Against allopathy Alternative medicine |
Clinically unproven |
Woo-meisters |
Dolphins and Money New Age |
Cosmic concepts |
Spiritual selections |
Kabbalah water is supposedly "dynamic, living, fractal and crystalline" whatever all that means.[1] (Fractally wrong, perhaps?) It claims a connection with the Jewish Kabbalah which others deny. Basically, it appears this group, considered a cult,[2][3] buys Canadian mineral water relatively cheaply, and adds a little quantum woo.
“”The Kabbalah Centre website explained that a process called Quantum Resonance Technology "restructures the intermolecular binding of spring water".[4]
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Of course, the idea that restructuring the molecular bindings between water molecules can cure disease or do other such things is unscientific, considering that clusters of water molecules break up within picoseconds of forming.[5]
They also meditate over the water and resell it expensively.
One technique, as uncovered by the BBC,[6][7] is to get a rich desperately sick person (in this case the patient really had cancer) and promise that paying vast sums of money will help ensure a cure help improve things anyway. An undercover reporter paid £860 for water to drink, more water to pour over his stomach, magic healing books in Aramaic, unspecified healing tools, and a Shabbat meal.
Madonna supposedly paid close to $10,000 to get this spiritually radiant water into the central heating system of her mansion.[8] She even thinks the mystical water can solve the radiation problem at Chernobyl.[9]
The Kabbalah as practised by the Kabbalah Centre is not Judaism as regular Jews see it.[10][11]
A spokesman for the London Kabbalah Centre sparked outrage among Jews by saying the Jews brought the Holocaust on themselves by not practising Kabbalah as the Centre says it should be practised. Jews who really study the Kabbalah dismiss the Kabbalah Centre as opportunistic and obscene.[12]