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ICSA E-Newsletter (formerly AFF News Briefs)
Volume 3, Number 2, 2004
Table of Contents
New! Articles and Conference Reports
for AFF News Briefs
-
Benjamin, Elliot.
On Conversations with God
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Bussell, Harold.
Checks on Power and Authority in the New
Testament
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Hassan, Steven.
The Strategic Interaction Approach
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Kropveld, Michael.
Preventive Education: A North American
Perspective
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Langone, M. D. McMillion, A., Almendros, C.
Cultic Studies
Bibliography: 2003
-
Pelland, Marie-Andree.
French Publications on
Cultic Phenomena and Related Subjects: English Summary
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Pelland, Marie-Andree.
Recension des Écrits
Portant sur le Phénomène Sectaire et Thèmes Connexe au Cours de
l’Année 2003
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Update on AFF 2004 Conferences
Education and Research News
Livia Bardin CSR Book Review Editor
Recovery Workshop in Colorado
Conference on Sexual Abuse in the Catholic Church
Conference: Society for the Scientific Study of Religion
Conference: Society for the Study of Alternative Religious
Movements
Conference at Novosibirsk
Conference in Kiev
Chautauqua Institution Conference
Tvind Alert's Web site down because of lawsuit threat
Anita Solomon, Ph.D., gives paper at APA
Chico News and Review Profile of Dr. Janja Lalich
Lois Bernard, M.S.W., opens private practice in Asheville,
NC
Info-Cult New Acquisitions
RIP: William Chambers, Ph.D.
RIP: Eli Shapiro, M.D.
RIP: Rob Tucker
Books, Articles,
and Web Sites Brought to Our Attention
Lalich, Janja. Bounded
Choice
Moore-Emmett, Andrea. God's Brothel
Baron, Robert et al. Aberrations of Power: Leadership in
Totalist Groups
Otani, Akira. Eastern Meditative Techniques and Hypnosis: A
New Synthesis
Nova Religio – articles from vol. 7, no. 3 and vol. 8 no. 1
Psychological Research On-Line
Bishops' Seminar: The Church in Europe and New Religious
Movements
Atheism Survey
Yoga Survey
Poloma, M. M. Main Street Mystics: The Toronto Blessing and
Reviving Pentecostalism.
Saliba, J. A. Understanding New Religious Movements, 2nd Ed.
Spilka, B., Hood, R. W., Hunsberger, B., & Gorsuch, R. The
Psychology of Religion: An Empirical Approach, 3rd Ed.
Bainbridge, W. S. After the New Age.
Ownby, D. The Falun Gong in the New World
Brothers, D. Clutching at Certainty: Thoughts on the
Coercive Grip of Cult-Like Groups
Anthony D.; Robbins T.; Barrie-Anthony S. Cult and Anticult
Totalism: Reciprocal Escalation and Violence.
Introvigne, M. 'There Is No Place for Us to Go but Up': New
Religious Movements and Violence.
Boeri, M. Williams. Women After The Utopia: The Gendered
Lives of Former Cult Members.
Fisherman, S. Spiritual Identity in Israeli Religious Male
Adolescents
Otani, Akira. Eastern meditative techniques and hypnosis: A
new synthesis.
Latin American book on the Legion of Christ
Cults, Religion, and Violence
Miquelon, Nancy. "Boundaries" - reFOCUS article.
The Hare Krishna Movement: The Postcharismatic Fate of a
Religious Transplant
Campus Chaplains: Cult Training and Perceptions
Encountering New Religious Movements: A Holistic Evangelical
Approach
Newsweek Article on Faith and Healing
Group News
Court Seeks Diplomat's
Assets in Falun Gong Case
In Rural China, Religious Groups Face
Suppression
Charismatics: "A Call for
Accountability" & "The Orlando Statement"
Court upholds NXIVM ruling
Tapestry Press Release
Polygamist Ruled Abusive to Daughters
Schools Closed Over Discipline Issues
Sri Chinmoy Accused of Sexual
Exploitation
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____________________________________________________________________________________^
Last fall's deaths of Herb
Rosedale, Margaret Singer, and David Halperin—all of whom
were on AFF's board of directors (see AFF's
Obituary Index)—necessitated
a major restructuring of the board. We have reduced the
number of directors to five. Drs. John Hochman and Edward
Lottick have resigned and will continue to serve this field
in other ways. We thank them for their many contributions
to cultic studies. Dr. Arthur Dole and Carol Giambalvo
remain on the board. They are joined by Lorna Goldberg,
M.S.W., L.C.S.W., Rosanne Henry, M.A., L.P.C., and Professor
Alan Scheflin, J.D., who was elected president.
We have also appointed an
Executive Advisory Board (EAB), the members of which will
lend their opinions about various subjects before the Board
of Directors and/or the Executive Director, who edits this
newsletter (the directors are also on the EAB). During the
coming year the EAB and Executive Director will appoint
various committees and subcommittees so that our volunteer
professionals can become more active and productive in this
field. The international flavor of the EAB reflects the
internationalization that has become evident at recent AFF
conferences and that is inherent in the world wide Web,
which knows no international boundaries.
These changes were all being
planned by Herb Rosedale, even before he became ill.
However, his illness and death required that these changes
move to the top of the priority pole. That shift in
priorities explains in part why we are behind on other
activities, such as the Cultic Studies Review.
In addition to the directors,
the EAB includes: Carmen Almendros; Jose Antonio Carrobles,
Ph.D.; Dianne Casoni, Ph.D.; Linda Jayne Dubrow-Marshall,
Ph.D.; Rod Dubrow-Marshall, Ph.D.; Steve K. D. Eichel,
Ph.D.; Philip Elberg, Esq.; Jorge Erdely, Ph.D.; Josep Maria
Jansà, M.D.; Stephen A. Kent, Ph.D.; Michael Kropveld; Janja
Lalich, Ph.D.; Ronald N. Loomis; Doni Whitsett, Ph.D.,
L.C.S.W.
Biographical sketches on the EAB
and directors can be found
here.
Atlanta, Georgia (October 15-16, 2004)
"Understanding, Cults, New Religious
Movements, and Other Groups," Atlanta, Georgia, October
15-16, 2004. (Preconference workshops for ex-group members
and for families on Thursday, October 14th.
Draft
Agenda
Presenters
Facility
Information
Fax/Mail
registration form
Online
Registration
_____________________________________________________________________^
Livia Bardin CSR
Book Review Editor
Livia Bardin,
M.S.W., a psychotherapist in Washington, D.C. and author of AFF's
Coping with Cult Involvement: A Handbook for Families and Friends,
is now the book review editor for Cultic Studies Review. She
can be contacted at
LiviaBardin@aol.com.
Recovery Workshop
in Colorado
AFF conducted
another successful workshop for former group members, Friday 3:00
p.m. July 23, 2004 to Sunday 3:00 p.m. July 25, 2004, at the St.
Malo Retreat and Conference Center, Estes Park, Colorado (1 hr. NW
of Denver). These workshops are for former group members only, not
family or friends (AFF has other workshops for these persons).
Topics discussed typically include: the nature of psychological
manipulation and abuse; coping with depression and guilt; effects of
hypnosis and trance techniques; coping with feelings of anger;
coping with anxiety; decision-making; dependency issues;
reestablishing trust in yourself and others; the grieving process;
reintegration/identity issues. Nestled at the foot of Mt. Meeker in
the heart of the Rocky Mountains, the Saint Malo Center is truly a
memorable location for this workshop. It is just minutes from Estes
Park, one of Colorado's most popular mountain communities and
gateway to Rocky Mountain National Park. It is a 60-90 minute drive
from Denver.
Next year's workshop
will take place July 22-24, 2005. Interested persons may contact
AFF (P.O. Box 2265, Bonita Springs, Florida – 239-541-3081;
aff@affcultinfoserve.com) to register or obtain a workshop
flyer.
Conference on
Sexual Abuse in the Catholic Church
This conference
opens a multidisciplinary dialogue that examines the Catholic crisis
from a variety of perspectives, including those of victims, clergy,
and psychoanalysts who are experienced in theorizing about and
working clinically with sexual trauma. It examines the Catholic
crisis in a way that goes beyond sensational headlines and
reductionist explanations by providing an opportunity to view this
panorama of sexual abuse through new lenses.
When: Saturday,
November 13, 2004. Registration 8:00; Conference: 8:45 - 6:30,
including the play, "The Tricky Part," Martin Moran's 2004 Obie
Award Performance about Recovery and Healing
Where: Stern
Auditorium, Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, 5th Avenue at 100th Street
Who: Speakers
include survivors Kathy Dwyer and Mark Crawford; psychologists
expert in working with survivors of sexual abuse - Mary Gail
Frawley-O'Dea, Ph.D. (addressed United States Conference of Catholic
Bishops in Dallas 2002 on long-term consequences of sexual abuse),
Richard Gartner, Ph.D., Daniel Gensler, Ph.D. and clergy - Rev.
James Martin, SJ, Rev. Dr. Jill McNish, Rev. Dr. Laurie Ferguson.
Martin Moran is an actor and survivor of clergy abuse. His Obie
Award one-man performance is a moving tribute to recovery and
healing.
For Whom: Survivors,
mental health professionals, clergy, and the general public
Sponsored by: Trauma
Treatment Center, Manhattan Institute for Psychoanalysis, New York;
Sexual Abuse Program, William Alanson White Institute, New York.
Costs: $100 for
individuals registered by 10/15, $125 from 10/15 - 11/1; $150 after
11/1 or onsite; $75 for students and psychoanalytic candidates
registered by 11/1, $100 after 11/1 or onsite; clergy of all
denominations, members of SNAP, Male Survivor, Linkup who are unable
to pay these fees: $25 if registered by 11/1, $40 after 11/1 and
onsite.
