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	<title>Question 12 Tribes &#187; Vermont</title>
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		<title>Kate Wiseman interview on Phish female fans radio</title>
		<link>https://question12tribes.com/kate-wiseman-interview-on-phish-female-fans-radio/</link>
		<comments>https://question12tribes.com/kate-wiseman-interview-on-phish-female-fans-radio/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 18 Nov 2019 07:00:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Charlie]]></dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://question12tribes.com/?p=7105</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[PART 1 OF INTERVIEW aired on October 13, 2019 Content Warning: This episode contains true stories of severe abuse Part one- 12 Tribes Cult- Interview with Kate Wiseman (ex-member), daughter of Ed Wiseman, the co-founder of the 12 Tribes Cult. Hear Kate&#8217;s experience of being born, bred and raised within this cult for 30 years....]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>PART 1 OF INTERVIEW aired on October 13, 2019</p>
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<p>Content Warning: This episode contains true stories of severe abuse Part one- 12 Tribes Cult- Interview with Kate Wiseman (ex-member), daughter of Ed Wiseman, the co-founder of the 12 Tribes Cult. Hear Kate&#8217;s experience of being born, bred and raised within this cult for 30 years. In the first part of this interview, Kate speaks about the early years of the cult and her childhood. Kate shares her intimate &amp; tragic stories that are filled with the truth of her amazing life. This woman is so brave and incredibly strong. She speaks publicly for the first time&#8230;..</p>
<p>Source: <a href="https://phemalecentrics.simplecast.fm/bf00fb82?fbclid=IwAR06pBWugwSCb4_GQv_8BYQLUnyxL3CvqDuaNWaaMeYxNLzEzG4pzWBSR_I">Phemale-Centrics episode 40</a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>PART 2 OF INTERVIEW aired on October 27, 2019</p>
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<p>Content Warning: This episode contains true stories of severe abuse Part 2- 12 Tribes Cult Interview Hear Kate Wiseman, ex-member &amp; daughter of co-founder Ed Wiseman, continued story of her life on the inside of the 12 Tribes Cult. In this episode, Kate shares her story of her arranged marriage, the beginnings of “the bus” on Lots, her love of Phish and her happy ending!</p>
<p>We’re part of the Osiris podcast network. Osiris is creating a community that connects people like you with podcasts and live experiences about artists and topics you love. To stay up to date on what we’re up to, visit our site and sign up for our newsletter. Osiris works in partnership with JamBase, which connects music fans with the music they love and empowers them to go see live music.</p>
<p>Source: <a href="https://phemalecentrics.simplecast.fm/4ee51332">Phemale-Centrics episode 41</a></p>
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		<title>FBI Documents Show Alleged Child Sex Abuse</title>
		<link>https://question12tribes.com/fbi-documents-show-alleged-child-sex-abuse-drug-trafficking-at-twelve-tribes/</link>
		<comments>https://question12tribes.com/fbi-documents-show-alleged-child-sex-abuse-drug-trafficking-at-twelve-tribes/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 30 Jun 2019 06:14:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Charlie]]></dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://question12tribes.com/?p=7021</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[WARNING: This article sensationalizes and exagerates even lies about what is actually in the FBI&#8217;s vault. But it also reflects the testimonies true, or not of those witnesses who spoke to the FBI. It will stay on this website until a better article summing up the FBI&#8217;s records is made public. So the reader is...]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>WARNING: This article sensationalizes and exagerates even lies about what is actually in the FBI&#8217;s vault. But it also reflects the testimonies true, or not of those witnesses who spoke to the FBI. It will stay on this website until a better article summing up the FBI&#8217;s records is made public. So the reader is advised to look at source material and contrast it with the vast amount of information, ex-members&#8217; accounts, legal documents, academic writings, professional investigations, Twelve Tribes own material such as teachings, etc.</p>
<p>Source of article: <a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/fbi-documents-show-alleged-child-sex-abuse-drug-trafficking-at-twelve-tribes_2982534.html">The Epoch Times.com</a></p>
<p>Source of FBI records: <a href="https://vault.fbi.gov/twelve-tribes/twelve-tribes-part-01-of-01/view">FBI.gov</a></p>
<p>FBI records on Twelve Tribes in PDF file you can view and download: <a href="http://question12tribes.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/FBI-files-Twelve-Tribes-Part-01-of-01.pdf">FBI files Twelve Tribes Part 01 of 01</a></p>
<div>By <a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/author-bowen-xiao">Bowen Xiao</a></div>
<p>June 28, 2019 Updated: June 30, 2019</p>
<p>The FBI released redacted documents this week on the cult community known as the “Twelve Tribes,” revealing numerous allegations against the group, including child sexual <a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/t-abuse" target="_blank">abuse</a>, drug trafficking, ritual abuse, and forced labor.</p>
<p>The <a href="https://vault.fbi.gov/twelve-tribes/twelve-tribes-part-01-of-01/view" target="_blank">61-page document</a>—released by the bureau’s <a href="https://twitter.com/FBIRecordsVault/status/1143579629870931968" target="_blank">Vault library on June 25</a>—included separate complaints detailing the alleged crimes, mostly against children. The cult has communes all over the United States, including Vermont, New York, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Florida, California, Tennessee, and more.</p>
<p>In 2013, a preliminary investigation was conducted by the FBI, based on a complaint the bureau received from the Alexander County Sheriff’s Office in North Carolina that children were being “sexually exploited” at a Twelve Tribes compound in the town of Hiddenite. The case was closed the same year.</p>
<p>Twelve Tribes has communes around the world, with the Hiddenite location being one of its training centers.</p>
<p>Documents showed that drugs were used at the commune and placed into “ritual” bread—usually LSD and hallucinogenic plants, as well as heroin and meth. There were also ritual ceremonies once a month that involved the bread being broken and gang rapes.</p>
<p>Punishment within the cult involved being beaten with a rod and having the wife or children of the accused being sexually assaulted by other cult members. The sheriff’s office had been aware of the Hiddenite location since 2006 and that much of the land in the area was owned by the cult, since families who joined had to turn over their property.</p>
<div></div>
<p>Members of the Hiddenite compound also allegedly were forced to go to a location and work all night and day for “three straight days,” in what was known as a “push” that involved three or six members. Those working were allowed to drink coffee that may have had something added to it to keep them awake.</p>
<p>In a prior complaint included in the released documents, a name that was redacted had contacted the public access line to report child sexual abuse in a Twelve Tribes commune located in Manitou Springs, Colorado. The person had said children were threatened not to tell the police or anyone else about the beatings or sexual abuse, and that the cult ran a restaurant in the area.</p>
<p>Yet another document, one from 2010, detailed how a former member was allegedly sexually and physically abused by cult members as a child but had repressed the memories. In 2009, the former member had seen a psychologist, who reported the abuse to local authorities, and had also contacted national leaders of the cult to inform them of her abuse. The former member also attended personal meetings with the cult leaders.</p>
<p>After a meeting on a date that was redacted, the former member was killed in a car crash that “was not accidental” and was allegedly “orchestrated” by cult members to prevent the woman from “propagating the claims of abuse.”</p>
<p>In the Twelve Tribe cult, members were also “allowed to punish any child belonging to the community.” The FBI document detailed how members would take their children to be “wooped,” meaning beaten, if they smiled at another child during a gathering, or if they were “horsing” around.</p>
<p>“Bigger children have missed ‘gathering’ for a couple of days at a time because they were beaten so badly and left in a condition where they could not attend,” the documents said, based on an interview with an FBI agent.</p>
<p>One former member said that they were once “locked in a cellar, beaten, and deprived of food.”</p>
<p>The release of the FBI documents came days after Keith Raniere, the former leader of purported self-help organization <a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/t-nxivm" target="_blank">NXIVM</a> was <a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/nxivm-leader-keith-raniere-found-guilty-on-all-counts_2970332.html" target="_blank">found guilty</a> on all charges at a Brooklyn federal court on June 19.</p>
<h2>NXIVM Collapse</h2>
<p>A federal jury, made up of eight men and four women, deliberated for less than five hours before finding Raniere guilty of all 7 criminal counts including sex trafficking, forced labor conspiracy, and racketeering.</p>
<p>Raniere listened attentively but showed no visible reaction as he learned the verdict. His sentencing is scheduled for Sept. 25.</p>
<p>The accusations against Raniere center around a secret society within the group—which he allegedly created in 2015—named <a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/t-dos" target="_blank" rel="noopener">DOS</a>, an acronym for the Latin “dominus obsequious sororium,” loosely translated as “master of the slave women.”</p>
<p>Prosecutors say Raniere was the “highest master” of <a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/t-dos" target="_blank" rel="noopener">DOS</a> and forced other members—all women—to have sex with him. Many of the DOS members were branded with a cauterizing pen while naked and being filmed.</p>
<p>Days ago, during closing arguments in the high-profile trial, assistant U.S. Attorney Moira Penza <a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/trial-begins-for-nxivms-leader-as-first-witness-testifies_2911115.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener">alluded to the prosecution’s May 7 opening statements</a>, telling the jury that Raniere was chiefly after “sex, money, power.”</p>
<p>Penza brought up the testimony of former NXIVM members, including one identified by prosecutors as “Daniela,” who had spoken about being locked up in a room for nearly two years after Raniere found out she had kissed another man. Another member, identified as Sylvie, testified about being <a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/witness-recounts-being-forced-into-sex-act-with-nxivms-leader_2912731.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener">forced into a sex act</a> with the leader. Another, a senior board member, detailed Raniere’s <a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/senior-member-breaks-down-in-court-over-nxivms-horrible-evil_2915415.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener">manipulation and fraud</a>.</p>
<p>The verdict comes after a 7-week long trial. Raniere could face a maximum sentence of life in prison.</p>
<div></div>
<p>Follow Bowen on Twitter: <a href="https://twitter.com/BowenXiao3" target="_blank">@BowenXiao3</a></p>
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		<title>Vermont news on raid-2009</title>
		<link>https://question12tribes.com/vermont-news-on-raid-2009/</link>
		<comments>https://question12tribes.com/vermont-news-on-raid-2009/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 24 Nov 2016 11:03:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Charlie]]></dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://question12tribes.com/?p=6280</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[WCAX.com, Vermont  prepared a report in July 2009, 25 years after the raid which took place in Island Pond. 112 children were taken by the State to be examined&#8230; Here are the original articles and videos linked: Article Part 1 with links to original TV report Article Part 2 with links to original TV report...]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>WCAX.com, Vermont  prepared a report in July 2009, 25 years after the raid which took place in Island Pond. 112 children were taken by the State to be examined&#8230;</p>
<p>Here are the original articles and videos linked:<a href="http://www.wcax.com/story/10734093/the-island-pond-raid-25-years-later-part-1"> Article Part 1 with links to original TV report</a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.wcax.com/global/story.asp?s=10740259">Article Part 2 with links to original TV report</a></p>
<p>Here are the articles reposted in this website: <a href="http://question12tribes.com/the-island-pond-raid-25-years-later-part-1/">Part 1</a>  and <a href="http://question12tribes.com/the-island-pond-raid-25-years-later-part-2/">Part 2</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Waiting for a family — A happy ending to a sad story</title>
		<link>https://question12tribes.com/syracuse-herald-american-sunday-april-13-1997/</link>
		<comments>https://question12tribes.com/syracuse-herald-american-sunday-april-13-1997/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 19 Dec 2015 09:46:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Charlie]]></dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://question12tribes.com/?p=4271</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Source: Cult Help and Information Original article from Syracuse Herald American, Sunday, April 13, 1997. After eight years on the run, her sons are home again.  Reclaiming kids from cult took Scriba woman across America. By Janet Gramza and Todd Lighty When the phone call finally came, Laurie Johnson&#8217;s heart soared.  After an eight-year search...]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Source: <a href="http://www.culthelp.info/index.php?option=com_content&amp;task=view&amp;id=2435&amp;Itemid=8" target="_blank">Cult Help and Information</a></p>
<p>Original article from <em>Syracuse Herald American, Sunday, April 13, 1997.</em></p>
<p><strong>After eight years on the run, her sons are home again.  Reclaiming kids from cult took Scriba woman across America.</strong></p>
<p><em> By Janet Gramza and Todd Lighty</em></p>
<p>When the phone call finally came, Laurie Johnson&#8217;s heart soared.  After an eight-year search for her two sons, authorities had found them in a small town in Florida.</p>
<p>But the moment she had prayed for held little joy.  When she finally met them, her sons refused to look her in the eye.</p>
<p>&#8220;I hope I don&#8217;t ever see you again,&#8221; they said.</p>
<p>Johnson and her husband, David, had expected the worst, and they got it.  Now, Laurie Johnson counts her painful reunion as the moment she and her sons began repairing their shattered bond.</p>
<p>By the time she brought them home to Scriba in Oswego County last month, Johnson&#8217;s sons, 12-year-old Seth and 17-year-old Nathanael, had spent their childhoods isolated in a religious sect whose leaders banished their mother and branded her as wicked.</p>
<p>Authorities say the cult, called The Community, and encouraged the boys&#8217; father, Stephen Wootten, to abduct them in 1989 on the eve of a court hearing granting their mother custody.</p>
<p>The Community allegedly helped hide the boys in &#8220;safe houses&#8221; around the country, sheltering them from the outside world.</p>
<p>Seth and Nathan Wootten used the aliases David and Andrew Leonard, forgot their own birthdays and had no Social Security numbers.</p>
<p>As members of The Community they weren&#8217;t allowed to attend mainstream schools, play with toys, watch television or befriend &#8220;worldly&#8221; children.</p>
<p>For their mother, their abduction began an exhausting quest that led her and her husband across the U.S. and to Canada and put them $50,000 in debt.</p>
<p>&#8220;We led a life that was just waiting for a family,&#8221; Johnson said.</p>
<p>The eight-year wait ended March 11th, when the FBI found Stephen Wootten&#8217;s rented house in Havana, Florida, arrested Wootten and took custody of Seth and Nathan.</p>
<p>In an interview from his jail cell in Tallahassee, Fla., Wootten defended his flight with the boys.</p>
<p>&#8220;In my heart, I was resolved that whatever I went through, I went through for the sake of the boys,&#8221; he said.  &#8220;That&#8217;s what kept me continually on that same course.&#8221;</p>
<p>With help from a hired cult &#8220;deprogrammer,&#8221; the boys have reclaimed Johnson as their mother and the word &#8220;Mom&#8221; now comes naturally from their lips.  Johnson, who declined to have her sons interviewed, said the boys look forward to going to school, making friends and living a normal life.</p>
<p><strong>Raised in religion</strong></p>
<p>Laurie Marrano was raised in Attica by born-again Christians who forced her to break up with her high school sweetheart, David Johnson, because he didn&#8217;t share their beliefs, she said.</p>
<p>At age 18, her parents packed her off to Bible school at the Elam Bible Institute near Rochester.  There in 1976, she met Stephen Wootten, an aspiring minister.  They married the next year.</p>
<p>By 1980, they had an infant son, Nathanael, and Wootten was pastor of the local Assemblies of God church where Laurie&#8217;s parents were active members.  In 1983, Laurie gave birth to Seth.</p>
<p>The next year, Johnson&#8217;s parents took notice of The Community.  The group drew national attention when Vermont police, acting on allegations of child abuse, raided houses in the group&#8217;s main branch at Island Pond and took more than 100 children into protective custody.</p>
<p>Within days a judge ordered the children released, citing a lack of evidence for the raid.  Johnson&#8217;s parents saw the incident as religious persecution.  After visiting the group, they said goodbye to their children and moved to Island Pond.</p>
<p>In fall 1986, the Woottens followed.</p>
<p>Wootten said his ex-wife liked the group&#8217;s focus on home schooling, the healthy diet and &#8220;the loving discipline.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Community claims about 2,500 members in 25 communities throughout the world but they are primarily located in New England.</p>
<p>Law enforcement authorities said The Community is a nonviolent, strict fundamentalist religious group that runs its own businesses, such as candle and soap shops.</p>
<p>From the outside, The Community looked like a commune of hippies wearing long hair and plain clothes and living off the land.  From the inside, Johnson said, it was a rigid hierarchy in which male elders made the decisions, male followers enforced them, and women and children obeyed.</p>
<p><strong>&#8220;Loving discipline&#8221;</strong></p>
<p>Instead of living a carefree country life, Johnson said, she worked 12-hour days teaching other members&#8217; children, doing chores and preparing communal meals.  She hardly saw Seth and Nathan, she said.</p>
<p>She also learned that &#8220;loving discipline,&#8221; meant hitting children with wooden sticks [dipped in resin] like those used on circus balloons.  The Community&#8217;s idea of misbehavior, she said, included slacking off on chores and indulging in make-believe play.</p>
<p>Without toys, Seth, then a toddler, made do by pushing a wooden block along the floor and saying, &#8220;Vroom, vroom.&#8221;  She was ordered to discipline him, she said.</p>
<p>Within eight months, Johnson was disillusioned with The Community and her husband was a devout follower.  She wanted to leave.  He didn&#8217;t.</p>
<p>Johnson left the community twice, the second time for six months.  Although she stayed with Wootten&#8217;s sister and called often, Wootten says she abandoned him and the children.</p>
<p>Johnson said she went back because she missed the boys.  The elders summoned her to a six-hour &#8220;confession&#8221; of her sins, during which she admitted she had been unfaithful to Wootten.  They declared her an unfit mother and banished her.</p>
<p>Months later, she reunited with David Johnson and moved to his home in Scriba, where he works as a mechanic at Nine Mile Point nuclear power plant.  Today she credits him with giving her the strength to reclaim her children.</p>
<p>The Community&#8217;s elders frustrated her attempts to visit her children, she said.  In September 1989 she filed for a divorce from Wootten and sought custody of the children.  A judge granted her visitation and set a custody hearing for September 28th.</p>
<p>Before the hearing, the couple spoke by phone for the last time before Wootten fled.</p>
<p>&#8220;He said I was the best mother in the world,&#8221; Johnson recalled.  &#8220;The problem was, I lived in the world.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Asleep in her arms</strong></p>
<p>Johnson has replayed her last visit with the boys countless times in her memory.</p>
