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Cult and
Society, Vol.
1, No. 1, 2001
Blind or Just Don't Want to See? Brainwashing, Mystification,
and Suspicion
Alberto Amitrani
Raffaella Di Marzio
From a letter written by a mother:
I am a desperate mother. Ten years ago,
I lost my daughter to a ferocious "cult"…. The unfortunate people whom we
meet are completely taken over… they tell them that their mothers are devils
who give out negative energy, thus hindering their perfect introduction into
cult life… I hardly ever hear from my daughter now. She doesn't take part in
our family meetings and calls me only when she needs money. You can well
imagine the tragedy of this poor mother... Please do something to help these
poor people who are in danger and want to live the life that Our Lord Jesus
gave us… I am afraid she will commit suicide like the others… do something,
I repeat, we cannot leave these kids at the mercy of jailers, of murderers
of the worst kind… I pray the Lord will help you in your work to help all
these kids who are prisoners of murderous cults.
Says a former member:
I then started to write a farewell
letter to my spiritual guide. This cost me a lot: every word was like a
dagger blow, and every now and then I had to stop since the tears would
block my vision. I wasn't able to do it all in one stroke, but every now and
then I went back to what was a small Calvary for me, a deserved one however,
unlike that of the Lord. My mind went back to the Good Thief and I hoped
Jesus would answer me the same way. When I got to the end of the letter, I
had a feeling of liberation… It had been a long trail, lasting over 20
years, but this was what had happened... What I thought was heaven was
actually a pink-colored hell, painted over with falsehood... I got hold of
my ancestors and my roots again. For years, everything which makes a person
free and conscious of what he is doing had been stolen from me. I was
picking up my pieces one by one, slowly but surely. However, many wounds
would never close again. It was still hard for me to free myself from what I
had thought was reality but actually was conditioning: the notion of being
one of the elect, somebody different, one of the Eternal's chosen… The
feeling I had deep inside is hard to describe: like being a flower which
slowly raises its petals again after having spent a long time without any
water and having risked death… When we realized that what we had been
through was a true cult, we understood we could no longer go on this way,
pretending nothing had happened, as other former members had done before…
All my fears went away one by one and were replaced by a single,
increasingly clear awareness: that diabolical thing, that tremendous
octopus, must stop, or at least we had to make others know it existed… you
can defend yourself from an enemy only when you know you have one.
Who Says "Apostates" are Unreliable?
According to a certain current of scholars
of new religions, these two testimonies - the first by a mother whose daughter
belongs to a magical-occultist group, the second by a person who left a
pseudo-mystical group - are not worthy of consideration by scholars of new
religions.
In the first case, with all due respect to
the person involved, some might say that this is the typical attitude of a
parent who, upset by her daughter's making a choice that does not agree with
her mother's ideas, sees the "cult" as the source of all evil. This attitude
does of course exist among families of members of New Religious Movements
(henceforth NRM), but one cannot generalize. When considering the suffering of
a mother (which appears clearly from the dramatic and even aggressive tone of
this testimony), who can no longer recognize her daughter, who has lost
emotional contact with her, who sees her suffer from a human and a spiritual
point of view, we cannot simply say: "Young people often make different
choices from their parents." Each case should be looked into individually.
While it is true that there have always been cases of authoritarian
interference by parents in the spiritual life of their children, without any
respect for their freedom of choice in such a delicate field as that of
spirituality, it is also true that there have been cases of young and less
young people taken into psycho-physical slavery inside certain organizations
that call themselves "religious." Those who are aware of this issue also meet
with cases of young people who, after difficulties and hesitation and thanks
to far-sighted and respectful help from their parents, realize that the group
they had joined was not actually what they thought it was. In such cases, the
young person leaves the group freely, but support and help from parents are an
indispensable element. We must therefore avoid pronouncing summary judgment,
and must keep to the facts. Facts sometimes do not confirm what the parents
say; in other cases they most definitely do.
In the second case, we have a former
member who denounces the state of "psychological imprisonment" in which the
group kept him. For a certain current of thought, this testimony would not be
reliable either, since this individual is certainly inspired by resentment
against the group he belonged to. Since the former member says he intends to
denounce the "atrocities" of the group, according to the scholars we have in
mind, this would be a case of "apostasy," that is, a case in which the person
who has left the group starts a war against it for personal reasons or
interests, or because he/she belongs to an "anti-cult" movement.
