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In 2011, the former Dynasty actor Catherine Oxenberg and her 19-year-old daughter India took a course from the self-help organisation Nxivm (pronounced Nexium). It was a pivotal experience for India as she had been struggling to find a career and Nxivm seemed to offer her purpose. She ended up working for them as a coach and moving away from her mother. What India didn’t know was that Nxivm was in fact a dangerous cult. Eventually she would be trapped in a secret subgroup, which was really a sex-trafficking ring operated by the cult leader, Keith Raniere. Ray Holman, the Trinidadian master of the steelpan, describes how he revolutionised steelpan performance. (This interview was first broadcast in 2016) Shaku Myoshin isn't your average Buddhist monk. For a start, he has long hair, tied in a ponytail. But that's not the reason he's called the 'Funky Monk'. He goes by the name of Tatsumi and is known as Japan's beatboxing monk. (This interview was first broadcast in 2017) The interview with India and Catherine Oxenberg is part one of Cult Behaviour, a mini-series from Outlook exploring how a cult can manipulate a person’s sense of reality, and what it can take to break free. Part two, which explores the next stage of India and Catherine’s story is available here: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/w3ct1jwb. Or you can listen to both these episodes combined on the Outlook podcast. Picture: Catherine and India Oxenberg, with Catherine's mother Princess Elizabeth of Yugoslavia on the left Credit: Courtesy Starz Entertainment
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