<p>&#8220;We picked Seth up,&#8221; she said, &#8220;and a Community member was ranting and raving and banging on our car window.  And a woman I had known in The Community brought Seth out to me.  He was 5.  And I just wept uncontrollably.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;&#8216;We went to a park.  We really enjoyed each others&#8217; company. . .  On our ride home, Seth wanted to stop at a hotel and stay with me.  And I cried because I couldn&#8217;t keep him.  And he fell asleep in my arms.&#8221;</p>
<p>The next day, they went to get Nathan.</p>
<p>&#8220;You need to come back to The Community,&#8221; she remembers the 9-year-old telling her.  &#8220;If you want to be my mother, you need to come back to The Community.&#8221;</p>
<p>After a day of shopping and talking, they went to a brook and David Johnson showed Nathan how to skip stones.  &#8220;I heard Nathan laugh from his toes right to his head, and it&#8217;s a laugh I remember to this day,&#8221; she said.</p>
<p>The custody hearing was 10 days later.  Johnson began calling to check on the boys.  Each time she was told, &#8220;Stephen is away, and we&#8217;re not sure when he&#8217;ll be back.&#8221;</p>
<p>When she got to Island Pond, she said, Community members greeted her with smug looks and said only, &#8220;He did what he did in the best interests of the children.&#8221;  Wootten and the boys were long gone.</p>
<p>The next day, a judge granted her sole custody of her children.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.culthelp.info/index.php?option=com_content&amp;task=view&amp;id=2440&amp;Itemid=8">Jean Swantko</a>, a lawyer and Community member, said Wootten had no choice but to run with the boys.</p>
<p>&#8220;The courts would not treat him fairly,&#8221; she said.  &#8220;He knew in his conscience that he could not turn them over to her.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>A long, futile chase</strong></p>
<p>Thus began the search that would consume the Johnsons&#8217; time, money and energy for eight years.  They plastered Vermont with &#8220;Missing&#8221; posters, which they believe The Community tore down.</p>
<p>They borrowed money from friends and family to hire private investigators and contacted missing children&#8217;s groups.</p>
<p>A year into their ordeal, Laurie and David Johnson got married.</p>
<p>Each time authorities had a possible sighting of the boys, the Johnsons jumped on a plane, making futile trips to Missouri, Florida, Vermont, Nova Scotia and Winnipeg, Canada.  The leads grew colder and the children older.</p>
<p>Sheriff Jeffrey Bitcon of Caledonia County, Vt., said Wootten was like the cartoon character Roadrunner, always one step ahead of Wile E. Coyote.  Except that Wootten had help.</p>
<p>&#8220;Most of the time when someone takes off and wants to hide, cops will say, &#8216;Well, he has nowhere to go,&#8217;&#8221; Bitcon said.  &#8220;But this guy had a lot of places to go.  He had his church friends.  They were hiding him out.&#8221;</p>
<p>That same year, Johnson appeared on an episode of &#8220;The Jerry Springer Show.&#8221;  The talk show broadcast snapshots supplied to the FBI by a Community member.  They showed Seth and Nathan five years older than she&#8217;d last seen them.</p>
<p>On the show, she was shouted down by a dozen members of The Community, including her parents and sister.  When asked why he wouldn&#8217;t help his daughter see her children, her father said, &#8220;These are the choices she made.  There&#8217;s nothing we can do.&#8221;</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Wootten and the boys were criss-crossing the country, moving a dozen times in eight years to Vermont, Missouri, California and Florida, police said.</p>
<p>In 1991, at a Community house in St. Joseph, Missouri, Wootten met Julie Williams, formerly of Cortland.  He married Williams in January 1993.</p>
<p>In a telephone interview, Williams described the boys&#8217; life on the run as &#8220;productive.&#8221;  They spent their days being home-schooled by Wootten, doing chores, preparing meals for their parents and visiting Community members, even helping on their father&#8217;s painting jobs.</p>
<p>&#8220;There were times they would be kind of rebellious, you know how teenagers get,&#8221; said Williams, 40.  &#8220;And we&#8217;d say, &#8216;Listen, do you want to just go live with your mother?&#8217;  And they would just get fear on their faces.  &#8216;No.  No.  No, don&#8217;t send me to my mom, please.&#8217; &#8221;</p>
<p>Wootten, Williams and the boys had moved to Havana in the Florida Panhandle by the spring of 1996, according to town records.</p>
<p>Wootten, 41, used the alias Mark Leonard and got work as a painter.  Williams worked as a project coordinator for a construction company.</p>
<p>At 8 p.m. on March 11, 1997, police and FBI agents raided Wootten&#8217;s rented house.  When the agents arrived, Wootten and Nathan were on a painting job and Williams was at work.  Seth was home with two Community members from Vermont, Williams said.</p>
<p>As Wootten and Nathan arrived home, they saw the police cars and kept going.  They drove to a pay phone and called Williams, who joined them.</p>
<p>Their next call was to The Community&#8217;s elders in Palenville, N.Y. Wootten faced what he called a &#8220;heart-wrenching&#8221; decision: flee and divide his sons, or go to jail.</p>
<p>&#8220;It was a real tug at my heart knowing that they had (Seth).  That was real suffering,&#8221; Wootten said.  &#8220;I&#8217;m thankful for the time that I have had with my sons.&#8221;</p>
<p>He returned home to be arrested on federal charges of unlawful flight to avoid prosecution and Vermont charges of custodial interference, or parental kidnapping.</p>
<p>The police led Wootten away in handcuffs.  Social service authorities placed the boys in a group home.</p>
<p><strong>A painful reunion</strong></p>
<p>In Scriba, Laurie Johnson was alone reading a fitness magazine ready to go to bed, when the phone rang at 10:15 p.m.</p>
<p>Johnson let the answering machine pick up.  Even when she heard Essex County (Vermont) prosecutor Jan Paul, she hesitated.  She didn&#8217;t want to talk about the case.</p>
<p>&#8220;David and Laurie, this is Jan Paul.  I need you to pick up the phone right now.  If you&#8217;re home, you need to pick up right now,&#8221; Johnson heard.</p>
<p>Johnson picked up.  Paul told her the news.  Johnson repeated it back to her: &#8220;You have both Nathan and Seth in Florida together, and they are safe.&#8221;  And Paul said.  &#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
<p>She dropped the phone and began jumping around the room, screaming and laughing and crying.</p>
<p>The next day, Laurie and David landed at the Tallahassee airport.  The social worker told her the boys didn&#8217;t want to talk to her.  Still, she asked to see them right away.</p>
<p>&#8220;That was a no-brainer,&#8221; Laurie Johnson said.  &#8220;&#8230; It didn&#8217;t matter what their reaction was, the fact was that they were going to see their mother.&#8221;</p>
<p>The reunion was more of a rejection.  They used almost the same words in blaming her for abandoning them, their father and The Community, Johnson said.</p>
<p>But the next day, the boys surprised the Johnsons by greeting them warmly.  It was as if they had rehearsed eight years for their first meeting with their Mother, David said, &#8220;but they had no prepared speech for the next day.&#8221;</p>
<p>Nathan had grown into a slim, dark-haired young man who resembles his mother.  Seth is huskier and blond, like his father.</p>
<p>They spent the day catching up, laughing over the baby pictures Laurie brought, talking about their lives and asking about hers.  They let her touch their hands, their shoulders, their necks.  Seth showed her his recent appendectomy scar.</p>
<p>The next day, the custody hearing that Wootten avoided eight years earlier was repeated in a different state, with him in handcuffs.  The judge gave custody to their mother.  He granted Wootten a few minutes to say goodbye.</p>
<p>Laurie Johnson said that meeting was brief because Wootten kept shouting at her.  Wootten denied that.</p>
<p>&#8220;I expressed to them how much I loved them,&#8221; he said.  &#8220;I expressed to them that our Father in heaven knows the number of hairs on their heads and he&#8217;s going to take care of them, and that I would see them again.&#8221;</p>
<p>The plane trip to Syracuse was the first novelty in the boys&#8217; return to mainstream life.  They were glued to the windows and chewed gum so their ears wouldn&#8217;t pop.  On the drive to Scriba, Seth delighted his mother by repeating, &#8220;Are we there yet?&#8221; every five minutes, &#8220;just like when they were really young.&#8221;</p>
<p>The boys were &#8220;courteous and polite,&#8221; but were hostile to any criticism of their father or The Community.  Laurie and David took them shopping for bikes and new clothes, and gave them each a television for their bedrooms.</p>
<p>Laurie Johnson&#8217;s fear that The Community would try to reclaim the boys followed them home, she said.  After two phone calls from Community members, she said, the Johnsons got an unlisted number and began sleeping in shifts.</p>
<p>On the third day, the boys were outside when a van pulled up near the end of the driveway.  Laurie looked out and saw that the driver was her father.  She screamed and shooed the boys back in the house.  The van drove away.</p>
<p>Carmen Marrano, Johnson&#8217;s father, said last week that he was there to see his grandsons.  If he had wanted to kidnap the kids, he said, he could have.</p>
<p>The next day, cult deprogrammer Rick Ross arrived.  Ross showed them [many videos about cults and techniques of mind control often employed by cults — this included] footage of the mass cult suicide in Jonestown, Guyana, the federal raid of the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas, and their mother&#8217;s appearance on the Springer show.</p>
<p>At first the boys challenged his assertion they had been brainwashed.  But soon they were immersed in discussions about the parallels between The Community and other cults.</p>
<p>A week later, the Heaven&#8217;s Gate cult suicide in San Diego reinforced Ross&#8217; arguments.</p>
<p>During that week, the boys stopped calling each other &#8220;David&#8221; and &#8220;Andrew.&#8221;</p>
<p>Then came another breakthrough.  Dave Johnson was in the garage when Nathan walked in and said, &#8220;Mom&#8217;s cooking supper.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;I came in and told Laurie, &#8216;You just got called &#8216;mom&#8217; out in the garage,&#8217;&#8221; he said.  &#8220;Of course, she started crying.&#8221;</p>
<p>By the time Ross left March 24th, [after days of dialogue and discussions] the family was tired of deprogramming.  The boys began enjoying the things they&#8217;d missed, including their mother.</p>
<p>Together, they reminisced about their last visit, about Seth sleeping in Laurie&#8217;s arms, Nathan skipping stones.  The boys&#8217; recollections were as vivid as hers, she said.</p>
<p>&#8220;I think they really like me,&#8221; she said.  &#8220;They&#8217;ve told me that they love me.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>The sky&#8217;s the limit</strong></p>
<p>With his first allowance 17-year-old Nathan bought himself a set of Hot Wheels cars.  Then he applied for his learner&#8217;s driving permit and got behind the wheel of the family car.</p>
<p>The boys have been busy setting goals.  They started school last week, Nathan at The Academy, Seth at Oswego Middle School.</p>
<p>Their mother tells them they can be whatever they want, the sky is the limit.  At the same time, every instinct tells her to hold them close and never let go.</p>
<p>Laurie said she thinks Seth and Nathan would run to her if anyone from The Community approached them again.  Still, she&#8217;s grown attached to a gift Dave&#8217;s mother gave them: walkie-talkies.</p>
<p>And so, on a recent day as the boys headed out to fish at a nearby pond, Laurie picked up her walkie-talkie and said, &#8220;Seth, can you hear me?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Yeah,&#8221; he responded.</p>
<p>&#8220;Here&#8217;s a big kiss!&#8221; she said, with a loud smack.</p>
<p>&#8220;10-4,&#8221; he replied.</p>
<p>Then she held the walkie-talkie to her cheek.  Her eyes misted.</p>
<p>Now that she has her boys back, the hardest part for Laurie Johnson is letting them go.</p>
<p><strong>Update</strong></p>
<p>The ex-husband of a Scriba woman who hid their two sons from her for nearly eight years was transported to Vermont Wednesday to be arraigned on a parental kidnapping charge.  Stephen Wootten had been in a Tallahassee, Florida, jail since police and FBI agents tracked him down March 11th.  The boys, 12-year-old Seth and 17-year-old Nathan, were returned to their mother, Laurie Johnson of Scriba.  Authorities say a religious cult called The Community had helped Wootten hide the boys since September 1989.  State Attorney Jan Paul of Essex County, Vermont, said Wootten was being returned to Vermont Wednesday by federal marshals, and was to be arraigned either late Wednesday or early today.  She said she would request that his bail be maintained at $750,000, because he poses a flight risk and because The Community has many assets.  Wootten also faces prosecution on a federal charge of unlawful flight to avoid prosecution.</p>
<p><strong>On the trail of two children</strong></p>
<p>Laurie Johnson&#8217;s eight-year wait for the return of her children included sightings and disappointments across the country until her ex-husband Stephen Wootten was found earlier this year.</p>
<ol>
<li>In 1986, the Woottens move to the Island Pond, Vermont, home of The Community, a religious sect.  When they divorced, Wootten takes the boys into hiding in 1989.</li>
<li>In 1991, at a Community house in St. Joseph, Mo., Wootten met Julie Williams, whom he marries in January 1993.</li>
<li>In 1994, authorities &#8211; acting on a tip &#8211; check a Community house in Santa Cruz, Calif., but Wootten&#8217;s not there.</li>
<li>In April 1996, police raid a Community house in Winnipeg, Canada.  Again, Wootten&#8217;s not there.</li>
<li>By spring 1996, Wootten Williams and the boys move to Havana, Fla., and adopt aliases.  On March 11th of this year, the FBI finds Wootten.</li>
<li>Today, Laurie Johnson has the boys in Scriba.</li>
</ol>
<p>For more on this story watch these videos: <a href="http://question12tribes.com/twelve-tribes-on-us-tv-show-1994/" target="_blank">Jerry Springer Show 1994</a> and <a href="http://question12tribes.com/12-tribes-ex-members-on-geraldo-rivera-show-1997-ny/" target="_blank">Geraldo Rivera Show 1997</a></p>
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		<title>Island Pond Journal; Trip Home to Stand Up For Their Community-June 2000</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Sep 2015 04:09:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Charlie]]></dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Source: New York Times Published: June 19, 2000 ISLAND POND, Vt., June 18— Sixteen years after a swarm of Vermont troopers rousted 112 children from their beds in an effort to examine them for signs of abuse, some of those same children, now adults, returned today to this community to swear that they had felt...]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div itemprop="headline">Source: <a href="http://http://www.nytimes.com/2000/06/19/us/island-pond-journal-trip-home-to-stand-up-for-their-community.html" target="_blank">New York Times</a></div>
<div itemprop="headline">Published: June 19, 2000</p>
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<p itemprop="articleBody"><strong>ISLAND POND, Vt., June 18— </strong> Sixteen years after a swarm of Vermont troopers rousted 112 children from their beds in an effort to examine them for signs of abuse, some of those same children, now adults, returned today to this community to swear that they had felt happy and loved, not abused.</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">The event fell near the 16th anniversary of the 1984 raid on a religious group then known as the Northeast Kingdom Community Church. The group has changed its name to the Twelve Tribes Community and has established 25 communities around the world.</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">At the time of the raid, the State of Vermont, frustrated in its effort to verify reports that church members were beating their children in the name of religion, sent 90 state troopers and 50 social workers into the compound in the early hours of June 22 to round up the children, who ranged in age from 9 days to 17 years old, and put them on a Greyhound bus for the courthouse in the nearby town of Newport.</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">Today, about 80 of the children rode a Greyhound bus back to Island Pond. To a standing ovation from their friends and parents, they got off the bus and gathered behind a lectern beside Island Pond, for which the town was named.</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">The oldest child involved in the raid, Lisa Campbell, who was 17 at the time, was the first to speak.</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">&#8221;I remember that several police officers gathered us into the living room to ask us our names and dates of birth,&#8221; Ms. Campbell said. &#8221;As evidence of the supposed child abuse, the police were picking up knitting needles and pieces of wood used to prop the windows open. I remember thinking that this was all ridiculous because I knew the truth: there was no abuse in our household.&#8221;</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">&#8221;Now I am the mother of four,&#8221; she said, &#8221;and only now can I realize what our parents went through for us on that day.&#8221;</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">Still, the atmosphere today was more one of celebration than of recrimination.</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">The children, as they are still called, performed a circle dance in honor of what they referred to as their Day of Deliverance by a Vermont district judge, Frank G. Mahady, who held 40 hearings that day, then released the children after ruling that the state did not have enough evidence to hold them for examination for signs of abuse.</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">Church members did not dispute that they were using corporal punishment, but said they disciplined their children, usually with thin rods, in the spirit of love.</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">Ed Wiseman, one of the founding members of the community, said, &#8221;Freedom of speech and freedom of religion were both at risk.&#8221;</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">Mr. Wiseman said: &#8221;The issue of religious persecution and discrimination against new religions is an issue all over the world today. We see a great need for government leaders to make sure that the information they&#8217;re receiving about these new minority groups is reliable.&#8221;</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">The community was founded in the 1970&#8242;s in the forests of Vermont, about 20 miles from Canada. Church members live in communal houses and work in businesses run by the commune like a shoe store, a candle shop and a dairy farm.</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">The group tries to follow the Bible closely and create a &#8221;Kingdom of God.&#8221; Mr. Wiseman and others said that discipline was essential to a developing a sense of self-worth and that a lack of it was destroying the nation at large.</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">Wayne Dyer, now a retired Vermont state trooper, was a participant in the raid and in today&#8217;s event. In a statement that he wrote for the gathering, Mr. Dyer called the raid &#8221;a terrible thing.&#8221;</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">&#8221;Individuals who were responsible for the raid were not brought to justice, and the state got off the hook with a small lawsuit from the family of a child who happened to be visiting that day and was scooped up,&#8221; Mr. Dyer wrote. &#8221;Without the Constitution, the Island Pond church would have been destroyed.&#8221;</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">Some other social service and law enforcement officials were invited, but did not attend.</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">One of them, Philip White, who was the state prosecutor on the case, told The Burlington Free Press, &#8221;The first lesson is that it is still O.K. to beat their children, especially if they have a religious justification for it.</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">&#8221;The second lesson,&#8221; Mr. White, said, &#8221;is that we still have not found a satisfactory approach to preventing and addressing child abuse issues when they occur in closed religious communities.&#8221;</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">Another child involved in the raid, Stacy Sage, now 26, is a mother of three. Like the others who returned to Island Pond today, she is still a member of the church. Mrs. Sage said it was &#8221;a God-given right&#8221; to discipline children.</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">&#8221;Many people have a hard time with discipline,&#8221; she told the gathering of 300 to 400 people, many of them community members.</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">&#8221;But discipline comes from love,&#8221; she said &#8221;Without discipline, children will not have any respect for God or for authority. They have no sense that there are consequences for disobedience. Discipline is not a joyful experience, it hurts, but I never felt unwanted or unloved.&#8221;</p>
