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Universal Medicine
Universal Medicine
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Universal Medicine
Alternative medicine
ClaimsEsoteric healing; esoteric breast massage, chakra-puncture, ovarian readings, esoteric ovary massage, esoteric connective tissue therapy.
Related fieldsEsotericism, Occult, New Religious Movements, Pseudoscience, Theosophy.
Original proponentsSerge Benhayon
Subsequent proponentsNatalie, Simone, Michael and Deborah Benhayon.

Universal Medicine, abbreviated as UniMed or UM, is an organization, often described as a cult, founded and led by Serge Benhayon, a former bankrupt tennis coach from New South Wales (NSW) Australia who has no medical qualifications.[1][2][3][4] It sells "esoteric healing" products, music, publications, workshops and courses.[5] None of the healing modalities are evidence based or have been proven effective by scientific research.[3][6] Uruguayan-born Benhayon founded the group in 1999 after receiving what he described as an "energetic impress" while on the toilet.[7][8][9] A NSW Supreme Court jury found it was true to say that he leads a "socially dangerous" and "socially harmful cult", "intentionally indecently touched" clients and "is a charlatan who makes fraudulent medical claims".[10][11][12][13] In a British court ruling, UM was found to be "a cult with some potentially harmful and sinister elements".[14]

The organisation and unregulated health service provider is principally located in Goonellabah and Wollongbar, near Lismore, NSW, Australia.[15] Its European headquarters are known as "The Lighthouse" and is situated in the village of Tytherington near Frome, Somerset, England.[16][17]

The signature treatments practised and taught by Universal Medicine are "esoteric breast massage", "esoteric healing", "ovarian readings", "chakra-puncture", "esoteric connective tissue therapy" and "esoteric ovary massage".[18][19][20] All treatments were devised by non-registered health practitioner Serge Benhayon, who has claimed the business grosses at least AUD$2 million a year from courses and retreats.[15][3][21]

The followers of its doctrine "The Way of the Livingness" are known collectively as "The Student Body".[22][23] "The Teachings" are classified into meditation, self-care, nutrition, exercise, music, reincarnation, psychological wellbeing and the esoteric, and are supported by audio, books, and online lectures. Serge Benhayon describes himself as a "seer", calls himself the "Ascended Master", and followers call him the "new Messiah".[4][24][7] They also believe he "was the one sent from (the mythical kingdom of) Shambhala to awaken us all", is the only human to have achieved the "highest level of initiation" on earth and claim the NSW Supreme Court ruling against him is "totally untrue".[25][26][27] In the British court ruling, the doctrine was said to be one of "erroneous and malign beliefs".[14]

While Benhayon has denied engaging in unethical practices, significant evidence to the contrary has been documented.[28]

Natalie & Serge Benhayon at UM event 2015

Beliefs and teachings

[edit]

Benhayon's esoteric healing belief system is based on the occult teachings of early 20th century theosophist Alice A. Bailey.[29][30][26] Serge Benhayon has claimed to be the reincarnation of Leonardo da Vinci and Pythagoras as well as Alice A. Bailey, Imhotep and Saint Peter.[4][31] He has written that Leonardo da Vinci is a "Claimed Son of God" and teaches that he is connected energetically to an ancient lineage of "living wisdom", and more "High Initiates" and Claimed Sons of God will reincarnate "over and over again until each and every single human is united as one, by their true light".[29] Benhayon also claims that his daughter, Simone, a swimming teacher and head of Universal Medicine UK, is the reincarnation of Winston Churchill.[32][33][34]

Serge Benhayon devised Universal Medicine's healing practices based on the belief that disease is caused by energetic disharmony resulting from ill choices made in this and previous lifetimes. Benhayon teaches that there are two types of energy: prana (प्राण, prāṇa; Sanskrit for life force) and fire.[29] Most forms of established wisdom, knowledge and belief, as well as most music and certain foods are believed to contain prana, which he regards as evil.[35] Prana is to be rejected or cleared to be replaced with "fiery energy" which emanates from the "Atmic womb of God". Universal Medicine healing modalities and products, including teas, herbal elixirs, creams and laminated healing symbol postcards, aim to clear prana.[29][20]

"I know more than any scientist in my inner heart ... I know everything about the universe and how it works. I can answer any question about any mystery in the world, any mystery in the universe."

Serge Benhayon's message for the "New Era", January 1, 2012[29]

Benhayon teaches that people who abuse their authority, such as dictators and corrupt politicians, are reincarnated as children with disabilities "as are Down syndrome, as are spastic,(sic) or any other disabled child" and claims disabilities such as Autism and Down syndrome are karma for past life sins.[36][24] He has also controversially stated on many occasions that sexual abuse, including that towards children, is karma from past lives and the universe attempting to stop a person from continuing to make non-loving choices.[32][8]

He also teaches that illness is caused by the possession of the body by evil spirits, and is reported to have told a terminally ill patient that an evil spirit had entered her liver and kidneys.[29] He reportedly teaches couples that when a man orgasms inside a woman she will take on his bad energy and he has said that if a possessed entity is of a sexual nature then they can invade a father's body and while he sleeps at night leave his body and rape his daughters.[37]

On race he writes that skin colour evolution was a conscious choice and that Asians chose yellow skin, saying: "yellow signifies the intellect" and the "pursuit of a lighter complexion arose when Black (sic) became erroneously identified with the Darkness (sic)".[8] He taught his followers that if their children misspent their inheritance, or if they set conditions on their donations to UM, their "kidney energy" could be harmed in the next life.[13]

During a sermon in September 2017, Benhayon stated he could "orgasm as a hermaphrodite (sic)", claiming he had the ability to "orgasm like a woman" and ejaculate as a man simultaneously.[38][22]

Universal Medicine and The Way of the Livingness has followers in Australia, the UK, North America and Europe.[29] Critics have characterised it as a cult, which has left a "trail of broken families".[21][20][39][40] An ex-partner of a Universal Medicine supporter complained that Benhayon "controlled every aspect of our lives".[41] Benhayon, who is reportedly referred to as a "fifth degree initiate" and "The One", rejects these claims.[20][40][42] According to the Chilling Effects website and other sources he has used legal threats to have cult allegations, including those within media reports, removed from Australian Google Search indexes.[43][44] The organisation has at least seven lawyers as members and officially denies it is a cult.[26][45] But when Australian Doctor questioned Amelia Stephens, a UM member and a Brisbane doctor, she responded "This depends on what your definition of a cult is".[46][22]

Benhayon and other senior UM members have a history of calling the police on journalists, and claim to be victims of a media witch hunt and smear campaign.[32][47][37][48] The group's devotees and practitioners reportedly inundate media organisations who publish stories about UM with angry letters and written complaints and denounce those in the media who critique them as "irresponsible journalists".[19][49][8][50][48] UK based director Simone Benhayon coordinates and instructs followers to post favourable comments online at least five or more times a day, with exceptions for those European members who recently had a "time travel experience".[34]

Devotees created the company 'Real Media Real Change' to combat unfavourable media coverage as well as the Universal Medicine 'Facts' website by the UM 'Facts Team' to combat UM critics.[51][52][53][54] Serge Benhayon is the registrant of this 'Facts about Universal Medicine' website.[55][45] UM labels non-believers as "detractors" with senior UM members claiming that these detractors are really afraid of them.[56][42][37] In 2019 the Supreme Court published that "evidence (was) tendered in the proceedings that there had been significant and persistent opposition to attempts to expose (UM's) bogus healing claims and practices, often involving personal and professional attacks on any critics... There are problems associated with (Benhayon's) ongoing zealous support, including from health professionals who evidence a lack of insight into the dangers of Universal Medicine activities, the deceptive conduct engaged in by (Benhayon) and Universal Medicine, and the risk that (Benhayon) poses to vulnerable people."[57]

Followers claim to be members of UM, which they assert is "like a religion" but Benhayon contradicted this saying he ran a business with clients and that there is "no group and no members".[42] Benhayon's doctrine "The Way of the Livingness" is one which he currently operates under his Universal Medicine business and is a 'form of theosophy'.[58][59] It was denied charitable status in the UK in 2011 as it did not meet the criteria of a genuine religion and is not registered as a religion in Australia.[60][59][23] Helena Blavatsky - the founder of the 19th century theosophy that Benhayon's doctrine is based on - insists that is not a religion.[61]

Critics say Universal Medicine places unreasonable pressure on followers to adhere to a severely restricted diet and to avoid most exercise for fear those things might "infect their spiritual alignment" and lead to poor health.[19] After reviewing a diet chart from Universal Medicine, the Professor of Public Health at the University of Wollongong and former president of the Public Health Association of Australia Heather Yeatman said it was "a public health issue" when children were placed on such restrictive diets: "If a child is not having dairy or cereals they are likely to be low in energy intake and there could be the risk of stunting if children are not getting enough energy. It is critically important there is a balanced diet, especially at the weaning stage because it can impact overall growth and cognitive development. It's a public health issue." This came after the report of a baby of UM member parents was hospitalised due to diet-related illness.[62][37]

Followers are reportedly told health problems result from wrongdoings in their past lives.[63] Cult Counselling Australia director Raphael Aron said his organisation had a researcher working full time on Universal Medicine after counselling former clients who were concerned about its influence on their children.[5] Aron said CCA had also counselled breakaway followers, who were still "battling" to withdraw emotionally from the group.[21] He also says:

UM seems to be "exercising a level of mind control to the point where people submit to whatever this fellow seems to be offering, to their detriment... What he's doing is potentially very dangerous".[19]

Benhayon denies he or the group interfere in "the students" personal lives but detractors say relationships become impossible when everything from music to sex must be "Serge-approved".[25] Cult expert David Millikan was quoted as saying "[Mr Benhayon] knows what they should read, what they should wear, what they should eat, how they should exercise, what sort of sexual life they should have and so they end up in this closed world".[64] The NSW Supreme Court found the statements that Benhayon "is sexually manipulative of his cult followers" and "engages in bizarre sexual manipulation to make money for his business" to be true imputations.[65]

Music

[edit]

Benhayon asserts that music such as rock, reggae, pop, funk, rap and the work of J.S. Bach contain the "pranic energy" that his followers must abstain from.[66] Taught to reject other forms of music, UM followers commit to in-house esoteric or 'glorious' Benhayon-approved music, such as that by Miranda and Michael Benhayon or the official UM musician Chris James.[26][29] WFMU music critic Micah Moses says tracks from the UM record label Glorious Music are "contemporary faux urban pop" and "imitation mainstream dreck" that are mostly "unplayable" and "dreadfully bad".[67]

Treatments and practices

[edit]

"Serge Benhayon is the leader of Universal Medicine, a group which to his knowledge, engages in misleading conduct in promoting the healing services it offers", "makes false claims about healing that cause harm to others" and "preys on cancer patients". "Serge Benhayon as the leader of Universal Medicine exploits the followers of that group through his false and harmful teachings", "had exploited children by having them vouch for Universal Medicine's dishonest healing practices", "has persuaded followers to shun loved ones who won't join his cult" and "is sexually manipulative of his cult followers". "Serge Benhayon is the leader of an exploitative" and "socially harmful cult, which to his knowledge had engaged in dishonest healing practices" and "that is paternalistic to women".

