Ernst Muldashev | |
Birth Date: | 1 January 1948 |
Birth Place: | Verkhne-Sermenevo, Beloretsky District, Bashkir Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, USSR |
Education: | Bashkortostan State Medical University (BSMU) |
Occupation: | surgeon ophthalmologist |
Ernst Rifgatovich Muldashev (Bashkir: Мулдашев, Эрнст Рифғәт улы; born on January 1, 1948, Verkhne-Sermenevo, Beloretsky District, Bashkir Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, USSR), Russian surgeon ophthalmologist, general director of the All-Russian Center for Ophthalmic and Plastic Surgery in the city of Ufa, author of esoteric books.
Ernst Muldashev was born on January 1, 1948, in the village of Verkhne-Sermenevo, Beloretsky District, of the Bashkir Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. He is the son of Bashkir Rifgat Iskandarovich Muldashev and Ukrainian Valentina Kirsanovna Makhini, brother of Albert Rifgatovich Muldashev and Eduard Rifgatovich Muldashev. From 1955 to 1965 Muldashev studied at the school (First Lyceum) of the city of Salavat.
From 1972 to 1982 he worked as a researcher, head of the department of reconstructive and plastic surgery at the Ufa Research Institute of Eye Diseases. From 1982 to 1988, Muldashev worked as an ophthalmologist in the eye department of Hospital No.10, MSCh OLUNPZ. From 1988 to 1990, he held the position of head of the transplant laboratory for ophthalmic surgery of MNTK "Eye Microsurgery". From 1990, he was a director of the All-Russian Center for Ophthalmic and Plastic Surgery (Ufa).[1]
He has written a number of publications, including monographs.
He has been a member of the Congress of People's Deputies in the early 90s.[2]
He married Tatyana Muldasheva.
Muldashev is an Honored Doctor of the Russian Federation, Doctor of Medical Sciences, Professor. Member of the Board of the Society of Ophthalmologists of Russia. Surgeon of the highest category, honorary consultant at the University of Louisville (USA), a member of the American Academy of Ophthalmology, a certified ophthalmologist in Mexico, a member of the International Academy of Sciences. According to him, he has published more than 400 scientific works, conducts 600-800 eye operations annually.[3]
Muldashev commercialized surgical techniques using a material made from cartilage from deceased donors he calls Alloplant. He claims this material, surgically implanted in the eye, will help cure or stop the progression of a vast array of diseases and conditions, such as retinitis pigmentosa, diabetic retinopathy, age-related macular degeneration, optic nerve atrophy, glaucoma, progressive myopia and retinopathy of prematurity.[4] [5] [6] Expert ophthalmologists contacted by the media say scientific literature include no studies validating Muldashev's claims about Alloplant.[6]
Muldashev is the author of books on mysticism, presenting pseudo-scientific theories relating to the origin of humanity. He has also presented many other theories in his book "Where do we come from" about the importance of the facial features around the eye.
The gene pool of mankind, according to Muldashev, is a hypothetical formation, which is a collection of somati caves located mainly in the Himalayas, in which people of previous civilizations are in a "preserved" state (somati or samadhi).
To finally unravel the secrets of this mystical country of Shambhala, an expedition of Russian scientists and climbers went to Tibet. The participants of the expedition RATT (Russian Adventure Travel Team), organized by the Russian Geographical Society with the support of Komsomolskaya Pravda, examined the area of Mount Kailash, under which an underground country is supposedly located. Scientists went up to the almost inaccessible “door to Shambhala”, examined the “stone laser”, and visited the mysterious “Death Valley”.