<p itemprop="articleBody">Photos: Former residents of the Northeast Kingdom Community Church in Island Pond, Vt., returned there yesterday, almost 16 years after the authorities raided the community in response to reports that they and other children had been abused. At left, children performed a dance to mark the anniversary of the raid. (Photographs by Amy Toensing for The New York Times) Map of Vermont highlighting Island Pond: State troopers raided a religious group in Island Pond in 1984.</p>
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		<title>US cult expert+sociologist warns of child abuse in the 12 Tribes+2 other cults</title>
		<link>https://question12tribes.com/house-of-judah-the-northeast-kingdom-community-and-the-jonestown-problem/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Apr 2015 00:25:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Charlie]]></dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Source: International Journal of Cultic Studies Volume 1, 2010, 27-48 Original title of essay (The Northeast Kingdom Community is short for Northeast Kingdom Community Church, name the 12 Tribes had previously): House of Judah, the Northeast Kingdom Community, and ‘the Jonestown Problem&#8217; Downplaying Child Physical Abuses and Ignoring Serious Evidence Stephen A. Kent Department of...]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Source: <a title="Isca article by Stephen A. Kent" href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt16" target="_blank">International Journal of Cultic Studies Volume 1, 2010, 27-48</a></p>
<p>Original title of essay (The Northeast Kingdom Community is short for Northeast Kingdom Community Church, name the 12 Tribes had previously):</p>
<h2>House of Judah, the Northeast Kingdom Community, and ‘the Jonestown Problem&#8217;</h2>
<h3>Downplaying Child Physical Abuses and Ignoring Serious Evidence</h3>
<div dir="ltr"><span style="font-family: arial,sans-serif;"><br />
<b><span style="font-size: medium;">Stephen A. Kent</span></b></span></p>
<div><span style="font-family: arial,sans-serif;"><b><span style="font-size: medium;"><br />
Department of Sociology</span></b></span></div>
<div><span style="font-family: arial,sans-serif;"><span style="font-family: arial,sans-serif;"><b><span style="font-size: medium;"><br />
University of Alberta</span></b></span></span><span style="font-size: medium;">This article offers a critique of the discussions concerning physical child abuse that occur in the standard academic sources on Peoples Temple and Jonestown—most especially John Hall’s Gone From the Promised Land, which he published in 1987. Using accounts about children in Peoples Temple and Jonestown from personal accounts and respected journalistic sources, the article shows that sociological and religious-studies scholarship has downplayed the extent of the physical and emotional abuse that the children suffered prior to their murders. Moreover, some of this scholarship even has minimized the children’s deaths themselves. Hall’s discussion of corporal child punishment comes under special scrutiny, because he attempted to contextualize it by analogizing Jonestown’s child punishment regimes to practices within both conservative Protestantism and two groups operating in the same period as Peoples Temple and Jonestown—the House of Judah and the Northeast Kingdom Community.</span><span style="font-size: medium;">The Jonestown</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt3">[3]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> deaths of November 1978 remain the most dramatic and tragic American ‘cult event’</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt4">[4]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> to have occurred after the Second World War, and a generation of people still remember the nightly news broadcasts of increasingly dire information as reporters and government officials struggled to make sense out of the bodies bloating in the sun. The generation of people who hold those memories, however, is aging (and, alas, dying—see R. Moore, 2000: 7–8), and at some point future generations will have to acquire information about the tragedy through media and Internet sources. Thanks to the Internet, audio of Jim Jones’s directives to his followers will survive electronically, as will many documentaries produced since the murder-suicides. Very little information from these sources, however, winds up in scholarship, since academics tend to rely upon the written word—especially the written word of earlier academics. Undoubtedly in the future, some academics will return to archives and mine information afresh, but until new research emerges, scholars and others will have to rely upon earlier publications in their efforts to understand the violent deaths of 918 people.</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt5">[5]</a><span style="font-size: medium;">Those of us who see Jonestown as the epitome of cultic control, manipulation, and abuse may find aspects of scholarship on that fateful community startling. The scholarship that I paid particular attention to appears in the book-length monographs that academics (people with appointments in colleges or universities) have produced on Jonestown, especially monographs published by university presses. For years I have been collecting these monographs, as well as journalistic, religious, and conspiratorial accounts about Jonestown and its demise. For this article, I supplemented my own collection with additional volumes that I obtained through my university’s library (including from the Kent Collection on Alternative Religions), and I spent hours searching new- and used-book Internet sites for more titles (which I either purchased or ordered through interlibrary loan). I also checked bibliographies within the academic monographs.</span><span style="font-size: medium;">Because in this article I am concerned about what subsequent generations will learn about Jonestown based upon existing scholarship, I wanted to identify which monographs are likely to have impact in the future. To determine books’ likely impact, I checked (in mid-November 2009) the titles on the OCLC Online Union Catalog (WorldCat) database, which gives the names and total numbers of libraries around the world that own particular volumes. I assumed that the greater a book’s availability, the more likely that future generations will have access to it. Presented chronologically (according to date of publication), the sociology studies are: Ken Levi (ed.), Violence and Religious Commitment: Implications of Jim Jones’s Peoples Temple Movement (1982; with a WorldCat count of 634);</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt6">[6]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> and John Hall’s Gone from the Promised Land: Jonestown in American Cultural History (1987; with a WorldCat count at 842).</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt7">[7]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> Other academics wrote and edited additional sociological books about Jonestown but published them with Edwin Mellen Press—a publisher that received very bad media coverage in 1993 for the poor review and production standards that it applied to its products (St. John, 1993).</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt8">[8]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> Again in chronological order, the books are Judith Mary Weightman, Making Sense of the Jonestown Suicides: A Sociological History of Peoples Temple (1983; with a WorldCat count at 363);</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt9">[9]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> Rebecca Moore, In Defense of Peoples Temple—and Other Essays (1988; with a WorldCat count at 146); and two books edited by Rebecca Moore and her husband, Fielding M. McGehee III—The Need for a Second Look at Jonestown (1989; with a WorldCat count at 152); and New Religious Movements, Mass Suicide, and Peoples Temple: Scholarly Perspectives on a Tragedy (1989; with a WorldCat count at 202). A number of religious studies and interdisciplinary books also have appeared concerning Jonestown, and I will mention them later in this study.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Based upon the number of libraries worldwide that own copies of these sociological books, Hall’s study of Jonestown appears destined to be the most influential in the coming years. Moreover, soon after its publication, several book reviews sang praise to its scholarship. “Hall’s achievement is noteworthy…. [H]e presents the most comprehensive and sociological assessment of Peoples Temple available,” said the review in Contemporary Sociology (Rigney, 1988: 469). Another proclaimed, “Hall’s book is a triumph of scholarly craft and a skillful demonstration of the sociological viewpoint” (Christiano, 1989: 222). According to a third review, this study provided “the most compelling sociohistorical account to date of one of the more chilling horrors of modern times” (Snow, 1990: 1103); and a fourth reviewed concluded, “I have no doubt this work will be a standard in the field for years to come” (Wright, 1989: 94). More recently, three religious-studies scholars praised Hall’s monograph as “the most complete and compassionate history of Peoples Temple to date” [Moore, Pinn, and Sawyer (eds.), 2004: xvii]. Certainly, Hall’s study of Jonestown is a likely source to examine in an attempt to see what future generations of scholars will learn about and how they will interpret child-abuse issues within Jones’s group. I begin, therefore, my analysis of scholarly representations about child abuse within Peoples Temple by examining his book.</span><br />
<span style="font-size: medium;">The Discussion of Child Physical Abuse in John Hall’s Gone from the Promised Land</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Hall discussed child abuse issues far more than did other scholarly books, yet he (and for that matter, other scholars, too) diminished important issues of the physical (and psychological) abuse that the children at Jonestown endured prior to their murders. He minimized the deviance of the children’s abuse by spuriously analogizing it to other punishment regimes in two contemporaneous groups (the House of Judah and the Northeast Kingdom Community), even though the regimes in those two groups actually were themselves widely criticized (and in at least one case, fatal). Other scholarship on Jonestown attempts to humanize the people who died while placing considerable blame upon the group’s countercult opponents (called the Concerned Relatives) for Jones’s murderous response (see R. Moore, 1988: 3–26), but these attempts minimize the significance of the large number of infants, children, teens, and elderly who simply were murdered.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Hall’s study was the product of extensive research, with his having gained information from the Guyanian government; the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Department of State; the California Historical Society; and the attorney for the Peoples Temple (Hall, 1987: x). Although the study has much to commend, it completely rejected any validity to what Hall called the anticult movement and its alleged reliance on atrocity tales (Hall, 1987: xiv–xviii). The anticult movement, he decided, “was ideological, no matter what its claims to scientific legitimation,” partly because it targeted “culturally deviant and unpopular religions” but ignored “the more subtle (and perhaps more effective) coercion in mainstream religion” (Hall, 1987: 107).</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Clearly, Hall was disinclined to provide any legitimation to the anticult movement. Moreover, his insistence that the movement relied upon atrocity tales to make its claims about coercion blinded him to the fact that people in the particular anticult movement against Jim Jones, called the Concerned Relatives, often were deadly accurate in their fearful predictions about the direction of his group (cf. Hall, 1995: 308 for mention of the group’s credibility problem). In, for example, his complaint against Peoples Temple, former member James Cobb, Jr. accurately predicted the mass murder of children that would occur five months after he filed his papers in court. Cobb indicated that ‘revolutionary suicide’ was what Jones and Temple leadership were calling the action that the group would take if “Jones felt he was being persecuted or unduly harassed,” but the action really “was a megalomaniacal threat of ‘mass murder’ which would result in the death of minor children not old enough to make voluntary and informed decisions about serious matters of any nature, much less insane proposals of collective suicide” (Cobb v. Peoples Temple&#8230; 1978: 14). Despite this kind of accurate prediction, Hall’s discussion of the group’s punishment of children did not locate Peoples Temple’s obvious abuses within a framework of anticult concerns, but rather attempted to place them within a context of conservative Protestantism. In doing so, however, Hall juxtaposed Peoples Temple with two other groups whose abusive practices had attracted considerable anticult attention and concern.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">The forms of child abuse that Hall identified in Jonestown were numerous, but his accounts of the physical and psychological abuse of children and teens understated the severity of their group-inflicted punishments. Hall reported that, on one occasion, a Temple defector indicated that Jones’s pathological cruelty manifested in “forcing a child to eat his own vomit” (Hall, 1987: 121). Child-beatings also took place by 1975, in which “children sometimes were subjected to extensive paddlings” in the context of public meetings in which the entire congregation agreed to them (of course, with Jones’s approval [Hall, 1987: 122]). After parents signed release forms that supposedly absolved Peoples Temple from any liability for administering the paddlings, children received a wide range of what Hall called “whacks.” “For example, “several small boys received ‘twenty-five whacks’ for ‘stealing cookies’ in a supermarket” (Hall, 1987: 124). Another boy of indeterminate age “took 70 whacks” for calling a member “a crippled bitch” (Hall, 1987: 124). One teenager even asked Jones to “administer seventy-five whacks” for an offense that she believed she had committed, but Hall was not clear whether she ever received them (Hall, 1987: 123–124).</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Beyond these paddlings, beatings, or whackings, Hall was imprecise about exactly what happened to children who faced punishment, saying only that they could expect to receive it</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">for stealing, for lying, acting ‘irresponsibly,’ making fun of people for their handicaps, physically threatening or attacking others, especially adults, associating too intimately with outsiders, and breaking the laws of the larger society, especially in ways that reflected on Peoples Temple. (Hall, 1987: 123)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">He mentioned boxing or wrestling matches as forms of punishment, but was not clear whether children (rather than just adults) had to endure them (Hall, 1987: 123, 124). Hall, for example, did not provide an age of “one ‘cocky delinquent type’” who successfully fought several opponents before one beat him (Hall, 1987: 124).</span><br />
<span style="font-size: medium;">Critiques of Hall’s Accounts of Child Corporal Punishment</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Two fundamental problems exist with Hall’s account of the child abuse that occurred in Jonestown prior to the murders of the children. First, it seems highly likely that he dramatically under-presented what the children actually suffered. One of Hall’s sources, cited in his bibliography, is Jeannie Mills’s 1979 book, Six Years with God: Life Inside Reverend Jim Jones’s Peoples Temple. Her accounts of beatings are explicit and numerous. Although Hall was vague about whether the teenager who supposedly requested “seventy-five whacks” got them (Hall, 1987: 123–124), Mills recounts in painful detail how Jones ordered and oversaw her daughter’s beating with a board, seventy-five times, for hugging “a girlfriend whom Jim [Jones] considered to be a traitor” (Mills, 1979: 267).</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt10">[10]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> Mills’s account of this public beating was only one of many. She indicated that large men beat children as young as four and five years old, sometimes as much as 150 times (Mills, 1979: 13). (As did Hall, she indicated that parents signed release forms prior to the public beatings, which reputedly gave Jones permission to carry them out [Mills, 1979: 260, 296].) During various periods in the group’s history, children received beatings with boards (Mills, 1979: 53, 71, 289), belts (Mills, 1979: 254, 259), elm switches, and electric cables (Mills, 1979: 260). She also indicated clearly that, as punishment, Jones forced young children (as well as adults) into boxing matches (Mills, 1979: 53, 279). In one case, the group forced a young boy, whom an adult man had molested, to watch as punishers stripped the molester and beat him with a board “all over his body” (Mills, 1979: 48; see 71)—an account substantially confirmed by a later source (Layton, 1998: 61).</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt11">[11]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> In addition, Mills also told the story, in far more detail than Hall, about the youngster whom Jones forced to eat his own vomit (Mills, 1979: 162). Another tale that she recounted, from a family who escaped the group and came to her, was about “young people [who] were forced to eat hot peppers or even have hot peppers put up their rectums as disciplines” (Mills, 1979: 79).</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Finally, Mills recounted a punishment that a defector from Jonestown told her about, in which adults put children down a well (Mills, 1979: 81), which a later account about life in Jonestown confirmed (Layton, 1998: 177).</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt12">[12]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> Reiterman with Jacobs contextualized the story about the well by placing it among other abuses that adults inflicted upon children and teens:</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">For younger children, punishment could be especially terrifying. At first Jones would threaten to turn disobedient children loose in the bush to see how long they would survive there by themselves. Those who continued to act up were blindfolded then lowered by rope into a well. Adults, on Jones’s orders, would hide in nearby bushes or even in the bottom of the well, making noises and pretending to be monsters. (Reiterman with Jacobs, 1982: 394)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">The authors further recounted the punishments Tommy Bogue, a teenager around sixteen years old, and another boy who tried to escape Jonestown suffered:</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Once when Tommy Bogue and another boy ran off, a Temple search squad caught them near the railroad tracks to Matthews Ridge, then put the boys in leg irons. Back in Jonestown, their heads were shaved and they were forced under armed guard to cut logs into small pieces until Stephan Jones got his mother to intervene. (Reiterman with Jacobs, 1982: 294; see 551)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Subsequently, Bogue was among the people who tried to leave Jonestown with Congressman Leo Ryan, and he was shot in the leg (Reiterman with Jacobs, 1982: 551). Hall failed to mention that one of the wounded defectors was a teenager (see Hall 1987: 279).</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;"> Another one of Hall’s sources also wrote about</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">a trench, roughly nine feet deep by nine feet square, where the slackers were dumped…. A few children who maintained they were sick and unable to work were lowered into that excavation and made to dig in the mud, first light till last light. (Reiterman with Jacobs, 1982: 357)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">As far as I can determine, however, Hall also omitted these punishments in his rendition of physical abuses.</span><br />
