It was announced in a CBC
press release to be a partnership with Bollywood, who is co-financing
the production. Expect them to go before cameras in July 2012 and be
available for broadcast on CBC’s 2012/2013 season. Sources close to CBC
brass expect more to join this cast soon but I am making this up as I
go along.
Who is the Swami Swindler? In October 2007 such a character became
real in Etobicoke, Ontario. Imagine being a cab driver, or a car
mechanic and you are South East Asian by origin. You want insight for
the year ahead. You look in your community newspaper and find an
advertisement, promoting Brother Roshan, a so-called spiritual healer.
You call the number, book an appointment. When you arrive at the
location and find the address to be an upscale residence, where
countless cars are parked, including a long line of clients up to the
front door.
You are last in line which is composed of people with your ethnic
heritage. Once in a while, the large, front oak door will open and
someone will exit, but there are always more people coming and standing
behind you. Finally, you get to the front door and eventually get
access to the residence. Once again, there is another long line up.
After exercising enough patience, you finally sit down with the much
sought after Brother Roshan. This spiritual healer is surprisingly young
in appearance, tells you things about yourself that no one else knows.
He makes the prediction, informing you to return with one hundred
thousand dollars in small bills, because if you do, you will win the
$21-million lottery on December 27, 2007. “Tell no one about this
prediction,” he warned. “Be quick about it too because time is passing.
Tell no one; otherwise it won’t happen at all!” You pay the Brother
Roshan his princely fee and depart. If you have money, you empty your
bank account.
If not, you over extend your mortgage, or go to a Payday Loans Center
and get into debt with a large amount of interest, all to add to your
woe. When in possession of the planned payment, you go through with the
hassle of booking an appointment with the aforementioned guru and visit
him. In due time, you pay Brother Roshan, get further instructions,
and leave. He imposes secrecy and the supplicant agrees to such a
measure.
Like clockwork, you recite a special prayer that is promised to cause
the promised win. Yes, December 27, 2007 does arrive and you win
nothing. To add to your dismay, you return to the upscale residence,
looking for an explanation, meeting others from your community, all
possessing the same complaint, including the home owner who rented out
the property. So the police are called and the mainstream media awaken
to this outrage. Countless victims come forward but the authorities
feel there could be more and the media report these concerns and dub
this culprit ‘The Swami Swindler.’ Weeks and months pass by. Finally,
the American news
agencies suggest that a Swami Swindler type of character and his
accomplice has completed the same scheme in fifteen states, before
fleeing overseas. For the record, different police forces allege the
same scam was pulled off in New Jersey in 1997; Sugar Land in 2003;
Chicago in 2004; Union City, Calif. in 2006 and, finally, at a
Mississauga home on Guildwood Way in 2007. At that time, a Canada-wide
arrest warrant was issued for Mohammed Umar Ashrafi, 43, also known as
Mohammed Roshan Zameer, 43, who police say posed as Brother Roshan, and
Latafat Ali Khan, 36, who also goes by Shair Ali Khan and acted as
Ashrafi’s assistant. ”I am asking myself how in the world I could do
this,” said one victim, Kamal Khairah, who told the media. “It has
become a joke now. I really don’t know, should I laugh or should I cry?”
If such a story would ever come to the attention of the imagination starved entertainment
outlets, it would make for an interesting show. If the CBC and
Bollywood would come together and commission myself as the screenwriter
for such a project, I would go through all the evidence, find a
commonality in all the victims’ experiences. Such a story would light up
a TV
screen, or even a movie theatre, only adding to the star power of
Russell Peters. If not, with a little instruction from a weekend
workshop, I could adapt the Swami Swindler to stage, maybe even a
Mirvish type musical, or maybe an off-Broadway production. We can make
it into a one man show, where a talent like Mr. Peters could display his
dramatic, acting skills. If Mr. Peters is not available, we can find
his half-brother, or his envious, industry rival, who would be just as
good.
I learned about the Swami Swindler when I picked up an old Toronto
Sun newspaper in a downtown Starbucks, where it was front page news. I
read it countless times. Whenever I looked up, I found I was surrounded
by people absorbed with the latest laptops, iPhones, and electric
handheld gizmo devices. All being said, the next time the Swami
Swindler comes to town, you should consider yourself forewarned!
Paul Collins, author of Mack Dunstan’s Inferno / Mystery of Everyman’s Way
Contact him on: http://www.facebook.com/#!/authorpaulcollins
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
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