NSW Supreme Court jury findings, December 6, 2018[68]

Universal Medicine markets practitioner training and accreditation through its Esoteric Practitioners Association Pty Ltd; however, the training and qualifications are not recognised and "esoteric practitioners" are not accredited.[3][69] Members of the association are charged an annual fee.[70] Clients have been reported to spend tens of thousands of Australian dollars on Universal Medicine products and services.[21][71]

Benhayon's "esoteric connective tissue therapy" is said to improve the patient's energy flow by "allowing the pulse of the lymphatic system to symbiotically correspond with the body's own ensheathing web". John Dwyer describes the existence of a lymphatic pulse as "utter nonsense".[20]

Universal Medicine also provides counselling services to parents, body-awareness education workshops to young women, cardiosacral pulse and craniosacral readings, as well as "exorcism sessions" where children were reportedly present.[72][19][73]

In November 2014, Universal Medicine's treatments were highlighted in a NSW Parliamentary Inquiry report by the Health Care Complaints Committee which states:

"While there is little anecdotal evidence to suggest actual harm caused by these treatments, concerns were raised that patients may forgo seeking proper medical advice and care. Two patients who were undergoing therapies at Universal Medicine were independently diagnosed with cancer and bronchiectasis respectively, and required proper medical intervention in order to be properly treated".[3]

Universal Medicine lobbied the local NSW MP for Ballina Don Page to have these unfavourable comments removed from the Parliamentary Inquiry Report.[8]

Controversy surrounds referrals for esoteric treatments by some doctors, a situation that medical regulators say is difficult to address.[74][75] During the inquiry Don Page MP said these types of referrals "would give most people considerable concern".[76] Universal Medicine's registered allied health practitioners allegedly encourage followers to seek GP referral for Medicare treatment plans to pay for sessions. A former patient who received treatment from a UM physiotherapist under a Medicare plan reported the "Universal physio claimed her health was improving from 'craniosacral pulse' therapy", however, "her GP ordered tests that found she had cancer". The patient was reportedly told by Universal Medicine that "doctors will make you sicker than you already are".[63] Another patient was told by a thoracic physician and student of UM that conventional HRT was harmful and "deep-seated grief is a major driving factor in lung disease".[77][70] Dwyer stated that it was "highly reprehensible" that medical professionals registered on a "promise to practise evidence-based medicine" were engaged in promoting "cultish behaviour".[22]

Serge Benhayon has responded to criticism stating that UM does not "interfere with medicine... We do not hold ourselves above medicine. We are super pro medicine".[19] UM conducts retreats such as "the science of Divination".[4] Sydney paediatrician and "Baby Doc" author, Howard Chilton, has endorsed Benhayon as a "teacher of enormous integrity". Chilton has given talks at the company's women's health forums but claims his support for UM is a personal matter unrelated to evidence-based practice. Chilton's daughter Isabella is married to Benhayon's son Curtis.[8] UM associated thoracic surgeon Sam Kim, who has praised Benhayon's esoteric breast massage and states UM is a reputable healing organisation, not a cult.[78][79] Supporter and Bangalow ophthalmologist Anne Malatt claims her life and work had been inspired by Benhayon, adding that the "core tenet of Serge's teachings is energetic integrity" and "when put into practice on a daily basis, they work".[48][29][20] Sydney rheumatologist and UM advocate Maxine Szramka claims to have observed UM student's chronic pain being permanently cured adding UM's esoteric healing practices lead to miracles every day.[80] Her endorsement has now been deleted from the UM website.[81][82]

UM practises an unproven technique on women called "Deeper Femaleness" claiming it is "great for rape recovery". It involves the "hands-on esoteric healing" of a woman's abdomen and pubic area and manipulation of the woman's pubic bone. UM publications show the therapy is performed by men.[24][83][37]

The treatments have been characterised as "sleazy" with one ex-patient comparing her experience to being subjected to a "grooming exercise".[84] UM has responded by taking the ex-patient to the Supreme Court of NSW alleging defamation.[85] The jury found it was substantially true to say "Serge Benhayon makes bogus healing claims" and "is engaged in a healing fraud that harms people".[65]

Benhayon confirmed that in 2009 at Billinudgel in NSW, the group held a "book burning" at the property of his lawyer.[86] Others reported it as "just like the ritual burning of books in Nazi Germany", where Benhayon's students were invited to throw their books onto the pyre. Most books burnt were on Chinese medicine, kinesiology, acupuncture, homeopathy and other alternative healing modalities, all of which Benhayon had decreed "prana" which he considers "evil".[29][35]

Benhayon insists women should not play sport, stating: "You've become involved with sport, which women should never be, because the right ovary becomes more powerful than the left. They're ready to have a child but the vaginal walls as thick as, and they're not a woman energetically, even though they have breasts, vagina, uterus and so forth".[37] On feminism Benhayon teaches that women are "paying the price" for greater equality in the form of breast cancer, ovarian cancer, endometriosis and period issues. He states women have now moved "into much more male energy" in gaining greater equality and how this was achieved is "energetically not correct".[66]

Serge Benhayon confirms revenue from Universal Medicine provides a living for the whole of the extended Benhayon family. In 2016, he had a taxable income of more than $188,000, and his wife, Miranda, $176,000. Approximately $50,000 of his income came from the Universal Family Trust, which also distributed $129,593 to his daughter Natalie, approximately $100,000 to his son Michael, $59,812 to his son Curtis and a further $34,890 to Curtis' wife Isabella. A further $400,000 went to another company. Benhayon's ex-wife Deborah Benhayon receives a salary as the chief financial officer for UM.[2] Real estate to the value of $5.5 million has been linked to the group, including a $1.75 million property in Brisbane, and a hall valued at $2.3 million.[18] All of his four children hold positions within the organisation.[26]

Serge Benhayon personally holds an extensive multimillion-dollar property portfolio in Northern NSW which includes UM's spititual home "The Hall of Ageless Wisdom" on one of his properties. When in Australia he lives on a private estate near Lismore, and when in England in a house at 'The Lighthouse' estate near Frome in Somerset.[37][13] 'The Lighthouse' is the European base for UM and is owned by Simon Williams, the ex-president of the local Chamber of Commerce.[27]

Esoteric breast massage

[edit]

UM operates 'esoteric breast massage' (EBM) programs for women with breast cancer as well as 'breast cancer care retreats' at the cost of $60 per head.[87][13] Stated by the group to be administered only by women, EBM has been promoted to "cure or prevent breast cancer" by rekindling femaleness.[20][88][89][86][33] This was described as "irresponsible, dangerous and misleading" by Matthew Lam, research director of Breakthrough Breast Cancer.[49] NSW Cancer Council CEO Andrew Penman said there was no medical evidence massage could prevent breast cancer. Esoteric breast massage claims have also been dismissed by Breast Cancer Network Australia (BCNA).[88] A former esoteric breast massage patient reported Universal Medicine staff told her it would prevent breast cancer by "clearing... all of men's negative energy" accumulated over her lifetime. She recalled it as "the most horrible thing I've ever had in my entire life".[19] Esoteric breast massage also claims "to heal many issues such as painful periods, polycystic ovaries, endometriosis, bloating/water retention, and pre-menstrual and menopausal symptoms".[90][75] John Dwyer from the University of NSW describes such claims as "ludicrous".[75] According to changes recorded in the web archive, those claims were erased from the esoteric breast massage website coinciding with the onset of media scrutiny in July 2012, along with assertions such as:

"The breasts are emanators of a quality of DIVINE TRUTH that begins at the heart. The heart in connection to the pubic bone chakra, which is aligned to the ovaries, brings the emanation of nurturing out for all to have".[91]

Serge Benhayon instructs his students to "try and avoid as much as possible the nipple area" and when questioned on what aspect of health is addressed by esoteric breast massage in September 2012, he stated: "Disconnection to their bodies".[37][5] A 2018 poll in the Medical Journal of Australia found that 94% of respondents agreed that doctors who promote "remedies" such as "esoteric breast massage" should be investigated.[92]

Regulatory and other issues

[edit]

The Australian Health Minister, Greg Hunt, wrote to AHPRA's CEO, Martin Fletcher, regarding "concerns for public safety in relation to the provision of certain services being provided by organisations allegedly with links to cults".