TO REGISTER EARLY:
We will send out brochures in mid-September. However, we expect a
capacity crowd. If you would like to register before receiving a
brochure, please contact the conference at Manhattan Institute -
212-422-1221 - or email
sexbetrayalconf@aol.com.
Conference: Society
for the Scientific Study of Religion
SSSR's (Society for
the Scientific Study of Religion) annual conference will take place
October 22-24, 2004 at the Marriott Country Club Plaza, Kansas City,
Missouri. The conference theme is "Overcoming Boundaries in the
Scientific Study of Religion. For more information:
http://las.alfred.edu/~soc/SSSR/index.html. Among the many
presentations: D – 3 Deception in New Religions and in the Study
of New Religions (AASNR). Organizer and convener: Timothy
Miller, University of Kansas. Destructive Anticultism: Adapting
Misinformation and Deception about NRM Violence to a Changing
Political Climate, Stuart A. Wright, Lamar University. Anti-Christ
of the Net? Scientology Online, Brenda E. Brasher, University of
Aberdeen. Respondents: Eileen Barker, London School of Economics,
Phillip Lucas, Stetson University, Thomas Robbins, Rochester,
Minnesota. E – 3 NRMs and the New Age Is New Age
Spirituality Better Conceived as Religious Unorthodoxy?: A
Comparison between the United States and Romania, Stephen Krauss,
University of Illinois at Chicago. New Religious Movement: A Case
Study of Falun Gong’s Global Spiritual Movements, Weishan Huang, New
School University. Message in the Bottle: Voluntary Regulations
within Aura-Soma and Reiki, Jenny-Ann Brodin, Umeå University.
Networks, Nuance, and New Religions: Human Potential from Gerald
Heard to Michael Murphy, Andrea Coukos and Marion S. Goldman,
University of Oregon. I – 3 Extreme Religion. Leaving
Extreme Religious Communities, Lynn Davidman, Brown University.
Religious Movements and Collective Violence, Thomas Robbins,
Rochester, Minnesota. A Phenomenological Perspective on Encountering
Death from Bitten Religious Serpent Handlers, W. Paul Williamson,
Henderson State University, and Ralph W. Hood, Jr., University of
Tennessee at Chattanooga. Which Way Islamists? From One Islamism to
Another, Abdullah A. Gallab, Brigham Young University.
Conference: Society
for the Study of Alternative Religious Movements
Society for the
Study of Alternative Religions: 2004 Call for Papers - Deadline
February 29, 2004. The Society for the Study of Alternative
Religions is accepting paper proposals for their meeting at the 2004
annual meeting of the Evangelical Theological Society in San
Antonio, TX, November 17-19. Proposals should include: paper title,
a 100-200 word abstract, presenter's full name, institution or
ministry, and address on the abstract. They may be submitted either
in the body of an email or as an email attachment in MSWord of Word
Perfect. Proposals may also be mailed via the postal service but in
such cases need to arrive by the deadline of February 29, 2004.
Proposals or questions may be addressed to Bob Stewart at
rstewart@nobts.edu or the following address: Dr. Robert B. Stewart,
Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Theology New Orleans Baptist
Theological Seminary, 3939 Gentilly Blvd., New Orleans, LA 70126.
Conference at
Novosibirsk
An international
conference, “Totalitarian Cults and the Democratic State,” will be
conducted in Novosibirsk, Russia on November 9-11, 2004. "Where are
the borders of religious freedom? Which organizations can be
considered religious? What kind of activity may be prosecuted by the
law? Freedom of consciousness – is it a personal or corporative
right? Does a religious organization bear responsibility for the
promises, given by it to the new members? What are the reasons
according to which the religious organization can be disbanded? Is
it legal and permissible to use the terms “cult”, “destructive
cult”, and “totalitarian cult”? What a state can do in order to
protect its citizens from abuses and exploitation in organizations
calling themselves religious? Can there be introduced a criminal
responsibility for mind control and mental manipulation? Does the
USA lobby the interests of the totalitarian cults? What is the
difference between European and American view of the freedom of
consciousness? These and many other questions will be tackled by
the specialists, gathered at this conference: religiologists,
lawyers, theologians, state officials, administrators, law
enforcement officers, teachers, priests, etc. Western countries
first faced this problem more than twenty years before Russia and
the post-soviet countries. Can we use their experience? Can we learn
from their mistakes? It is not by chance that such a serious Forum
will take place in Novosibirsk – in the geographical center of
Russia, one of the largest administrative, scientific, and cultural
centers of our country." For more information: Center of Religious
Studies, Pogodinskaya st 20, bld.2 Moscow 119435 Russia, Tel./Fax:
(+7 095) 246-25-35.
Conference in Kiev
International
Scientific-Practical Conference:
“Preventive means of psychological manipulations, mind control and
development of critical thinking for youth”. This conference took
place May 27-28, 2004, Kiev,
Ukraine, at the Academy of Pedagogical Sciences of Ukraine.
Sponsoring organizations included: Public organization «Family and
Personality Protection Society», member of
F.E.C.R.I.S., Institute of Social and Political Psychology of
Academy of Pedagogical Sciences of Ukraine, Kiev City Pedagogical
University, Coordination Committee for Interchurch Aid in Ukraine,
Ukrainian Center of Political Management. Conference
tasks: "Coverage of experience in conducting events and
scientific-practical programs in psychological health, prevention of
psychological (mental) abuse, dependent states not-related to
chemical addiction and development of critical thinking for high
schools and Universities. Providing information-methodological
materials about psychological health forming, prevention of
psychological abuse and totalitarian (authoritarian) thinking for
teenagers and youth. Drawing up attention of specialists and public
society to complexity of making social-psychological and law expert
appraisal of activity with characteristics of psychological abuse,
manipulation and mind control as a result of totalitarian
(authoritarian) and destructive cults activity in Ukraine."
Chautauqua
Institution Conference
Ron Loomis organized
a conference at the Chautauqua Institution in New York this summer.
The conference was entitled, "Cults in Society: The Appeal and The
Danger." Day 1: “Cults 101, An Overview of the Cult Phenomenon”
(Ronald N. Loomis, Cult Awareness Educator and Consultant). Day 2:
“My Experiences in a Cult” (Former Member of The
Path). Day 3: “A Religious Perspective on Cults” (Dr. Ronald Burks,
Clinical Director, Wellspring Retreat and Resource Center). Day 4:
“A Mental Health Perspective on Cults” (Dr. Ronald Burks, Clinical
Director, Wellspring Retreat and Resource Center). Day 5: “What Can
We Do to Deal With Cults?” (Ronald N. Loomis, Dr. Ronald Burks,
Carmen Almendros , University of Madrid). The
Chautauqua Institution was founded in 1874 as an educational
experiment in out-of-school vacation learning. It was successful
and now hosts 7,500 people in residence on any day during a 9 week
summer season. Over 150,000 attend scheduled public events. The
beautiful Chautauqua campus, including a 5,000-seat amphitheatre and
several smaller venues, is located on a lake in the SW corner of NY
State near Jamestown, close to the borders with PA, OH and Ontario,
CA. There is a different theme for each week, featuring programs in
the Arts, including a symphony orchestra, an opera company, a ballet
company, a theatre company, a music school, a school of dance and
visual arts programs; education, including lectures, an applied
ethics program, The Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle, which
is the oldest continuous book club in America, the Young Readers
Program and special studies courses; religion, including lectures,
worship services, and youth ministry programs; recreation,
including many sports and youth activities programs; and
accommodations, including the Athenaeum Hotel, built in 1881. Some
of the most distinguished leaders in US history have been featured
at Chautauqua, including Susan B. Anthony, Franklin D. Roosevelt,
Margaret Mead, Amelia Earhart, Thurgood Marshall, Freeman Dysan,
Jane Goodall, Sandra Day O’Connor, Kurt Vonnegut and Bill Cosby.
Tvind Alert's Web
site down because of lawsuit threat
In April, we
received the following from Tvind Alert [feedback@humana-alert.com]:
Tvind Alert is still
in trouble. Following the threat of legal action by a member of
the Tvind Teachers Group, our ISP in Britain has cancelled Tvind
Alert's website and we no longer have an Internet presence.
We would therefore
like to invite all members of this newsletter mailing list to join
the Tvind Alert Forum email discussion group, to keep Tvind Alert
alive and promote discussion of what to do next, while we try to
arrange for the site to be replaced.
There are already
about 60 members of this interactive forum, ranging from journalists
who have written about Tvind, to foreign aid experts, UN officials
and people with direct experience as a volunteer or member of the
Teachers Group. Basically, people can talk to each other, swap
ideas and listen in, which makes us feel good about getting some
feedback instead of being in a void.
www.humana-alert.com as of the date of publication still says: "Tvind
Alert is temporarily unavailable because of a threat of legal action
from a member of the Teachers Group. We aim to return as quickly as
possible." Donations are requested.
Anita Solomon,
Ph.D., ABPP, gives paper at APA
"The Vulnerable
Minds: Kids involved in Cults, as Distinguished from Involvement
in Healthy Religious Beliefs and Spirituality." Presentation to APA
(American Psychological Association) Division 36 (Psychology of
Religion) Midwinter Conference. Loyola College in Baltimore, March,
2004. This paper was dedicated to Herbert L. Rosedale, Esq. and
Margaret T. Singer, Ph.D.
Chico News and
Review Does Major Story on Janja Lalich
Devanie Angel in the
Chico News and Review of 12 August, 2004 wrote a story on California
State University, Chico sociology professor, Dr. Janja Lalich.
