Nov 12, 2025

CultNEWS101 Articles: 11/12/2025


Neurobiology, Meditation, Unification Church, Korea, Legal
"Bessel van der Kolk's book The Body Keeps the Score has maintained exceptional cultural and clinical influence since its publication in 2014, remaining a best-seller and shaping public discourse on trauma. Its central claims – that trauma causes lasting neurobiological damage and that body-based treatments are uniquely effective – have been widely embraced but seldom subjected to systematic critical evaluation in peer-reviewed literature. This commentary synthesises the evidentiary basis for these claims as a counterweight to an influential narrative. It situates these findings within broader discussions of neuroscience framing, cultural appeal, and evidence-based communication, underscoring the need for rigorous, balanced engagement with widely disseminated mental health narratives."
Meditation is widely praised for its mental health benefits, but new research shows that it can also produce unexpected side effects for some people—from anxiety and dissociation to functional impairment. Psychologist Nicholas Van Dam and his team found that nearly 60% of meditators experienced some kind of effect, and about a third found them distressing.

" ... The results showed that nearly 60% of U.S. meditators reported at least one side effect listed on the checklist (for example, feeling anxious or disembodied). About 30% said they experienced effects that were challenging or distressing, and 9% reported that these effects caused functional impairment.

The study also identified several potential risk factors. Individuals who had experienced mental health symptoms or psychological distress within the 30 days before meditating were more likely to report adverse effects. Those who attended intensive residential retreats, which often involve long periods of silent meditation, were also more likely to experience functional impairment.

Van Dam noted that more research is needed to determine cause and effect. A prospective longitudinal study, he said, would help clarify how mental health and meditation interact over time."
"Han Hak-ja, the leader of the Unification Church, was temporarily released on Tuesday from a South Korean jail on medical grounds after a court ruling, a court spokesperson and a church official said.

Han has been accused of directing the church to bribe former First Lady Kim Keon Hee for favours for the church's business interests. She has denied the allegations, calling them "false information".

Han will be freed from jail until 4 p.m. (0700 GMT) on Friday, the Seoul Central District Court said in a text message.

Han's lawyer had requested her temporary release for medical reasons, a spokesperson at the church said, without elaborating.

The court said Han would be required to stay at a hospital designated by the court.
She will be prohibited from meeting or contacting anyone related to the case, except for her lawyers, the court said."


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International Cult Awareness Day

International Cult Awareness Day


​Join us this International Cult Awareness Day, November 18th, as we raise awareness about the dangers of coercive control and the impact of cults on individuals, families, and society.

Cults can take many forms, from seemingly harmless groups to high-demand organizations that exert undue influence over their members. They often isolate individuals from their support networks, exploit their resources, and undermine their ability to think critically.

​This year, we encourage everyone to:


​By raising awareness, we can empower individuals to recognize and resist manipulative tactics, protect vulnerable populations, and support those on their journey to recovery.

​#CultAwarenessDay #CultAwareness #CoerciveControl #SupportSurvivors 


Resources:

International Cultic Studies Association

https://internationalculticstudies.org/


Graphics:

International Cult Awareness Day

















International Cult Awareness Day

















https://www.cultnews101.com/p/iternational-cult-awareness-day.html

Nov 11, 2025

CultNEWS101 Articles: 11/11/25

NXIVM, FLDS, Australia

CBC Listen: Allison after NXIVM from Uncover
"You think you know the NXIVM story. The secretive self-help empire. The sex cult headlines. The downfall of its leader, Keith Raniere. But the most famous woman at the centre of the story has remained largely silent. Allison, after NXIVM, tells the story of Allison Mack: a former Smallville actress, high-ranking NXIVM member, and convicted felon. With exclusive access following her release from prison, this series traces her astonishing path from Smallville fame to NXIVM's inner circle — and her effort to rebuild a life in the wreckage. Through raw interviews and revealing conversations with those who knew her before, during, and after NXIVM, this season dives deep into the gray zones of influence, accountability, and redemption. Crime. Investigation. Revelation. Uncover brings you explosive, high-caliber true crime year-round. From CIA mind control to serial abuse, mysterious disappearances to wrongful imprisonment. Each season features a new host who is deeply connected to the story and committed to uncovering the truth. With over 30 seasons to choose from, Uncover represents the best in true crime."

That's Life: Escaping a cult: How Briell rebuilt her life.
• Born into a radical religious sect, 18-year-old Briell was isolated entirely from the outside world
• Growing up, she was taught that it was normal for men to be married to at least three women
• Then came the day when she was forced to wed the cult leader, who already had 64 wives
Briell, now 39, tells her story in her own words.