Once the unreliability of this kind of
testimony has been settled, to whom must we refer to have the simple,
objective, clear, and "scientific" truth about the cult or NRM, always
following these same scholars? To the movement itself, of course, which will
be happy to cooperate, providing its own followers for interviews, its own
documents for a study of the doctrine, and everything else that may be needed
for a successful scientific study! Is there something out of place or wrong in
this happy picture of loving concord? First of all, let us ask, is it
scientifically correct to study a movement only on the basis of its own
sources and of the documents it provides? Is it possible that our scholars
never suspect that somebody in the movement might have an interest in
"forgetting" some document? And what if those who have left a group, showing
authentic documents and using evidence, had something to say too? And why
should "apostates" always be unreliable? What philosophical dogma lays this
down? Where is the evidence that every "apostate" is associated with an
anti-cult movement? And even if some really were, does this mean that merely
because they belong to such a group, they lose their human value, so much so
that they cannot be believed even when they present proof. We are dealing
here with bigotry, not science.
Luckily, not all scholars agree with this
attitude. For example, Benjamin Zablocki, Professor of Sociology at Rutgers
University, who has studied NRM's for about 30 years, says he has:
visited hundreds of religious communes and talked with or
interviewed over a thousand members and ex-members of these groups. Enough of
these people have explained their experiences by something like a brainwashing
model to convince me that the weapon exists. Some of them probably are lying
or confabulating, but it is unlikely that all of them are. Most had no
particular ax to grind, nor were the majority associated with any anti-cult
organization.
1
The same
author says:
Since many NRM
apostates were sources of evidence about brainwashing, a tendentious campaign
was begun to define the apostate role as one whose accounts were inherently
unreliable. Instead of letting the issue of the reliability of apostate
accounts be settled empirically, an attempt was made to settle it
definitionally... By definition, they are all now following the ideological
line of some opposing group, usually an anti-cult organization.
2
It is true that people who leave such
groups do not always do so dramatically; nor do they always bear a negative
memory of the group; indeed, they sometimes recognize that there were positive
as well as negative features in it. It is also true that only a few denounce
the "injustices" they suffered.
The fact that the former are less numerous
than the others does not necessarily imply that they are exceptions. It
could mean that other former members, who could testify to the same facts, do
not do so for other reasons, including:
- Fear due to the continued presence inside the group of a
relative one has to go on living with or whom one is afraid of losing once
and for all, or whom one hopes to help "recover."
- Blackmail of various kinds, both emotional and financial.
- Shame for taking part in not entirely "transparent"
activities when one was involved in the group.
- A psychological reaction of total rejection of the past
experience, felt to be foreign to one's own picture of oneself, a defensive
desire not to mention this part of one's past any more.
-
Involved minors are not always able to testify suitably to any
psychological or physical abuse they may have suffered.
- A left-over phobia induced by the leadership, which leads to the notion
that those who do not keep secrets may suffer mishap or disaster of some
kind.
Who can decide whether the silence of the majority of
former members is more reliable than the dramatic testimony of a minority of
"apostates"? Who can decide that "apostates" are "bad" former members, and
that all the others are "good"? Can some percentages here and there in one
hurried study finally prove a principle which can then be generalized to all
groups and all situations? And what about the statement that "apostates"
accuse the groups they used to belong to in court only to be awarded damages,
or in order to get publicity for their story, or to publish their
autobiography for money? Who can establish the intentions of people? Could it
not be that an "apostate" decides to testify or to ask for an indemnity or to
write a book simply because he considers it to be a useful action for mankind?
One could say the same thing about a couple who decides to sue a doctor who,
in their opinion, has caused the death of their child through negligence.
They will certainly ask to for damages, but are they doing so because they
want to get rich, or because they want to see justice enforced and want to
prevent the doctor from repeating the same mistake with others? In terms of
principle, why is such a notion not also applicable in the case of
"apostates"?
When the conscience of a person is involved, the scholar
might do best to bow his head and say, "this is a task for God and not for
me." While one can investigate the actions of a person, it is much harder to
establish the real reason why he performs them. And this holds true for the
members and leaders of NRM's. While one may criticize their actions,
statements, and doctrines, nobody can reliably and easily judge their
intentions. The history of mankind is replete with examples of people who did
a great deal of damage to others, thinking to do well.
As we see it, there is a tendency to be very indulgent
towards the organizations involved, but ferocious towards so-called
"apostates," even though the latter - while denouncing the abuses they have
suffered - rarely deny, in their often very painful confessions, having made
serious mistakes themselves. Considering the complex and delicate nature of
this issue, it would perhaps be best to establish some objectivity and
formulate research hypotheses that are not prejudiced and which use diverse
methods of investigation.
