In the Shadow of Enlightenment Audiobook By Sarito Carroll cover art

In the Shadow of Enlightenment

A Girl's Journey Through the Osho Rajneesh Cult

Preview

Audible Standard 30-day free trial

Try Standard free
Select 1 audiobook a month from our entire collection of titles.
Yours as long as you’re a member.
Get unlimited access to bingeable podcasts.
Standard auto renews for $8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

In the Shadow of Enlightenment

By: Sarito Carroll
Narrated by: Zoe Fletcher
Try Standard free

$8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Buy for $22.03

Buy for $22.03

In the Shadow of Enlightenment is the gripping story of Carroll’s childhood inside the Osho Rajneesh cult—one of the most controversial spiritual movements of the 20th century. While in the commune, Sarito was submerged in a world where devotion and freedom clashed with manipulation, sexual misconduct, and neglect. This was the life she knew until the movement collapsed amid scandal and criminal charges in 1985, when sixteen-year-old Sarito was thrust into a society she knew little about.

Now, decades later, after battling shame, fear, and self-doubt, Sarito breaks her silence to expose the abuse, exploitation, and disillusionment she endured in the Rajneesh community. She stands up against this formidable spiritual institution that promised liberation while concealing dark secrets behind its facade of love and joy. With raw honesty and heart-wrenching clarity, she recounts her fight to reclaim her identity, confront the community’s betrayal, and heal on her own terms. It is a powerful story of survival, resilience, courage, and hard-won freedom.

In the Shadow of Enlightenment is a profoundly moving exposé about the hidden dangers lurking behind charismatic leaders and spiritual movements. It will inspire and challenge you to question where you place your trust.

©2024 Sarito Carroll (P)2024 Sarito Carroll
Biographies & Memoirs Adventurers, Explorers & Survival Inspiring Religious Studies
All stars
Most relevant
In the Shadows of Enlightenment is a raw, powerful memoir that takes listeners through Sarito Carroll's emotional journey growing up in the Osho Rajneesh cult. The narrator brings the story to life with a compelling voice that conveys the depth of Sarito’s experiences, from the initial sense of belonging to the painful realizations that followed. This audiobook is a poignant exploration of self-discovery, healing, and the courage to face one’s past. A must-listen for anyone interested in new-age cults and the damage that exists behind the facade of "its all love and light."

What a Story!

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

Thank you Sarito for sharing your story. This book is very well written and is a powerful, heavy, interesting, and real story. It’s a must read.

Highly recommend this book

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

To anyone still impressed by gurus and larger than life spiritual teachers, give this a read on the real impact of spiritual and cultic abuse. Powerful!!!!

Essential Reading

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

This is all about the so-called Osho sex cult. Everything that takes place in this book is always between Sarito and other members of the Osho cult. The main argument is did Osho have knowledge about the sexual degeneracy and abuse going on? The bottom line is that Osho took that particular truth with him to the grave. In regards to his Osho talks they are filled with sound advice and advanced spirituality. His words and teachings still stand and he was always insulated from all his followers. It makes sense that many of his followers were corrupt and would use the place as an opportunity to advance their own interests. Perhaps it is best to give Osho the benefit of the doubt for peace of mind? Clearly the blame can be laid at the feet of the Ma's and many of Osho's followers. Osho didn't even believe in the death penalty, he believed that a murderer simply needed to be re-educated, In my opinion this is a naive take that will allow the murderer to potentially murder more: some people are completely unstable and have no place in human society. Is it so far-fetched that Bhagwan saw the best in all humanity for better or worse? This all sounds like an experiment that went wrong because Osho placed too much trust in his followers seeing all of them as advanced spiritually like himself.

Was Osho complicit or was he what he claimed to be?

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.