Subtitled, "How Chico State Prof. Janja Lalich went from cult member
to author-expert," the articles explores Dr. Lalich's personal
experience in a Marxist-Leninist cult, her years of helping others
affected by groups, and the professional research that has earned
great respect from her peers in this field. The author says, "Bounded
Choice: True Believers and Charismatic Cults was released last
week by University of California Press and is poised to become a
guide for everyone from frustrated families of cult members to
scholars interested in her new theory." Dr. Lalich will take part in
a meet the author session at AFF's Atlanta conference in October.
Lois Bernard,
L.C.S.W., opens private practice in Asheville, NC
Lois Bernard,
L.C.S.W. has opened a private practice specializing in
trauma treatment of children and adults impacted by sexual and
domestic violence. 34 Maxwell Street, P.O. Box 8802, Asheville,
N.C. 28814-8802, home/office phone/fax: 828 285-0138, mobile: 828
215-8621.
Info-Cult New
Acquisitions
The most recent (June
2004) acquisitions can be found at:
NEW ACQUISITIONS.
For an integrated
list of recent and past acquisitions please go to:
SELECTED HOLDINGS
RIP: William
Chambers, Ph.D.
William Chambers,
Ph.D., died September 9, 2003 of heart problems associated with
renal failure. Dr. Chambers was the statistical expert behind the
development of AFF's Group Psychological Abuse Scale (GPA). Dr.
Chambers was teaching at the University of South Florida when Dr.
Michael Langone sought his help to analyze data collected in a
survey sent to 308 former group members. Dr. Chambers gave hundreds
of hours of his time to this project, which has spawned many other
research studies, most recently the development and testing of a
Spanish version of the GPA.
RIP: Eli Shapiro,
M.D.
Barbara Shapiro,
wife of Dr. Eli Shapiro, one of the first professionals to write
about problems associated with cultic groups, told us that her
husband died in late 2003. Barbara and Eli Shapiro have been
long-time supporters of AFF and made many friends in this field
during the "old days," especially in the Boston area.
RIP: Robert Tucker
Rob Tucker, known to
many in this field for his exemplary work with the Council on Mind
Abuse in Toronto, died suddenly of a heart-attack on March 28, 2003
while vacationing with his family in Mexico. After Rob left COMA
about 15 years ago, he worked as an elementary school counselor in
British Columbia. However, he continued his research interests in
the cultic studies field and published a book, An Age for
Lucifer: Predatory Spirituality and the Quest for Godhood
with Holmes Publishing Group in 1999. Although Rob was not active
in this field for many years, those of us who knew and admired him
remember his keen intellect and kind heart. We grieve his passing.
Send news updates on your education and research activities to Dr.
Langone at
aff@affcultinfoserve.com.
______________________________________________________________________^
New Book by Janja
Lalich
Lalich, J. (2004).
Bounded choice: True believers and charismatic cults.
Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. 353 pages. Paperback
$21.95, £13.95, ISBN: 0-520-24018-9. Hardcover
$55.00, £35.95, ISBN: 0-520-23194-5. Paperback available from
AFF.
Heaven's Gate, a
secretive group of celibate "monks" awaiting pickup by a UFO,
captured intense public attention in 1997 when its members committed
collective suicide. As a way of understanding such perplexing
events, many have seen those who join cults as needy, lost souls,
unable to think for themselves. This book, a compelling look at the
cult phenomenon written for a wide audience, dispels such simple
formulations by explaining how normal, intelligent people can give
up years of their lives--and sometimes their very lives--to groups
and beliefs that appear bizarre and irrational. Looking closely at
Heaven's Gate and at the Democratic Workers Party, a radical
political group of the 1970s and 1980s, Janja Lalich gives us a rare
insider's look at these two cults and advances a new theoretical
framework that will reshape our understanding of those who join such
groups.
Lalich's fascinating
discussion includes her in-depth interviews with cult devotees as
well as reflections gained from her own experience as a high-ranking
member of the Democratic Workers Party. Incorporating classical
sociological concepts such as "charisma" and "commitment" with more
recent work on the social psychology of influence and control, she
develops a new approach for understanding how charismatic cult
leaders are able to dominate their devotees. She shows how members
are led into a state of "bounded choice," in which they make
seemingly irrational decisions within a context that makes perfect
sense to them and is, in fact, consistent with their highest
aspirations.
In addition to
illuminating the cult phenomenon in the United States and around the
world, this important book also addresses our pressing need to know
more about the mentality of those true believers who take extreme or
violent measures in the name of a cause.
Janja Lalich, Ph.D.
is Assistant Professor of Sociology at California State University,
Chico. She is coauthor of "Crazy" Therapies: What Are They? Do
They Work? (1996) and Captive Hearts, Captive Minds: Freedom
and Recovery from Cults and Abusive Relationships (1994).
New Book by Andrea
Moore-Emmett
Moore-Emmett,
Andrea. (2004). God's brothel: The extortion of sex for salvation
in contemporary Mormon and Christian fundamentalist polygamy and the
stories of 18 women who escaped. San Francisco: Pince-Nez
Press. 236 pages. Paperback. $16.95. ISBN: 1-930074-13-1.
Available from AFF.
"A chilling
indictment of contemporary Mormon and Christian fundamentalist
polygamy, God's Brothel reveals gruesome facts about
Bible-based polygamy through the brave voices of 18 women who
escaped from 10 of the 11 main religious groups as well as
independent families. Their stories include rape, incest, orgies and
violence, making this form of polygamy more akin to sexual slavery
than to any quaint religious or lifestyle choice."
Andrea Moore-Emmett
is an award-winning journalist and researcher whose stories on
polygamy have appeared in Salt Lake City Weekly. She was
researcher for Inside Polygamy, a two-hour documentary aired
on A&E and the BBC.
Aberrations of
Power: Leadership in Totalist Groups
Baron, Robert,
Crawley, Kevin, & Paulina, Diana. (2002). Aberrations of power:
Leadership in totalist groups. In van Knippenberg, D., & Hogg, M.
A. (Eds.), Identity, leadership, and power. London: Sage.
In this chapter,
several theoretical perspectives are used to analyze the leadership
tactics utilized within three manipulative groups; the Peoples’
Temple, Synanon and the Children of God. This case study approach
illustrates a number of common features of such leadership. These
features include the means by which emotional and cognitive fatigue
are used to amplify various categories of leader power, the manner
in which assaults on self confidence and self esteem heighten
dependence upon group leaders and the tendency of such leaders to
initiate transformations of group purpose and group norms. Such
transformation provides a means of testing member loyalty, evoking
cognitive dissonance among followers and creating a sense of mystery
and drama that serves to excite and intrigue group members.
Nova Religio (Vol.
7, No. 3, 2004)
The Thomas Robbins Award: For Excellence in the Study of New
Religious Movements
The Beast with Two Backs: Aleister Crowley, Sex Magic and the
Exhaustion of Modernity (Hugh B. Urban)
JeungSanDo and the Great Opening of the Later Heaven:
Millenarianism, Syncretism, and the Religion of Gang Il-sun (Robert
Pearson Flaherty)
From Divine Light Mission to Élan Vital and Beyond: An Exploration
of Change and Adaptation (Ron Geaves)
Eschatological Vacillation in Mary Baker Eddy's Presentation of
Christian Science (John K. Simmons)
Field Notes: Efraim: A New Apocalyptic Movement in the Netherlands
(Reender Kranenborg)
Review of Cults and New Religious Movements: A Reader, Edited by
Lorne L. Dawson (Thomas Robbins)
Review of Nine Worlds of Seid-Magic: Ecstasy and Neo-Shamanism in
North European Paganism by Jenny Blain (Michael Strmiska)
Review of Gurdjieff: The Key Concepts by Sophia Wellbeloved
(George Adams)
Review of Theosophy, Imagination, Tradition: Studies in Western
Esotericism By Antoine Faivre. Trans. Christine Rhone (Amos Yong)
Review of The Church Universal and Triumphant: Elizabeth Clare
Prophet's Apocalyptic Movement By Bradley C. Whitsel (Frank Ferreri)
Review of The Tao of the West: Western Transformations of Taoist
Thought By J. J. Clarke (Robin Wang)
Review of Boston Confucianism: Portable Tradition in the Late-Modern
World By Robert Cummings Neville (Patsy Rahn)
Review of Religion and Social Crisis in Japan: Understanding
Japanese Society Through the Aum Affair Edited by Robert J. Kisala
and Mark R. Mullins (Richard W. Anderson)
Review of Holy Terrors: Thinking About Religion After September 11
By Bruce Lincoln (Ian Reader)
Review of The Martyrs of Columbine: Faith and the Politics of
Tragedy By Justin Watson (Edward T. Linenthal)
Review of Sacred Mountains of the WorldBy Edwin Bernbaum (Joel
Geffen)
Review of The Lure of the Edge: Scientific Passions, Religious
Beliefs, and the Pursuit of UFOs By Brenda Denzler (Robert Ellwood)
Review of Children of Ezekiel: Aliens, UFOs, the Crisis of Race, and
the Advent of Time By Michael Lieb (W. Michael Ashcraft)
Review of Sexuality, Magic and Perversion By Francis King (David
Tabb Stewart)
Review of Messianic Judaism By Dan Cohn-Sherbok (Haakov Ariel)
Review of Learning Lessons from Waco: When the Parties Bring their
Gods to the Negotiating Table By Jayne Seminare Docherty (Eugene V.
Gallagher)
Review of Indigenous Traditions and Ecology: The Interbeing of
Cosmology and Community Edited by John A. Grim (Greg Johnson)
Nova Religio (Vol.