Who Wants the Funeral of "Brainwashing"?
What is the basic issue behind this matter? It is what
is commonly called "brainwashing." This expression, coined by a journalist
named Hunter, today is merely a metaphor, and like all metaphors expresses a
complex notion by using a picture, in this case images reminiscent of Frank
Sinatra's role in the movie, The Manchurian Candidate.
Some people are scandalized by the very mention of this
expression; others, like Benjamin Zablocki, are not afraid to use it because
"It may also be the most misunderstood of all these terms, but I see that as
an advantage, since using the term impels us to face these misunderstandings
head-on instead of avoiding them with linguistic sleights of hand."
3
What causes so much distrust among scholars is not simply
the metaphor, but what it means. Admitting the possibility that some form of
mind conditioning might be practiced on members within an NRM is something of
a holy monster to be exorcised, in order to achieve the noble purpose of
defending religious freedom at all costs.
We agree entirely with those who wish to defend religious
freedom, but not at all costs, not at the cost of closing an eye to violations
of other, equally fundamental, human rights. First of all, we should establish
what a "religion" is, and what, on the other hand, is mystification,
exploitation, abuse of credulity, etc. These issues, however, would take a
thorough investigation, and they are not the purpose of this article. Zablocki
says:
I am convinced, based on more than
three decades of studying NRMs through participant-observation and through
interviews with both members and ex-members, that these movements have
unleashed social and psychological forces of truly awesome power. These forces
have wreaked havoc in many lives - in both adults and in children. It is these
social and psychological influence processes that the social scientist has
both the right and the duty to try to understand, regardless of whether such
understanding will ultimately prove helpful or harmful to the cause of
religious liberty.
4
He then concludes that "the real sociological issue ought
not to be whether brainwashing ever occurs but rather whether it occurs
frequently enough to be considered an important social problem."
5
This scholar, however, suggests focusing the study of this phenomenon, not on
the recruiting methods used by groups, but on the processes which make it
enormously difficult to leave them, and which continue to condition people
even after they have left: "Does something occur to create, in the mind of the
person, a social-psychological prison without guards or walls?"
6
These suggestions can help serious scholars avoid
confusing ideology, philosophy, and culture with a scientific approach. Why
after all should we totally deny the possibility that certain groups, under
certain conditions, can actually practice some form of mental conditioning?
How can we otherwise explain cases of collective suicide or mental illnesses
which recur constantly among people who join such groups, or why "normal"
people can firmly believe absurd and unimaginable things and go on doing so
even when it is proved that these do not exist?
What is worrying is the attempt to minimize such episodes
and to downplay their enormous seriousness. Unfortunately, even the case of
Aum Shinrikyo, which carried out a poison gas outrage in the Tokyo subway, has
received this "softening down" treatment from religion scholars who raised an
outcry about persecution of the group led by Shoko Asahara.
Here are the words of Haifa University psychologist
Benjamin Beit Hallahmi, who, after describing the sarin outrage in Tokyo on
March 20, 1995, which led to the death of 13 people and injury to many others,
says:
According to media reports, four
Americans arrived in Tokyo to defend Aum Shinrikyo against charges of mass
terrorism. Two of them were NRM scholars. According to these reports, they
stated that Aum Shinrikyo could not have produced the gas used in the attack,
and called on Japanese police not to "crush a religion and deny freedom"
(Reid, 1995; Reader, 1995).
7
Actually, the author of the article says, the Japanese
authorities had been rather negligent before, if not actually conniving with,
the criminal operations of Aum Shinrikyo, precisely because it was a NRM. The
author complains of the ostentatiously favorable attitude of his colleagues,
and says that this kind of behavior not only involved Aum Shinrikyo, but
recurs constantly among NRM scholars, and is in his opinion deplorable.
8
A Cult Observer summary of a Washington Post article indicated that the
American scholars' "visit was not well received in Japan"
9
because it had been widely reported that Aum had paid for their ticket to
Japan and because the Japanese public believed it already knew more than
enough to consider Aum guilty.
Concerning this matter, it should be said that "actually,
at the opening of the press conference held in Japan, J. Gordon Melton [one of
the American scholars to whom Beit-Hallahmi refers] stated that the traveling
expenses - 'but no kind of fee' - had been paid for by Aum Shinrikyo."
10
Whoever gave out the news, the facts stand and speak for themselves.