<span style="font-size: medium;">Child Corporal Punishment in Protestantism</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;"> If Hall had believed that the accounts of either Mills or Reiterman with Jacobs were inaccurate, then he could have criticized or qualified their statements, as he did on other issues (see Hall, 1987: 167 [criticizing Reiterman with Jacobs], 338 n. 13 [qualifying Mills]). Instead, when he discussed the physical child-abuse incidents that they had reported, Hall dramatically downplayed their extensiveness, their severity, and their variability. As I have indicated, therefore, his downplaying and under-representation of various abuses is my first criticism of his use of Peoples Temple and Jonestown’s child-abuse incidents. By using them, however, he could putatively locate the abuses within the context of historical and contemporary Protestantism. Locating them in this manner was crucial for his argument, which was that most of the evils of Jones and Jonestown “were widespread and sometimes institutionalized practices in the wider society” (Hall, 1987: 309; see xviii; also see Hall, 1982: 49; 2000: 42; B. Moore, 1989: 551; Rigney 1988: 468). The anticult movement focused on “Temple methods, healings, money-making schemes, glorification of a prophet, intimidation and punishment, public relations, and political manipulations” (Hall, 1987: 309); but (Hall asserted) these issues were similar to what went on within society at large, and in that broad societal context did not receive scrutiny from the anticult movement.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Herein lies the second major problem with Hall’s account: He minimized the extreme and damaging punishments against children by trying to equate them with the punishments that various historic and contemporary Protestants and modern Christian-related sects inflicted upon their own children. The section in which he attempted the comparison between Jonestown and Protestantism is worth quoting at length:</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Physical punishment in the [Peoples] Temple certainly exceeded normative standards of the modern middle class, but Temple members were not predominantly middle class. Disciplinary practices of Peoples Temple more resembled those of stern Protestants, from the Puritans of seventeenth century New England to some modern fundamentalist sects. The extremes of Protestant discipline are marked by a Michigan sect whose members accidentally beat a child to death for his sins in 1984. More representative of the sensibility is [the] Northeast Kingdom Community, a contemporaneous Christian religious community in Island Pond, Vermont, whose members had no apologies for using rods and switches for ‘loving correction’ of children, even if it left marks on their bodies.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">By a Puritan standard like that of Island Pond, Temple discipline was not excessive. (Hall, 1987: 125)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Worth noting, however, about Hall’s analogy between Peoples Temple and Puritan and fundamentalist Protestant punishments is that, by minimizing their severity, he replicated a criticism that he had made of the anticult movement. He had criticized that movement for ignoring issues of coercion in mainstream religion, but he downplayed the severity of the physical and emotional child abuse that brutal corporal punishment entailed in the Peoples Temple by analogizing it with Protestant child-rearing practices.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Hall was at least correct in pointing out that the beatings Jones oversaw on children bore some resemblance to ones that children suffered in various forms of fundamentalist and sectarian Protestantism (see, for example, Ellison, 1996; Ellison, Bartkowski, and Segal, 1996). For example, the groundbreaking book on Protestant punishment techniques was Philip Greven’s Spare the Child: The Religious Roots of Punishment and the Psychological Impact of Physical Abuse, and it appeared in 1991, which was two years after Hall’s Jonestown study. On the issue of beating children, Greven was unequivocal in identifying “the pervasiveness of such views about physical punishment among fundamentalist, evangelical, and Pentecostal Protestants, as well as many Americans of other persuasions, both religious and secular” (Greven 1991: 40). Among those groups, “Puritan parents were among the most abusive in using the rod upon their children’s bodies and wills” (Greven, 1991: 133). Jones’s religious background included Pentecostal and Holiness theologies along with ordination in the Disciples of Christ (see Hall, 1987: 19–28), so this historical context was useful. The two contemporary (supposedly) Protestant sects, however, to which Hall drew analogies, were ones whose practices the anticult movement had specifically been concerned about for a long time and that many critics called ‘cults’ (see Langone and Eisenberg, 1993: 332–334). One sect turned out not even to have been Protestant, and the other was by no means representative of American Protestantism.</span><br />
<span style="font-size: medium;">Child Corporal Punishment in the House of Judah</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">The unnamed Michigan group that Hall mentioned was the House of Judah (also known as Black Hebrew Israelite Jews)—a group whose violent activities had attracted the attention of cult-monitoring organizations of the period.</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt13">[13]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> Contrary, however, to Hall’s claim, it was not a Protestant group, since its members read only the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament (Helfer, 1983: 3). Moreover, the beating death of a twelve-year old child (John Yarbough) took place in July 1983 (not 1984, as Hall indicated), with his mother (Ethel Yarborough) being convicted of involuntary manslaughter in February 1984 (Detroit Free Press, 1984). At the cult’s religious camp, the adolescent “repeatedly refused to do his chores,” which included chopping and hauling wood, digging dirt used to repair a road inside the camp and hauling pails of water” (Ray, 1983: 1A). For this refusal, adults put him in stocks and beat him “30 times on the butt” with a broomstick-sized wooden pole. One or more blows hit his spine, which killed him (Ray, 1983: 1A). In what cult apologists likely would call an atrocity tale, John’s brother, Daniel, eventually would testify under oath that his brother had been “beaten on at least 40 occasions by sect members, one of whom once tried to lift the youngster by the ears with a pair of pliers” (Detroit News, 1986). In response to the death, authorities removed sixty-six children from the camp, and eventually secured the conviction of the cult’s leader, William Lewis, and five others to between two- and three-year federal prison terms “for conspiring to enslave sect children and causing a boy’s death” (Mitzelfeld, 1986).</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">A pediatrics professor and medical doctor, Ray E. Helfer, assessed the children, and he observed:</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">&#8230;these nutritionally healthy bodies have been moderately to severely injured by repetitive beatings and other physical insults. Of the first 50 to 55 children examined by a physician after John [Yarbough]’s death a full 20% had signs of severe physical abuse. For the children greater than five years of age this percentage increases to approximately 40% and for the boys in this age range, the figure is 70% to 75%. Thus, the likelihood of a male child reaching adolescence without showing physical signs of severe abuse to his body is less than 25%, possibly even less. (Helfer, 1983: 2; see Langone and Eisenberg, 1993: 333)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">The physician wrote in conclusion:</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">The children of the House of Judah have been reared in a manner unacceptable to any and all standards. Their bodies [are] seriously and permanently injured, their intellectual capacities underdeveloped, minimal decision making and problem solving abilities have been taught, the basic concepts of delayed gratification underdeveloped, feelings and their expressions denied, trust misguided and nongeneralizable with fear serving as the foundation of the way of lives….</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Being reared in the House of Judah is physically unsafe and developmentally destructive. (Helfer, 1983: 10)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">In essence, Hall’s attempt to analogize the beating of children in Peoples Temple to the beating in the House of Judah works far better than he ever imagined, even though the group was not Protestant and the boy’s deadly beating was not “for his sins” (Hall, 1987: 125). Adults beat him to death because he refused to perform slave labour, and one wonders if ‘slavery’ would also have been an appropriate term for the conditions in which the Peoples Temple children lived and died.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">By attempting to contextualize, therefore, Peoples Temple’s corporal punishment of children within fundamentalist Protestantism, Hall inadvertently showed that such behaviours occurred outside of a Christian context, and were criminal in nature. Moreover, true “atrocity tales” assisted a United States District Court judge to reach his decision that six key adults in leadership positions deserved federal prison time. Alas, future generations are unlikely to be able to draw these alternative conclusions about Hall’s use of the House of Judah in an attempt to normalize the physical violence that occurred at Jonestown. They are unlikely to be able to do so because none of the book reviews written about Gone from the Promised Land (Bainbridge, 1989; Baptiste, 1988; Christiano, 1989; B. Moore, 1989; Rigney, 1988; Snow 1990; Wright 1989), nor any of the subsequent academic discussions about Jonestown that I have seen (for example, Chryssides, 1999; Dawson, 2006; Gallagher, 2004) have critiqued Hall on his child-abuse discussion. Moreover, only a few paragraphs exist on the House of Judah in two academic publications aside from this one (Landa, 1990–1991: 592 n.1; 610; Langone and Eisenberg, 1993: 333).</span><br />
<span style="font-size: medium;">Child Corporal Punishment in the Northeast Kingdom Community</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Although Hall had alluded to the House of Judah only when attempting to contextualize Peoples Temple’s corporal punishment of children, he specifically identified by name the Northeast Kingdom Community as a better example of a group demonstrating “[t]he extremes of Protestant discipline.” To reiterate his statement about it, he described it as “a contemporaneous Christian religious community in Island Pond, Vermont, whose members had no apologies for using rods and switches for ‘loving correction’ of children, even if it left marks on their bodies” (Hall, 1987: 125). On this much Hall was correct, and a significant body of academic literature does exist about this group that academics in the future will be able to read about its practices. Unfortunately, key elements of that scholarship misrepresent crucial issues in the sect’s stormy relationship with authorities over corporal punishment and child-protection issues.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">The basic facts about a 1984 raid against the Northeast Kingdom Community are well known, and Hall cited two New York Times articles and one Christian magazine article about it.</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt14">[14]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> On June 22, 1984, police officers, accompanied by social workers and nurses, raided the community, removing 112 children. The next day, however, a judge overturned the raid on grounds that the search warrant was too general and did not mention specific alleged crimes against specific children who were living in specific buildings (Mahady, 1984a, 1984b). At least nine academic and academically related articles have appeared about this group and the raid against it (Bozeman and Palmer, 1997; Malcarne and Burchard, 1992; Palmer, 1998, 1999; 2001; Swantko, 2000 [then revised, updated, and reprinted in 2004], 2005–2006; Swantko and Wiseman, 1995)</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt15">[15]</a><span style="font-size: medium;">; and the author/co-author of four of these is the Northeast Kingdom Community’s lawyer, Jean Swantko.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">In various publications, Swantko blamed the raid on the anticult movement, specifically on Priscilla Coates, who was active in the Citizens Freedom Foundation, and deprogrammer Galen Kelly, who had deprogrammed at least one member. According to Swantko, Coates and Kelly “prevailed on the Attorney General’s Office and the Governor himself to adopt as true” a collection of unreliable evidence that a state team of investigators had gathered from a dozen former members from around the country (Swantko, 2004: 184). Indeed, “these two antireligious zealots” (as Swantko called them [Swantko, 2004: 184]), “provided the fodder for local law enforcement to compile a 32-page affidavit used to secure the warrant, which was replete with unfounded stories of abuse strewn with erroneous and sensational interpretations of doctrine” (Swantko, 2004: 184). Nothing in Swantko’s articles, nor in any of the articles in which Susan Palmer was the author or contributor, gave any credence to the possibility that authorities acted on compelling evidence, or that Coates and Kelly were speaking in the community and talking to authorities because they had genuine, well-founded concerns about children’s welfare. Indeed, a review of media accounts</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt16">[16]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> about the Island Pond community before the raid paints a very different picture than what Swantko presented—one of serious, documented physical abuse against children, and a religious group that was uncooperative with authorities who were acting on behalf of children’s welfare.</span><br />
<span style="font-size: medium;">Pre-Raid Media Accounts of Child Abuse in Island Pond’s Northeast Kingdom Community</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">An article that appeared in the Hartford Courant (and was reprinted in Florida’s St. Petersburg Times) at the end of 1982 provided a litany of problems that local residents were having with the Island Pond community, all the result of actions and policies of the Northeast Kingdom Community itself. These actions and policies were not things that residents learned about from anticultists; they learned about them simply from living in the same community with members of the group (Cockerham, 1982).</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Within about three years of Northeast Kingdom members moving to Island Pond in 1979 (Palmer, 2001: 213), tensions with local residents festered over a number of issues. Specifically regarding the group’s care of children, residents had figured out that the group illegally exempted its members from normal registry procedures involving births and deaths. As locals realized, “the group refuses to record births or deaths. They [sic] have a registered graveyard on church-owned land, although no one knows of any mortalities” (Cockerham, 1982: 6; see Harrison, 1984: 61). This refusal was particularly troublesome regarding children, since officials had no way of identifying or tracking their health and safety.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Also regarding children, townspeople saw and heard firsthand how the adults in the group punished their children. In essence, townspeople such as Bernard Henault observed them “‘disciplining their own children on the street’” (quoted in Cockerham, 1982: 6). Almost certainly, “disciplining” often meant hitting their children. For example, former members Charles and Tommye Brown</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">decided to leave [the group] because they objected to the way the group treated its children. ‘The kids are punished for almost everything, asking for more food or not speaking to adults they pass on the street.’ Brown and his wife, who are childless, said the punishment ranges from whippings to being locked in their rooms for as long as a week. He also said the food is barely enough to survive on. (quoted in Cockerham, 1982: 6) </span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Apparently, Tommye Brown had testified about the beatings during a previous, high-profile custody case, since, in late November 1982, Newsweek reported that, during the trial,</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">witnesses testified that all of the Kingdom’s children, from tots to teens, received frequent and lengthy bare-bottom thrashings with wooden rods—during which they were supposed to smile and thank their elders…. ‘I couldn’t stand what they were doing to their children,’ said Tommye. ‘I couldn’t stand listening to them cry.’ (Zabarsky, 1982)</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt17">[17]</a></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Again, these tensions between the local community and the Northeast Kingdom came from interactions that members from each group had with one another while living and working in proximity. Coates and Kelly from the Citizens Freedom Foundation did not have to generate allegations of physical abuse against Northeast Kingdom Community children—Island Pond residents apparently saw instances with their own eyes, heard the beatings going on in a Northeast Kingdom community house (Sexton 1983: 25), and read about other instances in the local press.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">In addition to information about children allegedly being beaten within the Northeast Community, local citizens also learned from the press that Lydia Mattatall, one of a defector’s children, essentially had been kidnapped. Ex-members relayed that the defector’s former wife “‘gave’ her to [leader Elbert Eugene] Spriggs as a faith gesture” (Nickerson, 1983: 81), and Spriggs took her to Europe. In her scholarship, Susan Palmer mentioned Lydia was with Spriggs; Swantko did not. Palmer indicated that “members claim that [mother] Cindy Mattatall gained her husband’s consent prior to this arrangement [involving Lydia living with Spriggs], but when he was disciplined by the community in Boston, he decided to claim his daughter was ‘kidnapped’” (Palmer, 1999: 170). Even if this were true, however, when the father, Juan, demanded custody of his daughter, “the church has ignored a court order to return her,” and (on December 28, 1982) members “were told to pray for his death. One elder of the sect rose during a ‘body meeting’ of baptized members and described a dream in which Juan’s throat was slit and his head lopped off” (Nickerson, 1983: 81; see Braithwaite, 1983: 1). Moreover, no reasonable explanation comes to mind about why the group leader would want to raise someone else’s young daughter in the first place, especially thousands of miles from the parents themselves. No indication exists, for example, in anything that I have read, that the mother gave her daughter to Spriggs out of fear that her husband was a child molester, as might be inferred from Swantko’s comments and subsequent evidence about the father himself.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Lydia’s disappearance was not the first time that a young girl had gone missing from the Northeast Kingdom Community at Island Pond. In 1980, a Northeast Kingdom member kidnapped his daughter, Gabrielle Spring Howell, from her grandmother’s house in Tennessee and brought her to Island Pond. Gabrielle Spring’s mother found her and was trying to flee with her when Northeast Kingdom members (or her husband himself—accounts vary) “ran her off the road and snatched the child again.” Her father took her to Europe; but three years later (when she was seven years old), her uncle tracked her down in Spain and returned her to her mother in Alabama, in March 1983. Spring (which was the name she went by) “told her family on her return that she was beaten, forced to do physical labor, milk goats and scavenge for nuts and berries to feed the cult” (Ottawa Citizen, 1983; see Daley, 1985: 154–155). Moreover, upon her return, she bore</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">scars on her legs and buttocks that her mother, once a member of the church, claims are the result of whippings administered by sect members. ‘These are sick and dangerous people who would do this to a child in the name of Jesus,’ the mother, Deborah Heflin 26, said in a telephone interview&#8230;. (Nickerson, 1983: 87)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">A medical doctor in Alabama examined Spring, and he reported that “she had ‘multiple, long, narrow, discolored scar tissue areas over the &#8230; buttocks and posterior thighs—the result of severe blows to this area with a rod-like instrument’” (quoted in Daley, 1985: 155).