By Andrew J. Pulskamp
Steve Hassan is an intelligent and successful author. He was also a cult member
for more than two years after being recruited on his college campus. In his
40s now, he uses his writing to warn others about the lure of cults.
"I had just broken up with a girl and I was feeling kind of down. I was going
to Queens College when I was approached by three attractive young women at the
cafeteria," relates Hassan. "They started talking to me and were very nice but
it turns out they were a front group for the Moonies."
Regarded
by many as a cult, the Moonies follow their charismatic leader reverend Sun
Myung Moon, who leads his Unification Church. Moon claims that when he was 16
and living in Korea, he saw Christ who sacredly charged him to complete God's
unfinished mission on earth. The Moonies are probably best known for their mass
marriages where many followers wed assigned partners whom they are meeting for
the very first time.
"They lied a lot, which is a major thing readers should know. No one joins
a cult -- they get recruited. The major difference between legitimate organizations
and cults are the legitimate ones are upfront, they don't have to lie and deceive
to get new members," insists Hassan.
Right now, according to the American Family Foundation (AFF), a non-profit
group that studies psychological manipulation and cultic groups, there are approximately
1,000 cults worldwide. And some of them are said to be setting up shop on college
campuses -- a prime recruiting ground, say cult experts.
In an effort to find out if a cult problem exists on college campuses today,
we asked our readers. In this latest Poll, 40 percent of respondents say there
are cults that are active on their college campuses. Seventeen percent of respondents
claim to, at one time or another, have been a member of a cult on campus. And
of that 17 percent, nearly a quarter of them say they felt pressured into joining,
while 35 percent say they thought the group used mind games to control them.
Jeanette Simpson, a sophomore at Texas A&M University says she's never really
noticed any cults at her school and she thinks she knows why. "We are a conservative
campus and it's a real tight knit community. We're all Aggies first before anything
else. I think a lot of people don't feel the need to belong to another group."
Kristin Kyriakos, a sophomore at the University of Maryland, says some groups
have approached her on the College Park campus. "I've had people come up to me
and ask me if I wanted to join Christian worship groups but I didn't think they
were cults or anything," she says. "Usually [people] will come up with bibles
in their hands and ask if you have worshipped Christ lately or something like
that." Kyriakos does admit that these invitations made her a bit uncomfortable,
but after a quick 'no thank you' she says she was usually left alone.
In 1999, Maryland became embroiled in a cult controversy as the state appointed
a task force to study the effects of cult activities on public senior higher
education institutions. The task force was started after the parents of a University
of Maryland student complained.
Les and Nora Baker say their daughter was the victim of a cult recruiter on
campus. What made things worse, according to the Bakers, was the recruiter was
the girl's resident advisor whom she had approached for advice. The dispensed
wisdom came complete with an invitation to join his religion, the International
Churches of Christ (ICOC), a Christian sect that believes baptism in their church
is a way of becoming one of Christ's disciples. The group has thousands of followers,
an international presence - and has also been referred to as a cult.
"I think that absolutely we don't define ourselves as a cult. Basically people
label something a cult, religious or otherwise, when it's something they don't
understand or agree with," says Al Baird, an ICOC elder and spokesman.
The Bakers disagree. They claim that after their daughter's recruitment into
the ICOC, her GPA went from a 3.3 to a 2.0, she gave all of her $2,322 in savings
to the group and she was ready to leave for Iran to serve as a missionary for
her newfound religion.
The task force heard testimony from the Bakers, minority religious members,
scholars, cult experts and lawyers. At the end of the investigation, it listed
among its findings of fact: "The extent of group activities causing harm is
statistically very small. ...However, when interaction with a group causes harm
to a student, that harm can be very severe." They also said the cult problem
is enormous and extremely complex on college campuses.
William
Stuart, an anthropology professor at the University of Maryland says he sees the
Maryland task force probe as more of a witch-hunt. "Cults are as American as apple
pie," says Stuart, who insists the word "cult" is rife with negative connotations.
What some refer to as "cults," he calls new religious groups or minority religions,
which he says are more accurately examples of religious freedom than extremist
religious groups.