What we wish to stress is that tragedies like those we
have just mentioned invite all of us, scholars included, to look for a
plausible explanation of the phenomenon and for possible ways to prevent
others from happening. Sticking one's head in the sand like an ostrich is of
no use. One should lift up one's head, open up one's eyes and ears, and use
one's brain without making exceptions for anybody, if the safety of human
lives, and their psychological, physical, and spiritual well-being depends on
this.
Going back to those who are trying to understand and
investigate these issues honestly and without prejudices, we find a proposal
by Zablocki interesting. He says that the notion of "brainwashing" should be
defined again, and then treated like any other notion of social psychology.
The idea that "brainwashing" must involve the denial of free choice is based
on wrong premises. "Brainwashing" does not in fact state that people are not
able to choose freely, but they choose freely on the basis of values that are
different and which have been totally restructured according to the viewpoint
of the group and its leader. Zablocki holds that there is a sequence of events
that can be observed in the notion of "brainwashing" and that sometimes lasts
for years. "This visible and relatively unambiguous sequence consists of four
steps: (1) affiliation, (2) lifestyle modification, (3) disaffiliation, and
(4) disenchantment."
11
Zablocki's main hypothesis is, that under certain
circumstances a person can be subjected to a form of persuasion that can
transform his or her values of reference and notion of personal identity. This
is a special kind of persuasion that is performed within a strongly united
group, which largely or totally controls the environment around the
individual, and which uses stress and disorientation to exercise its
influence. The peculiarity of this kind of persuasion lies in the fact that it
persists even after the individual has left the group, as well as in the
terror of leaving the group it brings about, as if the very life of the
individual depended on his or her belonging to the group. Of course, even
though these aspects are easy to observe, there is no reason to think they are
present, or have the same intensity, in every group. There may also be
individuals who are hard to condition, since the process varies from
individual to individual.
Zablocki also says that, in his opinion, "...brainwashing
is likely to always remain a relatively rare phenomenon because of the
difficulty of achieving the high degree of milieu control and charismatic
influence necessary to make it effective.
12
We believe that the problem is that of identifying the
level of conditioning a person must be subjected to before we can speak of
brainwashing. This problem of definition arises because there are several
levels or degrees of conditioning inside different movements, as well as
different sensitivities and reactions on the part of individuals subjected to
environmental stimulation. Zablocki holds that "brainwashing" is a relatively
rare affair, and he does so on the basis of his experience and of his
assessment categories. Other scholars hold that it does not exist at all, yet
others imply that it happens quite frequently. The frequency of this
phenomenon is still harder to establish when we are dealing with children or
very young people, or with people who have psychological problems. The
controversy about the existence, frequency, and intensity of mental
manipulation inside NRM's has also been dealt with in committees of various
European parliaments, which have drawn up reports after the recent mass
suicides.
Concerning this issue, it is worth while to remember what
Massimo Introvigne had to say about the committee of the Belgian Parliament:
This committee claims to have "taken note of the
division in the academic world," and to have decided to choose sides. "On
the basis of its own proceedings (and especially on hearings of dozens of
former victims) the committee comes to the conclusion that it cannot share
the conclusions of the group of sociologists of religions, since the latter
clearly underestimate the potential dangers which cultic organizations pose,
due to a restrictive and unilateral approach that such sociologists adopt."
Especially, the sociologists - and CESNUR- deny the existence of "mental
manipulation," whereas the committee has "been presented with several
testimonies on this matter" which have convinced them that the opposite
holds true. The committee also takes the liberty of preaching to the
sociologists, since it "deplores the conclusions of this type of analysis
which refer to 'new religious movements' being published without a thorough
examination. From an ethical point of view, it is highly disputable to
consider a cultic organization as a 'new religious movement (...). Analyses
of this kind, which ignore one side of reality, end up by justifying to a
certain extent harmful cultic organizations. The result is to give them
carte blanche, or at least to allow them to perform their dangerous
activities more easily."
13
We find another mention of the attitude of the Committee
towards CESNUR in an article by Julien Ries :
The Committee severely reprimanded
the first group, CESNUR, for having published the book, Pour en Finir Avec les
Sectes, where 22 authors discredit the "Report by the Committee of Inquiry of
the French National Assembly, judged not to be scientific" since it provided
moral justification for numerous representatives of cult organizations during
the hearings in Brussels, because of its support for the new religious
movements.