8, No. 1, 2004)
Cultural Configurations of Mormon Fundamentalist Polygamous
Communities (Martha Bradley) pp. 5-19
Church, State and the Legal Interpretation of Polygamy in Canada
(Lori G. Beaman) pp. 20-38
Land as Lover (Sarah McFarland Taylor) pp. 39-56
Soka Gakkai in Australia (Daniel A. Metraux) pp. 57-72
Perspective: Toward a Definition of "New Religion" (J. Gordon
Melton) pp. 73-87
Perspective: What Are We Studying? (Eileen Barker) pp. 88-102
Book Reviews
Life in The Family: An Oral History of the Children of God (James D.
Chancellor) pp. 108-112
Prostitution, Polygamy, and Power: Salt Lake City, 1847-1918
(Jeffrey Nichols) pp. 112-113
Lure of the Sinister: The Unnatural History of Satanism (Gareth J.
Medway) pp. 114-115
The Sikh Diaspora: The Search for Statehood (Darshan Singh Tatla)
pp. 115-115
The Cultic Milieu: Oppositional Subcultures in an Age of
Globalization (Jeffrey Kaplan & Helene Loow) pp. 115-118
A Magic Still Dwells: Comparative Religion in the Postmodern Age
(Kimberly Cton & Benjamin C. Ray) pp. 118-120
Living Santería: Rituals and Experiences in an Afro-Cuban Religion
(Michael Atwood Mason) pp. 120-121
Free Love in Utopia: John Humphrey Noyes and the Origins of the
Oneida Community (George Wallingford Noyes) pp. 121-123
Star Trek and Sacred Ground: Explorations of Star Trek, Religion,
and American Culture (Jennifer E. Porter & Darcee L. McLaren) pp.
123-124
Children of the New Age: A History of Spiritual Practices (Steven
Sutcliffe) pp. 124-129
Psychological
Research Online
Gosling, S. D.,
Vazire, S., Srivastava, S., & John, O. P. (2004). Should we trust
Web-based studies? A comparative analysis of six preconceptions
about Internet questionnaires. American Psychologist, 59(2),
93-104.
Internet research
methodology has many important advantages over traditional research
methods and is a useful addition to psychological research. Many
objections against Internet data are unfounded; however, as with any
new methodology, caution in its use is justified. Internet research
methodology adds yet another approach to the conduct of research.
Kraut, R., Olson,
J., Banaji, M., Bruckman, A., Cohen, J., & Couper, M. (2004.
Psychological research online: Report of Board of Scientific
Affairs' Advisory Group on the Conduct of Research on the Internet.
American Psychologist, 59(2) 105-117.
Internet research is
inherently no more risky than traditional observational, survey, or
experimental methods. This article describes some benefits and
challenges of conducting psychological research via the Internet and
offers recommendations to both researchers and institutional review
boards for dealing with them.
Bishops' Seminar:
The Church in Europe and New Religious Movements
Dr. Raffaella Di
Marzio of Rome, Italy (www.dimarzio.it)
sent us a report on an interesting conference/seminar:
Baar (Fides Service)
- The Council of European Bishops’ Conferences (CCEE)
organized a seminar 25-28 March for representatives of Bishops’
Conferences on “alternative” religions in Europe, including New Age
groups, meditation and healing therapies, new religious movements
outside or parallel to the Christian tradition, and religious groups
that have come into Europe from other continents.
The Swiss Catholic
Working Group on New Religious Movements also contributed generously
to the meeting. 24 people represented 19 European Bishops’
Conferences; they included theologians and philosophers, a canon
lawyer, a psychologist, and several people who work full-time in
this area, some in the area of research and others in counseling
centres. The Pontifical Councils for Culture and for Inter-religious
Dialogue were also represented.
The preparation of
the document Jesus Christ, the Bearer of the Water of Life,
published in February 2003 by the two Pontifical Councils
represented, was presented by Mgr. Peter Fleetwood (CCEE
Secretariat), and Archbishop Pier Luigi Celata (Secretary,
Pontifical Council for Inter-religious Dialogue). It was a
“provisional report”, and there is to be a consultation on the
responses to it in Rome later in 2004.
Mr. Richard Rouse
(Pontifical Council for Culture) spoke of the working document
(Instrumentum Laboris) that had been discussed at the Council’s
recent Plenary Assembly. One of its conclusions, based on responses
to a questionnaire on unbelief in the world today, was that unbelief
does not really figure in Africa, Asia and the Muslim world. The
point was made that it is rare in North America as well: unbelief is
a distinctly European phenomenon.
Professor Martin
Baumann (University of Lucerne) described the varied situation of
Asian religions in Europe, above all Buddhism and Hinduism. Factors
like colonial history explain the size and location of some
communities, but the numbers of European converts (mainly to
Buddhism) makes the picture more complex. Dr. Benjamin Simon
(University of Heidelberg) gave three models for the development
(ecclesiogenesis) of African religious groups in Europe, suggesting
that they interact with local (ecumenical) ventures according to the
stage they have reached in establishing an identity.
Fr. Joachim Müller
(Swiss Catholic Working Group on New Religious Movements) described
the religious landscape in German-speaking Europe, particularly
Switzerland, offering a kind of “thermometer” for diagnosing whether
membership of religious groups makes people healthy or otherwise.
Several people gave reports on the situation in their home areas,
some with extensive documentation.
A friendly but
serious atmosphere allowed free discussion on issues like the best
way of responding to inquiries about particular therapies, what the
Church needs to do to understand why people find spiritual
satisfaction in particular groups, and proposing appropriate
policies, and the need to capitalize on Christianity’s rich mystical
tradition. Participants focused throughout on the service they can
give to the Bishops’ Conferences that sent them, and offered them a
few recommendations.
It seems crucial to
recognize the effects of “alternative” religions on the culture
being evangelized, and experts ought to be consulted on this.
Participants recommended a flexible but regular system of
communicating as a group, which could also benefit smaller countries
with fewer resources and keep them ‘in the loop’. They hoped there
could be further seminars like this one, and thanked CCEE for what
some referred to as a “really fascinating” meeting. (SL) (Fides
Service 31/3/2004 EM lines 46 Words: 561)
Atheism Survey
Dr. Di Marzio also
sent us the following report:
VATICAN - “There is
no rise in the number of atheists in the world”, according to survey
on ‘non belief and religious indifference’ carried out by Pontifical
Council for Culture in preparation for annual Plenary 11-13 March in
the Vatican
To fulfill the
mission entrusted to it by the Holy Father to be at the heart of
profound changes at the beginning of this new millennium, the
Pontifical Council for Culture felt the need to look again at two
serious phenomena: non belief and religious indifference in the
world, its actual importance, modalities and impact on believers and
the frontier between religion and non belief consisting of so called
“new religious movements” or “alternative religions”.
Despite all
appearances, a longing for God is ever present in the human heart
alongside the aspiration to happiness. The 300 responses to a survey
carried out by the Council on non belief and religious indifference
reveal widespread weakening in Western culture of “faith” (we could
say) both in the world of atheism and in the Church. On the contrary
Africa, Asia and Latin America are still animated by popular
religious piety at the heart of their respective cultures. China is
still under the power of atheism like Vietnam, North Korea and Cuba.
At the dawn of the
new millennium, said Cardinal Poupard President Pontifical Council
for Culture, there is a clear decline in membership of major
Churches and in followers of major systems, while there is renewed
interest for religion in itself, with a swarm of new forms of pagan
religiosity.
Organized, militant
atheism of the past has given way to a situation of practical
indifference, in which the question of God is no longer relevant and
religious practice is abandoned, particularly in the Western world.
This “new face of non belief” puts before the Church a pastoral
challenge, how to proclaim the Gospel to non believers, a major
theme for the imminent Plenary of the Pontifical Council for
Culture.
An overall view of
the situation of non belief in the world shows that Asia and Africa
are still the most religious continents. Non believers in Africa are
mostly of European origin, in many parts animist practices continue
and Christians often practice a sort of syncretism (Christians by
day and Animists by night). With regard to North America, 46.7% of
baptized Catholics live in Canada where most people claim to be
Christians and only 0.13% say they are atheists or agnostics. In the
United States atheism and non belief are not increasing but there is
widespread dropping out of specific religious confessions.
In Latin America
there is growing concern for the proliferation of sects which
propagate belief without rules. However Mexico is second in the
world for the number of Catholics and Brazil is the country with the
highest number of Catholics, who are 73.8% of its total population,
while 15% has joined new Pentecostal churches or religious movements
and 10% claims to be non believer or with no religion. In Argentina,
4% of the population is declared atheist and 12% declared agnostic.
In Asia the problem
is not the absence of religion but a superimposition and complex
coexistence of many different religions. In Japan 65% - 70% of the
people declare themselves non believers although they respect
religion and like taking part in religious activities. The
Philippines is the only country in eastern Asia with a Christian
majority population. The concern here, more than non belief, is a
boom in sects and very active cults mostly started by lapsed
Catholics. Korea is the country with the highest number of
conversions to Christianity. In other countries, Indonesia for
example, Constitutions oblige citizens to declare a religion so
atheists are not registered in official censures (sic).
In Europe,
Christianity is widespread but the situation is diversified and
calls for special attention in every different social/cultural area.
People in the Mediterranean vary between regular practicing
believers, irregular practicing, indifferent and atheists. In Italy
14% of the population declares itself indifferent and 4% of these
claim to be atheists; in Spain the percentage of atheists is low but
it is concerning to note that among young people it is high. The
three countries with the largest number of people who say they have
“no religion” are in Western Europe: Netherlands (54%), France
(43%). Belgium (37%). With regard to central Europe, 25% of Germans
say they do not belong to any religion and in Austria there is an
attitude of diffidence, for fear of being labeled members of a
certain church or religion.