Dean Robert Thornberg, a religious advisor at Boston University, says, "I
refer to it as a destructive religious practice." And that's just how the school
refers to the ICOC. "They've been banned [on campus] since 1989 and a whole
bunch of other colleges use our model," says Thornberg. In fact, according to
the AFF, some 40 other colleges have followed suit, kicking the ICOC off school
grounds.
"Those estimates are ridiculous," proclaims ICOC elder, Baird. "By and large
the universities that we've had problems at are private. You don't have first
amendment rights at private schools."
Boston U says it kicked the group to the curb because it was using high pressure
recruiting tactics with its students. Some involved going door to door in the
dorms telling students to attend "mandatory" ICOC meetings. This dorm proselytizing,
according to Thornberg, violated school rules since students are protected from
solicitation of any kind in the dorms.
| Infamous Cult Incidents:
1978: The Jonestown Massacre. Led
by Jim Jones, 913 members of the People's Temple committed mass suicide
by drinking cyanide-poisoned punch in Guyana, South America. Those
who refused to commit suicide were shot.
1993: Seige at Waco. Self-proclaimed
messiah, David Koresh along with more than 80 Branch Davidian cult
members died when their compound in Waco, Texas went up in flames
following a tear gas attack by the U.S. government. This followed
a 51-day standoff with ATF and FBI agents.
1997: Heaven's Gate Suicide.
Members of this cult -- 39 in all, including leaders Marshall Applewhite
and Bonnie Lu Trousdale Nettles, took their own lives with a mix
of sedatives and vodka at the cult's headquarters just north of
San Diego. Once dead, they believed their souls would be transported
to a UFO waiting behind the Hale-Bopp comet, which would take them
to the "next level" of existence in outer space.
2000: Ugandan Cult Massacre.
Hundreds of cult members of The Movement for the Restoration of
the Ten Commandments were either burned to death, strangled or fatally
stabbed inside a locked church last March. Police are investigating
this as a mass murder. The three most prominent leaders, Joseph
Kibwetere, Credonia Mwerinde and Dominic Kataribabo disappeared
with the group's cash and possessions. So far 924 bodies have been
found.
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Asked whether the church uses aggressive recruiting tactics,
Baird says, "That's true. We believe in sharing the faith. It's not impolite or
in your face, but our people believe in Jesus enough that it has changed their
life and they want to share that." He adds, "We don't sell flowers in the airport
or anything."
The breaking of the dorm proselytizing rule was a key element in getting the
church banned at BU, but there were other troubling facts concerning students'
involvement with the group.
Thornberg says, "We figure in 1989, at the high point here, 40 students dropped
out entirely to follow them. Two guys were second year medical school students.
They dropped out after four years of college and two years of med school to
go off to be evangelists in the Far East." He continues, "An awful lot of kids
were swept up by them and the results were almost always a disaster. I know
a person who's been out for six or seven years now and they're just feeling
a sense of freedom."
Margaret Singer, a clinical psychologist and an expert on cults and coercion,
says one characteristic of cults is the groups often rob a member of their freedom
in many different ways. "A cult is started by a self proclaimed person. He or
she has special secret knowledge that they will share with followers if they
drop everything and come with them."
To that Baird says that any group that is different will always be the target
of accusations. "It started with Jesus. He was called a lot worse than a cult
leader. The church in the first century was called a cult. And I don't think
that Jesus was a cult leader and I don't think that the first century church
was a cult."
Singer points out the difference in today's so-called cults. "There is a modern
day double set of ethics. It's okay to lie and deceive outsiders, but total
honesty is demanded amongst members. There are totalistic rules for everything
and the rule is totalitarian." Singer says this means today's cults expect your
undivided attention and time.
"When one joins, you join up with the notion of working closely with two or
three others," says Stuart, who believes Singer's point of view is distorted.
"It's not just a 'come on Sunday and forget the rest of the week' proposition.
They expect you to be very involved and they're very expectful of time and resources,"
he says.
Money is another demand Singer says a cult may make of a student. She says
most cult leaders are driven by greed and use their group as a means to a follower's
cash, assets and belongings. To do this, she says, most cults will use mind
control.