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Photos: The Worshipers of the Valley of the Dawn (18 photos)

Every year, on May 1, worshipers of the Vale do Amanhecer spiritual community in Brazil gather for their biggest ceremony of the year, the Day of the Spiritual Indoctrinator. The religion known as Vale do Amanhecer, (or Valley of the Dawn, or, officially, Social Works of the Christian Spiritualist Order) was founded in 1959 by a charismatic woman known as Tia Neiva. Neiva had been working as a truck driver in Brasilia when she began to experience visions of spirits and extraterrestrial beings who she said imparted lessons to her. The spiritual group she began with her partner Mario Sassi grew into a community of thousands of mediums today who claim to communicate with spirits, combining doctrines and symbolism from Christianity, Judaism, Hinduism, Incan and Afro-Brazilian religions, ancient Egyptian concepts, and a belief in extraterrestrial life, intergalactic travel, and reincarnation. Members of the movement claim to have hundreds of thousands of adherents worldwide who attend temples located in Brazil, Portugal, Germany, Japan, and the United States.

Nymphs, female devotees of the Vale do Amanhecer religious community, pray during their biggest ceremony of the year at their temple complex in Vale do Amanhecer (Valley of the Dawn), a community on the outskirts of Planaltina, 50 km from the Brazilian capital, Brasilia, on May 1, 2019. ( Carl De Souza / AFP / Getty)
https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2019/05/photos-worshipers-valley-of-the-dawn/588475/