In Oceania,
according to a 2001 census Australia has 68% declared Christians,
New Zealand has 66.1%.
10/3/2004 Agenzia
Fides.
www.fides.org
Yoga Survey
Apologia Report,
March 29, 2004 (apologia-report@apologia.org)
describes a survey on Yoga. "It's No Stretch To Say Americans
Embrace Yoga" by Sara Steffens -- summarizes a Harris International
market study for Yoga Journal [5] in 2003.
"Yoga is now
practiced by 7 percent of U.S. adults, or 15 million people,
according to a market study conducted by Harris International this
summer for Yoga Journal. That's up 28.5 percent in the last two
years alone. ...
"Three-quarters
of fitness clubs now offer some form of yoga class, according to the
International Health, Racquet and Sportsclub Association. ...
"If yoga is
changing Americans, so, too, are Americans changing yoga, with a
result that looks distinctly different from the tradition's roots in
India, which reach back thousands of years. ...
"Not
surprisingly, many longtime teachers and practitioners share these
mixed feelings about yoga's popularity.
"One major
complaint is that today's students tend to see yoga merely as the
process of perfecting difficult poses, ignoring its meditative and
spiritual components.
"'If I could wave
my magic wand, I would like the deeper philosophical aspects of yoga
to be taught more,' said Judith Hanson Lasater, a longtime Bay Area
yoga teacher who holds a doctorate in East-West psychology and whose
books include Living Your Yoga:
Finding the
Spiritual in Everyday Life [3]. 'I would like it if people just knew
the ten commandments of yoga, the yama and niyama.'
"Those principals
include not lying, stealing, harming others, or being greedy, and
knowing oneself, surrendering to God and seeking purity and
contentment. ...
"Among Americans
who practice yoga:
* - 77 percent
are women
* - Nearly half
have completed college
* - 27 percent
are ages 45-54; another 25 percent are 25-34
* - Slightly less
than 20 percent live on the West Coast, compared to 30 percent in
the Northeast and 30 percent in the central United States." Contra
Costa Times (San Francisco Bay area), Mar 9 '04,
<http://www.contracostatimes.com/mld/cctimes/living/8140651.htm>
A link from this
page goes to a second feature from the Times with the same date:
"Why Yoga? Why Not?" also by Steffens. She opens: "It may begin with
an aching back or the desire for rock-hard abs. But more often than
not, yoga ends up taking on a life of its own." Steffens quotes a
practitioner who began "thirsting to learn more of the philosophy
that underlies the ancient practice. ..."'It has a spiritual aspect,
even though mostly what people do is confuse asanas [pose positions]
and yoga,' says Lasater. 'I think human beings have a fundamental
need for some sort of spiritual connection, whether they get it in
church or hiking or painting.' ..."'After a while, people who learn
asanas often want to learn yogic philosophy, just as many people who
learn meditation end up interested in yoga,' says Lasater."
<http://www.contracostatimes.com/mld/cctimes/living/8140710.htm>
The Toronto
Blessing
Poloma, M. M.
(2003). Main street mystics: The Toronto blessing and reviving
Pentecostalism. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishing
Group, Inc. Paper. 224 pp. $26.95. ISBN 0-7591-0354-2.
Second Edition of
Saliba Textbook
Saliba, J. A.
(2003). Understanding new religious movements, 2nd ed.
Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc. Paper. 312
pp. $26.95. ISBN 0-7591-0356-9.
Third Edition of
Classic Psychology of Religion Textbook
Spilka, B., Hood, R.
W., Hunsberger, B., & Gorsuch, R. (2003). The psychology of
religion: An empirical approach, 3rd ed. New York: Guilford
Publications, Inc. Hardcover. 671 pp. $70.00. ISBN 1-57230-901-6.
After the New Age
Bainbridge, William
Sims. (2004). After the New Age. Journal for the Scientific
Study of Religion, 43 (3), 381-394.
This article
explores the connections between conventional religion and the New
Age, using data from a major online questionnaire study,
Survey2001, that was sponsored by the National Geographic
Society and the National Science Foundation. It begins with two
competing hypotheses. (1) Involvement in conventional religion
discourages involvement in unconventional para-religion because
conventional religion competes with para-religion. (2) Conventional
religion encourages unconventional para-religion by promulgating
supernatural assumptions about the nature of humanity and the
universe. Factor analysis of 20 putatively New Age agree-disagree
questionnaire items reveals that 15 of them define a general New Age
factor, supported by secondary anti-paranormal and anti-alien
factors. Three measures of conventional religiousness show complex
relations to the New Age items. Analysis using factor scores
indicates that both hypotheses express real effects that cancel each
other out for many people. Individual subjective religiousness and
personal prayer or meditation correlate strongly positively with the
New Age among respondents who never attend religious services. The
study considers denominational differences, then concludes by
showing that a curvilinear relationship exists between religiousness
and acceptance of New Age beliefs.
The Falun Gong in
the New World
Ownby D. (2003). The
Falun Gong in the New World. European Journal of East Asian
Studies, 2(2), 303-320.
Despite the
polarised debate which has raged in the media over whether the
Chinese spiritual movement Falun Gong1 should be seen as an 'evil
cult' or as an innocent 'cultivation system', there is little doubt
that most objective Western scholars would categorise Falun Gong as
a new religious movement (many of which have also been accused
rightly or wrongly of being 'cults' or 'sects'). Indeed, the
controversy surrounding Falun Gong has attracted considerable media
and scholarly attention, so that the Falun Gong is now undoubtedly
the best known of Chinese new religious movements and, as I argue
elsewhere, a key to the reevaluation of a centuries-old tradition of
popular religious practice in China which has long been condemned
and suppressed by Chinese authorities. The present article, based on
fieldwork in North America, on research in Falun Gong written
sources and on my previous work in the history of Chinese popular
religion traces a portrait of Falun Gong practices both in China and
in North America.
Clutching at
Certainty: Thoughts on the Coercive Grip of Cult-Like Groups
Brothers, D. (2003).
Clutching at Certainty: Thoughts on the Coercive Grip of Cult-Like
Groups. Group, 27(2-3), 79-88.
This response to
Richard Raubolt's article, “Attack on the Self,” attempts to
understand the intense and enduring connection that often develops
between charismatic leaders of cult-like groups and their followers
in terms of their mutual need to regulate uncertainty. After
describing “the intersubjective regulation of uncertainty,” a
concept influenced by self psychology and intersubjectivity systems
theory, a number of uncertainty regulating modes that emerged in the
training program are examined including: 1) the denial of
difference, 2) the denial of sameness, 3) alter ego relating, 4) the
inflammation of passion, and 5) faith-keeping fantasies.
Cult and Anticult
Totalism: Reciprocal Escalation and Violence
Anthony D.; Robbins
T.; Barrie-Anthony S. (2002). Cult and Anticult Totalism: Reciprocal
Escalation and Violence. Terrorism and Political Violence,
14(1), 211-240.
Religio-ideological
totalism entails an absolute division of humanity into dual
categories such as saved/damned, human/subhuman, godly/demonic, etc.
Totalistic 'cults' are not necessarily violent, but the psychology
of totalism does feature an impulse to validate an absolute
worldview by confronting demonized exemplars of evil as contrast
symbols. Such confrontations can become violent under certain
circumstances, which may include totalistic persecution by the
anticult movement. As Robert Lifton has noted, 'Totalism begets
Totalism', and anticult confrontations of totalistic movements may
themselves take a totalistic and hence persecutory form. Lifton
specifies the totalism begets totalism principle somewhat
cryptically, and does not articulate either its theoretical or its
practical implications in any detail: a defect which we attempt to
remedy in this article. We discuss research which documents a cycle
of increasing totalization of both the group and the counter-group
response, which may escalate out of control to the point that it
triggers a violent dénouement. We also develop a model of the
interactively totalistic nature of both cult and anticult ideologies
and activities which highlights both the psychological concept of
projective identification and the sociological concepts of deviance
amplification and conflict/interaction. In our discussion of this
model we describe projective identification and these sociological
concepts as complementary rather than competitive explanations, at
different levels of description, of the 'totalism begets totalism'
principle. We discuss this model in relation to a variety of
research studies on millenarian religious and political movements,
including two very different North American governmental reports
which were apprehensive of millennial violence in 2000.
'There Is No Place
for Us to Go but Up': New Religious Movements and Violence
Introvigne, M.
(2002). 'There Is No Place for Us to Go but Up': New Religious
Movements and Violence. Social Compass, 49(2), 213-224.
While the 'cult
wars' of the 1970s--1980s largely ended in the USA with the Fishman
decision (1990), between 1994 and 2000 mass suicides and homicides
perpetrated respectively by the Solar Temple, Aum Shinrikyo,
Heaven's Gate and the Restoration of the Ten Commandments of God
revived anti-cult feelings which eventually led to administrative
and legislative action in several European countries. The author
criticizes two anti-cult explanations of the incidents, one based on
brainwashing and the other on psychopathology and fraud, and
suggests that scholars of new religious movements and critics of
'cults' may both learn from these cases and start a fruitful
dialogue by revisiting the original literature on thought reform and
the works of Robert Jay Lifton and Edgar H. Schein. Ultimately, and
without denying that 'cults' may carry out illegal activities other
than those involving the actual loss of human lives, as far as
'critical incidents' are concerned content-neutral models of
persuasions and influence should be supplemented by an examination
of which ideologies may be more conductive to suicide and violence.
Women After The
Utopia: The Gendered Lives of Former Cult Members
Boeri, M. Williams.
(2002). Women After The Utopia: The Gendered Lives of Former Cult
Members. Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, 31(3),
323-360.
