Cults and Society, Vol. 1, No. 1, 2001
Teaching Young People
Alexandra Stein
Abstract
How did Napoleon,
Orwell's totalitarian pig, persuade a farmyard full of sheep to bleat, "Four
legs good, two legs better! Four legs good, two legs better!" in honor of a
long line of pigs marching ridiculously on their hind legs? In his allegory,
Animal Farm, George Orwell (1946) simply and
clearly describes the psychological manipulation of totalist systems. Can
we, as cult awareness educators, follow his example and use simple language
and clear thinking to communicate these complex concepts?
In her essay,
"Laboratories of Social Change," the author Doris
Lessing (1987) looks forward to a time when people will understand the
mechanisms of group behavior and group psychology, teach their children these
mechanisms, and apply this knowledge to their daily lives. By applying the
existing research in this way, she says, we may start to challenge our "most
primitive and instinctive reactions," those reactions which so often have led us
to act against our own interests and our own survival. This group psychology,
she argues, while well-understood by social scientists, has not yet reached the
broader public to help change destructive social behaviors.
Lessing imagines a scenario
where nations organize education to teach children how human beings respond to
group situations. This is education, she says, for the long term and for human
survival, unlike the current focus on technology skills, which (though
necessary) by its nature focuses on the short-term and the temporary. But she
scoffs at the idea that governments will ever support this type of learning.
Political parties use these very mechanisms of group psychology to maintain
power, she argues, so why would they threaten their own position?
The Maryland Task Force on
Cults, however, may challenge Lessing’s misgivings about governments.
Recommendation 9 in their
Final Report requires Maryland's public senior higher educational
institutions to: "create an educational program for incoming students and
ongoing education programs thereafter […] to assist students in assessing
their decisions whether to join groups and how to recognize destructive behavior
that may be affecting them" (emphasis added).
The Problem of Language
Despite the fact that this
Task Force, convened this summer by the Maryland state legislature, recognized a
problem and created an eleven point set of recommendations to deal with it, the
controversy surrounding this issue is such that the word cult appears in
the final report only in quotes. As for example: "…certain individuals were
concerned that the Task Force was attempting to define religion, identify
certain religious groups as being "cults" and equating "destructive groups" and
"cults" with religion."
It is illustrative of the
stage of our educational efforts that, while "cults" exist to the extent that a
governmental Task Force is convened to study their impact, yet still we may not
use this word to name them. This reminds me of Orwell’s
1984 and his description of Newspeak which: "was designed not to extend
but to diminish the range of thought, and this purpose was indirectly
assisted by cutting the choice of words down to a minimum" (Orwell, 1949).
Newspeak lives! This "whatever-it-is" has enough of an existence to cause
witnesses to testify emotionally and at length on "whatever-it-is", and for
others to testify equally emotionally that such a thing doesn't exist at all. It
is, however, enough of a "whatever-it-is" for the Task Force to list thirteen
behavior characteristics that define
this mysterious, un-nameable thingamajig.
Cults (whoops! - I mean
"cults") themselves restrict thought by restricting language (Lifton's
loaded language). In our educational efforts we need to have a rich
vocabulary to discuss this "whatever-it-is"; a clear language that allows for
complexity, that allows us to discuss the continuum of social influence,
and that also gives us the ability to define points along that continuum with
precision.
Broadening the Scope
Perhaps part of the problem
is that this "whatever-it-is" is broader, in fact, than simply the issue of
cults (OK, OK, I give up, no more quotes) – although clearly cults are one of
its most dramatic and damaging forms. This column will regard this issue as
including, not only cults, but also the study of influence, of group behavior,
of power relationships between people and of psychological manipulation.
Lessing emphasizes the
importance of the "soft sciences" – social psychology, social anthropology,
psychology and so forth – in understanding ourselves as social animals, subject
to the pressures of group influence and needful of the comforts of group life.
But she also points to literature and history, "those two great branches of
human learning, records of human behavior, human thought" which can be taught as
stories from which we "may learn, not only what has happened, but what may, and
probably will, happen again".
Individuals, families and
individual schools can act as a "yeast," says Lessing, to introduce these new
ideas and to stir up the society as a whole. In that sense those of us in the
cult awareness world – particularly in the US where we tend to feel beleaguered
– can be proud of our role as sentinels who advocate for these ideas in a
society that resists confronting them.
Raising Visibility
A key problem facing those of
us concerned with education is to raise the visibility of these topics. We know
that, unless there is a Heaven’s Gate, a Waco, or an Aum Shinrikyo, the problem
of cultic activity and psychological manipulation remains hidden on a day-to-day
basis. It is hidden due to shame, due to the very withdrawal from society (and
therefore public view) of most cults, and frequently it is hidden by fear of
litigation. Education in our field must start by finding ways to make this issue
visible in the way that domestic violence has become so in the past twenty
years, brought out of the "privacy" of family life and into the public realm for
open discussion and examination.
Visibility can be raised by
former members telling their stories (Lessing defines literature as being a
record also of human memory), and more and more of these are becoming available.
At the last AFF conference a small group of volunteers (this author among them)
organized an evening of Readings on the Cult Experience to provide a public
forum for some of these stories. Perhaps the cult awareness organizations can
find more ways to provide such outlets.
Part of this visibility comes
when the research being done in the "soft sciences" is translated, summarized,
and made useful to lay people and the media.
Allying ourselves with others
working on related issues can also raise visibility. We can form useful
collaborations with those working to prevent youth violence, domestic violence,
AIDS/HIV, drug abuse, and other social ills. We have much to offer, with our
understanding of the mechanisms of social influence and manipulation, to workers
in these fields who in turn can share with us their experience in public health
education.
Finally it is critical that
we begin to connect our work to broader issues of human rights and democracy.
Perhaps we can work with those educating young people on the human rights agenda
and contribute our particular understanding of the impact of psychological
manipulation on democracy.
We must also move the debate
beyond the trap of "religious freedom" in which it now languishes in this
country. I, for one, as a former member of a political cult, find the
religious freedom debate less than relevant to my experience. We can learn from
other
countries how to broaden the discussion, and show how critical this issue is
to general democratic health.
Sharing Knowledge and
Experience
Future columns published here
will attempt to provide a channel to share experiences and ideas on education in
our field by discussing:
-
Current efforts at education and assessment of
those efforts
-
Ideas and theories on education
-
Use of public health models
-
Opportunities for, and obstacles to,
implementing prevention education
-
Work in related fields, and collaborations
with those fields
-
Overseas efforts
Please contact me to
contribute your experience and ideas to this discussion.
Our efforts are important.
They are important in helping people identify coercive psychological
manipulation and in preventing the loss of life, and the loss of "years of life"
that many have suffered. We can help to educate children and youth to become
what Lessing describes as "people who think about what is going on in the world,
who try to assimilate information about our history, about how we behave and
function – people who advance humanity as a whole."
References
Lessing, D. (1987)
Laboratories of Social Change, in Prisons We Choose to Live Inside.
New York; Harpers and Row.
Orwell,
G. (1946) Animal Farm. New York; Signet Classic.
Orwell, G. (1949) 1984. New American Library. New York.
Report Of The Task
Force To Study The Effects Of Cult Activities On Public Senior Higher
Education Institutions. (1999) Maryland.
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