Dzhuna Davitashvili

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Dzhuna Davitashvili

Birth
Krasnodar Krai, Russia
Death
8 Jun 2015 (aged 65)
Moscow Federal City, Russia
Burial
Moscow, Moscow Federal City, Russia GPS-Latitude: 55.7688417, Longitude: 37.5511583
Plot
12
Memorial ID
View Source
Russian healer and mystic, Eugenia "Juna" Yuvashevna Davitashvili (sometimes known as Yevgenia Dzhuna Davitashvili), whose psychic powers were sought out by ex-Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev, American movie star Robert de Niro, along with thousands of average people. Dzhuna claimed to work with biofields. She would alter them into a healthy configuration to prompt good health and healing.

Born Evgenia Sardis of Assyrian descent, but known most of her life as Juna, the healer claimed to be able to cure cancer, knit broken bodies and prolong life beyond 100 years. She rose to prominence in the 1970s, and was actively consulted by member of the Soviet Georgian leadership, but was also known for her common touch and attentive treatments for ordinary citizens.

She regarded herself as a mediator or conduit between Heaven and Earth. Davitashvili began her rise to national fame in 1980, when she said she was summoned to the ailing Brezhnev's bedside after conventional medicine could help him no more.

She is also credited with having foreseen the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster when a reactor blew up at the power plant, envisioning shortly before the incident, "Fire, fire, something is exploding, people are running."

Davitashvili often dressed in her healing clothes - a short black skirt, black stockings, black blouse, yellow silk vest and a cascade of jewelry. Some referred to her as "the new Rasputin," who's hands got hot as she healed patients, even remotely, according to newspaper reports from her heyday.

As well as being a mystic, painter and poet, Davitashvili also tried her hand at Russian politics. The death of her only child Vakhtang in 2001, left her heartbroken and she lived part of the rest of her life as a recluse.

Davitashvili was born to Anna and Yuvash Sarkisov, one of six children - Georgiy, Vladimir, Emma Khinoeva, Andrey, and Aleksey. She married Igor Matvienko in 1986. An ethnic Assyrian, Juna -- or Yevgenia Yuvashevna Sardis, as she was known officially -- was born to an Iranian immigrant family residing in Russia's North Caucasus region of Krasnodar. Her parents are said to have regarded her as "something strange" even as a child.

Davitashvili rose to fame when passions for the occult grew after Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev started his liberalization reforms known as perestroika' She made her first public appearance in the late 1980s, with Russian rock musicians Igor Talkov and Andrei Derzhavin, and 'was rumoured to have treated film stars from Hollywood and Europe'. She disappeared from the public eye after the death of her son, Vakhtang Davitashvili, in 2001.

Juna Davitashvili was buried in Moscow's Vagankovskoye Cemetery at a ceremony attended by 300 people. She was reportedly laid to rest in a military uniform she had ordered for herself for the celebrations of the 70th anniversary of the defeat of Nazi Germany, but had no chance to wear because of illness in her finals days. (Source: intellinews.com).

The best resource for anyone interested in Evgenia "Djuna" Davitashvili is "Psychic Warfare: Threat or illusion?" by Martin Ebon, McGraw-Hill Publishers, 1983. (Chapter 13 - Dzhuna The Healer).
Russian healer and mystic, Eugenia "Juna" Yuvashevna Davitashvili (sometimes known as Yevgenia Dzhuna Davitashvili), whose psychic powers were sought out by ex-Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev, American movie star Robert de Niro, along with thousands of average people. Dzhuna claimed to work with biofields. She would alter them into a healthy configuration to prompt good health and healing.

Born Evgenia Sardis of Assyrian descent, but known most of her life as Juna, the healer claimed to be able to cure cancer, knit broken bodies and prolong life beyond 100 years. She rose to prominence in the 1970s, and was actively consulted by member of the Soviet Georgian leadership, but was also known for her common touch and attentive treatments for ordinary citizens.

She regarded herself as a mediator or conduit between Heaven and Earth. Davitashvili began her rise to national fame in 1980, when she said she was summoned to the ailing Brezhnev's bedside after conventional medicine could help him no more.

She is also credited with having foreseen the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster when a reactor blew up at the power plant, envisioning shortly before the incident, "Fire, fire, something is exploding, people are running."

Davitashvili often dressed in her healing clothes - a short black skirt, black stockings, black blouse, yellow silk vest and a cascade of jewelry. Some referred to her as "the new Rasputin," who's hands got hot as she healed patients, even remotely, according to newspaper reports from her heyday.

As well as being a mystic, painter and poet, Davitashvili also tried her hand at Russian politics. The death of her only child Vakhtang in 2001, left her heartbroken and she lived part of the rest of her life as a recluse.

Davitashvili was born to Anna and Yuvash Sarkisov, one of six children - Georgiy, Vladimir, Emma Khinoeva, Andrey, and Aleksey. She married Igor Matvienko in 1986. An ethnic Assyrian, Juna -- or Yevgenia Yuvashevna Sardis, as she was known officially -- was born to an Iranian immigrant family residing in Russia's North Caucasus region of Krasnodar. Her parents are said to have regarded her as "something strange" even as a child.

Davitashvili rose to fame when passions for the occult grew after Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev started his liberalization reforms known as perestroika' She made her first public appearance in the late 1980s, with Russian rock musicians Igor Talkov and Andrei Derzhavin, and 'was rumoured to have treated film stars from Hollywood and Europe'. She disappeared from the public eye after the death of her son, Vakhtang Davitashvili, in 2001.

Juna Davitashvili was buried in Moscow's Vagankovskoye Cemetery at a ceremony attended by 300 people. She was reportedly laid to rest in a military uniform she had ordered for herself for the celebrations of the 70th anniversary of the defeat of Nazi Germany, but had no chance to wear because of illness in her finals days. (Source: intellinews.com).

The best resource for anyone interested in Evgenia "Djuna" Davitashvili is "Psychic Warfare: Threat or illusion?" by Martin Ebon, McGraw-Hill Publishers, 1983. (Chapter 13 - Dzhuna The Healer).