But the 69-year-old says Sikh acquaintances at the Gurdwara Sahib temple became angry at Mr Bakhshi’s attention and subsequently put a hex on him blinding him in his left eye in 2007. Mr Bakhshi said: “I realised they were putting a hex on me because he was reading some magical words and was gazing at me from across the temple. Then I started to see smoke in my eyes and it hasn’t gone away since this. You can put a hex on someone – by a telephone call or a letter. It doesn’t matter how.”

After his eyesight failed to improve, Mr Bakhshi decided to seek the help of a local faith healer last month, but after paying £400 for one session he claims the male healer demanded a further £1,200 for ‘treatment’. He said: “He gave me a small bottle of water and told me to go and throw the water outside and then take a bath and I would be cured. But nothing has happened. I still cannot see properly. The situation has gone from bad to worse.” After he got a refund, unimpressed with the service offered, Mr Bakhshi paid £230 to see another faith healer in Woolwich.
Again Mr Bakhshi requested a refund after his sight was still not restored – only to be told by the healer, another Indian man – that he had given it to charity and would not give it back. He said: “This man treated me like a child – a baby sucking milk from the breast of its mother! He kept telling me he was taking good care of me but he wasn’t. I’m very angry because I am a good man who doesn’t deserve to be treated in this way.” Mr Bakhshi has not reported either incident to the police. A spokesman from the Gurdwara Sahib temple said: “We do not believe in black magic.”
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