 more than Oponyo’s entire annual salary. Also unmentioned is the 2008 IRS filing that lists $1,042,623 in  “unspecified operating and construction costs”—a sizable chunk of Raising Malawi’s total expenditures that remains unexplained (and all made before Oponyo was hired). When asked about these costs, Neilson offered no response.

The more important fact seems to be that only $850,000 of the $3.8 million spent on the academy was paid out in Malawi. The lion’s share, almost $3 million, was spent by the Kabbalah Centre’s office in L.A. under the watch of the center’s Michael Berg. “We have not seen anything that leads us to be concerned about how money  was spent [by the center],” Neilson says flatly. (He refused to provide  his Global Philanthropy Group report to NEWSWEEK.)

In fact, Raising Malawi and the Kabbalah Centre have always been inextricably intertwined—despite efforts by others to separate them. Two months before the U.N. extravaganza, Gucci, concerned  that it would be contributing to a religious organization, executed an agreement barring Madonna’s group from using proceeds to pay any entities “with the word Kabbalah in their names.” The day before the gala, Kabbalah officials filed an application with the IRS to gain approval for Raising Malawi to operate as a public charity in its own name. However, the submission, which was approved three months later, made Madonna’s group a subsidiary “operated, supervised, and controlled”  by the Kabbalah Centre. Nonetheless, Madonna assured New York magazine  several months later that Raising Malawi was “a separate entity” from Kabbalah. Gucci wound up transferring nearly $3 million to the foundation.

Neilson concedes that the center kept its Malawi account open, receiving and spending money after Raising Malawi registered separately with the IRS. A Neilson aide says the center “took  in more revenue than was spent” on Malawi projects in 2006 and 2007 and  that “those ‘profits’ remained” on its books, designated for Malawi use. Neilson won’t say how much in profit the center kept for the past five years but says it is being used to settle the debt Raising Malawi owes the center.

The explanation prompts more questions than it answers. If the center was holding millions in Raising Malawi funding since 2006, why didn’t it transfer the funds when Raising Malawi ran deficits in 2009 and 2010? And what about 2008, when the foundation had its best fundraising year, finishing with a half-million-dollar surplus,  yet the center listed a $1.8 million liability from Raising Malawi on its IRS filings? How could there be a liability if it was the center that in fact owed Raising Malawi the millions it had collected over the prior two years?

When NEWSWEEK asked the center’s tax attorney Shane  Hamilton how the Kabbalah Centre and Raising Malawi divided the money that was raised for Malawi, he replied: “I don’t know if they have a structure.” This fluid “intercompany debt,” as one Neilson aide described it, reinforces the charges made by critics that the center used Malawi as a fundraising tool, and that there is no way to independently determine what was really done in the name of its orphans.  Neilson will now say only that it was unfortunate that Raising Malawi was “linked to any religious organization” from the beginning because it  limited the foundation’s “ability to generate broad public support.”

Neilson has offered at least two other explanations  for why the Raising Malawi school was not built: that there weren’t enough girls living near the school to attend it (despite the fact that the academy was planned as an elite boarding school for girls from every  district in the country) and that the Malawian government never executed a title transfer for the site. However, NEWSWEEK has obtained a  Jan. 4 lease signed by the land registrar in Malawi stating that the Raising Malawi academy “is now registered as the proprietor of the leasehold interest” in that property. Morgan Tembo, a member of the local advisory board for the school, met Neilson during his visit to Malawi and says, “If Trevor is saying that the lease or title is one of the reasons construction stopped, it’s not true.”

What is true is that there are indications the center had made the decision to pull the plug on the school long before it was announced: the last check was sent to Malawi in July of last year, just three months after the bricklaying ceremony, and it was for a  mere $8,659. There was no apparent plan to cover the costs of operating  the school.

“My original vision is now on a much bigger scale,”  Madonna said in a statement after the school’s collapse. “I want to reach thousands, not hundreds, of girls. I want to do more and I want to  do it better.”

Neilson says Raising Malawi will now focus on financing “proven interventions.” If Madonna is willing to throw her money and prodigious fundraising talents behind the effective programs that already exist, that would be the best news possible for Malawi. UNICEF’s Schools for Africa program, for example, has renovated or built  1,000 schools and trained 100,000 teachers since 2004.

9 comments:

  1. for the INSIDE SCOOP on my first hand experience at the Kabbalah Centre, click here: www.billyphillips.com

    ReplyDelete
  2. " ... gullible (mostly) gentiles who would have found much more substance and power in simple Judaism ..."

    No, sorry, you cannot decide for others.

    "Seriously, if you want to find the key to living a spiritual life, you must first start with the basics of following Jewish law."

    Seriously, no, this is not the only "key" to a spiritual life, although it might be YOUR personal key.

    I cannot comment on the Kabbalah Centre as I discovered this blog while researching Kabbalah but you come across as a self-righteous and arrogant person.

