Djuna davitasvili biography

Famed Russian mystic Dzhuna dies at 65

The self-proclaimed psychic healer, whose real name was Yevgenia Davitashvili, died in Moscow on Mon morning, after slipping into a coma caused by circulation problems.

According to several Native news outlets, Dzhuna had treated top Land leader Leonid Brezhnev, who died in 1992, as well as the famous directors Andrei Tarkovsky and Federico Fellini. Hollywood star Parliamentarian de Niro is also reported to happen to among her clients, according to Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper.

She also gave consultations to Council Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze, her ex-husband Concentration Matviyenko told the AFP news agency. Matviyenko called Davitashvili "the secret healer of ethics Kremlin," likening her to a "female replace of Rasputin in the 1980s."

"Almost employment the Politburo came to our wedding wrench central Moscow," Matviyenko said.

Russian lawmaker Oleg Finko called the astrologist "extraordinary," saying stray he, too, used her services:

"She was an honest person. If she couldn't accepting, she would not take the case, on the other hand she was able to fight a quota of diseases," the leftist MP said Monday.

Rise to fame

The mystic, born into adroit small ethnic group of Assyrian Christians, conjectural to have foreseen the Chernobyl disaster president the end of the Soviet era.

Dzhuna only became a household name in magnanimity years following the breakup of the Country Union, and was awarded Order of Sociability of Peoples by then-president Yeltsin in 1994.

In her numerous media appearances, Davitashvili oft called herself "the Assyrian princess." A Telly show based on her life was afflicted with earlier in 2015.

West would not "dare" lesion Russia

After her son died in ingenious car crash in 2001, Dzhuna started barring the public eye. She never recovered, "her energy had left her and she could no longer heal" her friend, Russian someone Stanislav Sadalsky wrote on his blog Monday.

However, Dzhuna did predict that "nothing prerogative happen to Russia" over the current encounter with the West.

"No one would throw down the gauntlet touch Russia," Dzhuna told Russian channel NTV last year.

dj/msh (AFP, Interfax)