Northern Star, August 8, 2019[15][93]

Accusations of misconduct against Universal Medicine have drawn attention from the regulatory bodies; the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA) and the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA).[94][89][39][95] The NSW Office of Liquor, Gaming and Racing investigated claims of breach of Australian charitable fundraising laws by the charity the "College of Universal Medicine" and referred these to the police.[90][96] A 2018 complaint by the Friends of Science in Medicine sparked a Health Care Complaints Commission (HCCC) investigation into UM and associated non-registered practitioners.[15][93]

Prior to the TGA investigation and their withdrawal from sale UM's herbal remedies were erroneously said to "promote fire in the lungs and therefore help to dispel any dampness in the lungs" and were "good for dealing with hardening of the connective tissue especially around the chest and arms and also hardening of the vascular system".[97]

Benhayon's daughter Simone is one of the Trustees of The Sound Foundation in the UK, a second related charitable organisation that Universal Medicine called one of its "two main world headquarters".[33] The Sound Foundation was the subject of a 2013 complaint to the Charity Commission for England and Wales which found extensive irregularities and resulted in the charity being given a mandatory compliance plan.[98] It also attracted attention from a National Health Service Forum who distanced itself from the group.[99]

Universal Medicine is reported to have received a portion of AUD$709,493 federal funds to provide six public lectures and "counselling services to parents" under a Commonwealth grant scheme applied for by the YWCA. The Australian Government refused to fully release documents explaining how the funds were used, saying "YWCA raised objections... including that the information does not accurately reflect YWCA's activities" and could "have an adverse effect on the YWCA by affecting its relationships with other entities and its reputation".[72]

In 2016, 20 Universal Medicine adherents joined the Australian doctors' reform lobby group, the HPARA, en-masse causing turmoil and a split in the organisation. HPARA chair John Stokes said the UM adherents, who "initially ... all seemed quite impressive and normal," unexpectedly began turning up to meetings and attempted to take over the organisation's social media accounts and board of directors without declaring their UM connections. "Some of them behaved in ways that made me feel quite uncomfortable, where they would come into my personal space," he recalled. Stokes said there were concerns of reprisals and potential legal threats from the UM group, and that he and others expressed concern at HPARA being associated with the cult, but is now confident that no member with links to UM remains in the HPARA.[100]

An investigation by ABC News in April 2018 revealed that The University of Queensland was investigating conflicts of interest of three of its faculty who were "acolytes" advocating for Universal Medicine. Video allegedly shows four researchers, two of whom are doctors, publicly advocating UM practices. Two more of the nine are presenters for the College of Universal Medicine. John Dwyer stated that: "[They] have let the university down badly in their fervour for promoting the benefits of Universal Medicine's approach to treatments, which have no basis in science, couldn't possibly be effective, and really represent a pre-scientific approach to how the body works and interacts with God and the universe". After receiving a 12-page letter from a third-party whistleblower The Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR) raised "serious concerns" as to the conflict of interest of the authors of the UM related articles it published. The editorial director stated that: "the omission of this conflict of interest, which appears to be highly significant in this case, is a clear violation of our policies" and suggested both articles published in the JMIR should be retracted. JMIR was also "very concerned" when it was revealed that the "original results paper contained large statistical errors inflating the effect sizes" and concluded "the proposed and executed research does not provide any evidence that any Universal Medicine modalities are effective in making people healthier".[22][92] When the original peer-reviewers of the papers were made aware of the extensive conflicts of interest, they stated they would not have accepted the manuscripts had they been aware of this fact upon submission.[6]

In November 2018, Universal Medicine was compelled to cancel all their event and hire bookings with Ballina Shire Council, including the Girl to Woman Festival, only days prior to the festival being debated in council chambers. UM took this action after 1,000 people had signed a petition to have the Girl to Woman event barred from Lennox Head Cultural Centre, and also to avoid becoming embroiled in a council policy motion that adopted child-protection measures for future events and hiring "where the Council believes that provision of the service would pose a potential for child abuse".[101] Council's amended policies concerning hiring and the tightening of child-protection measures (not mentioning UM or the girl festival) were adopted, but not before UM had publicly criticised council's actions and long-term UM student and advocate Rebecca Asquith (Baldwin) appeared at the council meeting on behalf of the festival urging councillors to oppose the motion.[52][9][102][28][103][104] Council representatives said that UM education events were used as recruitment gateways, urged people to stay away from joining the group and said UM was not wanted in the area.[105]

Subsequent to this, NSW Minister for Health, Brad Hazzard, issued a directive for NSW Health to halt all dealings with Universal Medicine after UM-linked individuals and businesses were found to be involved in the annual Positive Adolescent Sexual Health (PASH) conference. The youth health initiative is backed by the NSW Department of Health and aimed at teens aged 15 years and up. Northern NSW Local Health District chief executive Wayne Jones said that UM members would be removed from the project and NSW Health would: "immediately review engagement and risks of health service involvement with Universal Medicine and discontinue any further association".[106][51] Lismore MP Thomas George (Nationals) and ALP candidates for Lismore and Ballina, Janelle Saffin and Asren Pugh, supported the directive by the Health Minister.[107] A few days earlier Ms Saffin and ALP candidate for Page Patrick Deegan had called for an inquiry into UM to ensure that no government resources go toward any organisation regarded as a 'cult', and that government departments and agencies do not endorse, encourage or support the involvement of children and young people in any such organisation. Ms Saffin said: "An inquiry [into UM] would be opportunity to clear the air and to restore faith in our local institutions". "It has taken the courage of whistle-blowers and the determination of journalists to expose the predatory practices of Universal Medicine".[108][102]

Also in November 2018 the NSW child protection agency, Family and Community Services (FACS), issued a staff directive that "no child be referred to Universal Medicine" after at least one UM aligned child protection worker was found to be incorporating UM teachings and events in the care plans of two children overseen by the department. Documents released showed an acting manager and child protection case worker endorsed the girl's involvement with UM activities including the Girl to Woman Festival and Kids in Connection. Care plans instructed that the girl "needs to be supported to maintain her connection with the teachings of Universal Medicine" and that she have "internet access to access readings and meditations from the universal medicine website". After the rogue care plans became public FACS responded that they had "referred the matter to the Office of the Children's Guardian" and "the information in the (Benhayon v Rockett) Supreme Court judgment is known to FACS and staff are taking appropriate action to ensure it has no impact on children known to FACS". UM practitioners were also reported to have attended Lismore FACS staff meetings to conduct relaxation workshops.[109][110]

Since the Benhayon v Rockett court ruling in Australia, two Church of England schools have decided to stop using the swimming pool run by Benhayon's daughter Simone, which is located at UM's UK headquarters at 'The Lighthouse' in Somerset.[16][34]

In April 2019, The Lismore Chamber of Commerce in NSW stripped business awards previously awarded to Universal Medicine after a review instigated by the new board of directors. The awards removed after a unanimous decision were: 2014 People's Choice Award, 2015 People's Choice Award, 2017 People's Choice Award, 2017 Excellence in Health Services (Highly Commended), and the 2018 Hall of Fame People's Choice Award. The Chamber said that: "any business that has engaged in any unlawful, fraudulent, misleading, deceptive or other improper misconduct should be refused entry to the business awards."[111] Benhayon claims that Universal Medicine is not liked in the NSW Northern Rivers community because, as he says: "we have standards they cannot meet".[37] UM has been accused of a "them and us" mentality that creates community divisions.[26] Senior UM members and Benhayon family members were once active on the board's of Lismore, Byron Bay and Ballina Chambers of Commerce in NSW and resigned from the Lismore Chamber due to association with UM.[112][52][113] Senior UM members have also unsuccessfully run for Liberal and National Party preselection in NSW.[81][114] In the UK Senior UM members resigned from the board of Frome Chamber of Commerce after their association with UM was reported by the BBC.[115][47]

Australian medical authorities and Samuel Kim

[edit]

Following an investigation by the NSW Medical Council in 2017 a Universal Medicine advocate and affiliated doctor, Samuel Tae-Kyu Kim, was reprimanded for referring a patient for esoteric lung massage and chakra puncture: "knowing there was insufficient evidence for their efficacy as treatments for Patient A's lung condition".[116] The physician, whose clinic is located in the Universal Medicine Clinic in Goonellabah, claimed chakra puncture is an "internationally recognised therapy", however only practised by Universal Medicine. The Council heard evidence from a Senior Specialist and thoracic physician, who stated:

Universal Medicine "affects an attitude which conventional medicine abandoned in the 19th century and this heightens the need to clearly distinguish for patients the difference between conventional medicine and Universal Medicine. Particularly as it is unclear, given it is a relatively new organisation, how Universal Medicine's training programs are accredited".[117]

The HCCC alleged Samuel Kim had withheld conventional therapy and the investigation focused on his referrals to his now wife Jasna Jugovic (esoteric lung massage) and three "Universal Medicine practitioners" Neil Ringe (chakra puncture), Serge Benhayon (spiritual healing) and Michael Serafin (non-medically trained pharmacist).[74][78] The investigating committee found Kim to lack contrition, and at times to be an unreliable witness and his evidence to be contradictory.[70] Following the enquiry, the HCCC found 5 out of 6 allegations against Kim proven, him "guilty of unsatisfactory professional conduct" (which he admits to), and concluded by placing permanent restrictions upon his practice.[70]

Kim stood down from the Australian Medical Association Queensland council in May 2018 after ABC News investigated a second case of professional misconduct where he had shared the entire medical and medication records of a patient with Serge Benhayon without the patient's knowledge. The patient had criticised Universal Medicine in the media and Kim claims he obtained the patient's verbal consent. The NSW Privacy Commissioner disagreed and found Kim had breached Health Privacy Principles, violated the patients privacy and its report said it was "unclear ... why it was necessary for Kim to provide such a summary of what appears to be Mr Martin's entire medical history to Mr Benhayon". Shaun Rudd, the AMA Queensland chairman, said the council had "a robust conflict of interest policy and AMA Queensland has full confidence in Kim's ability to serve as a councillor".[79][54] Kim stated that he was a 'student' of Universal Medicine and an honorary advisor at Benhayon's College of Universal Medicine, but had no financial interests in the organisation.[79]

Call for Parliamentary Judicial Inquiry

[edit]

In NSW Parliament in August 2019, Lismore MP Janelle Saffin called for a judicial inquiry into UM stating: "I call for an inquiry not because it is a cult, but because it has infiltrated my community, some government departments, agencies and related programs, and non-government organisations, some educational institutions, some media outlets and some business organisations." Among other things she stated that: "It is a cult that has caused the separation of families, is a wealthy commercial enterprise that has a range of subsidiary and related companies operating from Lismore and beyond, and has targeted those who speak out and bullies them in a range of ways, including directly on the streets in my hometown of Lismore and with defamation threats." She concluded by saying: "Professionals who are Universal Medicine socially harmful cult promoters in the workplace are not fit and proper professionals to be in charge of children, the sick, students and the vulnerable."[118]

The Taxation Office and the College of UM

[edit]

The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) investigated and took action against the College of Universal Medicine, after almost $600,000 in charitable donations had been collected for its "school building fund" between 2011 and 2015.[119] College director Charles Wilson had initially rejected any suggestion of impropriety.[96] The ATO found the "not for profit" college located in NSW was "not operating a school" because its courses did not qualify as "knowledge-based teaching" for tax purposes.[119][120] The College was retrospectively stripped of its deductible gift recipient (DGR) status and returned $563,282 back to donors in October 2015.