Research on former
members of cults, also known as new religious movements, often
focuses on psychological issues. Little has been written about the
everyday lives of former members, and rarely has gender been placed
at the center of analyses. Based on participant observation at
ex-cult reunions and in-depth interviews, this analytical
ethnography examines the everyday lives of women who are former
members of a religious cult. Their experiences and concerns are
analyzed with a focus on four qualitative themes: identity, roles,
interactions, and contexts. The salient issues that emerge are
alienation, depression, spiritual confusion, changing wife and
mother roles, limited friendships, sexual abuse, lack of education
and work history, and health concerns. The minority status of cult
survivor is proposed as a core concept, and the implications of this
study for intervention and future research are discussed.
Spiritual Identity
in Israeli Religious Male Adolescents
Fisherman, S.
(2002). Spiritual Identity in Israeli Religious Male Adolescents.
Religious Education, 97(1), 61-79.
Based on Herbert's
(1987) theory of ego identity development and on interviews of
hundreds of Israeli religious male adolescents and young adults who
were raised and educated in religious society and later left the
fold, this article presents a model of development of religious
identity. Three levels of religious identity development— healthy,
unhealthy, and dangerous—are described. In healthy development,
adolescents abandon childish faith, confront and deliberate about
their doubts, and consolidate a mature and personal spiritual
identity. Unhealthy development, which may occur if doubts are not
accepted and dealt with, is seen in four forms: sloganeering,
diffuse spiritual identity, moratorium, and emphasis on ritual and
behavioral aspects of religion. These, in turn, may lead to
dangerous developments: (1) joining a cult or enslaving oneself to a
charismatic leader; (2) joining a group of formerly religious peers;
(3) group delinquency (theft or vandalism) or group use of alcohol
or drugs; (4) alienation and antireligious attitudes; (5)
inconsistency or "being religious at heart"; (6) solitary use of
alcohol or drugs, possibly leading to addiction. Methods of
preventing and correcting unhealthy and dangerous developments are
presented and discussed.
Eastern Meditative
Techniques & Hypnosis
Otani, Akira.
(2003). Eastern meditative techniques and hypnosis: A new
synthesis. American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, 46(2),
97-108.
In this article
major ancient Buddhist meditation techniques, samatha, vipassana,
Zen, and ton-len, will be described in reference to
contemporary clinical hypnosis. In so doing, the Eastern healing
framework out of which these techniques emerged is examined in
comparison with and in contrast to its Western counterpart. A
growing body of empirical literature shows that meditation and
hypnosis have many resemblances despite the distinct differences in
underlying philosophy and technical methodologies. Although not all
meditation techniques "fit" the Western culture, each has much to
offer to clinicians who are familiar with hypnosis.
This article
includes some cautions about the clinical uses of meditation.
"Buddhist texts in general, and especially Zen literature in
particular, are replete with examples of ill effects associated with
meditation. The term makyo, which literally means 'evil
zone' in Japanese, refers to various hallucinatory experiences that
may occur during Zen meditation. These include a sense of
weightlessness, the loss of bodily sensations, visualizations of
light, colors and objects, and so on (Masis, 2002). Although the
practitioner frequently finds these perceptual distortions simply
fascinating and at times even ecstatic, they can also leave negative
effects, especially with meditators who have limited ego strength or
with individuals who have a history of trauma. As Engler (2003)
aptly points out, '[meditation] practice itself uncovers personal
issues by holding up a mirror to the mind' (p. 43). It is possible
therefore that some meditators can be overwhelmed by spontaneous
abreactions, traumatic memory revivications, or other unpleasant
forms of primary process thinking during practice."
Engler, J. (2003).
Being somebody and being nobody: A reexamination of the
understanding of self in psychoanalysis and Buddhism. In J. Safran
(Ed.), Psychoanalysis and Buddhism: An unfolding dialogue
(pp. 35-100). Boston: Wisdom Publishers.
Masis, K. V.
(2002). American Zen and psychotherapy: An ongoing dialogue. In p.
Young-Eisendrath & S. Muramoto, eds., Awakening and insight: Zen
Buddhism and psychotherapy (pp. 149-171). New York:
Brunner/Routledge.
Latin American Book
on the Legion of Christ
Chipres, S. G., Gonzalez, F. M., Erdely, J., Escalante, P.,
Masferrer, E., Mascarenas, C. (2004). El circulo del poder y la
espiral del silencio: La historia oculta del Padre Marcial Maciel y
Los Legionarios de Cristo. México Cita: Editorial Grijalbo. 264
p. ISBN: 970-05-1754-3.
El caso de Marcial Maciel analizado por primera vez desde una
rigurosa perspectiva multidisciplinaria, con la participación de
cinco académicos que abordan el tema desde ángulos nunca antes
cubiertos, que aportan una total claridad sobre este controvertido
tema, con una visión objetiva y veraz.
Esta obra revela los misterios alrededor de las acusaciones contra
la Legión de Cristo y su controvertido fundador. Entendemos los
mecanismos ocultos a la opinión publica utilizados para cerrar el
circulo de poder e impedir, por muchos anos, una denuncia publica.
Cults, Religion and
Violence
Bromley, D. G., &
Melton, J. G. (Eds.). (2002). Cults, religion and violence.
New York: Cambridge University Press. 249 pages. $22 paperback.
Nancy Miquelon on
Boundaries
The May/June 2004
reFOCUS newsletter includes an interesting article by Nancy Miquelon
on reestablishing and maintaining healthy boundaries after leaving a
cultic group. "For many of us in the cult experience boundaries
were deliberately and systematically removed…In general, unhealthy
boundaries have to do with lack of permission and respect. It might
be that someone wants to be close when he or she hasn’t earned that
privilege through the dance of friendship first. It might be to the
severity of physical or sexual abuse. It might be giving too much to
someone else at one’s own expense. Healthy boundaries would have to
do with self respect and self knowledge. It takes time and
practice!... Probably one of the best signs our boundaries are being
restored, oddly enough, is that we can tolerate ambiguity. We are
secure enough in ourselves to accept others, and don’t need the
world to be black and white anymore." The complete essay can be
found at
http://home.att.net/~affcarol/boundaries.htm.
The Hare Krishna
Movement: The Postcharismatic Fate of a Religious Transplant
Bryant, Edwin, &
Ekstrand, Maria (Eds.). (2004). The Hare Krishna Movement: The
Postcharismatic Fate of a Religious Transplant. New York:
Columbia University Press. 496 pages. ISBN: 0-231-12256-X.
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/cup/catalog/data/023112/023112256X.HTM
Contributors: Larry
D. Shinn, Berea College; Guy Beck, Tulane University; Graham
Schweig, Christopher Newport University; Kim Knott, University of
Leeds; Ekkehard Lorenz, University of Stockholm; Burke Rochford,
Middlebury College; Kenneth Valpey, University of Oxford; Thomas
Herzig (late), Cambridge University.
This comprehensive
study includes more than twenty contributions from members,
ex-members, and academics who have followed the Hare Krishna
movement for years. Since the death of its founder, the movement,
also known as the International Society for Krishna Consciousness
(ISKCON), has experienced debates over the roles of authority,
heresy, and dissent, which have led to the development of several
splinter movements. There is a growing women's rights movement and a
highly publicized child abuse scandal. Providing a privileged look
at the people and issues shaping ISKCON, this volume also offers
insight into the complex factors surrounding the emergence of
religious traditions, including early Christianity, as well as a
glimpse of the original seeds and the germinating stages of a
religious tradition putting down roots in foreign soil.
Campus Chaplains:
Cult Training and Perceptions
Elleven, Russell K.,
Greenhaw, Kimberly J., & Allen, Jeff. (2004, June). College
Student Journal, (University of North Texas).
This article
examines the perception of 43 college chaplains across the United
States with regard to cult training and perceptions of college and
university cult activity. Campus chaplains are in a unique and
challenging position on college campuses to assist students and
confront cult issues. The results of the survey indicate that most
campus chaplains have had surprisingly little formal training with
regard to cultic groups and often perceive faculty, staff, and
students as requiring additional education regarding cult issues on
college campuses.
Encountering New
Religious Movements: A Holistic Evangelical Approach
Hexham, Irving,
Rost, Stephen, & Morehead, John II. (Eds.) (2004). Encountering
New Religious Movements: A Holistic Evangelical Approach.
Franklin, TN: Kregel. ISBN: 0-8254-2893-9). 322 pages, soft cover.
Introduction: New
Religious Movements and Contextual Mission, Part 1: Biblical and
Historical Perspective 1. The Incarnational Ministry of Jesus: An
Alternative to Traditional Apologetic Approaches. Mikel Neumann.
2. Contextualized Mission in Church History. Harold Taylor. Part
2: Methodological Issues. 3. History of Religion and Missiology:
Complementary Methodologies. Terry Muck. 4. New Religions as
Global Cultures. Irving Hexham and Karla Poewe-Hexham. 5. Paul's
Areopagus Speech in Acts 17: A Paradigm for Applying Apologetics and
Missions to Non-Christian Religious Movements. Stephen Rost. 6.
Traditional Religions, New Religions, and the Communication of the
Christian Faith. David Hesselgrave. Part 3: Practical Application.
7. Bridging the Divide: Cross-cultural Missions to Latter-day
Saints. Kenneth Mulholland. 8. Reaching the Christadelphians.
Philip Johnson. 9. Reframing a Traditional Apologetic to Reach "New
Spirituality" Seekers. Ross Clifford. 10. Reaching Wiccan and
Mother Goddess Devotees. Philip Johnson and John Smulo. 11.