</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">It turned out, too, that Spring had babysat Juan Mattatall’s daughter, Lydia, in Europe. The information that she brought back, however, was deeply disturbing. Detective Corporal Peter M. Johnson filed a report about his interview with Spring, indicating that she told him,</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">During the time in Spain, Spring was severely disciplined by Kirsten Nelson and Gene and Marsha Spriggs. Spring Howell advised that she was hit all over with a stick with her clothes off. During the interview, Spring showed concern for children that [sic] were still with the group; Spring named Lydia (Lydia Mattatall), Semony Daniel and Benjamin Sayer that [sic] they were still getting beaten; Spring advised that during breakfast, if she asked for more food, she would get a beating. Spring was suppose[d] to take care of Lydia Mattatall and advised that Lydia was still in diapers; Spring got a spanking for lying about Lydia wetting the bed. (Johnson 1983a: 1)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Shifting to information that the police officer received from Spring’s mother, his report continued:</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Deborah Heflin advised that at one point, approximately 3½ years ago, she was forced to watch as Gene Spriggs and James Brooks hit Spring with a stick until she bled; Deborah advised that Spring was scarred up when she came home from Spain and that a few weeks after she returned, photographs were taken; Deborah gave this officer written permission to obtain the photographs&#8230;. (Johnson, 1983a: 2)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">It appeared, therefore, that the founder and leader of the Northeast Kingdom Community was practicing corporal punishment against children, not to mention requiring a child to care for an infant. About a month after officer Johnson filed this report, and in a surprise twist of fortune, Mattatall recovered his daughter, in October 1983, when Canadians living on Cape Sable Island, Nova Scotia who had seen a television show about the group recognized Spriggs and phoned both the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and Canadian Broadcasting Corporation television (Gorham, 1983).</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt18">[18]</a></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Information provided by defector Arthur Fritog (apparently in January 1983)</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt19">[19]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> established the connection between the alleged beating behavior by the leader and his wife in Spain and the probable beating practices in Island Pond, Vermont. Fritog departed the group after having attended the meeting where two elders asked baptized community members to pray for Juan Mattatall’s death. As a Vietnam War veteran told a friend at the time, however, “‘I’ve watched a lot of men die, and I’ve been party to a lot of men dying…. I assured him that nobody knew what death was. I could not ask for a man to die,’” so he left the meeting and departed from the group (quoted in Braithwaite, 1983: 1). In Fritog’s accounts about what life was in the Northeast Kingdom Community, he revealed:</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Methods of child discipline at the Island Pond community have been dictated in a series of messages from Mr. Spriggs and his wife, based on their experiences with three-year-old Lydia.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">One method, called scourging, involved tying a nude child face down on a bed and striking the entire body with a thin wooden balloon stick. Mr. Fritog said he had seen the technique used on a two-year-old girl. (Braithwaite, 1983: 23)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">If true, then Fritog’s information established a clear link between the beatings that Spring received in Spain—the results of which police had summarized in a police report and had seen in photographs—and messages received and followed by Northeast Kingdom residents from the leader and his wife in Europe, both of whom had been involved with beating the young girl.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">What at the time appeared to be unfortunate confirmation that Northeast Community elders were following the Spriggs’s instructions about scouring came when Constance and Roland Church reported that elder Charles “Eddie” Wiseman had scourged their thirteen-year-old daughter, Darlynn, over a period of seven hours. Detective Johnson’s report indicated that he and a person from Social and Rehabilitation Services taped a statement from Darlynn in which she</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Advised that she was sent from the room and the adults stayed and had a meeting. Darlynn was called back into the room and told she was going to be disciplined for lying. Darlynn was stripped to her underpants and told to put her hands on a window sill. The accused then hit the victim with a long, thin piece of wood (balloon stick). According to Darlynn she was hit and then questioned…. The victim advised that this lasted from approximately 0930 until 1630 hours. (Johnson, 1983b: 2)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Along with the police report, Detective Johnson also submitted a copy of a medical report written by a physician at a local hospital, which “indicated that linear scars were present on legs and would be consistent with the victim’s statement” (Johnson, 1983b: 2).</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Darlynn’s father, Roland Church, who was present in the room during the beating, confirmed his daughter’s story. He indicated that the men who beat her “suggested that the rod be an extra long one and that they should strip her down to her waist, down to her panties” (R. Church, 1983: 3). He also indicated that the men talked to her for about “an hour before the discipline started,” and it lasted “until 4:30 in the afternoon.” The men overseeing her beating would stop scouring her for “ten to fifteen minutes until they pried information out of her,” then start the whipping again (R. Church, 1983: 3). Likewise, Darlynn’s mother, Constance Church, confirmed her daughter’s story, since she, too, witnessed it. The man beating her daughter, she said, used long balloon sticks as the whips (C. Church, 1983: 5). Although crucial aspects of this family’s accounts would change in the future, before the raid there was strong evidence that adults were scourging children, as the Spriggs couple had instructed.</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt20">[20]</a></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">More dramatic evidence of physical abuse came forward in late August 1983, when Brenda Hebert, who was the wife of a Northeast Kingdom Community member, produced for the police seven photographs she had taken of children whom she said had been injured, sometimes bleeding, from beatings. One picture was of a baby’s bottom—the child was still in diapers; Hebert claimed the child had been beaten for a week (Hebert, 1983: 4–5). Still another allegation of a nine-month-old being physically abused came to light in March 1984, when defector Jeff Jenke indicated that, in the community, a baby with broken bones had been hit with “sticks,” and the people in the church said that the breaks were from rickets (Jenke, 1984: 5–6; see Hebert, 1983: 3).</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Clearly, Social and Rehabilitative Services knew that a serious problem existed regarding the physical abuse of children in Island Pond’s Northeast Kingdom Community. Authorities had similar accounts of beatings coming from multiple sources over a period of years. They also had medical reports that corroborated people’s statements, and they even had photographs showing the damage caused by children having been beaten with balloon sticks. Moreover, police and social services had no way of knowing whether any children had been sufficiently injured to have required medical attention, since one member of the Northeast Kingdom Community already had been convicted of practicing medicine without a license (Lium, 1982; O’Dea, 1984). Likewise, officials could not even be sure that no children had died from the physical abuse, since the Community operated its own graveyard, refused to register births and deaths, and at every juncture refused to cooperate with them. The lack of cooperation had gone so far as a Community member hiding a stillborn baby’s body from authorities in 1980 (Kenney, 1980).</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">With these facts in mind, a raid against the Northeast Kingdom Community was inevitable. Any efforts by subsequent authors such as Jean Swantko to blame it on “anticultists who try to use the legal system” (Swantko, 2000: 342), or Susan Palmer, who saw the raid as a consequences of anticultists who “created a portrait of a nefarious cult habitually cruel to children” (Palmer, 1998: 201) clearly are attempts to scapegoat responsibility away from the group itself. After Judge Mahady threw out the warrant and any possible evidence that authorities acquired, the Commissioner of Social and Rehabilitation Services for the Vermont Agency of Human Services, John D. Burchard, Ph.D., wrote a clear (and to my mind, compelling) justification for the raid and the continued need to provide protection to Northeast Kingdom Community’s children. Swantko called this statement a “self-serving justification” (Swantko, 2000: 353), but it actually seems to have been an accurate account of the decision-making processes that led up to the raid itself.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">With considerable understatement, Burchard let readers see how surprising it was that Judge Mahady would have squashed the state’s intervention into the Community on behalf of its children, since he himself had commented strongly on the group’s corporal punishment in a previous case. In that case, Mahady stated:</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">‘At all material times, while the children have been residing at the religious community, they have been subjected to frequent and methodical physical abuse by adult members of the community in the form of hours-long whippings with balloon sticks. These beatings result from minor disciplinary infractions.’ (quoted in Burchard, 1984: 6)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Although Burchard said little else directly about Mahady’s decision, the clear implication was that, in ruling to dismiss the raid, the judge allowed a social environment to continue that even he realized fostered physical abuse.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Swantko claimed that “antireligious zealots, Kelly and Coates, prevailed on the Attorney General’s Office and the Governor himself to adopt as true the unreliable information collected by two state employees sent to investigate” former members around the United States (Swantko, 2000: 347). Burchard, however, pointed out that many of the incidents that contributed to officials believing in the necessity of the raid had appeared in the media,</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt21">[21]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> and much of the evidence also included “sworn statements from witnesses and victims and there are photographs corroborating several of these incidents” (Burchard, 1984: 5). Religiously bigoted information from “anticult zealots” played no role in the officials’ decision, especially since many of the incidents, and much of the supporting evidence were local to the Island Pond area.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Without specifically naming the cases involved, Burchard presented “some of the specific allegations” that gave police and social-service workers great alarm about the safety of the Community’s children:</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">1. A named four-year-old child who was hit fifteen to twenty times with a rod for imagining that a block of wood was a truck.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">2. A named seven-year-old girl who was stripped naked by several persons besides her father and spanked for asking for some food. The spanking continued until her bottom bled.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">3. A named thirteen-month-old female child spanked for not taking food from someone other than her parents. The spanking led to bruises on both legs and her buttocks.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">4. A named three-and-one-half-year-old boy disciplined until his back was bleeding.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">5. A named thirteen-year-old girl who was stripped to her underpants by several men and hit with a rod for being deceitful. The discipline lasted over a period of several hours and produced more than eighty welts on her body.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">6. A named eleven-year-old boy who was hit with a 2 x 4 eight times for laughing at a church member. A large blister and bruise resulted from the discipline. (Burchard, 1984: 5)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Burchard certainly captured the feelings of many Island Pond citizens when he offered, “any person who reads the published accounts of the disciplinary practices of the church must believe there is reasonable evidence that child abuse may have occurred” (Burchard, 1984: 5; see Malcarne and Burchard, 1992). He also was aware of how severe (if not deadly) child beatings in closed communities can be, because he had consulted with Michigan officials concerning what had transpired within the House of Judah (News Tribune, 1984).</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Judge Mahady’s objections to the raid, of course, were not because he doubted the probability that adults were inflicting child physical abuse upon children; rather, they were largely because the warrant was not specific in naming alleged victims and their exact locations. Burchard, therefore, both examined whether the state had any alternative to initiating a raid on an entire community, and discussed whether such a raid was legal from the standpoint of an action designed for juvenile protection. On the question of possible alternatives, Burchard was very clear that the behavior of Northeast Kingdom Community members toward authorities left his department with no other choice than to issue a general warrant. Said succinctly, time and again, Community members refused to cooperate with far less intrusive social-service interventions:</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">The problem that State has faced from the beginning is that the church community appears to be purposefully organized to shield the identity of the parents and children in question, and to allow them to thwart the ordinary steps of due process which many critics seem convinced should have worked successfully. (Burchard, 1984: 7)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Amidst discussing eleven instances (dating back only to 1982) when the Northeast Kingdom Community had refused to cooperate with a variety of state agencies, Burchard concluded “that the church does not recognize the state as having any authority to examine any of their children under any circumstances” (Burchard, 1984: 10; see 8–10; see Palmer, 1998: 194). Later he added, “the active, unlawful resistance of the church was also extraordinary” (Burchard, 1984: 13). The noncooperation and actual resistance of the Community members, individually and collectively, made it impossible for the Attorney General’s office or Social and Rehabilitation Services to specify the names or specific locations of people or possible evidence. The group members “file [tax] returns as if they were one family” (Harrison, 1984: 61), and they acted as a unified front against all of the state’s authorities and institutions designed to protect children.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Comparing the detailed media and professional accounts of child physical abuse within the Northeast Kingdom Community with the scholarship on the group, it is clear that most scholars have buried or dismissed the former Commissioner’s thoughtful statement about his perspective on the raid that his office had conducted. If researchers, therefore, try to contextualize the child punishment in Peoples Temple and Jonestown by following Hall’s suggestion and looking at the Northeast Kingdom, then they likely will find articles by Swantko, Palmer, and a few others that conveniently neglect to portray the severity with which that group apparently disciplined children and teens. Hall greatly understated the severity of the group’s abuse when he stated that members’ use of “rods and switches” sometimes “left marks on [children’s] bodies” (Hall, 1987: 125), since in reality the beatings apparently also left bloodied and bruised children with scars.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">This level of corporal punishment clearly exceeded community standards outside the narrow confines of some Protestant (mostly fundamentalist and evangelical) circles, which Hall overlooked when he used the group’s corporal punishment actions as indicative of a “Puritan standard” that was not excessive (Hall, 1987: 125). These actions were excessive and potentially harmful to the children themselves, as historian Philip Greven realized. In Spare the Child (1991), Greven highlighted many of the beating allegations, and mentioned the raid as “the result of several years of intense but frustrating investigation by the Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services” (Greven 1991: 35). When discussing the harms caused by such beatings, Greven identified the causal connection between corporal punishment techniques involving “spankings, whippings and beatings” of children and the development of sadomasochism in adults (Greven, 1991: 174–186). “For many adults,” Greven observed,</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">&#8230;sadomasochism in both erotic and nonerotic forms is a direct consequence of the confusions generated by the combination of love and pain in childhood, the long-tem outcome of the normal assaults and abuse associated with physical punishment from infancy to adolescence. (Greven, 1991: 174)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Illustrating this point, Greven concluded,</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">&#8230;the association of love, fear, and pain begin early and remain embedded in the unconscious mind for life. Children from Island Pond, Vermont, who have been beaten for disobedience, have sometimes insisted that painful punishment is the proof of love. (Greven, 1991: 175)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">He quoted a disaffected member who told a reporter, “’I have an eight-year-old girl who is a masochist. She equates love with beatings’” (Greven, 1991: 175, quoting Juan Mattatall in Sexton, 1983: 36). The ex-member had audio-taped that daughter insisting to him:</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">‘I know, the Lord wants you to spank us [herself and her younger sister] if we’re disobedient. If you love us &#8230; then you’ll spank us. If you spank us, then you love us. If you don’t spank us, then you don’t love us…. That’s what it says in the Bible.’ (Greven, 1991:175, quoting daughter of Juan Mattatall in Sexton, 1983: 36)</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt22">[22]</a></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Greven concluded his section on the implications of Northeast Kingdom Community disciplinary procedures by observing that “the association of love and pain is inescapable when corporal punishments are used” (Greven 1991, 176). It seems wholly inappropriate, therefore, to continue Hall’s use of fundamentalist and evangelical Protestantism to normalize the corporal punishment at Jonestown. Such intense beatings are physically and emotionally harmful to children regardless of the religious or secular context in which they occur.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Moving beyond Hall’s analogy involving corporal punishment in Jonestown and conservative Protestantism, other forms of extraordinary discipline took place under Jones’s supervision that have no Protestant parallels. Hall had to downplay or ignore these other forms in order for his analogy to Protestantism to appear superficially credible. I am not aware of Protestant children being lowered into wells and terrified by adults hiding within them or within surrounding bushes, and I am not aware of Protestant children being forced to eat their own vomit. I have not seen any reports of Protestant children being punished by ingesting hot peppers or having those peppers rubbed on their rectums. Nor have I encountered examples of Protestant children being placed in leg shackles and having their heads shaved. Hall’s effort, therefore, simply failed when he attempted to ‘normalize’ the child physical abuse inflicted by Jones and his followers by equating it to practices in conservative Protestantism. Rather, the attempted analogy heightened awareness of how uniquely brutal the Jonestown environment was on children. The brutality reached its apex, of course, with the child murders.</span><br />
