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Venerated Enlightened Master Beinsa Douno (vegetarian), born Peter Deunov, was a Bulgarian philosopher, prophet, and musician. Emerging in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, a period marked by social upheaval and spiritual searching in Europe, He founded the Universal White Brotherhood and offered a vision of humanity grounded in love, harmony, and conscious evolution. He believed that universal brotherhood offers the true solution to humanity’s problems. Master Beinsa Douno was born on July 11, 1864, in the village of Hadarcha (now Nikolaevka), Varna region, Bulgaria. His father was the renowned Orthodox priest The Reverend Father Konstantin Deunovski, and His mother was Dobra Atanasova Deunov. He was the third child, and since He was born on Saint Peter’s Day according to the Eastern Orthodox calendar, He was named Peter. According to a popular village story, Peter was once taken to the fields during harvest time. While the workers were harvesting under a clear sky, the boy climbed onto a sheaf and warned, “Farmers, gather the harvest; a storm is coming.” The sky was clear, and the people thought He was speaking nonsense. His warning was ignored, but His mother, Dobra, chose to trust Him and ordered the workers to stop and secure the harvest. Within an hour, just as they finished stacking the sheaves, a sudden storm with heavy rain and hail struck the fields. The harvest was saved, while the neighboring villagers, who had just been mocking them, stood in shock amidst their own ruined crops. From that day forward, the locals remembered the event as a sign of Peter’s unusual intuition and would say, “Ask the priest’s child first.” Gabriel Dushkov, a classmate of Peter Deunov in the American Methodist School, recalled His time in Svishtov: “He was a convinced teetotaler and a passionate advocate against drinking and smoking. He did not preach only with words, but persuaded others through examples and reasoning. He was a vegetarian. I remember Him as if it were today – of medium height, with thick dark hair, penetrating eyes, and a high forehead. His face was pure, almost translucent, like that of a young maiden. He was modest and quiet. But when discussions began, He would come alive, take the floor first, and speak at length. It was evident at first glance that we were facing a young man who had truly outgrown His years – full of knowledge, mature beyond His age, highly intelligent, and well-read. The teachers called Him an ‘encyclopedia,’ and to us, He was a true Sage. […]”