Discipling New Age and Do-it-Yourself Seekers Through Booth
Ministries. Philip Johnson. 12. Reaching Nietzschean
Individualists: Toward a Contextualized Apologetic to LaVeyan
Satanism. John Smulo. 13. Jesus Among the Alternative Healers:
Sacred Oils, Aromatherapists, and the Gospel. Ruth Pollard.
Conclusion: Where Do We Go From Here? Transforming Evangelical
Responses to New Religions. John Morehead II. Included is a
Recommended Reading List, Scripture Index and a Subject Index.
Newsweek Article on
Faith and Healing
Faith & Healing.
Newsweek, November 10, 2003By Claudia Kalb With Anne
Underwood, Ellise Pierce, Joan Raymond, Jenny Hontz, Karen Springen
and Sarah Childress
Can religion
improve health? While the debate rages in journals and med schools,
more Americans ask for doctors’ prayers. Nov. 10 issue —
…"According to a NEWSWEEK Poll, 72 percent of Americans say they
would welcome a conversation with their physician about faith; the
same number say they believe that praying to God can cure
someone—even if science says the person doesn’t stand a chance. On
Beliefnet, a popular interfaith Web site, fully three quarters of
more than 35,000 online prayer circles are health related…All over
the medical establishment, legitimate scientists are seeking the
most ethical, effective ways to combine patients’ spiritual and
religious beliefs with high-tech treatment. Former mutual-fund
tycoon Sir John Templeton spends as much as $30 million a year
funding scientific projects that explore the nature of God. 'The
Anatomy of Hope,' a meditation on the effects of optimism and faith
on health, by New Yorker medical writer Jerome Groopman, M.D., is
coming out early next year. The National Institutes of Health plans
to spend $3.5 million over the next several years on “mind/body”
medicine…
"To make sense of
the morass of data, the NIH commissioned a series of papers,
published earlier this year, in which scientists attempted to
definitively assess the state of the faith-and-health research.
Lynda H. Powell, an epidemiologist at Rush University Medical Center
in Chicago, reviewed about 150 papers, throwing out dozens that had
flaws—those that failed to account for age and ethnicity, for
example, which usually affect religiosity. In one respect, her
findings were not surprising: while faith provides comfort in times
of illness, it does not significantly slow cancer growth or improve
recovery from acute illness. One nugget, however, 'blew my socks
off,' Powell says. People who regularly attend church have a 25
percent reduction in mortality—that is, they live longer—than people
who are not churchgoers. This is true even after controlling for
variables intrinsically linked to Sundays in the pew, like social
support and healthy lifestyle. While the data were culled mainly
from Christian churchgoers, Powell says the findings should apply to
any organized religion…Using brain scans, researchers have
discovered that meditation can change brain activity and improve
immune response; other studies have shown it can lower heart rate
and blood pressure, both of which reduce the body’s stress response.
(Most religions incorporate meditative practices, like chanting or
prayer, into their traditions.) Even intangibles, such as the impact
of forgiveness, may boost health as well...
"But what does the
science say? At a meeting of the American College of Cardiology last
month, Duke researcher Dr. Mitchell Krucoff reported preliminary
data on a national trial of 750 patients undergoing heart
catheterization or angioplasty. A group of patients who were prayed
for (by, among others, Roman Catholics and Sufi Muslims in the
United States, Buddhist monks in Nepal and Jews at the Western Wall)
did no better than a second group that received standard care or a
third, which was given a special program of music, therapeutic touch
and guided imagery. But there was one intriguing finding: a fourth
“turbocharged” group, which received both prayers and the music
program, had death rates 30 percent lower than any of the other
patients…Overall, the prayer studies have not shown clear effects,
and even religious proponents are skeptical that it can ever—or
should ever—be tested. So many people already pray for the sick that
scientists cannot establish a control group; when the prescription
is prayer, patients often get it whether doctors want them to or
not. This “noise”—the extra prayers of mothers, fathers, sisters,
brothers, friends, church members—may taint trial results. And the
studies prompt questions that no one, not even the best scientists,
will ever be able to answer: Can one extra prayer mean the
difference between life and death? Can prayer be dosed, the way
medicines are? Does harder praying mean better treatment by God? In
the minds of many, especially theologians, those questions border on
the sacrilegious. “To think that God would only respond to the group
that was prayed for and leave the other group out in the dark is
based on total misconceptions of how God responds to prayer,” says
Cynthia Cohen, a senior research fellow at the Kennedy Institute of
Ethics at Georgetown University…
"Other experts
worry, however, that faith can sometimes interfere with a patient’s
journey through illness. Dr. Suki Tepperberg, a family physician in
Dorchester, Mass., has concerns about those who put too much faith
in God’s will. One of her patients, a Jehovah’s Witness who has
diabetes and hypertension, believes her illness is in God’s hands
and she sometimes eats destructively, harming her health...Kenneth
Pargament, a psychology professor at Bowling Green State University
in Ohio, studied the religious coping methods of almost 600 patients
with diseases from gastrointestinal disorders to cancer. Those who
thought God was punishing them or abandoning them were up to 30
percent more likely to die over the next two years…Koenig advocates
that doctors take spiritual histories of any patient they are likely
to have an ongoing relationship with, asking questions like: 'Is
religion a source of comfort or stress? Do you have any religious
beliefs that would influence decision-making? Do you have any
spiritual needs that someone should address?' Not asking can have
devastating consequences because religion can affect the most
pragmatic details of a person’s life, says Dr. Susan Stangl, a
family-medicine doctor at UCLA...Just because some studies show that
being married can make you live longer, Sloan argues, 'we don’t
expect physicians to say to patients, ‘I recommend that you get
married’.' Doctors should feel free to refer patients to hospital
chaplains, he adds, but that’s as far as the religious conversation
should go.
Send information on noteworthy new books and articles to Dr. Langone
at
aff@affcultinfoserve.com.
________________________________________________________________________________^
Court Seeks
Diplomat's Assets in Falun Gong Case
The Globe and Mail (Canada), Thursday, July 29, 2004, Page A8, by
Chris Lackner
Chinese deputy consul-general under fire over defamation of Falun
Gong supporter
An Ontario court has filed a notice to seize the personal assets of
a Chinese diplomat found liable for defaming a Canadian Falun Gong
practitioner.
The Ontario Superior Court ruled in February that Pan Xinchun, the
Chinese deputy consul-general in Toronto, defamed Falun Gong
supporter Joel Chipkar in a letter that appeared April 25, 2003, in
the Toronto Star.
Mr. Pan's letter was a response to an earlier letter by Mr. Chipkar
that berated the Canadian government for not condemning China's
alleged political corruption and human-rights abuses.
Acting on the request of Mr. Chipkar and his lawyer, the Ontario
Superior Court issued a Notice of Garnishment against Mr. Pan on
July 14. Garnishment allows creditors to secure outstanding debts
without a debtor's direct co-operation, through a debtor's financial
institution or employer, for example.
"This is not about the money, it's about the principle. . . . It's
about accountability and visiting officials here not being able to
attack Canadians with impunity," Mr. Chipkar said.
At the February ruling, the presiding judge concluded that Mr. Pan
was not acting in his official capacity when he made statements
about Mr. Chipkar and was therefore not protected by diplomatic
immunity. Mr. Pan did not attend in his defence. The judge awarded
Mr. Chipkar $1,000 for the defamation and compensation for his legal
fees that amounted to $10,000.
"The immunity of consulate officials -- who are not full diplomats
-- is subject to limits within the law," said Peter Downard, Mr.
Chipkar's lawyer.
Attempts to access funds in Mr. Pan's personal account at the Bank
of China, which is owned by the Chinese government, have been
unsuccessful, Mr. Downard said. He added that the bank's Toronto
branch informed him there was no money in Mr. Pan's account.
The Bank of China's Toronto branch would not confirm receiving a
garnishment notice or whether Mr. Pan even holds an account with the
institution. "As a banker, we can't disclose any kind of
correspondence in relation to our customers," said David Chan, the
bank's chief accountant and compliance officer.
The defamation case against Mr. Pan prompted the Chinese government
to release a statement on Mar. 12 through Toronto-based law firm
Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg: "Mr. Pan was protecting the
interests of PRC [the People's Republic of China] in Canada, and
acting on the instructions of PRC to respond to an attack. . . . Mr.
Pan was acting in the exercise of consular functions and is thus
immune from Canadian courts' jurisdiction."
Inquiries made yesterday to both the Chinese Consulate-General in
Toronto and Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg were met with no
response.
Mr. Downard said his client could serve Mr. Pan notice to attend a
judgment-debtor examination to explain his lack of payment and
disclose any assets he may hold.
According to its post-ruling statement, China made numerous
unsuccessful requests to the Department of Foreign Affairs and
International Trade to intervene in the case and clarify Canada's
position on consular immunity. "This is an extremely serious issue .
. . with potential substantial consequences for the state of
relations between Canada and China."
In Rural China,
Religious Groups Face Suppression
Wall Street Journal, July 27, 2004, Page A14, by Charles Hutzler,
Staff Reporter
Government Tactics Used To Eradicate Falun Gong Are Directed at
Christians
"China is using tactics it employed to quash the Falun Gong
spiritual movement against Christian churches and other fast-growing
religious groups in the latest sign of a broad government clampdown
on dissent. The campaign -- quietly ordered late last year by the
political leadership -- is being waged by an offshoot of the task
force that coordinated the crackdown on the Falun Gong. It focuses
on rural China, where religious conversion -- to Christianity and
other faiths -- is flourishing.
"Across China, a religious revival is gaining momentum, with much of
the worship taking place in venues outside government control.