<span style="font-size: medium;">The Child Murders</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">To his credit, Hall included information about the child murders that took place as adults administered the poison to infants and children (Hall, 1987: 283–287). He reproduced some of the debate between member Christine Miller and Jones in the minutes before the final act, in which she told Jones, “’I look at all the babies and I think they deserve to live’” (Christine Miller in Hall, 1987: 283; see Hall, 2000: 37; and for a transcription of these final exchanges between Miller, Jones, and others, see Maaga, 1998: 147–164). Concerning a retort that Jones gave soon afterward to another member’s question about how Jones could allow his precious little boy (John Victor, who was the subject of an ongoing paternity battle [see Hall, 1982: 48–49]) to die, Hall reported Jones as saying that he could not put the child’s life above the lives of the others. Hall surmised that, “for the children, Jones held, life was worse than death: ‘we give them [i.e., the governmental authorities] our children, then our children will suffer forever’” (Jones in Hall, 1987: 284; see also Jones quoted in Smith, 1982: 117). He described the actions of the first two adults to pour poison down the throats of their children, and he reproduced the comments of a Jonestown member who instructed, “‘the older children help love the little children and reassure them. They’re not crying from any pain; it’s just a little bitter tasting’” (Judy James, quoted in Hall, 1987: 285; see Hall, 2000: 37). When yet another man tried to speak to the crowd, “the shrieks of the children yelling ‘Noooo!’ swallowed up his words” (Hall, 1987: 285). As Hall concluded in an early book chapter on Jonestown, “many Jonestown residents did not willingly commit the suicide” (Hall, 1982: 54).</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Despite Jones’s pronouncement that the cyanide would not cause convulsions, Hall mentioned the action of Odell Rhoades, who “helped carry a young boy out to the yard and gently laid down the life jerking with convulsions” (Hall, 1987: 286; see a longer account in Feinsod, 1981: 198). Curiously, however, Hall did not provide the exact number of children—around 276—who fell victim to the poisonings at Jonestown, even though one of his sources was Kenneth Wooden’s The Children of Jonestown, which provided this number in the first sentence of its prologue (Wooden, 1981: 1; cf. Smith, 1982: 108, and Chidester, 2003: 154, both of whom gave the number of infants and children at 260). Most of the 234 unidentified bodies were the murdered children (R. Moore, 1988: 107, 109). Not always included in the body count were Sharon Amos and her three children, who were away from Jonestown at the time of the murder/suicides. After receiving instructions over the short-wave radio to follow the lead provided by her comrades, she slit the throats of her children, and then cut her own wrists (Feinsod, 1981: 210; see B. Moore, 1989: 183).</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">The most detailed examination of the dead people’s ages appeared in a 2004 study by Rebecca Moore, who lost two sisters and a nephew (i.e., a sister’s child) among the 918 or so people who died because of Jonestown (R. Moore, 2004: 61). She determined that “one hundred thirty-one (131) were children under the age of 10; 234 were between the ages of 10 and 19&#8230;,” which means that “more than one-third were under 20” (R. Moore, 2004: 64–65). (Presumably, Moore included nineteen-year-olds so that her findings would encompass all teenagers, but the exclusion of eighteen- and nineteen-year-olds would have allowed her to speak more clearly about the number of children who died.)</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt23">[23]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> In addition, “two hundred eleven (211) people were 60 and older, with three-fourths of this segment being black females” (R. Moore, 2004: 65). From these figures, “twenty percent of the members were over 60 years of age…. Over a third of the population—36 percent—were infants, children, and teenagers” (Sawyer, 2004: 169–170). (Moore’s bar graph that presents ages makes it difficult to be precise, but apparently around ninety people who died at Jonestown were in their seventies and around twenty-five were in their eighties. One or two people appear to have been in their nineties [R. Moore, 2004: 66). In sum, half or more of the people who died at or related to Jonestown were of ages (young and old) at which responsible adults should have been giving them varying degrees of care. Instead, the presumed caregivers killed them.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">The inescapable reality that adults (often parents) murdered hundreds of children in the final moments of Jonestown has caused problems for scholars who wish to give interpretations of Jonestown that challenge anticult images of Jones as the brainwasher who destroyed the critical minds of his followers. Respected religious-studies professor Catherine Wessinger, for example, wrote the introduction to Mary McCormick Maaga’s study that attempted “to restore the humanity of the individuals who were a part of People’s Temple” (Maaga, 1998: xx). (The book’s front cover contains four pictures, each with a child or children and an adult in normal, almost always happy, poses.) Toward this goal, Wessinger offered:</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Most Jonestown residents agreed that their ultimate concern was worth killing and dying for. The transcript of the last Jonestown meeting [reproduced as an appendix in Maaga’s book] provides evidence of peer pressure, persuasion, psychological coercion—by the whole group, not solely by Jim Jones—but there is no evidence that physical force was used to make people commit suicide. (Wessinger in Maaga, 1998: xi–xii)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Immediately, however, Wessinger seemingly contradicts herself in a qualifying footnote:</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">I am saying that, contrary to the media myth, we have no evidence that there was any physical coercion to join the mass suicide. The witnesses are dead. There is testimony of surviving witnesses of people willingly going to participate in the mass suicide. Certainly the children did not choose to die. Probably a number of elderly people did not have a choice. Dissidents in Jonestown were drugged and kept confined. These people do not choose to die. Able-bodied people could have escaped the suicide easily and some chose to do so. My primary point here is that mass suicide could not have been carried out without the agency of the able-bodied adults. (Wessinger in Maaga, 1998: xii n. [italics in original])</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">In other words (and not even challenging her claim that able-bodied members easily could have escaped rifle-carrying guards [see Chidester, 2003: 154]), at the very least the group used physical coercion probably to kill dissidents and the elderly and certainly to murder the children.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">In essence, the children of Jonestown suffered what surely has to be the cruelest and most severe form of child abuse—murder, committed by their poisoning parents. A surviving letter from Jonestown member Annie Moore (deceased sister of Jonestown scholar Rebecca Moore) likely captured the attitudes that many of the able-bodied killers felt about murdering the children. Annie Moore indicated, </span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">‘I don’t relish the idea of participating in killing the children and I don’t think anyone else does but I will do it because I think I could be as compassionate as the next person about it and I don’t hate children.’ (letter reproduced in Maaga, 1998: 123)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Efforts to restore the humanity of the individuals who were at Jonestown, therefore, cannot gloss over the fact that roughly half of those people had their humanity—their very lives—taken from them by other members acting under Jones’s directives.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Somewhat similar qualifications about the fate of the children appeared in David Chidester’s 1988 study (revised 2003), Salvation and Suicide, which attempted to give a religious-studies perspective to the tragic events. “For those who willingly embraced death through revolutionary suicide, Jones described the conditions under which this could be regarded as a meaningful act within the categories of symbolic orientation and classification that operated in their shared worldview” (Chidester, 2003: 155; see Smith, 1982: 119–120). But in the previous paragraph he had to acknowledge:</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Finally, it would be difficult to suppose that the 260 children</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt24">[24]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> of Jonestown all committed suicide. Babies were sacrificed first, perhaps to signify to the adults that this was not a rehearsal, not another loyalty test, but an act from which there could be no turning back once it had begun. (Chidester, 2003: 154–155)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">However much scholars within religious studies want to find meaning for the suicides within the group’s own theological system, for the children the final event was infanticide. As even Hall admitted, “the organizational effectiveness of People’s [sic] Temple for more than fifteen years and the actual carrying out of the mass murder/suicide show that Jones and his staff knew what they were doing” (Hall 1982: 36; Hall, 1990: 270).</span><br />
<span style="font-size: medium;">Conclusion</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">The so-called ‘cult wars’ continue to rage, as a few scholars persist in publishing ideologically tainted studies designed to minimize or ignore real instances of harm. In such studies, of course, these scholars have to neutralize or deemphasize the child abuse that the adults far too frequently perpetrate upon children. Sociologically, therefore, important social processes involving the socialization of adults into abusers (not to mention, murderers) are crucial to identify; and studies that ignore, sidestep, or downplay the range of child abuses that adults perpetrated against children in Jonestown are overlooking an important issue. It seems likely that they are doing so because close analysis of groups’ deviant socialization processes will fuel anticultist criticism of numerous groups. As a sociologist realized back in 1983,</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">The children of Jonestown were very thoroughly socialized. For them, the [Peoples] Temple was not an alternative reality, a subuniverse, but the ground of their primary socialization…. The primary socialization that the children of the Temple was receiving, however, was taking place within a milieu designed more for the secondary socialization of their parents—a milieu oriented toward those who might be tempted to deny its reality. (Weightman, 1983: 152–153)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Surely these questions about socialization are vital (see R. Moore, 1988: 130–131), especially concerning how adults came to individual and collective positions that allowed them to abuse and ultimately murder children.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Far too much of the existing scholarship on Jonestown has avoided detailed examinations of the child abuse in Peoples Temple facilities, probably for fear that such an examination would feed the fires of the anticult movement with atrocity tales (Maaga, 1998: 39; see Hall, 1987: 107; R. Moore, 2009: 5, 116–118; Shupe and Bromley, 1982: 128–129; Swantko, 2004: 180–181; Weightman, 1983: 177–178). If, however, members of the anticult movement are in fact looking at issues related to child abuse in Jonestown and other ideological organizations, then they are pursuing an important, and often neglected, research and social agenda. At this moment, however, no comprehensive academic study of the child abuse within Peoples Temple and Jonestown exists for future generations to read. In a discussion a decade ago about why scholars were not ready to ‘close the canon’ concerning Jonestown, nowhere in lists of issues and data still needing study were the plights of children (and for that matter, the elderly) mentioned (R. Moore, 2000: 17, 22). Surely their lives and their deaths demand careful and thoughtful attention.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">As I conclude this article, I return a final time to one of the groups, the Northeast Kingdom Community, that Hall used when he attempted to normalize the physical beatings that Peoples Temple and Jonestown children suffered. An important glimpse into the “subuniverse” of that group—one that casts additional doubt upon its validity in providing normative child-rearing practices, comes from a surprising source—a child-turned-young-adult who had intimate knowledge of the world in which spokesperson, lawyer, and scholar Jean Swantko lived.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Swantko not only is the group’s lawyer, but also is a convert who (in 1991) married a leader, Charles “Eddie” Wiseman. She had met Wiseman when she was a Vermont public defender assigned to defend him on charges of simple assault, after he allegedly was involved in the beating of a 13-year-old girl (a case that I mentioned earlier [Johnson, 1995: 24]). This beating/</span><br />
<span style="font-size: medium;">whipping allegedly took place over a seven-hour interval, and the girl and her father “told state officials [that] she had 89 welts” from it (Clendinen, 1984).</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt25">[25]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> A court dropped the charges, however, in 1985 because the defendant had not received a “speedy trial” (Swantko, 2004: 185), but the state’s case had been damaged badly when the father of the girl retracted his initial statements about the beating (Donnelly, 1984).</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Years later, Swantko went so far as to indicate that “Members do use corporal punishment, but abusive punishment is not taught or condoned” (Swantko, 2004: 185). Certainly she was in a position within the group to know about this corporal punishment, since she became a stepmother to Wiseman’s children, one of whom was Zebulun (or simply Zeb) Wiseman. In 2001, Zeb fled the group and spoke to a reporter. “‘Growing up in there, I saw the inside scoop. There’s [sic] a lot of things there that weren’t right…. Spanking kids, locking them up’” (quoted in Wedge, 2001). Academics are likely to believe Swantko, who dismissed allegations of abuse, but her own stepson, and others of his generation, have a different tale to tell. Academics who ignore their voices run the risk of producing scholarship that, in the future, will prove to be simply, demonstrably, wrong.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Jonestown was a dramatic reminder for people worldwide that demagogic, emotionally and psychologically imbalanced (see Lys, 2005), but charismatic individuals can both attract followers and do tremendous harm to them and their children. Their deaths were the clearest possible warning that unaccountable leaders can spiral downward with their flocks into destructive, even murderous behavior. The clarity of this warning to future generations must include accurate accounts of what the youth experienced, and it is highly regrettable that people in generations to come will receive information that downplays the Jonestown children’s suffering. It is equally regrettable that similar diminishments of child abuse appear in accounts about young lives in other groups. Academics who write apologetic or misleading accounts of life in sectarian or ideological groups do an injustice to the lives of the people about whom they write and a disservice to their readers in the years and decades to come. Victimized children deserve more; and so, too, do the persons who were (and are) active in anticult groups and who try to sound the alarm about children’s plights.</span></p>
</div>
<div><span style="font-family: arial,sans-serif;"><span style="font-family: arial,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><b><br />
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<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Daley, Yvonne. 1985. “Who’s Minding the Children in Island Pond?” Yankee 49 No. 1 (January): 7878–83, 152–155.</span></p>
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<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Detroit Free Press. 1984. “Mother Convicted in Cult Camp Death,” February 10.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Detroit News. 1986. “Judah Boy Tells About Horrors Inflicted at Camp,” August 20, p. 6B.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Donnelly, John. 1984. “Defector Rejoins Sect, Recants Abuse Charges.” Burlington Free Press [Vermont], August 29, pp. 1A, 12A.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Ellison, Christopher G. 1996. “Conservative Protestantism and the Corporal Punishment of Children: Clarifying the Issues.” Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 35 No. 1: 1–16.</span></p>
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<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Feinsod, Ethan. 1981. Awake in a Nightmare: Jonestown: The Only Eyewitness Account. New York: W. W. Norton &amp; Company.</span></p>
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<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Gorham, Rob. 1983. “Cult Custody Battle Sets Barrington Passage Abuzz.” The Chronicle-Herald (Halifax, Nova Scotia), October 14, pp. 1, 2.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Greven, Philip. 1991. Spare the Child: The Religious Roots of Punishment and the Psychological Impact of Physical Abuse. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Hall, John R. [1981] 1982. “The Apocalypse at Jonestown.” In Violence and Religious Commitment: Implications of Jim Jones’s People’s [sic] Temple Movement, edited by Ken Levi. University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press, 35–54.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">———. 1987. Gone from the Promised Land: Jonestown in American Cultural History. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction Publishers. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">———. 1990. “The Apocalypse at Jonestown (with Afterward).” In In Gods We Trust: New Patterns of Religious Pluralism in America, 2d ed., revised and expanded, edited by Thomas Robbins and Dick Anthony. London: Transaction Books, 269–293.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">———. 1995. “Peoples Temple.” In American Alternative Religions, edited by Timothy Miller. Albany: State University of New York Press, 303–311.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">———. 2000. “The Apocalypse at Jonestown.” In Apocalypse Observed, edited by John R. Hall with Philip D. Schuyler and Sylvaine Trinh. New York: Routledge, 15–43. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Harrison, Barbara Grizzuti. 1984. “The Children and the Cult.” New England Monthly (December): 56–70.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Hebert, Brenda. 1983. “Statement.” (Interview of Conrad Grims and Cpl. Peter Johnson), August 13, 10pp.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Helfer, Ray. E. 1983. “The Children of the House of Judah.” Department of Pediatrics/Human Development, Michigan State University. August 5, 11pp.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Jenke, Jeff. 1984. “Interview” (interview not specified), March 16, 9pp.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Johnson, Det. Cpl. [Detective Corporal] Peter M. 1983a. “Vermont Crime Information Center Investigation Report.” Agency or SP District B – Derby, Case No. 2005-83-01829, September 20, 2pp.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">———. 1983b. “Vermont Crime Information Center Investigation Report.” Agency or SP District B – Derby, Case No. 640–892, June 3, 3pp.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">———. 1983c. “Affidavit.” State of Vermont, Essex County S.S. July 18.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Johnson, Sally. 1995. “Defender of the Faith.” Boston Globe Magazine, March 12, p. 20ff.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Kenney, Sgt. Harold. 1980. “Vermont Crime Information Center Investigation Report.” Agency or SP District B – Derby, Case No. 580–273, June 25, 4pp.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Landa, Susan. 1990–1991. “Children and Cults: A Practical Guide.” Journal of Family Law 29:591–634.</span></p>
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<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Layton, Deborah. 1998. Seductive Poison: A Jonestown Survivor’s Story of Life and Death in the People’s[sic] Temple. Toronto: Doubleday.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Levi, Ken (ed.). 1982. Violence and Religious Commitment: Implications of Jim Jones’s People’s [sic] Temple Movement. University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press.</span></p>
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<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Maaga, Mary McCormick. 1998. Hearing the Voices of Jonestown. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press.</span></p>
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<p><span style="font-size: medium;">———. 1984b. “Opinion and Order: Petition.” State of Vermont Orleans County, ss. In Re: Certain Children. District of Vermont Unit 3, Orleans Circuit. Docket No. 22-6-840sj, August 7, date-stamped August 8, 14pp.</span></p>
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<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Mills, Jeannie. 1979. Six Years with God: Life Inside Reverend Jim Jones’s Peoples Temple. A&amp;W Publishers, Inc.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Mitzelfeld, Jim. 1986. “House of Judah Leader Gets 3 Years for Slavery, Death.” Detroit Free Press, December 20, p. A3.</span></p>
