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Renata Josephine Leitner

Renata Josephine Leitner
Born1961
Location unknown (reportedly Austria or southern Germany)
DiedSpring 2017 (aged 55–56)
Glastonbury, Somerset, England
OccupationLecturer in comparative religion; spiritual teacher
Known forCo-founding Insoucianism
PartnerMatthias Voss (d. 2014)

Renata Josephine Leitner (1961–2017) was a lecturer in comparative religion at the University of the West of England and the co-founder of Insoucianism. Together with her partner Matthias Voss, she convened the original study group in Bristol in 2003 that would develop into the Insouciant Assembly.

Early life and academic career

Little has been publicly established about Leitner's early life. The movement's published texts identify her as a former lecturer in comparative religion at the University of the West of England, Bristol. She reportedly had extensive involvement in Western ceremonial magic and Theosophical study prior to founding the Insouciant study group.[6]

Investigative reporting by The Guardian in 2024 was unable to confirm Leitner's academic appointment beyond the period 1996–2002. The university declined to comment, citing data protection. Former colleagues interviewed for the article described her as "brilliant but increasingly eccentric" and noted that she had left the university "under unclear circumstances."[L1]

The Voss Journals

Leitner's principal legacy is the series of notebooks she kept from 2003 until shortly before her death, compiled as the Voss Journals. These notebooks form the foundational textual source for Insouciant philosophy and practice. The Journals remain unpublished in full, though extensive quotations appear throughout the movement's published works. A volume of Selected Correspondence was published by Stillwater Press in 2020 but is available only to Assembly members.[58]

Death and legacy

Leitner died in the spring of 2017. The precise circumstances and cause of death have not been publicly disclosed by the Assembly. The movement's texts describe her final journal entry, written three weeks before her death, as a key spiritual text. The entry concludes: "Do not seek the light. Become the kind of person around whom light gathers of its own accord."

Alleged extraordinary claims

Several former members of the early Bristol Circle have described Leitner, particularly in the period after 2010, as claiming or being attributed abilities beyond ordinary perception. A 2024 account by Marcus Hale, identified as one of the original seven Bristol group members, described Leitner as having "an almost uncanny ability to perceive the internal states of people around her" and stated that by the final years of her life "several of us genuinely believed she could see things—energy fields, emotional states, sometimes events at a distance—that the rest of us could not."[HW4]

The Assembly has stated that Leitner "never claimed supernatural powers" and that attributions of such powers reflect "the natural respect students feel for an exceptional teacher, not evidence of any extraordinary claim."[HW5]