14
The Belgian parliamentary report was severely criticized
for having included some perfectly "orthodox" Catholic groups in its list of
189 movements. Some used this to try to alarm the public, saying more or less:
"Catholics, beware, if we approve the methods of the Belgian Parliament
Committee (which accepts testimonies by 'apostates'), some Catholic groups
could also be labeled as cults!"
This of course would, quite rightly, cause a chorus of
indignation in the Catholic world. As a result, people of faith would start to
embrace the same positions of total distrust towards "apostates" and towards
"anti-cult" movements, which are a resource for families trying to "recover"
loved ones who belong to various kinds of "cults." This could lead to a new
opinion crusade, which, however, we believe would be entirely out of place.
We believe no such possibility existed, exists, or will
exist. The Belgian parliament report issued on April 28, 1997, does include
some Catholic groups in its list of 189 movements, but a note on the side
makes a very important point:
... this list in no way expresses
any judgment or any stand on the part of the committee; further examination of
these movements must be made and the chart must be updated constantly.
Moreover, on page 209, the text says that the committee
was able to make a census of 189 organizations that "might belong to one of
the three categories it laid down within the framework of a definition," i.e.,
harmless sects or new religions, a sect or new religion which is harmful for
individuals and societies, and criminal associations. In other words, the
committee de facto admits having mixed all groups together, leaving various
people or bodies free to make further classifications. 15
So the 189 movements (which also include some Catholic
groups) are not distinguished within the three categories chosen by the
Committee, which obviously did not want to take the responsibility of putting
on paper which groups are dangerous and which are not. Of course, the fact
that Catholic movements were listed together with truly dangerous cults led to
protests from the bishops as well. The parliament finally approved the Report,
but decided not to place the list of movements in its conclusions, but only to
consider an Appendix. 16
We believe this is sufficient to prove that it is
simply not true that the Belgian Parliament called Opus Dei or other Catholic
groups dangerous cults. It is also a manipulation of facts to blame the
"anti-cult" movements, the "apostates," or anybody who believes brainwashing
exists in NRM's for the fact that Catholic groups too were listed. If the
Committee drew up such a list, it was because of testimonies and evidence
which they found to be credible. And in any case, when a Parliament Committee
is established after massacres like that of the Solar Temple, the people who
have the most right to be heard are the victims, and States have the duty to
investigate the dangerousness of groups. The fact that the Committee kept to
general terms, not fitting the various groups into the three categories, is
certainly a pity, since it seems to confuse them with each other, and this
appears to be a justified criticism. However, it does not allow anybody to
pick and falsely represent facts in order to "grind his own axe."
We think a few comments should be made here. The Catholic
Church is certainly not a cult, since it has none of the features of one, even
when the religious experience is lived most intensely. However, it is
impossible to deny that during its long history, there have been deviations on
the edge of the Church, doctrinal deviations and cases of sectarian groups
(today generally called pseudo-Catholic). The Bishops have often taken steps
in such cases, sometimes also against priests, members of religious orders,
nuns, or even other Bishops who have strayed from the authentic doctrine. Who
can deny that in such deviant groups, there may have been cases of small or
large "cults" with manipulative methods of recruitment and indoctrination
similar to those of other "cults"? The Pastors themselves have often warned
the faithful not to believe blindly in seers, prophets, or "holy men" of
various kinds, who blend the authentic faith the Church has in the existence
of supernatural phenomena with fanaticism and sectarianism. We must
acknowledge that the Church is both saintly and sinful, and we must all take
steps so as not to stick our heads in the sand like ostriches, but to see,
warn, and help those who are confused or led astray by deviant doctrines.
For a believer, this does not mean kidnapping,
threatening, imprisoning or blackmailing; that is, forcing those who are
making a mistake to go back to the authentic faith. It means respectfully
engaging in dialogue and telling the person the truth clearly, advising him or
her of the possibly serious consequences of the choice he or she is about to
make or has made. Afterwards, the person will freely choose and his
brothers in the faith can only pray and witness the Gospel with greater
determination and courage than before. Perhaps someone will be able to find a
denial of religious freedom even in these words. We believe, however, that it
is simply a form of the "fraternal correction" that Jesus speaks of in the
Gospel.
The same blend of charity and truth must be used, albeit
in a different form, with all those who - even outside the Catholic world -
are involved in groups and movements of various kinds where some elements can
be found which can make one suspect so-called "brainwashing." If this notion
is interpreted and used in a balanced form, moderately and with respect for
others, it can help us to understand the inside dynamics of certain NRM's
better, and provide help according to the circumstances.