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<p><span style="font-size: medium;">———. 2000. “Is the Canon on Jonestown Closed?” Nova Religio 4 No. 1: 7–27.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">———. 2004. “Demographics and the Black Religious Culture of Peoples Temple.” In People’s Temple and Black Religion in America, edited by Rebecca Moore, Anthony B. Pinn, and Mary R. Sawyer. Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 57–80.</span></p>
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<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Shupe, Anson D., Jr., and David Bromley. 1982. “Shaping the Public Response to Jonestown: People’s [sic] Temple and the Anticult Movement.” In Violence and Religious Commitment: Implications of Jim Jones’s People’s [sic] Temple Movement, edited by Ken Levi. University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press, pp. 105–132, 186–187.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Smith, Jonathan Z. 1982. Imagining Religion: From Babylon to Jonestown. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Snow, David A. 1990. Review of John R. Hall, Gone From the Promised Land: Jonestown in American Cultural History. American Journal of Sociology 95 No. 4 (January): 1101–1102.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Swantko, Jean A. 2000. “‘The Twelve Tribes’ Communities, the Anti-Cult Movement, and Government’s Response.” Social Justice Research 12 No. 4: 341–364.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">———. 2004. “The Twelve Tribes Messianic Communities, the Anti-Cult Movement, and Governmental Response.” In Regulating Religion: Case Studies from Around the Globe, edited by James T. Richardson. London: Kluwer Academic, 179–200.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">———. 2005–2006. “Retrospective on 1984: The Island Pond Raid: What We Know Now That We Didn’t Know Then.” Vermont Bar Journal (Winter): 44–50.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Swantko, Jean A., and Ed Wiseman. 1995. “Taking Our Children, Part I: Messianic Communities, Sociologists, and the Law.” Communities 88 (Fall): 34–35.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">United Nations. 1989. Convention on the Rights of the Child. Retrieved December 13, 2009 (</span><a href="http://www.unicef.org/crc/">www.unicef.org/crc/</a><span style="font-size: medium;">).</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">United Press International. 1982. Untitled article, 22nd story of Level 1, November 10.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Wedge, Dave. 2001. “The Cult Next Door: Teen Shares Chilling Tale of Alleged Abuse Inside the Twelve Tribes Sect.” Boston Herald, September 4.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Weightman, Judith Mary (1983). Making Sense of the Jonestown Suicides: A Sociological History of Peoples Temple. Toronto: Edwin Mellen Press.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Wooden, Kenneth. 1981. The Children of Jonestown. Toronto: McGraw-Hill Paperback.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Wright, Stuart A. 1989. Review of John R. Hall, Gone From the Promised Land: Jonestown in American Cultural History. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 28 No. 1 (March): 92, 94. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Zabarsky. Marsha. 1982. “The Kingdom at Island Pond.” Newsweek, November 29, p. 53.</span></p>
</div>
<div><span style="font-family: arial,sans-serif;"><span style="font-family: arial,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: medium;"><b><br />
About the Author</b></span></span></span><span style="font-size: medium;">Stephen A. Kent, Ph.D., Professor of Sociology, University of Alberta, teaches undergraduate and graduate courses on the sociology of religion and the sociology of sectarian groups. He has published articles in numerous sociology and religious study journals. His 2001 book, From Slogans to Mantras: Social Protest and Religious Conversion in the Late Vietnam War Era, was selected by Choice: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries as an “Outstanding Academic Title for 2002.”</span><span style="font-size: medium;">International Journal of Cultic Studies ■ Vol. 1, No. 1, 2010 </span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref1">[1]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> This article is a revised version of a paper presented at the International Cultic Studies Association conference on June 27, 2008, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.</span><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref2">[2]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> Thanks go to Terra Manca and Ashley Samaha for their editorial suggestions.</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref3">[3]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> The technical name of the group that followed Jim Jones (1931–1978) was Peoples Temple, and the community that Jones and more than a thousand of his followers established in Guyana was Jonestown. Often, however, people use Jonestown to refer to the entire movement, and at times I may be guilty of doing so myself.</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref4">[4]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> I use the ‘cult’ term in a manner that is in line with standard dictionary (in this case, Webster’s) definitions as both a religion that most people consider unorthodox and spurious, and a small circle of persons devoted to an intellectual figure. In simple terms, Jones’s self-deification, harsh punishments, and fake healings made his movement unorthodox if not spurious in the eyes of many, and his combination of Christianity and Marxism made him something of an intellectual leader (at least in the eyes of his followers). I am also aware of the early attempt by an opponent of the so-called anticult movement, James T. Richardson, to isolate Peoples Temple and Jonestown from the debate around new religions and cults. According to Richardson, most new religions developed in America during the 1960s or early 1970s; Peoples Temple began in the 1950s (Richardson, 1980: 241-242). Most new religions comprise Caucasians/whites; many of the Peoples Temple members were African Americans/black (Richardson, 1980: 242). Jones’s organization was more authoritarian than most new religions (Richardson, 1980: 243-244). Peoples Temple grew more wary toward outside society over time, while most new religions become less wary of the dominant society over time (Richardson, 1980: 245-246). In a remarkable admission, Richardson acknowledged that some of the resocialization techniques that Peoples Temple used seemed to share “at least some important facets with the thought reform model developed by R. J. Lifton&#8230;,” while most new religions used resocialization techniques closer to effective persuasion (Richardson, 1980: 247). Jones was a socialist, whereas the new religions “reflect Western culture’s emphasis on individualism” (Richardson, 1980: 248). Jonestown’s members were not crazy or brainwashed in committing suicide; they committed what Durkheimian sociologists call ‘altruistic suicide’ (Richardson, 1980: 249). In addition, new religions tended to be introversionist, whereas Peoples Temple attempted to involve itself in the political process (Richardson, 1980: 251). Finally, participants in most new religions engage in their groups’ rituals sincerely and see symbolic meaning to their actions, while Jones probably “manipulated ritual behavior to accomplish his own ends” (Richardson 1980: 251). According to Richardson, even though Peoples Temple/Jonestown bore little relation to the new religions, those groups were under increasing pressure from deprogrammers, anticult groups, and even the Internal Revenue Service because of the inaccurate analogies between the two (Richardson, 1980: 252). Suffice it to say that no anticultist identifies a cult according to the ages of its members or the racial composition of the group. Nor does the time period in which a group emerges or flourishes influence a cultic designation. Moreover, authoritarian leadership is more pervasive than Richardson implied, which certainly can contribute to outsiders seeing a group as spurious and cultic. In fact, many groups do engage in politics in varying degrees, and now several of them also have committed murder/suicide. For anticultists, a major factor for labeling a group to be a cult is a determination of harm caused by group actions, and this very determination of harm often is what makes a group spurious in the eyes of many societal members.</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref5">[5]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> As indicated by Rebecca Moore, “[t]his number includes four of Congressman Leo Ryan’s party—including Ryan himself—and one [Peoples] Temple member who were killed at the Port Kaituma airstrip outside Jonestown, and four Temple members who died in Georgetown [Guyana]” (Moore, 2004: 61). </span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref6">[6]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> According to the book’s cover, Ken Levi (PhD) taught sociology at the University of Texas at San Antonio at the time of the book’s publication.</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref7">[7]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> According to the back of the book, John R. Hall was an associate professor of sociology at the University of Missouri-Columbia.</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref8">[8]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> St. John (1993: 22) referred to the Edwin Mellen Press as “a quasi-vanity press cunningly disguised as an academic publishing house&#8230;,” and manuscripts did not go through a review process (St. John 1993: 24). Its owner, Herbert Richardson, used the press’s proofreaders as a money-making enterprise and also “threatened to take a quarter out of the proofreaders’ paychecks for every mistake they corrected past a certain number” (St. John, 1993: 23). Richardson sued St. John and Lingua Franca over the article but lost; and about a year after St. John’s article appeared, St. Michael’s College (which is part of the University of Toronto system) dismissed Richardson for “gross misconduct” (Lingua Franca, 2000). For a short analysis of the libel case between Edwin Mellen Press and Lingua Franca (albeit one published by Edwin Mellen Press), see Reid, 2006. </span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref9">[9]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> This book is a version of Weightman’s 1983 Ph.D. dissertation from Drew University in Religion and Sociology entitled, Breakdown in the Creation of a New Reality: A Sociological Analysis of the Peoples Temple. A 1989 source suggests that she may not have remained in academia (Moore and McGehee [eds.] 1989: 249–250. </span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref10">[10]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> Other differences exist between Hall’s and Mills’s accounts. Hall stated that the teenager Linda Mertle (who was Mills’s daughter) “wrote a letter requesting seventy-five whacks for greeting a lesbian adult friend of the family who had left People’s [sic] Temple several years earlier” (Hall, 1987: 123). Mills, however, made no mention of a letter requesting punishment, but instead said, “Our sixteen-year-old daughter Linda was called up for confrontation. She had hugged a girlfriend whom Jim considered to be a traitor. Linda stood before Jim and admitted that she was guilty.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">“Jim looked at her sternly. ‘You have been unwise, in the past, in your choice of friends, and it is important that we teach you a lesson you won’t forget…. In order to help you learn this lesson, you will get seventy-five whacks with the board’” (Jones, quoted in Mills, 1979: 267).</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Even if Hall is accurate in stating that Mertle wrote Jones and requested the beating, it still is outrageous that Jones had it carried out. Likewise, the sexual orientation of the person she hugged should have been of no consequence to anybody, and neither should the fact that she had left the group.</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref11">[11]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> Layton did not mention the victim having to watch the beating, but she did recount that “There was the secret rubber hose beating of a member who had molested a Temple child. Father [i.e., Jones] made me watch the beating and had my photo taken holding the rubber hose, which paralyzed my questioning inner voice” (Layton, 1998: 61). Note that Mills said that the beating instrument was a board, while Layton indicated that it was a rubber hose.</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref12">[12]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> Layton wrote,</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">There was also the Well, a punishment used especially for children. They would be taken to the Well in the dark of night, hung upside down by a rope around their ankles, and dunked into the water again and again while someone hidden inside the Well grabbed at them to scare them. The sins deserving such punishment included stealing food from the kitchen, expressing homesickness, failing a socialism exam, or even ‘natural’ childish rebelliousness. Their screams were chilling but we had learned from the consequences of previous people’s objections not to complain. (Layton, 1998: 176)</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref13">[13]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> Among the early accounts about the House of Judah was a news summary about the group that appeared in the newsletter of the anticult organization the Citizens Freedom Foundation (Citizens Freedom Foundation, 1983: [3]). Later, an organization that concerned itself with harm caused by cultic groups, the American Family Foundation, published an article about the House of Judah in its May/June 1988 newsletter, The Cult Observer, reproducing it from the newsletter of an organization (Children’s Healthcare is a Legal Duty, or CHILD) dedicated to children’s medical rights (American Family Foundation, 1988). In July of that year, the largest cult-monitoring organization in the United States at that time, the Cult Awareness Network, published an article about the group in its Cult Awareness Network News (1988).</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref14">[14]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> Hall’s citation system was minimalist, citing only “NYT, 6/23, 29/84; Charisma 1984: 68–79. Charisma is a Christian magazine from the period (Nori, 1984), and a New York Times article did appear on June 23, 1984 (The New York Times, 1984). I an unable to find, however, an article from June 29; but perhaps it is a typographical error for the date of the article that appeared on June 24, 1984 (Butterfield, 1984).</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref15">[15]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> In an editorial note in Swantko 2004: 179, she said that this article is revised, updated, and reprinted from Social Justice Research 12(4), 1999. My copy of the earlier article, however, is from 2000, which is the date that I use here in the bibliography.</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref16">[16]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> In one of her articles about the Northeast Kingdom Community, Susan Palmer referred to “negative and inaccurate media reports” that likely contributed to the “violent reactions” against the group (Palmer, 2001: 211). Presumably, she had in mind the very media accounts to which I am about to refer. What suggests to me, however, that these media accounts likely were accurate is that multiple reporters using different sources (interviews with former members, police reports, medical reports, photographs, etc.) identified similar accounts of severe child beatings allegedly perpetrated by different people</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref17">[17]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> Alluding to this trial, Swantko and Wiseman said that, in 1982, a member of their community, “whose wife accused him of pedophilia,” defected and tried to gain custody of the family’s five children. Vowing to “‘destroy’ the community, [he] sought advice from anticult activists, who apparently suggested that he spread lies in the media and among local government officials” (Swantko and Wiseman, 1995: 88). What they failed to state is that, during the hearing,</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">&#8230;several former members of the Vermont church community testified that toddlers were beaten with rods or belts. David Anderson, 24, said he comforted one mother as a church member whipped her 3-year-old son on his legs, chest and arms for about 40 minutes. He said he also saw two other youngsters the same age beaten until blood flowed down their legs. (United Press International, 1982)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Simply from reading the account by Swantko and Wiseman, one cannot know that several people testified under oath about intense corporal punishment in the group. Bozeman and Palmer 1997: 184) indicate that, in the early 1980s,</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">[r]umors, gossip and mis-information about the community—particularly about possible child abuse—grew, a situation unintentionally aggravated by the Church’s unwillingness to indulge the curiosity of journalists or state officials. This was particularly true after 1982, when church members lost a series of child custody battles due to their unconventional lifestyle….</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">Note that both reporters’ and state officials’ interest in the group was only “curiosity,” and that “possible child abuse” was only “mis-information.”</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref18">[18]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> Palmer, (1999: 162) mistakenly gives the year as 1982 when Mattatall retrieved his daughter, but it was 1983.</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref19">[19]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> As sometimes happens when one tries to piece together events by using documents, I have encountered some problems around events and dates concerning Arthur Fritog that I cannot resolve. The newspaper article indicating that Fritog had left the Northeast Kingdom Community has a handwritten date on it of “January 12, 1983” (Braithwaite, 1983). I also have, however, an affidavit by Detective Corporal Peter M. Johnson, dated July 18, 1983, alleging that that a person named Timothy Pendergrass had committed “simple assault” against Fritog’s son by “hitting hit with a piece of 2 x 4 on the buttocks” as a punishment for laughing with two other boys (Johnson, 1983c). Does this report mean that Fritog remained in Island Pond after he left the group? Did he rejoin it after issuing his harsh criticisms against the media? Is the handwritten date incorrect on the newspaper photocopy that I have? The fact that detective Johnson reached Arthur Fritog by telephone suggests that he no longer was a part of the Northeast Kingdom Community; but if that is so, then why did Pendergrass allegedly beat his son? I cannot resolve these issues.</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref20">[20]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> Worth noting are Susan Palmer’s comments on the child beating issue:</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">I have been asked on many occasions to express an opinion concerning the severity of these disciplines. I always state that, since I have never personally witnessed the chastisement of children, I cannot judge. Certainly, the people I have spent time with strike me as kind and loving parents, and their children are high-spirited and trusting, so it is difficult to believe some of the affidavits I have read for the courts. (Palmer, 1999: 161)</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref21">[21]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> Swantko also had an issue with Burchard’s use of media accounts:</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">While Vermont’s Commissioner of Social Services claimed evidence of abuse of children, he relied on newspaper reports unlawfully published as a source. Despite the fact that he knew, or should have known, the confidentiality laws for juvenile cases, he violated them. He then used the fact that newspaper reporters printed unlawful disclosures to justify his own use of them, clearly prohibited by the juvenile statutes. (Swantko 2005-2006: 45)</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: medium;">While I do not know what these laws were in the early 1980s, perhaps they had to do with not using the names of children who allegedly had been abused. If this interpretation were in fact accurate, then I note that both Swantko herself and Palmer named thirteen-year-old Dealynn Church as having alleged that a group leader had spanked her (Palmer, 1998: 199; Swantko 2000: 349). Perhaps reporters were able to use children’s names because their alleged beatings became public knowledge outside of court proceedings.</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref22">[22]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> In one of many ironies involving the people and incidents surrounding the Island Pond raid, the ex-member father Juan Mattatall, who taped his daughter making these statements, would be murdered several years later by his own mother (who then killed herself), apparently because she feared that her son would have ongoing problems around his pedophilia (Palmer, 1998: 196).</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref23">[23]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> Here I follow Article 1 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, which defines “a child” as “every human being below the age of eighteen years unless under the laws applicable to the child, majority is attained earlier” (United Nations, 1989: Article 1).</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref24">[24]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> See above, where I give Kenneth Wooden’s (1981: 1) number for dead children as 276.</span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.icsahome.com/articles/house-of-judah--the-northeast-kingdom-community--and--the-jonestown-problem-kent-ijcs-2010#ftnt_ref25">[25]</a><span style="font-size: medium;"> Palmer (1998: 207 n.2) claimed, “the testimony of ‘eight or nine’ welts on her skin, read out by the judge with a heavy Maine accent, was transcribed as ‘eighty-nine’ welts.” I cannot verify or disconfirm the claim.</span></p>