In reaching its decision the ATO also noted conflicts of interest where the College's fundraising to renovate the building, owned by Serge Benhayon, was a "potential capital benefit" to the owner in earning $80,000 a year in rent from it. It also found most donations to the building fund were not maintained separately to the College's other moneys, meaning "the safeguard of public money is threatened" and the cash could be potentially used "for other purposes".[119]

[edit]

Estate of Judith McIntyre

[edit]

In December 2015, Benhayon appeared at the Supreme Court of NSW when his sizeable inheritance from the estate of devotee Judith McIntyre was challenged by her children. The breast cancer victim's estate was estimated to be worth $1.1 million, $600,000 of which was intended for Serge Benhayon. A further gift of $800,000 was given to Benhayon by McIntyre three days after executing her will. Justice James Stevenson declined to alter the distribution of the estate and issued a ruling stating that Ms McIntyre "appears to have carefully considered how she should dispose of her estate".[121][7] Prior to her death, UM followers had established themselves as Ms McIntyre's nurse, housemate, financial planner, the witness to her will, the lawyer who drafted it and its executor.[13][37] Benhayon's solicitor acted for both the benefactor and the beneficiary.[122] In a later unrelated trial, a NSW Supreme Court jury found it was substantially true to say that Benhayon "preys on", "swindles" and "exploits cancer patients by targeting them to leave him bequests in their wills" and that he exercised "undue influence" on Ms McIntyre to inherit the bulk of her million-dollar estate.[65][1][13]

Years after the court case, Judith McIntyre's daughter Sarah released her mother's emails that were ruled inadmissible by the court in 2015.[64] Sent during the last few months of her life, they showed Benhayon coaching her dying mother on how to restrict her children's share of her fortune, where he claimed that her children were "trying to destabilise you, trying to evoke your sympathy", which was "an attack on the funds that will help The Hierarchy's work on Earth".[24][37] Benhayon also warned her against publicly revealing donations because evil spirits known as "the Dark Lodge" could "cause serious harm" to donors. Theologian and minister David Millikan says the emails "reek of coercion, they are very unseemly for a person who is in that sort of powerful position pastorally over the woman who's dying".[64][26] Shortly before her death, Judith had been persuaded by UM staff to appear in a video blaming herself for her breast cancer, saying: "I had created the disease by all my self neglect, my choices". Daughter Sarah said: "I think my mother was scared for what might happen to her in the afterlife if she didn't give him (Benhayon) the money".[37]

In June 2018, Justice McCallum, of the Supreme Court of NSW, ordered Benhayon to produce photographs and videos of workshops or sessions that relate to the technique of "Deeper Femaleness" which display the "hands on" healing technique practised by Universal Medicine. He was also ordered to produce a list of donations received, tax returns and other financial statements. This pre-trial ruling came as part of the defamation case in which Benhayon attempted to sue blogger, Esther Rockett, for defamation.[58][83]

Benhayon v Rockett Defamation Trial

[edit]

Under cross-examination ... Mr Benhayon had referred to spirits - which he could sense rather than see - being in the courtroom as he gave his evidence. However, he refused the barrister's repeated requests for him to count the spirits, saying he could not break the rule of his soul.

Australian Associated Press, October 15, 2018[11]

Benhayon unsuccessfully sued blogger Esther Rockett for defamation in the Supreme Court of NSW between 2015 and 2018. He claimed social media posts she had made portrayed him as: delusional, dishonest, a sexual predator and the leader of a "socially harmful cult". Rockett had described Benhayon as a "sleazebag guru" and accused him of performing a "sleazy ovarian reading" on her during a treatment session, inappropriately touching her, and engaging in inappropriate conduct towards women. Rockett - a religious studies graduate who studied cults, New Age and eastern religions - argued the defences of truth and honest opinion in connection to her social media postings.[123][10][26] In court Benhayon claimed these portrayals made him feel "raped", saying; "The attempt to demolish my reputation ... you feel raped, you feel you have been stripped".[124] Later he stated that he takes the subject of rape very seriously.[125]

During the 7-week trial, which began in September 2018, Benhayon described himself as a "teacher and practitioner" and also a "business owner". He said his teachings, which are offered as courses, were derived "from the tradition known as the ageless wisdom". He claimed the ageless wisdom had a "very strong lineage that includes the divine messengers", including Hermes, Plato, Pythagoras, Jesus and Muhammad. He told the court that he "had an understanding", which was stronger than a belief, that in one of his many past lives he was Leonardo da Vinci in addition to Pythagoras.[123][2][31] Benhayon told Ms Rockett's barrister, Mr Molomby QC, that he could sense discarnate spirits in the courtroom who were nine feet tall, had no feet, and a "crevasse" where the nose was meant to be. He declined to count them and denied this was because he couldn't really feel their presence, saying "I could [count] if I wanted to but it's not something I practise and it's not something I'm allowed to do".[31][2] Under cross-examination, Benhayon also stated that people who abused their authority - such as dictators and corrupt politicians - are reincarnated as disabled children. He agreed that during a Sacred Esoteric Healing course - level 1, that he had said that the Roman emperor Nero continues to reincarnate as an autistic child, while other authority abusers reincarnate as children with Down syndrome or other disabilities.[126]

The four-person jury completed answers to 58 pages of questions, finding in Ms Rockett's favour and against Mr Benhayon. They found it was substantially true to say he led a "socially harmful cult", made "bogus healing claims", "intentionally indecently touched" her and a number of other clients, and as Ms Rockett claimed, that there were "reasonable grounds to believe" Mr Benhayon intentionally sexually preyed upon her and other clients during treatment sessions. It was also found substantially true to say Mr Benhayon "had an "indecent interest in young girls as young as ten whom he causes to stay at his house unaccompanied", "is guilty of inappropriate behaviour with children" and "is dishonest".[127][10][65][128][68]

The jury found the imputations that he "vilifies people with disabilities", "exploits cancer patients by targeting them to leave him bequests in their wills", "dishonestly promotes fraudulent ideas of karma for self-gain", "denigrates life and glorifies death" and "is a hypocrite because his Esoteric Healing has death as its goal" were also substantially true.[112][1][11][65][128] The Northern Star also reported further findings of substantial truth including that "Serge Benhayon engages in inappropriate conduct towards women", "instructed students at Universal Medicine training workshops to touch the genitals of victims of sexual assault", "has engaged in bullying to stop Esther Rockett exposing that he is guilty of inappropriate behaviour with children" and "is not a fit person to hold a Working with Children Certificate".[65][104][68]

The jury found imputations that Benhayon was "delusional", had "a propensity to touch girls inappropriately", "groped the genitals of various women under the guise of treating them" or "instilled fear and guilt in children to get them to do his bidding" were not substantially true, instead they were covered by Rockett's defences of honest opinion and qualified privilege.[10][128][129] Serge Benhayon has denied all allegations of wrongdoing.[28]

The judge declared that Benhayon's failure to accept a settlement offer made early in the proceedings by the defendant was unreasonable, and was quoted as saying that the "unreasonableness of the plaintiff's refusal to accept the offer is illustrated by the apparent appetite for public humiliation of the defendant", and ordered him to pay Rockett's legal costs on an indemnity basis - a higher rate than usually applies.[130][131] Benhayon had to pay around $1.2 million to Rockett.[132] Benhayon's Sydney barristers were not criticised for their handling of the case and concluded by informing the court that Benhayon "accepts the analysis of the jury's verdict".[127][133]

In addition, during final hearings, Justice Lonergan criticised Benhayon's Mullumbimby-based lawyers Universal Law, calling solicitor Paula Fletcher's 31-page legal letter sent to the defendant on the day of Rockett's father's funeral "disgraceful" and "demeaning", saying it contained "personal insults" that were "at best, unprofessional and most discourteous" and "at worst, bullying and harassment".[134][135] Lonergan added "there is no place for any such personal remarks and insults in any professional correspondence in legal proceedings" and that the letter "suggests that the solicitor who authored them had a lack of independence from, or objectivity about, the litigation".[136][131] Fletcher's daughter was Benhayon's son's first wife. The judge also commented on other legal demands and machinations from Universal Medicine's legal team regarding a concurrent defamation trial taken out against Rockett in Queensland calling lawyer's actions: "completely preposterous" and "harassment and unreasonable".[133][134][137] Fletcher also represented UM members and Benhayon associates, Caroline Raphael and the self-"renowned" Ray Karam in those proceedings in the Brisbane District Court. That case was dismissed.[138][136][114] The judge referred Fletcher to the NSW Legal Services Commissioner for alleged unsatisfactory professional conduct or professional misconduct.[132][122][139]