Foreign church groups conservatively estimate that there are 35
million Chinese Protestants alone, and say as many as two million
more are baptized every year. 'The spread of Christianity is really
worrying the government, so it has become a target,' says Kang
Xiaoguang of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, who in the past has
urged the leadership to take a more-tolerant approach toward
religion.
"The crackdown targets "cults," which are deemed illegal under
Chinese law. In official documents that outline the effort and that
haven't been publicly circulated, the government's definition of a
cult is vague. Critics say the ambiguity is purposeful in order to
encompass the many Christian groups that are resisting state
control.
"Activists in the Christian movement say local governments are
brandishing the cult label to force these underground Christians
into state-backed churches that are more susceptible to government
control.
"The tone bears striking parallels to government actions against the
Falun Gong, which espouses slow-motion exercises, meditation and a
blend of idiosyncratic beliefs. The government campaign is led by
the National Rural Anti-Cult Warning and Education Activity Office,
which is part of the so-called 610 Office -- the group that oversaw
the suppression of Falun Gong. An official from the 610 Office
declined to comment on the latest course of action."
Charismatics: "A
Call for Accountability" & "The Orlando Statement"
More than 50 leaders of the charismatic/Pentecostal community
convened in Orlando for the first-ever Ministries Today Symposium,
moderated by Jack Hayford, the magazine's senior editorial adviser.
High-profile leaders such as Ted Haggard, Reinhard Bonnke, Myles
Munroe, C. Peter Wagner, Rod Parsley and Joyce Meyer convened to
discuss the topic of ministry ethics. The unified convictions of
those present were distilled in a series of affirmations called "The
Orlando Statement." An abridged report of the Symposium and the
complete text of "The Orlando Statement" is available at
http://www.ministriestoday.com/specialreport.html. For a
complete report on the event, be sure to see the March/April 2004
issue of Ministries Today.
Court upholds Nxivm
ruling
Albany Times-Union, Friday, April 23, 2004, by Dennis Yusko,
Staff Writer
"Albany-- Training company challenged allegations that it's a cult"
Allegations that a Colonie-based human potential company is a cult
can stay online, a federal court has affirmed.
Nxivm (pronounced NEX-ee-um), which offers human potential seminars,
alleged that Rick Ross of New Jersey, a "cult deprogrammer,"
published critical commentary of its program after obtaining
information through copyright infringement. In September, a federal
district judge in Albany denied its request for an injunction to
remove the information from a Web site.
This week, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New
York City rejected Nxivm's appeal of that decision, saying critical
analysis of a confidential 265-page Nxivm manual by two mental
health professionals on Ross' site represented criticism, and
therefore "fair use" under copyright law.
"The court treats it like a negative theater review, which even
though damaging is not legally actionable," said Albany attorney
Thomas F. Gleason, who represented Ross. "It's a very negative
development for the plaintiff."
Arlen Olsen of Latham, who has been acting as attorney for Nxivm,
could not be reached.
The company claimed in a federal lawsuit filed in August that a
former Nxivm student, Stephanie Franco of New Jersey, supplied Ross
with its confidential "Rational Inquiry" manual after signing an
agreement not to disseminate it.
Paul Martin, a clinical psychologist, and John Hochman, assistant
clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of California at
Los Angeles, acquired and read the material and characterized it on
Ross' site as an expensive form of brainwashing. The postings caused
Nxivm to lose the support of prominent members and a coach,
thousands of dollars a day in revenue, a speaking engagement by
actress Goldie Hawn and more, Nxivm lawyers alleged.
Rational Inquiry was created by Keith Raniere and Nancy Salzman,
both of Halfmoon, and sold as part of Executive Success Programs or
ESP at Nxivm's New Karner Road offices in Colonie. Students call
Raniere "Vanguard" and Salzman "Prefect." The company has applied to
build a 67,000-square-foot headquarters off Woodin Road in Halfmoon,
a plan that has drawn the opposition of residents.
An ESP student named Kristin Marie Snyder has been missing for 14
months and is presumed dead. The 35-year-old woman was last seen
leaving an ESP intensive session in Anchorage, Alaska. Police there
believe Snyder committed suicide by drowning herself in an Alaska
bay in February 2003.
Snyder left a note in her vehicle saying Nxivm brainwashed her,
police said.
Tapestry Press
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE PRESS RELEASE
July 13, 2004
“TAPESTRY REJECTS ATTORNEY GENERAL’S POLYGAMY MANUAL”
Yesterday on KSL radio the Attorney General’s spokesperson, Paul
Murphy, announced a polygamy primer that the AG’s office is working
on to help service providers “who may have to help someone coming
from a polygamous background.” The AG’s representative also said
that they “have been working with both polygamists and
anti-polygamist groups”.
Tapestry Against Polygamy wants to make it very clear to the public
that we do not endorse this manual and will not work with the AG’s
office at this time.
“After reading its 30 pages we were stunned and believe this primer
is one more attempt to normalize polygamy. This manual is deeply
concerning and warrants some kind of explanation,” said Vicky Prunty,
Executive Director of Tapestry Against Polygamy, “We hand delivered
a letter to the Attorney General’s office today outlining our
concerns.”
The premise of this manual seems to be based on cultural sensitivity
to those who practice polygamy and we believe any contribution to
this manual would only assist the Attorney General’s office in
endorsing polygamy and encourage its growth.
“This manual seems convoluted and contradictory with no direction
and without clear goals or objectives. It would be impossible for a
provider to operationalize this manual,” says Sylvia Mahr
ex-polygamist wife and L.C.S.W. . “This is a sub-culture that
discriminates actively against the very groups it claims to be
similar with (African Americans, gay/lesbians, Native Americans,
etc.) and then expects preferential treatment.”
Co-Founder, Rowenna Erickson, supports this statement because of her
past experience assisting those leaving polygamy. Rowenna says
“This booklet in no way provides people with the help they need to
heal from their experiences.”
If service providers and others want Tapestry’s point of view they
can read “God’s Brothel,” released August 1st and written by Andrea
Moore Emmett, Utah N.O.W. President. It is a book with stories from
eighteen women who have escaped polygamy
Polygamist Ruled
Abusive to Daughters
Juvenile Court Judge Andrew Valdez ruled in Salt Lake City that John
Daniel Kingston, a wealthy businessman, father of an estimated 100
children, and a leader of the polygamous Kingston Clan/The Order,
abused two of his daughters. The judge gave temporary custody of the
girls to an aunt and uncle who are not members of the group. They’ll
be able to visit their mother, Heidi Foster, whom the judge said was
negligent in not protecting them. Kingston, who was ordered to keep
away from all ten of his children by Foster unless the visits are
supervised, pleaded no contest in 1999 to felony abuse after beating
a 16-year-old daughter for running away from a prearranged
polygamous marriage to one of his brothers. (AP in New York
Times, Internet, 6/4/04)
Judge Valdez also ordered that the Foster children be given new
birth certificates, with his name on them, in order to ensure their
inheritance rights and to end alleged efforts to hide his links to
them.
The head of the state Guardian ad Litem office says she took the
lead in pressing the case against Kingston because the Division of
Child and Family Services “has a view that you need to be tolerant
of different people’s cultures. They viewed this as a polygamy case
and I was viewing it as a child abuse and neglect case.”
In February, two of Kingston’s children, ages 2 and 4, were found
wandering along a busy street and taken home to an “extremely filthy
and unsanitary” house. DFCS has provided Foster with 54 months of
homemaking lessons and periodic supervision. A DFCS spokeswoman said
her agency was “looking at long-term solutions for those girls. We
don’t feel that just putting them into foster care is a long-term
solution.” (AP in Casper Star Tribune, Wyoming, Internet,
6/18/04)
Schools Closed Over
Discipline Issues
Mountain Park Baptist Boarding Academy, in southeast Missouri, and
Palm Lane Academy, in Florida, related boarding schools that relied
on Christian fundamentalist teachings, strict discipline, and
corporal punishment to reform troubled teens, have closed following
years of criticism of their practices. Last month, a former student
was awarded $20,000 by a jury for an injury suffered at Mountain
Park. He alleged that he was falsely imprisoned at the school, that
discipline there violated his civil rights, that he was denied
outside communications, and that the school let [sic] students sleep
as little as five hours a day.
The Mountain Park lawyer called the allegations “part of a crusade
by a few individuals against fundamentalist Christian schools.”
Mountain Park founder, the Rev. Bob Wills, once ran a school in
Hattiesburg, MS, that was sued for allegedly paddling pregnant teens
and detaining a 19-year-old against her will. A settlement required
changes in the school, but Wills closed it and relocated to
Missouri. (AP in New York Times, Internet, 5/30/04)
Sri Chinmoy Accused
of Sexual Exploitation
Queens, NY-based guru Sri Chinmoy (Chinmoy Kumar Ghose), who
preaches celibacy to some 4,000 followers worldwide, is being
accused by some of them of sexual abuse. One reports in an online
discussion board that the guru “summoned” her for sexual encounters
in 1991 and 1996, and in 2000 asked her to have sex with another
female disciple while he watched. ”I had never kissed a woman or
touched a woman. It was not something I fantasized about. . . my
mind was completely blown. It was so hard for me, but not only did I
do it but I acted happy about it.” Another woman claims to have
become pregnant by Ghose, and says he paid for her abortion.
Sri Chinmoy’s attorney said: “You’re going to have disgruntled
people. His philosophy attracts many people, and some of them are
deeply troubled, some in a sexual way.”
The guru’s former attorney — a longtime member — says disciples went
into debt supporting him. “Their whole existence is saving enough
money to go on the [annual three-month] Christmas trip. Celebrities
attracted to Sri Chinmoy include Olympian Carl Lewis and guitarist
Carlos Santana. (Alex Ginsberg, New York Post, Internet,
5/32/04)
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