The relatives of Chechen Khalimat Taramova, whose abduction from a Makhachkala shelter became national news, said that she was “possessed by genies.” If there are jinn, then they need to be driven out.
For these purposes, there is a special Center for Islamic Medicine in Chechnya; the head physician there is the imam of the main mosque of the republic. Clients are accepted free of charge, services include bloodletting, reading the Koran to identify jinn, and exorcism.
You can contact the Center with any problem, from alcoholism and schizophrenia to cancer, but it is best known for expelling genies and fighting “witches” and “magicians,” as well as for re-educating “disobedient wives” such as Khalimat Taramova. You can also resort to exorcism in Moscow: the Center for Islamic Medicine has a branch in the capital.
The center is financed by the Akhmat Kadyrov Foundation and can receive about a billion rubles a year. The head of the center, Daud Selmurzaev, judging by his declaration, buys expensive cars with modest official incomes, and is also constantly photographed with Ramzan Kadyrov and calls his children nephews.
The Dossier Center tells how jinn are expelled in Chechnya.
https://dossier.center/besogon/
In the summer of 2021, the Prosecutor General’s Office blocked our website. Now the Dossier Center’s investigations in Russia can only be read via VPN or on a mirror:
How exorcists make money by expelling jinn from the inhabitants of Chechnya
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