Esther Rockett was bankrupted and made homeless by legal actions initiated by Benhayon and his two associates Raphael and Karam.[132][127] In September 2019, Benhayon and seven other UM members published online retractions and apologies for articles written about Rockett and removed the offending online articles. The apologies were published over three UM websites by authors Simon Asquith, Rachel Hall and Serge Benhayon, and by website administrators Alison Greig, Jonathan Baldwin, Desiree Delaloye, Ray Karam and Isabella Benhayon.[140]

Failed attempts to have UM critic criminally charged

[edit]

The ABC reported that in 2015, Eric Walsh a UM member and South Australian (SA) police Sergeant, had coached 30 other UM adherents in attempts to have UM critic Esther Rockett criminally charged by making complaints to the Australian Cybercrime Online Reporting Network (ACORN) and NSW police. The ABC obtained exchanged messages and emails, including 800 and 900 word documents from Walsh directing UM complainants on how to file police reports and pressure a Byron Bay detective. Walsh also sought advice from his SA police colleagues on ways to silence online criticism of UM. Serge Benhayon had encouraged his actions, responding: "This is Gold, Eric... Let's make Esther... 'famous' with the police". The extensive six month bid to have Rockett charged, failed with NSW police and ACORN finding the claims, including inciting violence, were baseless. Walsh is an active UM devotee attending UM retreats and promoting the UM men's group Unfolding Men.[141][142]

UK child protection court case

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In January 2020, Judge James Meston QC ruled that a mother must make "an immediate and definitive break" from "Universal Medicine... a cult with some potentially harmful and sinister elements" or face losing custody of her daughter. He also found evidence put forward by the father "relating to the harmful and potentially harmful influence and effect of Universal Medicine to be compelling." The ruling, that the mother should "give formal, clear and specific undertakings" to the court that she would disassociate herself and her child "from Universal Medicine and from its specific practices" was appealed by the child's father. In May 2020, three senior judges allowed the appeal, saying the girl "must be distanced entirely from Universal Medicine" and that the mother's involvement with the cult is a "pervasive source of ongoing harm" to the young girl. Lord Justice Peter Jackson, sitting with Lord Justice McCombe and Lady Justice King, said: "Shared care can therefore only continue if the mother makes an immediate and definitive break from the organisation. Otherwise Lara (not the child's real name) should move to live with her father full time and have supervised contact with her mother."[143][144][145]

In July 2020, the mother lost custody of her daughter after failing to make a "full-hearted" break from the cult and its "harmful teachings and beliefs". The court ruled that her involvement with the group was a "source of ongoing harm" to the child.[14][146]

Other privacy and confidentiality issues

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An ex-patient and HCCC complainant, who was vilified on Universal Medicine websites said the organisation accuses "everyone else of cyberbullying while embarking on a systematic, online pack hunt". Numerous students of the organisation unknown to the complainant have openly disputed her medical conditions online. Benhayon has defended the group's right to do so.[71][8]

The former Queensland mental health commissioner was scathing of Universal Medicine after the UM "Facts Team" breached privacy and published an ex-UM client's full name, image and schizophrenia diagnosis online after he criticised them. Prior to the outing in 2018 the man had been anonymous. The former commissioner Lesley van Schoubroeck said:

it is "entirely inappropriate for any organisation, particularly one purporting to be a health organisation, to publicly reveal identifying information of anyone's diagnosis, be it mental health or physical health" and "people with schizophrenia suffer stigma and discrimination in the workplace and in the community".[54]

When interviewed by the ABC the ex-client expressed concern about his future job prospects owing to the privacy breach.[54]

Criticism removed from Google searches

[edit]

Universal Medicine uses the services of private investigations firm Phoenix Global for online reputation management.[8][43][147] Benhayon says he has nothing to hide and claims the print media has printed "scurrilous lies" and "that the false allegations are nothing but an orchestrated vindictive attack".[9][148][48] He and his associates had submitted numerous legal complaints to Google Australia to remove links to Internet news articles, websites or blogs that might question or criticise UM.[44][122] Google Australia reportedly acted on complaints about more than 15 independent websites, as well as reports from seven news organisations.[43][149] According to a report in The Daily Telegraph, 36 blogs had been removed. Links to television news reports, ABC radio reports and newspaper articles critical of Universal Medicine had also been removed from Google search results.[8][149] According to the affected parties, Google undertook the removals without court orders or notifying publishers.[122][44]

Subsidiary and affiliated companies and organisations

[edit]

Universal Medicine comprises a number of companies and organisations based in Australia and the UK.

  • All Rise Say No to Cyber Abuse PRI/LBG/NSC (UK)
  • Ballina Men's Circle
  • College of Universal Medicine[119][79] (Aus registered charity)
  • EPA EU/UK (Esoteric Practitioners Association)
  • Esoteric Practitioners Association Pty Ltd[70][81]
  • Esoteric Women's Health Pty Ltd[28]
  • Evolve College (formerly Australian College of Massage)
  • Fabic Pty Ltd[4][150]
  • Featherlight Productions
  • Fiery Investments Pty Ltd, Fiery Impulses Pty Ltd[86]
  • Foundational Breast Care Ltd
  • Gentle Rhythms[151]
  • Glorious Music[41][109]
  • Innermost Beauty
  • Kids in Connection[110]
  • Living Medicine[51]
  • Love Camp
  • Real Media Real Change Pty Ltd[42][51]
  • Simple Living Global
  • Sound Foundation Community Care[33][129] (UK registered charity)
  • Spherical Living Ltd (UK)[33][129]
  • Teachers are Gold[152]
  • The Co-Creative
  • The Girl to Woman Festival[110][53][102]
  • The Girl to Woman Project[101]
  • Total Health 'From Inside Out' Pty Ltd
  • True Movement[152]
  • UM Cold Storage & Warehousing
  • Unfolding Men[141]
  • UniMed Brisbane Pty Ltd[150]
  • UniMed Living[6]
  • UniMed Perth
  • UniMed Publishing
  • Universal Healing Symbols
  • Universal Law[130][131][138]
  • Universal Medicine Deutschland, Köln
  • Universal Medicine Pty Ltd
  • Universal Medicine/The Universal Family (Discretionary) Trust
  • Universal Medicine UK Ltd[33][153][17]
  • Von Innen Heilen, Psychotherapie & Massagetherapie, Sprötze (Hamburg)
  • 'Women in Livingness' Magazine[154]

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Universal Medicine is an Australian-based esoteric organization founded in late 1999 by Serge Benhayon, presenting itself as a complementary healing clinic that applies holistic modalities rooted in ancient wisdom to address energetic causes of illness and promote self-loving lifestyle choices. The group offers workshops, lectures, retreats, and treatments including esoteric healing, yoga, and bodywork through affiliated practitioners worldwide, emphasizing principles such as energetic integrity and The Way of the Livingness—a path purportedly drawn from esoteric philosophy to foster inner harmony and brotherhood. Despite its self-description as supportive of conventional medicine, Universal Medicine has encountered substantial regulatory and legal challenges, including investigations into practitioners for unproven therapies and associations with professional misconduct among affiliated health professionals. In defamation proceedings, a New South Wales court ruled in 2018 that the organization constitutes a socially harmful cult, with Benhayon deemed a charlatan who exploited vulnerable individuals, including through financial solicitations from followers facing serious illnesses. A jury in the same case affirmed predatory behavior toward a cancer patient who donated over A$1.4 million before her death; her estate's bequest to Benhayon faced an unsuccessful family provision challenge by her children, the court rejecting claims of inadequate provision and affirming the deceased's testamentary capacity, as decided in McIntyre v O’Regan NSWSC 1985. These determinations, upheld in subsequent rulings, highlight systemic concerns over influence, doctrinal claims linking disabilities to karma or past-life sins, and the receipt of public funds via linked entities for disability services.

History

Founding and Early Years

Serge Benhayon, born in 1964 and originally from Uruguay before relocating to Australia, founded Universal Medicine in late 1999 in northern New South Wales. Prior to this, Benhayon had worked as a tennis coach, including as a junior coach on the north coast of New South Wales, with no formal background in healthcare or medicine. He has stated that the organization's inception stemmed from a personal "re-connection" or awakening to esoteric principles in early to mid-1999, initiated through energy-based healing sessions and an impulse toward ancient wisdom traditions. From its outset, Universal Medicine emphasized complementary therapies rooted in esoteric concepts, including the role of energy in health and the identification of emotional and energetic factors as primary causes of illness. Initial activities centered on presentations, workshops, and clinic-based healing modalities, with Benhayon establishing "The Way of the Livingness" as a core philosophy promoting self-responsibility and energetic awareness. Operations began modestly in a single practice room in Alstonville, New South Wales, focusing on treatments delivered by Benhayon and early collaborators. By the early 2000s, the group's activities had expanded to include training for allied health practitioners, such as physiotherapists, in Universal Medicine's techniques, and outreach to Europe for seminars and treatments. The organization positioned itself as reviving "ageless wisdom" for modern wellness, with Benhayon conducting extensive hands-on work and authoring initial materials on its principles. This period marked the foundational development of its therapy modalities, which grew from Benhayon's personal claims of intuitive insight rather than empirical or scientific validation.

