Australian Women’s Weekly NZ

SLAVE TO THE GURU

When India Oxenberg talks about having her pelvic skin branded to indoctrinate her into a sex-slave ring, what she remembers most is the smell. As the granddaughter of Princess Elizabeth of the former Yugoslavia, and daughter of actress Catherine Oxenberg, India does not seem the type to be enticed into a cult. Yet she was the first among her group to voluntarily remove her clothes and lie down while her “sisters” gripped her ankles and wrists so a symbol could be seared into her skin one wintry afternoon in 2016.

India recalls how the smoky, singed scent of burning flesh seeped into every room of the suburban house in Albany, New York, where the ceremony took place, and how she convulsed as the red-hot needle approached her hipbone. But she endured the pain because, at the time, she believed she was doing something brave and strong.

A rising television star with a blonde bob, Allison Mack stood nearby reading incantations as India was admitted into a group known as DOS, which stands for Dominus Obsequious Sororium, or “master over slave”.

“I saw it as a positive thing,” India, 29, says now. “When [Allison] invited me into DOS, I felt special and singled out. It was like a sorority. A secret sorority. I liked the idea of a sisterhood. We live in a world where there aren’t a lot of spaces for women to learn and feel safe. I thought that this was going to be that for me,” she explains in her documentary, Seduced: Inside the NXIVM Cult.

With her royal blood and Orange County upbringing, India’s pedigree made her the ultimate prize for a cult that promises success

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Australian Women’s Weekly NZ

Australian Women’s Weekly NZ4 min read
Coming Up Roses
This is joy in its purest form: Silky cool and velvety to touch, the billowing Jurlique Rose sits feather light across my cupped palms, a sumptuous burst of pale pink petals that beckons, not just with its beauty, but with its almighty sweet scent. I
Australian Women’s Weekly NZ5 min read
Yes, Menopause Brain Does Exist
Along with sweating and poor sleep often comes something many menopausal women don’t anticipate: Brain fog. Few things are more disconcerting than when your brain feels like mush rather than the sharp and useful tool you’ve been used to, or when your
Australian Women’s Weekly NZ4 min read
From One Mum To Another
I was on my way to pick up my 10-year-old daughter Freya from a birthday party when I received the news I might have cancer. I said to the doctor, “I don’t have time for cancer,” and he said, “Well, you’re going to have to make a bit of time.” I was

Related Books & Audiobooks