    Peace,
    Chris

    ReplyDelete
  3. B"H

    Dear Chris,

    Uh . . . I don't think you can decide for others either and, by the way, the Kabbalah is a JEWISH text, the Bergs claim they are JEWISH rabbis, and this is a JEWISH blog. So, I would say that this might be a classic case of psychological projection on your part. (Translation: The one who is accusing is the one who is guilty).

    :)

    M

    ReplyDelete
  4. ב"ה

    1) Michelle didn't say anything was "the only way to spirituality" (though, IMHO, it is the best way).

    2) Michelle was telling people that learning Kabbala without learning the basics on which it is based will lead to misunderstanding.

    3) Would you criticize a mathematician who said that you couldn't learn Calculus if you've never learned Arithmetic? Would you object if a Medical School administrator rejected a potential student who had never learned the basics of Biology?

    Trying to teach true Kabbala to someone who doesn't know the basics a Judaism and Tora (Hebrew bible) learning is like trying to teach nuclear physics to a preschooler, who doesn't even know what a nucleus is. Knowledge builds on other knowledge and Kabbala isn't a beginner course. It's an advanced course, VERY advanced!

    And, please, don't tell us that you know our religion or our laws or our scripture better than we do. It's like an artist telling a musician that (s)he knows the best way to play the musician's instrument. Besides being wrong and offensive, it's very presumptuous.

    ReplyDelete
  5. As far as Mawali is concerned, having done business in Africa, you'd know that it's risky business. As far as the baseless accusations, and opportunistic and hateful spew... well my 12 year old can see through that and those who perpetuate it should be ashamed to spread evil speech. My 5 year old knows the negative effect of evil speech, and learned it from studying at the Kabbalah Center.  I'd think any adult would have learned that by now because everyone I interact with at the Kabbalah Center has, so I guess I am spoiled and shouldn't judge (something else my 7 year old can teach anyone).  

    It would appear that it's not all that simple to interact with people who haven't the merit to study as we have thanks to the Berg family not listening to all those that told them to stop.  Maybe the agenda is the problem, and quack all you want...  it won't effect the truth about the amazing good that the Kabbalah Center does towards turning nasty people into sharing people who help the world by improving their own lives. There are good people everywhere, and I imagine if those that post this nonsense could learn what I have, there's good in them too. Good luck with that all of you!

    I highly suggest reading Billy's blog. Don't worry, there's hope for us all. I encourage people to write about that!  All the best :)

    ReplyDelete
  6. B"H

    I'm truly sorry, Anonymous, that you have been taken advantage of, and I am so sorry that Billy has too.

    I am obligated, by Torah, to warn people about fakery and false teachers. The Kaballah Center is an example of fakery, and the Bergs are examples of false teachers. They are using ancient Jewish texts in a very cynical way in order to make money and putting a stumbling block before the blind. I stand by my criticism of them, and have published your comment and the link to Billy's blog as an example of the ignorance they perpetuate.

    I suggest putting down your fake books, and taking a look at the Torah. And, after you are done with that, the Talmud. And, when you are finished with that, in a good 50 years, try picking up the rules of speech codified by the Chofetz Chaim.

    Kaballah without Torah is like Peanut Butter and Jelly without bread. Very sweet, but impossible to hold on to--and a mess to clean up.

    M

    ReplyDelete
  7. Each story have 2sides here is the other side: I’ve been a student of the center and know very well that these are all false acquisition. It’s really sad how people can’t see the great achievements of KC, SFK and other great organizations that are sponsored by kabbalah center. Rav & Karen opened the door for all of us and shared the most ancient and sacred wisdom with us. Kabbah helped me to understand the real, deep meanings of the stories and spritual terms in the bible, It doesn't teach us not to observe "the law" it opens the deep meanings of them and help us to connect with the source THAT IS tHE cREATOR HIMSELF and not just talk the talk but walk the walk. Kabbalah totally transformed my life and the lives of many others like me. If you want to know the truth or at least another side of this story I recommend these links….The TRUTH about KC is in these links:
    http: / /billyphillips7.posterous.com/49136621
    http: / /billyphillips7.posterous.com/48340908

    ReplyDelete
  8. The cruel comments made about the Kabbalah Centre are NOT TRUE! The Kabbalah centre led by HaRav and Karen Berg are ending PAIN and SUFFERING for the whole world. Kabbalah is a UNIVERSAL WISDOM meant for the world , and is not " JEWISH" in fact many Christians should know JESUS was a KABBALIST, go to

    ReplyDelete
  9. B"H

    Poor Rachel. You don't know how absolutely brainwashed you appear to be.

    May Hashm help you to understand that you can only trust in Hashm--not fake rabbis, not fake books, and certainly not in fake institutions.

    Your comments make it clear you have substituted this organization for Hashm. Very sad.

    ReplyDelete

Please do not use comments to personally attack other posters.