Expansion and Global Reach

Universal Medicine originated in the Northern Rivers region of New South Wales, Australia, where Serge Benhayon established the organization in 1999, initially focusing on local seminars and healing modalities. By the early 2000s, it expanded its offerings to include annual retreats presented by Benhayon, which drew participants from beyond Australia and facilitated international engagement. The group's global footprint grew through structured events and digital dissemination, with retreats held annually in Australia, the United Kingdom, and Vietnam, emphasizing esoteric principles and personal development over five-day programs. Webcasting technology enabled presentations to reach 77 host sites across 21 countries, accommodating hundreds of attendees per event via local student-hosted gatherings. This model supported the training and accreditation of practitioners offering therapies like esoteric massage, contributing to a network of over 12 registered modalities delivered internationally. Further outreach occurred via online resources, including free downloadable meditations and teachings on health and energy, accessible worldwide through the organization's website. Content production involved more than 250 volunteers globally, sustaining publications and media that promoted "The Way of the Livingness" to an international audience. While primarily event-driven, the expansion relied on word-of-mouth among adherents rather than formal branches, with activities centered in Australia but extending influence through traveling presentations and remote participation.

Founder and Leadership

Background of Serge Benhayon

Serge Benhayon was born in Montevideo, Uruguay, in 1964. He immigrated to Australia with his family around the age of six, settling in Sydney's Maroubra suburb. His paternal heritage included Moroccan Jews and Catholics. Benhayon holds Australian nationality and resided in New South Wales. Before establishing Universal Medicine in 1999, he worked as a tennis coach in Sydney and on the New South Wales north coast. He had no prior involvement in healthcare or formal medical training during this period. Media reports from outlets including The Sydney Morning Herald and Rolling Stone Australia have described Benhayon as having faced bankruptcy as a tennis coach prior to his pivot to esoteric teachings, though these accounts stem from journalistic investigations rather than public financial records. Such coverage often frames his career shift in the context of later controversies surrounding Universal Medicine, reflecting institutional skepticism toward alternative spiritual movements.

Central Role and Personal Claims


Serge Benhayon established Universal Medicine in late 1999 as a vehicle for disseminating esoteric healing practices and teachings rooted in what he terms the Ageless Wisdom. As the organization's founder and spiritual leader, Benhayon holds a pivotal role, personally developing all principal modalities such as Esoteric Healing and Chakra-puncture, training practitioners, and delivering presentations, workshops, and retreats across Australia, Europe, and beyond. The structure and content of Universal Medicine's activities revolve around his presentations and example, with him embodying the lifestyle known as "The Way of the Livingness" that adherents seek to emulate for health and energetic alignment.
Benhayon describes the core of his work as sacred and esoteric in nature, asserting that insights and modalities "flow through" him from a higher energetic source to address the root causes of illness, which he attributes to imbalanced human energy rather than solely physical factors. He maintains that no extraordinary claims are imposed, urging individuals to verify the truth of teachings through personal discernment and lived experience. However, Benhayon has made specific personal assertions regarding his identity and knowledge origins, including a claim of being the reincarnation of Leonardo da Vinci, publicly asserted in later years such as during a 2014 court case. In court testimony during defamation cases, including in 2014 and 2018, Benhayon has elaborated on reincarnation principles central to his worldview, stating that those who abused authority in prior lives could reincarnate with physical disabilities as a form of energetic consequence. These claims underscore his self-positioning as a seer with access to multidimensional truths, including ageless wisdom discerned through sensory means like smell for the future and taste for the past, though such assertions remain unverified by empirical standards and are presented as accessible through his guidance.

Core Beliefs and Teachings

Esoteric Foundations and Energy Concepts

Universal Medicine's esoteric foundations posit that the universe and all phenomena consist fundamentally of energy, with no solid matter existing independently; instead, physical forms are dense vibrations of energy, as interpreted through Einstein's equation E=mc², which equates mass to concentrated energy. This perspective, presented by founder Serge Benhayon since 1999, draws on principles of the Ageless Wisdom tradition, asserting that human beings are energetic entities governed by the quality of energy they allow to flow through their bodies, influencing health, behavior, and consciousness. Benhayon teaches that energy operates under laws such as the Law of Correspondence, where external conditions reflect internal energetic states, and the science of the nadis—described as 45,000 energy pathways or cells forming the human energetic structure. Central to these teachings are two distinct forms of life-force energy: prana, a lower vibrational energy derived from the physical environment and associated with vital but transient forces like food, air, and emotions, and fire (or fiery energy), a higher, divine quality originating from the soul and characterized by qualities of love, stillness, and harmony. Prana is depicted as potentially "ill" or depleting when misaligned, contributing to cycles of reactivity and decay, whereas fire represents an innate, unchanging energetic essence that supports true vitality and self-healing when consciously chosen. Benhayon claims humans originally align to fire but devolve to prana through poor energetic choices, leading to dis-ease; restoration involves discerning and arresting offending energies to allow soul-impulsed fire to predominate. This binary energetic model underpins Universal Medicine's view of illness not as isolated physical events but as manifestations of energetic imbalance, where "ill will"—choices permitting lower pranic inflows—precedes bodily symptoms. These concepts integrate esoteric philosophy with claims of empirical observation, emphasizing personal responsibility for energetic integrity: individuals must develop a "sixth sense" to feel and select energy quality, as all thoughts, actions, and interactions are impulsed by one type or the other. Universal Medicine therapies, such as Esoteric Healing modalities introduced in training programs from 2002, aim to realign the body to fire by addressing energetic blockages in tissues and nadis, complementary to conventional medicine but rooted in the assertion that true healing occurs through energetic return to one's divine origin rather than symptom suppression. Benhayon attributes these principles to ancient esoteric knowledge revived in modern terms, cautioning against conflating prana with universal life force, as it lacks the sustaining fire of soul connection.

The Way of the Livingness

The Way of the Livingness is presented by Universal Medicine as a religious way of life rooted in esoteric principles known as the Ageless Wisdom, emphasizing reconnection to one's inner essence or divinity as the foundation for personal transformation and authentic living. It redefines religion not as institutional dogma but as a deliberate connection to an individual's true nature, purportedly leading to vitality, joy, and freedom from external dependencies such as gurus or prescribed doctrines. Proponents claim it integrates into daily existence by fostering surrender to innate qualities, with answers to life's questions derived internally rather than from external sources. Teachings are disseminated through a series of periodic sermons authored by Serge Benhayon, delivered as live presentations approximately nine times per year at venues like the Hall of Ageless Wisdom in Wollongbar, Australia, and one to two times annually in the UK. Each event, lasting about one hour, involves Universal Medicine students reading selected paragraphs from the freshly composed sermon onstage, interspersed with Benhayon's live commentary, and since 2014, has incorporated music, songs, and prayers. These free public gatherings aim to introduce participants to a "Divine endless vastness" for accessing unifying wisdom, reinterpreting concepts like science (as "Divine Science") and drawing inspiration from figures such as Jesus and Einstein. Full audio recordings are available for purchase, extending the reach beyond attendees. Core principles include prioritizing self-observation and energetic awareness, with claims that illness and disharmony arise from disconnection from this essence, addressable through lifestyle alignment rather than symptomatic intervention. It draws from Theosophical traditions via influences like Alice A. Bailey, blending New Age energetics with a focus on prana or universal energy, though empirical validation of these mechanisms remains absent in peer-reviewed scientific literature. Adherents report transformative experiences, such as heightened inner vitality, but these testimonials lack independent corroboration beyond group-affiliated accounts. As an esoteric framework underpinning Universal Medicine's therapies, The Way of the Livingness positions human potential as inherently divine yet obscured by modern habits, advocating practices like mindful movement and dietary choices to restore energetic flow. Scholars classify it within new religious movements, noting its occult elements often provoke scrutiny in secular contexts like Australia, where it has been misperceived despite parallels to global esoteric traditions. No randomized controlled studies substantiate its health claims, distinguishing it from evidence-based modalities.

Perspectives on Health, Illness, and Human Potential

Universal Medicine teaches that health arises from alignment with the body's innate energetic quality, which is derived from the soul's fiery, loving essence, rather than mere absence of symptoms. According to Serge Benhayon, true health involves choosing energies that support this alignment, such as through self-care, responsible lifestyle decisions, and avoidance of self-abusive behaviors like poor diet or emotional indulgence, which introduce discordant "astral" energies. Practitioners claim that such alignment reverses lifestyle-related diseases, with reports of followers reducing chronic conditions through weight loss, addiction cessation, and energetic modalities, emphasizing personal responsibility over external interventions. Illness and disease, in Universal Medicine's framework, manifest as physical outcomes of prior energetic imbalances, where individuals allow lower-quality energies to imprint the body due to misaligned choices or disregard for one's evolutionary purpose. Benhayon asserts that disease does not originate solely in the physical realm but precedes it as an energetic disturbance, preventable or reversible by discerning and selecting higher-quality energy through daily living. This view posits illness as a marker of deviation from divine intelligence, with healing requiring integration of esoteric principles—such as self-love and oneness—with conventional medicine, rather than reliance on symptom suppression alone. Human potential, per Benhayon's presentations, centers on evolution as the core purpose of life, achieved by returning to one's multi-dimensional energetic nature and unfolding innate divinity through the "Way of the Livingness." This involves four pillars: energetic integrity, self-responsibility, alignment with universal laws, and conscious choice to evolve beyond material illusions, unlocking vast capacities equivalent to the body's latent energy (e.g., 7.8 septillion joules in an average human). Adherents describe this as liberating true empowerment, transforming suffering into harmony by living in accordance with soul-imparted wisdom, though these claims lack empirical validation beyond anecdotal reports.