So it seems to us neither useful nor honest to want the
"funeral" of this notion at all costs so as to be able to justify the abuse of
personal freedom which exists in certain groups. According to Zablocki, this
is what many of his colleagues have done: the notion of "brainwashing" has
been treated without respect, declared guilty, and set aside without a decent
scientific trial. This improper treatment has been called "blacklisting" by
Zablocki. 17 He claims that most scholars have not been able to
refute this theory; they have simply swept it under the carpet. Others have
used it in a distorted fashion in court, and this distortion has led to
prejudices against those scholars who do want to investigate the phenomenon
and who are accused, for this reason only, of belonging to "anti-cult"
movements.
We have personally seen this bad habit of labeling others
simplistically, unfairly, and disrespectfully. However, because of the loose
fashion with which some label people or associations with derogatory terms
such as "anti-cult," this adjective has lost much of its power. This happens
whenever a category or a definition is abused. Equal over-use has been made of
the term "deprogramming." Nobody denies that in the past, some made use of
violent techniques and kidnapped people in order to make them leave a
"religious" group. Those who used such methods merely put another kind of
"brainwashing" into practice, equally unacceptable and injurious to personal
freedom. But, without going so far, there are also people who - while entirely
disapproving of deprogramming - believe that certain "religious" organizations
apply a high degree of conditioning on their followers. One could also ask
those who refuse to believe in the reality of "brainwashing" to consider what
deprogrammers do to people. How can one accuse deprogrammers of using coercive
techniques similar to "brainwashing" when these techniques are not supposed to
exist? What kind of scientific theory is this, which claims a phenomenon
exists only when applied by a certain category of people (deprogrammers in
this case)? If "brainwashing" exists, it exists, whether it is applied by
charismatic leaders or by deprogrammers; if it does not exist, then we can
accuse nobody of practicing it.
Someone might object that, whereas deprogrammers kidnap
their "prey," people who join a religious movement do so freely. We believe
this method of affiliation, which Zablocki considers to be unimportant in
terms of defining "brainwashing," deserves some comments. If it were true that
joining a group always took place with full respect for the freedom of
the individual, we would certainly agree with this approach. But things are
actually quite different. Let us consider a few concrete examples:
-
A person looking for a job lands up in an
employment agency, where he is put through "capacity" tests, in order to
investigate his capacities for a future job. If he then found himself,
without realizing it, a member of a psycho-religious group, he could walk
away, but what if he has already been conditioned, and has already been
subjected to pressure from the group, which has become his emotional point
of reference? Can we still say the individual has joined the group freely?
And what if part of the doctrine were kept hidden from the person, to be
revealed only when he is held to be "ready" by the leaders? In this case,
could we still say that the person was fully aware of what lay ahead of him
at the moment he made his choice?
-
A student with problems studying a foreign language
receives an attractive invitation with cartoons to a church where he will
receive language lessons from mother-tongue teachers. He goes there, and
after a while, he is presented with "strange" texts in the foreign language,
which tell the life of the founder of a religion, and how he was granted the
"great revelation," and the teachers begin to praise the virtues of this
figure, saying they are his followers. If this were followed up by kind
invitations to take part in religious services, chant special prayers, would
it not be right to say that the person approached the group for entirely
different reasons, and was then gently (i.e., without kidnapping) led
elsewhere?
-
A Christian is approached by a friendly "missionary"
who offers him a free home study of the Bible. This Christian could well
accept in order to try to take a deeper look at his own faith. But suppose
the "bible" studied at home were not the Bible after all, and the homeowner
too uninformed to realize it? If the alterations in the text led him to
abandon his previous religion to embrace the one offered by his "teacher,"
in such a case could we still say that the person freely and with awareness
chose a religion, or would it be better to say he had simply been tricked?
Countless examples of this sort could be made. They lead
us to think that "kidnapping" may take many forms. Current laws rightly punish
some kinds of kidnapping, others (unfortunately, in our opinion) do not.
However, they take place every day, right under our eyes.
Who Finances Research on New Religious
Movements?