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		<title>Former Twelve Tribes Leaders Speak</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 13 May 2014 01:13:49 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Interview with former Twelve Tribes leaders Michael Painter and James Howell &#160; Part two through eighteen can be seen below. &#160;]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Interview with former Twelve Tribes leaders Michael Painter and James Howell</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Part two through eighteen can be seen below.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>Lawyer: Convicted abuser dodging payment</title>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 26 Apr 2014 13:02:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Charlie]]></dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Source: Cape Cod Times Amy Anthony April 26, 2014 A man recently ordered by a Vermont jury to pay $35 million in damages to a woman he was convicted of sexually assaulting years ago joined the Twelve Tribes religious community in Hyannis to avoid paying the victim, the victim’s attorney alleges. On April 18, after...]]></description>
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<p><a title="Convicted abuser dodging payment" href="http://www.capecodtimes.com/article%2F20140426%2FNEWS%2F404260321" target="_blank">Source: Cape Cod</a><a href="http://www.capecodtimes.com/article%2F20140426%2FNEWS%2F404260321" target="_blank"> Times</a></p>
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<p>Amy Anthony<br />
April 26, 2014</p>
<h2>A man recently ordered by a Vermont jury to pay $35 million in damages to a woman he was convicted of sexually assaulting years ago joined the Twelve Tribes religious community in Hyannis to avoid paying the victim, the victim’s attorney alleges.</h2>
<p>On April 18, after a four-day trial, a Chittenden County Superior Court jury ordered Scott Isaacson, 56, to pay damages to the now 24 year old victim, whom he was convicted of assaulting between 1993 and 1999. The jury ultimately decided on the sum, but the victim’s lawyer, Jerome O’Neill, said the suggested $50 million in compensatory and punitive damages based on Isaacson’s “beyond outrageous” actions.</p>
<p>Isaacson was found guilty in 2000 by an Essex Superior Court in Massachusetts of three counts of indecent assault and battery on a child under 14 stemming from the assaults, which took place in locations throughout Massachusetts and during ski trips in Vermont. The victim told a babysitter and a YMCA employee, who reported the abuse, O’Neill said.</p>
<p>Isaacson, who served about 4 ½ years in prison, denied abusing the victim. In 2006, the Massachusetts Appeals Court upheld a lower court’s decision to deny him a new trial.</p>
<p>In 2012 the victim discovered Isaacson was set to inherit a home in Marblehead and filed a civil lawsuit against him, O’Neill said. The house was sold in May 2013 and the net proceeds, which amount to about $200,000 were placed in escrow, O’Neill said. In June 2013, Isaacson filed a complaint against the victim to prevent her from obtaining any of the proceeds from the sale if she were to win the civil case, O’Neill said.</p>
<p>Isaacson, who represented himself in court, moved to the Cape around the time the lawsuit was filed, according to public records.</p>
<p>Isaacson began working at Common Ground Café in Hyannis about a year ago, said Nazer Aldokhi, café manager. The café is owned and operated by members of the Twelve Tribes, a religious community that adheres to a communal lifestyle and requires members to live modestly. Like other members, Isaacson worked at the café in exchange for room and board and did not receive any wages, Aldokhi said. In a 2013 deposition, Isaacson said he had no income.</p>
<p>“For (Isaacson), it’s an incredibly good way to prevent any money ever being recovered by this woman,” O’Neill said. “I think he has joined the Twelve Tribes because it’s a way to avoid paying the (victim).”</p>
<p>Aldokhi said Isaacson was forthright about his conviction when he started working at the café but he has denied that he abused the victim. He said Isaacson has not worked at the café since the most recent trial, and Twelve Tribes is “working on” how he will continue to earn to earn his room and board.</p>
<p>Aldokhi said he believes Isaacson and attended the recent trial to support him.</p>
<p>“No one can know definitively what the truth is in a situation like that,” said Aysh Harris, a Twelve Tribes member who answered the organization’s information line Friday.</p>
<p>Harris said he does not know Isaacson but trusts Aldokhi’s judgment.</p>
<p>“Anyone who was living immorally in any way wouldn’t be allowed to live in our community,” Harris said. A tribe member who committed abuse or another crime would not be turned over to the police but would be told to go to the police, he said.</p>
<p>“We definitely believe in the justice system,” Harris said. People who have made mistakes deserve a chance to live a “good, moral life,” he said.</p>
<p>“What I can’t fathom is why Twelve Tribes, whatever their beliefs, would have somebody who is a convicted child molester in their midst,” O’Neill said. Isaacson is required to register as a sex offender each year.</p>
<p>On April 3, Isaacson registered as a Level 2 sex offender with the Barnstable Police Department and provided a home address of 14 Main St. In Hyannis. Paul Sage owns the three-bedroom property according to public records. Phone calls and visits to the property Friday evening also confirmed Sage is a member of Twelve Tribes.</p>
<p>Isaacson could not be reached for comment Friday. A woman who answered the door at 14 Main St. said she did not know him. Aldokhi said Isaacson did not have a phone. A message left with Aldokhi for Isaacson was not returned Friday.</p>
<p>More links on this story<a href="http://question12tribes.com/jury-awards-35m-to-victim-of-sex-abuse/" target="_blank">: Jury awards $ 35 Million to victim of sex abuse</a></p>
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		<title>A sad echo from across the seas: “They’re still at it!”</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Sep 2013 11:24:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Charlie]]></dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Source:The Chronicle, Vermont, 17 September 2013 by nataliehormilla  In this Chronicle file photo, a Vermont state trooper carries a bundle of wooden rods out of a restaurant owned by the Island Pond community on June 22, 1984. &#160; “They’re still at it!” That’s what we said when we read the astounding news that on September...]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a title="A sad echo from across the seas" href="http://bartonchronicle.com/tag/twelve-tribes/" target="_blank">Source:The Chronicle, Vermont, 17 September 2013</a></p>
<p>by <a title="View all posts by nataliehormilla" href="http://bartonchronicle.com/author/nataliehormilla/" rel="author">nataliehormilla</a></p>
<div> <img alt="In this Chronicle file photo, a Vermont state trooper carries a bundle of wooden rods out of a restaurant owned by the Island Pond community on June 22, 1984." src="http://bartonchronicle.com/wp-content/uploads/beating-sticks-297x300.jpg" width="297" height="300" />In this Chronicle file photo, a Vermont state trooper carries a bundle of wooden rods out of a restaurant owned by the Island Pond community on June 22, 1984.</div>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>“They’re still at it!”</p>
<p>That’s what we said when we read the astounding news that on September 5, almost three decades after Vermont State Police raided the Northeast Kingdom Community Church in Island Pond and seized its children, it happened again in southern Germany.</p>
<p>Again it was an early dawn raid on the group, which now calls itself the Twelve Tribes.  Again, the children were taken away by police who said they had “fresh evidence indicating significant and ongoing child abuse by the members.”</p>
<p>We imagine that our outraged amazement that they’re still at it was shared by two groups of Vermonters.</p>
<p>For one group, no doubt the larger group, “They” are the police and the State they serve.  And what they’re at is the persecution of a religious community for straying outside the norms of our society.</p>
<p>For the second group, largely made up of people closer to the story, people who perhaps had friends or relatives living with the group in Island Pond, “They” are the adults in that community.  And what they’re at is the systematic abuse of their own children, using slender wooden sticks of the sort used to hold balloons at birthday parties.</p>
<p>For the record, here’s what the Twelve Tribes says on its website, under “frequently asked questions,” about how it disciplines its children:</p>
<p>“When they are disobedient or intentionally hurtful to others we spank them with a small reed-like rod, which only inflicts pain and not damage.”</p>
<p>In Vermont it was evidence of the use of these rods, which left welts on small bodies in beatings that were sometimes very lengthy, sometimes severe, that finally led authorities to resort to the raid.</p>
<p>District Judge Frank Mahady ruled, in 1983 after presiding over a custody battle between a father who left the group and a mother who remained, that the children “were subjected to frequent and methodical physical abuse by adult members of the community, in the form of hours-long whippings with balloon sticks.”</p>
<p>District Judge Joseph Wolchik, after reviewing a large collection of evidence and allegations, signed a warrant ordering police to conduct the raid of June 22, 1984.</p>
<p>But at the Orleans County Courthouse that afternoon, Judge Mahady ruled that the raid was unconstitutional and sent the children home to Island Pond.</p>
<p>Governor Richard Snelling said at the time he would submit the constitutional issue to the Vermont Supreme Court, but changed his mind.</p>
<p>So as a legal matter, that’s how things stand to this day.  Two judges of equal authority disagreed.  No higher court has ever resolved their dispute.</p>
<p>That’s a problem, because the reconciliation of practices based on sincere religious belief and laws that prohibit such practices is a difficult constitutional issue.</p>
<p>There can be no doubt that the adults in the Island Pond community believed they were following God’s will.  And there can be no doubt that they were breaking the laws crafted to protect this society’s most vulnerable members.</p>
<p>There were people, in the aftermath of the raid, who saw the need to tackle the problem, to try and draft laws that would protect children using methods less drastic than a frightening pre-dawn raid.  But public reaction against the raid was strong enough to marginalize anyone who tried to continue the discussion.</p>
<p>It was a stunning victory for the Island Pond community, and we said so on June 27, 1984:</p>
<p>“We hope we’re wrong, but can’t shake off the feeling that those children are out of the reach of the state of Vermont once and for all.  Not out of the reach of some awesome, totalitarian power.  But out of the reach of a community that surrounds them, cares for them and weeps for them.”</p>
<p>Maybe this time, for a different generation of children in a different country, things will work out better. — C.B.</p>
<p><em>To read the</em> Chronicle <em>story on the Twelve Tribes raid in Germany, <a href="http://bartonchronicle.com/german-police-seize-twelve-tribes-children/">click here</a>.</em></p>
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		<title>From Commune to College: One Young Woman&#8217;s Road to Independence</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 19 Jul 2010 09:31:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Charlie]]></dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Samantha Brosseau was raised in a strict Christian commune. At age 18, she decided to run away to escape her oppressive lifestyle and go to college &#8211; but leaving wasn&#8217;t nearly as simple as she&#8217;d hoped. Tonic, California/July 19, 2010 By Lisa DeBenedictis Samantha Brosseau twists her ring around her finger absentmindedly. It consists of...]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h4>Samantha Brosseau was raised in a strict Christian commune. At age 18, she decided to run away to escape her oppressive lifestyle and go to college &#8211; but leaving wasn&#8217;t nearly as simple as she&#8217;d hoped.</h4>
<h3>Tonic, California/July 19, 2010</h3>
<h3>By Lisa DeBenedictis</h3>
<p>Samantha Brosseau twists her ring around her finger absentmindedly. It consists of a champagne-colored oval stone, reaching nearly to her knuckle in size. It&#8217;s quite the accessory.</p>
<p>For most women, wearing such an opulent piece of jewelry (the ring, albeit lovely, is fake) may seem commonplace and lighthearted. But as Brosseau follows my gaze down to her bauble, I watch as she laughs softly to herself.</p>
<p>Brosseau, born Batach Yaqara Brosseau grew up in Island Pond, Vt., in a religious commune known as The Twelve Tribes. When she was 18 years old, she ran away.</p>
<p>&#8220;I took everything I wanted. It only fit into a little suitcase, the size of a carry-on,&#8221; she tells Tonic. &#8220;I took my Social Security card, because I knew I&#8217;d need it for a job. I had no other identification. I also took my pillow, some T-shirts, my running sneakers, my journal and my photo album. That&#8217;s all I really had.&#8221;</p>
<p>Brosseau now attends the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. A Hospitality Management major, she is spending the summer in Boston, where she is working as an intern at the Intercontinental Hotel.</p>
<p>It has taken a lot for her to get here.</p>
<p>The Twelve Tribes, or &#8220;the community,&#8221; as Brosseau (at left, far right) refers to it, is a Christian religious sect. With nearly 5,000 members worldwide, the organization has communities in the United States, England, Canada, Spain, Australia, Germany, France, Brazil and Argentina. But Brosseau&#8217;s commune, Island Pond, is where it all began.</p>
<p>According to their website, Gene and Marsha Spriggs founded the group in the early 1970&#8242;s, in Chattanooga, Tenn.</p>
<p>&#8220;They were kind of like hippies,&#8221; Brosseau explains. &#8220;People starting moving in with them, they began having Bible studies on Sundays. To make money, they opened a restaurant called The Yellow Deli, where everyone worked.&#8221;</p>
<p>In 1978, the community decided to move to Island Pond, Vt., where some of its members had moved to start another branch. And that&#8217;s when Brosseau&#8217;s grandparents first joined.</p>
<p>She explains that although for a lot of people, joining a religious community is difficult to understand, much of it comes down to a sense of belonging.</p>
<p>&#8220;I think people need to feel like they have something to belong to,&#8221; she says. &#8220;A purpose in life. I suppose that what they were doing in their own life wasn&#8217;t enough.&#8221;</p>
<p>To make money, the community owns and operates stores and restaurants that sell homemade wares and natural foods. Everyone works in them, including the children. The children are home schooled, and its members don&#8217;t believe in sending them to college. Use of technology is not allowed, except by some of the men in leadership roles.</p>
<p>Members dress in handmade or secondhand clothing, and the women must dress modestly, mostly in long dresses. All of the men grow beards and none of the women are allowed to cut their hair.</p>
<p>With no access to outside books, music, and other forms of entertainment and information, Brosseau got creative &#8211; and at times, downright sneaky.</p>
<p>&#8220;When I was 14, my mom used to go to the library to get materials for home schooling. I would go with her, and I found history books about the Civil War, which we&#8217;d never learned about,&#8221; she says. &#8220;All of our lessons and curriculum were based on the Bible. I was so interested in history. I thought: why would they not tell me? One day, I talked the librarian into giving me a library card, and I started taking out books without my mom knowing. I would hide them in my pillowcases, and read them late at night under my covers.&#8221;</p>
<p>By the time Brosseau turned 17, things were coming to a head. She was sent to work in one of the commune&#8217;s restaurants in Hyannis, Mass. She worked 80 hours a week, and was paid nothing, she says. It was during this time that she began planning her escape.</p>
<p>One day, when her father left to run some errands and her mother decided to take a nap, Brosseau (at left, in gray sweatshirt) decided that this was her chance. She unplugged the phones except for the portable one, and dialed 411. The only person that she knew outside of the community was her second cousin, Joanne Dealy, who lived with her husband and three teenage daughters in Pembroke, Mass.</p>
<p>When she called, Joanne&#8217;s daughter Catherine picked up the phone, and agreed to drive out and get her.</p>
<p>Brosseau stayed with the Dealys that night, but the next day, her parents showed up at the house. They tried to talk her into coming back, but she refused. Over the next couple of days, she says, they called constantly.</p>
<p>By Sunday of that first weekend away, however, Brosseau&#8217;s older sister convinced her to go out to dinner. On the way home, Brosseau noticed that they were taking a different route, and asked her sister what was going on.</p>
<p>Her sister had taken Brosseau back to her parents and, she says, they then brought Brosseau to a secluded house somewhere on Cape Cod, with no computer and no phone, where she remained for two months.</p>
<p>Still, Brosseau refused to give up.</p>
<p>&#8220;At the time, I had braces. When I went to an appointment with my doctor, I told her what was going on. She helped me schedule a fake appointment. I called Catherine, and told her I&#8217;d be at the train station,&#8221; she says. &#8220;While I waited, I called my dad and told him that I was okay. He told me it was the end of our relationship and that I shouldn&#8217;t expect to hear from him again. And he hung up. I exhaled, but it was a feeling of relief. Freedom. Finally, I didn&#8217;t have to fight anymore.&#8221;</p>
<p>Brosseau stayed with the Dealys for a week, and then decided to move out to Amherst, Mass., to live with their oldest daughter, at the time a UMass graduate student.</p>
<p>&#8220;I knew I wanted to go to college, but I had to get a job first. All I had were the clothes that my cousins had bought and given me. I had to pay rent, too. My first job was substitute teaching. Then I worked at Marshalls, then Target,&#8221; said Brosseau.</p>
<p>Brosseau got her GED, and then took the SAT&#8217;s. She applied to UMass Amherst, and in December of 2006, was accepted.</p>
<p>&#8220;I wanted to do something in business so that I can have a dependable job when I graduate, just because of my background. I chose Hospitality because I love meeting and interacting with people. I&#8217;m also really interested in sales. But one day, I&#8217;d love to go to law school,&#8221; she says.</p>
<p>Today, Brosseau is independent, successful and content, but her relationship with her family is still distant and strained. She hasn&#8217;t been allowed to see her younger siblings in over five years, she says.</p>
<p>For Brosseau, being financially independent is crucial, but she also hopes to be able to make enough money to help her siblings and other children in similar situations.</p>
<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d like to be financially stable enough to send my younger siblings to college &#8211; if they want to,&#8221; she says. &#8220;But most importantly, I want to start an organization that provides a safe haven and smooth transition for children who&#8217;ve grown up in communes or other difficult environments that provides education, counseling, and other ways to help them succeed in the world.&#8221;</p>
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