Practices and Therapies

Healing Modalities and Techniques

Universal Medicine's healing modalities, developed by founder Serge Benhayon and introduced in 1999, center on esoteric principles that emphasize the manipulation of subtle energies—particularly through the nadis system, described as 45,000 energy channels or cells associated with the human spirit—to facilitate the body's self-healing. These therapies, taught to practitioners since 2002 via structured courses, are positioned as complementary to conventional medicine, focusing on addressing "ill energy" that purportedly underlies physical and emotional imbalances rather than treating symptoms directly. Practitioners claim the modalities promote reconnection with one's inner essence, stillness, and energetic integrity, drawing from concepts like the Law of Correspondence and distinctions between prana (absorbed external energy) and inner fire (soul-derived energy). Sacred Esoteric Healing, a flagship modality, involves gentle, hands-on application to various body parts while the client remains fully clothed, allowing the practitioner to discern and redirect incoming energies that are said to cause disharmony or "ill Will." The technique integrates ancient esoteric knowledge with modern anatomy, aiming to arrest disruptive energies and support the body's return to its natural state of harmony, love, and truth; sessions typically last 45-60 minutes and are available worldwide through trained practitioners. Benhayon, who claims direct impartation of this knowledge, teaches it as part of a two-year, four-level training emphasizing personal energetic responsibility. Esoteric Massage seeks to restore fluid movement in the body by gently manipulating muscles and joints to establish what is termed the "right flow of energy," countering rigidity attributed to energetic blockages. Performed by certified therapists, it differs from conventional massage by prioritizing energetic alignment over mechanical pressure, with claims of reducing tension and enhancing overall vitality. Esoteric Chakra-Puncture, akin to acupuncture but focused on the body's seven chakras as energy centers, employs fine needles at specific points to balance and unblock energetic flows, purportedly addressing root causes of illness more precisely than traditional methods. This modality, developed by Benhayon, is taught as a complementary tool for conditions linked to chakra imbalances, such as emotional or organ-related issues. Other specialized techniques include Esoteric Connective Tissue Therapy, which targets the body's connective tissues to release stored tensions and support structural healing, and Esoteric Breast Massage, a targeted bodywork session aimed at clearing energetic congestions in breast tissue to promote health and awareness. These are part of a broader suite that also incorporates meditation practices—simple, energetically attuned techniques taught since 1999 to foster inner stillness—and emerging methods like walking therapy, which observes and corrects gait patterns to align movement with energetic truth. All modalities require practitioner certification through Universal Medicine's programs and are offered at clinics or by affiliates globally.

Esoteric Breast Massage and Specialized Treatments

The Esoteric Breast Massage (EBM) constitutes a core specialized therapy within Universal Medicine, developed by founder Serge Benhayon and restricted to female practitioners administering it exclusively to female clients. The procedure entails a gentle, circular massage technique employing a proprietary cream and oil blend, applied to the peripheral heart and lymphatic regions encircling the breast tissue rather than the breasts directly, with an underlying focus on energetic interplay between the physical body and purported subtle energy fields. Universal Medicine maintains that EBM facilitates women's reconnection to innate qualities such as love, stillness, nurturing, and inner power, which the organization attributes as diminished by contemporary lifestyle factors eroding traditional feminine essence. Proponents, including trained practitioners under the affiliated Foundational Breast Care banner, assert it promotes heightened breast and bodily awareness, encouraging personal accountability for health outcomes through subtle energetic activation of surrounding tissues. Training for EBM practitioners involves structured courses emphasizing Benhayon's esoteric principles, culminating in certification via the Esoteric Practitioners Association, though specifics on duration or empirical validation of training efficacy remain undisclosed by the organization. Sessions typically last 45-60 minutes and are positioned as complementary to conventional medicine, non-diagnostic in nature, and cardio-centric in orientation. Despite these claims, independent assessments by health regulators and skeptics highlight the absence of randomized controlled trials or peer-reviewed studies demonstrating physiological or therapeutic efficacy, classifying it among unproven modalities promoted within the group. In 2017, for instance, a New South Wales doctor faced professional rebuke from the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency for referring patients to EBM without disclosing affiliations, underscoring regulatory concerns over unsubstantiated endorsements. Universal Medicine's repertoire of specialized treatments extends to other esoteric modalities, such as chakra-puncture, wherein fine needles are applied superficially to chakra points to ostensibly reconfigure the body's energetic harmony via activation of nadis—described as living energetic cells—restoring natural vitality without deep penetration akin to acupuncture. Similarly, esoteric ovary massage, a women-only practice, is taught to enhance corporeal connection, particularly to ovarian function, through tender energetic manipulation purportedly addressing relational and reproductive imbalances rooted in esoteric cosmology. Additional offerings include ovarian readings, interpretive sessions claiming to discern energetic imprints from past lives or soul states influencing current ovarian health. These interventions, like EBM, derive from Benhayon's synthesis of Ageless Wisdom teachings and energy-based healing, yet lack corroboration from biomedical research, with critics noting reliance on anecdotal testimonials over falsifiable data. No large-scale clinical trials validate their mechanisms or outcomes as of 2025, positioning them as adjunctive at best within evidence-based frameworks.

Lifestyle and Self-Care Protocols

Universal Medicine's lifestyle and self-care protocols are encapsulated in "The Way of The Livingness," a framework presented by founder Serge Benhayon as a means of living in alignment with one's "true self" through self-caring choices that purportedly influence personal health, the body, and energetic well-being. This approach emphasizes energetic integrity and self-responsibility, viewing daily actions as directly impacting physical and planetary health, with adherents encouraged to make decisions that foster self-love and avoid behaviors seen as disruptive to inner harmony. Dietary guidelines under The Way of The Livingness prioritize whole, unprocessed foods while advocating avoidance of substances believed to compromise vitality. Followers typically abstain from gluten, dairy, alcohol, caffeine, excessive sugar, and salt, opting instead for fresh produce, water, and herbal teas to support bodily purity and energetic flow. Benhayon teaches that food choices should align with self-care, rejecting stimulants and addictive items in favor of nourishing options that enhance awareness, such as fresh fruit and vegetable juices consumed regularly. Exercise and movement practices focus on gentle, consistent activity to build self-commitment and vitality, rather than intense regimens. Participants in Universal Medicine programs report incorporating regular physical activity, such as walking or Esoteric Yoga, alongside dietary adherence, leading to observed improvements in energy levels and capacity for daily tasks. The emphasis is on movement that supports inner connection, avoiding overexertion that might disrupt energetic balance. Daily self-care routines involve foundational practices like mindful breathing to reconnect with one's essence, alongside habits such as early rising, hydration, and reflective pauses to assess choices against principles of livingness. These protocols extend to broader abstinences, including tobacco and recreational drugs, with no tolerance for alcohol even in social contexts, as it is viewed as antithetical to true self-expression. Adherents attend workshops and courses, such as Livingness 1-3, to deepen these habits, integrating them into a holistic rejection of mainstream indulgences in favor of disciplined, inwardly directed living.

Organizational Structure

Affiliated Entities and Operations

Universal Medicine operates primarily as a complementary healing clinic in Goonellabah, New South Wales, Australia, offering esoteric therapies and modalities under the direct oversight of founder Serge Benhayon. The organization functions akin to a family business, with Benhayon and close relatives managing core activities including clinic services, international workshops, and practitioner development. These operations extend globally through a network of accredited practitioners who deliver treatments such as esoteric massage and counseling, coordinated via centralized training and accreditation processes. A key affiliated entity is the Esoteric Practitioners Association Pty Ltd (EPA), established as a branch of Universal Medicine to support practitioner training, accreditation, and ethical standards for its modalities. The EPA maintains an international arm, enabling practitioners in multiple countries to offer services aligned with Universal Medicine's teachings, with membership requiring adherence to specific energetic and lifestyle protocols. Another entity, the College of Universal Medicine (COUM), founded in 2011 as a charitable educational institution, focuses on disseminating Benhayon's teachings through presentations and programs aimed at fostering "energetic awareness." In 2019, the COUM was directed by Australian regulators to return approximately $600,000 in donations following court determinations regarding the group's exploitative practices. Operations emphasize self-funding through course fees, book sales, and therapy sessions, with Benhayon personally conducting retreats and lectures in locations including Australia, the UK, and Vietnam as of recent years. Publishing efforts include Benhayon's authored works, such as the "Time, Space and All of Us" trilogy, distributed to support the dissemination of esoteric principles. While no large-scale corporate subsidiaries are documented, affiliated clinics like Fabic on Australia's Gold Coast have utilized National Disability Insurance Scheme funds for behavioral therapies linked to Universal Medicine's ideology, drawing regulatory scrutiny. The structure prioritizes hierarchical loyalty to Benhayon's interpretations, with practitioners operating independently but under EPA guidelines.

Educational and Training Programs

Universal Medicine's educational and training programs are centered on esoteric principles derived from the Ageless Wisdom, emphasizing self-healing, energetic awareness, and lifestyle alignment, delivered via workshops, retreats, and structured courses. These offerings, presented by founder Serge Benhayon and affiliated practitioners, include introductory sessions on meditation—taught by Benhayon since 1999—and advanced practitioner training, primarily through in-person intensives in Australia and the United Kingdom. The flagship training is Sacred Esoteric Healing (SEH), a four-level program spanning two years, open to all without prerequisites beyond sequential completion, aimed at developing energy-based healing skills for self-application or professional practice. Level 1 consists of a 2-day introduction to foundational energy work and personal integrity; Level 2 is a 3-day intensive building advanced techniques; Level 3 spans 3 days plus 6 weeks of distance healing focused on specialized energies; and Level 4 is a 3-day exploration of "Cross Healing" and intentional energy dynamics. Training occurs in Northern Rivers, New South Wales, Australia, and Somerset, United Kingdom. Following SEH completion, participants may pursue Esoteric Body Work certifications, including 3-day intensives in Esoteric Massage (Parts 1 and 2) and Connective Tissue Therapy, which integrate hands-on modalities with energetic principles. Broader workshops, such as the Livingness series (e.g., Livingness 1 for breaking self-abusive patterns and Livingness 2 for clearing energetic imprints), and 5-day live-in retreats—held annually since 2008 with thousands of attendees—cover esoteric philosophy, psychology, medicine, and group healing practices. The College of Universal Medicine supplements these with online courses on topics like anxiousness management, relational harmony, and personal publishing, alongside a formal syllabus encompassing men's and women's health, living medicine, healthy lifestyles, and psychological well-being. These programs position healing as a daily, self-directed science rather than conventional medical education, with no accreditation from recognized health authorities noted in organizational materials.