Scientific research is always partial because it is human
and hence limited; however, one can well imagine how partial it can be when,
as in this case, it is affected by prejudices or when some suspicions exist
even as to its integrity and objectivity. Zablocki says:
With regard to finances, a major
obstacle toward the sort of progress desired is the cloud of secrecy that
surrounds the funding of research on NRMs. The sociology of religion can no
longer avoid the unpleasant ethical question of how to deal with the large
sums of money being pumped into the field by the religious groups being
studied and, to a lesser extent, by their opponents. Whether in the form of
subvention of research expenses, subvention of publications, opportunities to
sponsor and attend conferences, or direct fees for services, this money is not
insignificant, and its influence on research findings and positions taken on
scholarly disputes is largely unknown...I know there will be great resistance
to opening this can of worms, but I do not think there is any choice. This
is an issue that is slowly but surely building toward a public scandal...I am
not implying that it is necessarily wrong to accept funding from interested
parties, whether pro or anti, but I do think there needs to be some more
public accounting of where the money is coming from and what safeguards have
been taken to assure that this money is not interfering with scientific
objectivity. 18
To provide an example, Zablocki gives some details on the
funds he himself used for his research. 19 Some might say that
such insinuations are unfounded and are part of a campaign of defamation
against certain scholars. Zablocki, however, bases his statements also on a
document dated December 20, 1989, which he received himself:
I was one of the recipients on the
mistaken belief that I would be sympathetic to the ideas expressed. Even
though the email message has been widely distributed and is famous throughout
the discipline, I see no need to embarrass the author by citing his name.
20
This message includes an account of
a meeting of a few sociologists of
religion in 1989 shortly after an incident (discussed below) which resulted in
their failure to get the American Sociological Association to endorse a
statement to the United States Supreme Court denying the scientific validity
of the brainwashing conjecture.21
In fairness, it should be noted that this memo was
prepared by one of the meeting's participants and sent to others, some of whom
disagreed with certain points in the memo. Nevertheless, the tone of the memo
and the subject matter of the meeting clearly indicate that this was not a
group of dispassionate scholars seeking truth, but advocates seeking to
promote a point of view that tends to gloss over, if even acknowledge, the
destructive aspects of some new religious movements.
Beit-Hallahmi mentions this same message:
I have before me a piece of evidence
which reveals significant collusion between researchers and NRMs. This is a
confidential memorandum, dated December 20, 1989, and authored by an NRM
researcher, who stated that he was writing on behalf of two other leading
researchers, all of them sociologists. Copies of this document have been
circulated by an anti-NRM group, and its authenticity is beyond any doubt. It
is significant that this document has been sent to a long list of sociologists
by email, and has been cited before. It is embarrassing to refer to a
confidential memo written by a dear colleague, but no less embarrassing has
been the experience of witnessing dear colleagues act as collaborators and
shills for a variety of masquerading organizations. This document reports on a
series of meetings and activities involving several NRM scholars, NRM
attorneys, NRM leaders, and some other scholars...What is striking is the
clear sense in which the leading members of the NRM research network regarded
NRMs as allies, not subjects of study. It seems that the scholars were more
eager than the NRMs to lead the fight for NRM legitimacy. 22
Immediately after, Beit-Hallahmi, quotes a few lines from
the email:
Our meetings with the members of the Unification Church confirmed our earlier
impressions that ... their response is very substantially confined to ad hoc
responses to crises. I pressed them on the question of whether it might be
possible for the UC in collaboration with several other NRMs to raise a
significant amount of money - no strings attached - to an independent group,
which in turn, would entertain proposals and fund research on NRMs. NRMS were
less than enthusiastic, the writer thought, and "The cooperative funding of
the American Conference on Religious Freedom would appear to be about as far
as they are prepared to go at this time" (Confidential, 1989, p. 4). In
addition to the idea of creating an NRM-funded research organization...we
spent a good deal of time considering whether the time might be right to
import ... INFORM or create a US organization that would perform a similar
function ... INFORM has taken a very significant step in neutralizing
anti-cult movements in the UK (Confidential, 1989, p. 5).
23
Beit-Hallahmi then reminds his readers of the foundation
in 1992, of AWARE, the Association of World Academics for Religious Freedom,
which includes among its founding purposes the promotion of the defense of
freedom of religion. After a few comments, the author says: "In light of what
we have witnessed we are forced to re-read, our eyes fresh with suspicion, the
whole corpus of NRM literature." 24
Conclusion
We would like to finish with the words of our Pastors,
who - in their sensitivity for the spiritual health of their flock - are
interested in the new challenge posed by cults, a challenge typical of our
times, and who on May 30, 1993, approved the Pastoral Note of the Secretariat
for Ecumenism and Dialogue of the Italian Bishops' Conference. The Bishops,
after listing certain reasons why people join cults and stay in them, say the
following:
Other motivations are to be sought in a psychological
context. Belonging to a cult is an easy refuge for people who are
psychologically disturbed, who need a kind of safety which does not demand
the price of a personal search. Sometimes, members of cults are bound by
forms of emotional and psychological coercion, of control and vigilance, so
much so that this can lead to an actual limitation of personal freedom.