Reception and Empirical Assessment

Reported Benefits and Follower Testimonials

Followers of Universal Medicine have reported subjective improvements in physical health, emotional well-being, and overall quality of life following engagement with its practices, such as esoteric healing modalities and lifestyle protocols. These accounts often emphasize increased vitality, reduced chronic symptoms, and enhanced self-awareness, attributed to the organization's teachings on energetic integrity and self-care. For instance, participants describe experiencing greater harmony in daily living and a deeper connection to their bodies after sessions like Sacred Esoteric Healing or chakra-puncture, claiming these interventions address underlying energetic imbalances rather than surface symptoms. Specific testimonials highlight personal transformations. A consultant surgeon in Northern Ireland, Eunice Minford, stated that Universal Medicine's approaches have informed her surgical practice, enabling closer collaboration with general practitioners and affirming the value of integrating esoteric principles with conventional medicine for patient care. Another follower recounted initial encounters with founder Serge Benhayon as revealing a level of tenderness and respect in body handling surpassing prior professional training, leading to sustained inspiration in their healing work. Practitioners with decades of experience have reported renewed efficacy in their modalities after adopting Universal Medicine techniques, citing benefits like alleviated practitioner burnout and improved client outcomes through heightened energetic awareness. Lifestyle adherents frequently testify to benefits from protocols emphasizing gentle movement, hydration, and dietary simplicity, such as reduced inflammation or enhanced mental clarity. One account described a profound shift in understanding life, crediting Serge Benhayon's presentations for fostering purposeful living and resilience against stressors. These reports, drawn from client and student experiences, consistently portray Universal Medicine's influence as catalyzing a return to innate health potential, though they remain anecdotal and unverified by independent empirical measures.

Scientific Scrutiny and Lack of Evidence

Universal Medicine's healing modalities, including esoteric breast massage, lung massage, and connective tissue therapy, claim to address conditions ranging from chronic pain to cancer through energy-based interventions, yet these assertions lack substantiation from rigorous scientific investigation. No peer-reviewed randomized controlled trials or systematic reviews have demonstrated efficacy for these therapies beyond potential placebo effects or general wellness practices like relaxation. The New South Wales Health Care Complaints Commission (HCCC) has explicitly ruled that Universal Medicine treatments promoted by affiliated practitioners are not evidence-based, highlighting risks of delaying proven medical interventions. In a 2017 determination, the HCCC found Dr. Samuel Tae-Kyu Kim guilty of unsatisfactory professional conduct for referring a patient with bronchiectasis to Universal Medicine esoteric practitioners, noting the treatments lacked scientific support, involved undisclosed conflicts of interest, and withheld conventional therapies like antibiotics. Similarly, esoteric breast massage, touted for preventing or treating breast cancer by purportedly clearing "energetic blockages," has been critiqued by oncologists as unsupported by anatomical or physiological evidence, with no clinical data validating its claims. Affiliated research efforts, such as study protocols published in journals like the Journal of Medical Internet Research for esoteric therapies in back pain or women's health, have drawn scrutiny for undisclosed ties to Universal Medicine among authors, raising concerns over bias and methodological flaws that preclude establishing causal efficacy. The University of Queensland investigated such publications in 2018 but retained them, despite expert testimony affirming "absolutely no evidence" for Serge Benhayon's techniques. A 2019 New South Wales Supreme Court jury, in the defamation case Benhayon v Rockett, determined Universal Medicine propagated false healing claims, labeling founder Serge Benhayon a charlatan exploiting vulnerable individuals, including cancer patients, without verifiable therapeutic outcomes. This verdict underscored the absence of empirical validation for modalities reliant on untestable esoteric principles rather than mechanistic, falsifiable hypotheses grounded in biology or physics. Independent medical reviews, including those from bodies like the Australian Medical Association, align with this assessment, classifying Universal Medicine practices as pseudoscientific due to reliance on anecdotal testimonials over controlled data.

Allegations of Cult Dynamics and Social Harm

Critics, including former members and family of adherents, have alleged that Universal Medicine (UM) exhibits cult-like dynamics, characterized by authoritarian control exerted by founder Serge Benhayon, who positions himself as a divinely inspired healer and reincarnation of figures such as Leonardo da Vinci. These claims gained legal validation in a 2018 New South Wales Supreme Court defamation trial (Benhayon v Rockett), where a jury unanimously found it substantially true that UM operates as a "socially harmful cult" led by Benhayon, who engaged in predatory behavior including indecently touching vulnerable clients seeking healing. The ruling highlighted UM's exploitation of cancer patients, with Benhayon convicted in the same proceedings of knowingly accepting over $185,000 in payments from a terminally ill follower under false pretenses of providing ineffective esoteric treatments. Allegations of social harm center on familial disruption and isolation tactics, where adherents are reportedly encouraged to sever ties with non-believers, leading to parental alienation and fractured relationships. For instance, in a 2021 ABC report, a woman described her mother's immersion in UM since approximately 2009, which resulted in the mother relocating to Australia, prioritizing group events over family, and effectively estranging her children through doctrinal emphasis on "energetic integrity" that deems external relationships impure. Similarly, a 2019 BBC account detailed a daughter's loss of contact with her mother after the latter adopted UM practices like "burping out bad spirits," with family communication dwindling as the mother aligned exclusively with the group's worldview, refusing conventional medical advice and social reintegration. These dynamics prompted judicial intervention in family law cases, notably the 2020 UK Court of Appeal ruling in Re S (Parental Alienation: Cult), which transferred primary custody of a child from her UM-adherent mother to her father to mitigate exposure to the group's influence. The court cited Australian precedents affirming UM's harmful nature, including Benhayon's charlatanism and the organization's vilification of disabilities as karmic retribution, which exacerbated risks of indoctrination and emotional manipulation. Ex-members have further reported financial coercion, with mandatory courses and retreats costing thousands, fostering dependency and diverting resources from dependents, though UM maintains these are voluntary self-development offerings.

Regulatory Interventions and Professional Repercussions

In 2017, the New South Wales Health Care Complaints Commission (HCCC) found respiratory physician Dr. Samuel Tae-Kyu Kim guilty of unsatisfactory professional conduct for referring two patients to Universal Medicine-affiliated practitioners without disclosing his personal connections to the group, including friendships with founder Serge Benhayon and practitioner Neil Ringe, or potential conflicts of interest. The HCCC imposed a reprimand on Kim, mandated completion of education on ethical referral practices, and placed conditions on his registration requiring peer review of referrals and disclosure of affiliations. In a subsequent 2018 incident, Kim shared a patient's confidential medical history with a Universal Medicine associate without consent, prompting further HCCC scrutiny and his resignation from the Australian Medical Association's Queensland council amid a second finding of misconduct. The Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA), which oversees national registration of health professionals, has received complaints regarding Universal Medicine affiliations but has primarily addressed them through investigations into individual practitioners rather than group-wide restrictions. Despite multiple complaints to the HCCC about Universal Medicine's treatments, such as esoteric breast massage, the commission has not issued a prohibition order against the organization's clinical activities, citing requirements for evidence of direct patient harm to unregistered providers under NSW law. Medical advocacy groups, including Friends of Science in Medicine, have urged the HCCC to exercise its powers for broader intervention, arguing that the group's promotion of unproven therapies poses public risks, though no such order has been enacted as of 2018. No deregistrations of health professionals directly linked to Universal Medicine have been publicly documented by regulatory bodies, with repercussions limited to reprimands, supervision conditions, and practice restrictions on affiliates like Kim. In 2018, Serge Benhayon, founder of Universal Medicine, initiated defamation proceedings against Esther Rockett in the Supreme Court of New South Wales over blog posts alleging he led a socially harmful cult, constituted a social menace to vulnerable individuals, and had engaged in predatory behavior toward clients including sexual impropriety and exploitation of cancer patients. A jury trial concluded on October 12, 2018, with the jury unanimously finding the imputations substantially true, including that Benhayon led a socially harmful cult, preyed upon breast cancer patient Judith McIntyre (who donated approximately $1.4 million to him and Universal Medicine entities before her death in 2012), held an indecent interest in young girls, and had sexually assaulted or indecently touched clients. The jury's verdict dismissed Benhayon's claim, validating Rockett's contextual truth defense across multiple publications from 2011 to 2014. Subsequent rulings addressed costs and conduct. On December 6, 2018, Justice Helen Wilson determined that Benhayon had pursued the litigation partly to intimidate and inflict financial and emotional harm on Rockett, a former client turned critic, rather than solely to vindicate reputation. Benhayon was ordered to pay Rockett's legal costs on an indemnity basis, estimated in excess of $1 million, with Rockett disclosing in June 2019 that Benhayon owed her approximately $630,000 after partial recovery efforts. The case, documented as Benhayon v Rockett (No 8) NSWSC 169, has been cited internationally as evidentiary support for Universal Medicine's characterization as a harmful organization. In a separate UK family law matter, Re S (Parental Alienation: Cult) EWCA Civ 568, the Court of Appeal addressed the primary care of a nine-year-old girl whose mother was deeply involved in Universal Medicine. The trial judge at first instance found Universal Medicine to be a cult exhibiting potentially harmful and sinister elements, including doctrines that pathologized normal bodily functions and discouraged conventional medical care, with the mother's adherence alienating the child from her father and exposing her to unproven esoteric practices. The father's appeal succeeded on April 29, 2020, overturning the lower court's refusal to transfer residence; the appellate court upheld the cult findings, emphasized the risks of the child's continued immersion, and ordered immediate transfer to the father's primary care to safeguard her welfare, citing evidential weight from the Australian defamation verdict. This outcome underscored judicial concerns over parental alienation facilitated by cult involvement, without direct financial or criminal penalties but prioritizing child protection.

References

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