25
This Pastoral Note also stresses what we believe to be an
indisputable reality: that the right attitude towards the phenomenon of cults
must be based on dialogue, "without falling into irenism or sectarianism." The
Note goes on to provide pastoral advice that is rich in opportunities for
dialogue, charity, and respect for individuals.
We fully embrace these pastoral instructions, trusting
that they will be shared by all men and women of good will, whatever their
religious orientation.
Notes
[1]
Benjamin Zablocki, "The Blacklisting of a Concept.
The Strange History of the Brainwashing Conjecture in the Sociology of
Religion," Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent
Religions, vol. 1, n. 1 (October, 1997), pp. 96-121 (p. 98). This
article was published in October 1997. The second article, a continuation of
the first, was published in April 1998 always in Nova Religio. A
reply by D. Bromley, and Zablocki's reply to him were also published.
[2] Ibid., p. 113.
[3] Ibid., Nota 17 - p. 117.
[4] Ibid., p. 97-98.
[5] Ibid., p. 99.
[6] Ibid., p. 101.
[7] Benjamin Beit Hallahmi, "Dear
collegaues: integrity and suspicion in NRM research," paper presented at
the 1997 annual meeting of the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion,
p. 1.
[8] cfr. Ibid.
[9] "American
Aum Apologists Not Believed." Cult Observer, July/August,
1995, p. 10. (Based on T. R. Reid, "U.S. Visitors Boost Cause of
Japanese Cult." The Washington Post, May 9, 1995, A8.)
[10] M. Introvigne, "Movimenti
anti-sette e ricerca scientifica," in Giovanni Cantoni e M. Introvigne,
Libertà religiosa, "sette" e "diritto di persecuzione," Cristianità,
Piacenza 1996, p. 142.
[11] Benjamin Zablocki, Ibid.,
p103.
[12] Ibid., p. 103.
[13] M. Introvigne, "Il ritorno dei
giacobini: il rapporto della commissione parlamentare belga d'inchiesta
sulle sette," 2. Il metodo, CESNUR, 1997. Le retour des Jacobins,
Massimo Introvigne et
CESNUR.
[14] Julien Ries, "Sette e nuovi
movimenti religiosi davanti alla Commissione Parlamentare Belga," "Religioni
e Sette nel mondo" , Rivista trimestrale di cultura religiosa, Anno 3,
n. 2 (giugno 1997), pp. 175-193 (p. 183)
[15] Ibid., p. 185-186.
[16] Cfr. Ibid., p. 187.
[17] cfr. Benjamin Zablocki, Ibid.
[18] Ibid., p. 116.
[19] Ibid., p. 121. - nota 70.
[20] Ibid., p. 118. - nota 29.
[21] Ibid., p. 107. This is the
well-kown episode of the Amicus brief (a statement by some scholars who
claimed there was no reason to claim that physical coercion could be
replaced by another form of coercion in the process of "brainwashing"),
first signed and then withdrawn by ASA. An executive officer of ASA appears
to have simply signed the brief, arbitrarily taking the place of the entire
ASA, and delivered it to the Supreme Court (as if ASA had approved it
officially) before discussing it with the Council. He later admitted having
made a mistake in good faith, believing the discussion had already taken
place. However there is no trace of this assumed discussion in his
documents. The hurried and secretive nature of these operations shows
something of the atmosphere in the late '80s. (Benjamin Zablocki, personal
e-mail communication; also asserted in documents submitted to ASA at the
time by Richard Ofshe).
[22] Benjamin Beit Hallahmi, Ibid.,
p. 4.
[23] Ibid., p. 4.
[24] Ibid., p. 5.
[25] Segretariato per l'ecumenismo e il
dialogo della CEI, "L'impegno pastorale della Chiesa di fronte ai nuovi
movimenti religiosi e alle sette,,Nota Pastorale del 30 Maggio 1993,
Edizioni Paoline, Milano, 1993, pag. 16.
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Amitrani, Alberto & Di Marzio, Raffaella: "Blind or Just Don't Want to See: Brainwashing, Mystification, and Suspicion" Amitrani, Alberto & Di Marzio, Raffaella: "Min Control in New Religious Movements and the American Psychological Association"
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