Catholic Weekly: Monica Doumit: The cult is in the eye of the beholder
" ... Attention is increasingly focused on a slight variation of the former: the debate isn't about whether we should have a state-imposed religion, but rather whether there are some religious beliefs and practices that the State should intervene and prohibit.

We had our first taste of this with the prohibitions on so-called conversion practices, which, in addition to outlawing harmful practices like electroshock therapy, have also banned consensual prayer in some cases.  

The result is that a person who wants to abide by their religious beliefs on sexual ethics is banned by the State from seeking prayer or counsel from a spiritual leader to do so, with the threat of the religious leader being imprisoned if they try to help.

Now we have the Victorian inquiry into cults, the parliamentary hearings on which you will read about in this week's edition of The Catholic Weekly. While purportedly aimed at ensuring no one is coerced into religious practice, the terms of reference are so broad that they capture even mainstream Christian teaching.  

The potential outcome of this inquiry would be laws that would prohibit certain religious beliefs or practices, and that's where we get into very dangerous territory.

For example, those who allege a religious group is a cult will often talk about hierarchical structures, male-only leadership, traditional sexual ethics and a demand for modest dress.
But an orthodox view of all the major religions would reveal similar complaints, would it not?

Should millennia-old leadership structures or teachings on sexual morality now be seen as indicative of a cult, simply because the last 50 years has seen many in our society throw away these norms?

Even more basic teachings are under the spotlight.

As one of the witnesses at the inquiry noted, talk about sin and its eternal consequences could be judged as coercive, especially if a religious leader is bold enough to warn people that certain activities done in rejection of God and his plan for us could send them to hell.

While some members of the parliamentary committee would consider such language to be archaic and even harmful, and would readily seek to see such teachings banned, we need to be very careful here.

Even though Catholics are the largest religious grouping in the country by far and feel safe from the "cult" label, the bigger principle at play is the extent to which the State should be allowed to prohibit religious belief or practice because they know better than the believers themselves about what might harm them."


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Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.

CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families make the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.

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Nov 10, 2025

Parliamentary inquiry probes experiences of children in high-control religious groups

ABC News Australia
November 5, 2025  

A Victorian parliament probe into the impacts of cults and organised fringe groups has heard lived experience testimony from two women who grew up in high-control religious groups. Their evidence has added to calls for a greater focus on the safety of children in religious groups.

What's next?

The inquiry will continue public hearings before releasing its findings in September next year.

At eight years old, Mirriam Francis remembers locking herself in the bathroom to avoid "auditing" — a series of intense interviews in which she was asked intrusive and sexual questions.
Fighting back tears, she recounted these sessions and her experiences within the Church of Scientology at a parliamentary inquiry this week.

"I lied and said I needed to pee. I ran the water in the sink while she knocked," she said.

"I lied and said I was hungry. She came back with pieces of cheese.

During auditing, which Scientologists say is about discarding "spiritual disabilities", an interviewee holds cans connected to a meter that measures small electrical changes.

The church says this helps an auditor to identify a person's thoughts, emotions and past experiences.
Ms Francis was born into Scientology in Sydney in 1984.

At the age of six, Ms Francis was moved to Los Angeles, where she says she lived in a Scientology facility with other children.

She called it "institutionalised care" — children sleeping on bunks or on the floor with limited adult supervision.

"I know what it is to be treated as an adult in a small body," she said.

"To bear adult expectations, to face adult exposures and to have adult experiences."

Returning to Australia in 2002 at the age of 17, she spent about a decade volunteering with the church before leaving in her mid-20s.

She has now given evidence to the Victorian parliament's inquiry into the recruitment methods and impacts of cults and organised fringe groups.

The inquiry is considering whether stronger laws are needed to deal with groups that "use manipulation or control".

"The inquiry is not about judging anyone's beliefs — it's about protecting people from harm," the inquiry said on its website

Scientology is a recognised religion and registered charity in Australia, meaning it does not have to pay income tax on profits.

This is something Ms Francis — now a director of the Olive Leaf Network, which supports people leaving high-control religious groups — would like changed.

"When the federal government supports the financial benefits from these activities, this is not negligence," she said.

"It is complicity. This is institutional child abuse backed by this country."

The Church of Scientology has previously responded to questions from the ABC by saying Ms Francis joined the church staff of her own choosing and left of her own choosing.
Growing up in the Children of God

Maria Esguerra, another director of the Olive Leaf Network, also addressed the inquiry.

She is a registered psychologist with training in cultic abuse, coercive control and complex trauma.

She was born into the Children of God church, now known as The Family International.

Like Ms Francis, she also wants a greater focus on child safety in religious groups.

"The committee must maintain a clear distinction between adults and children through this inquiry, recognising children's particular rights, protections and vulnerabilities," she said.

 "I was born an Australian citizen, yet I was raised with no access to the rights and protections I should have been afforded."

Ms Esguerra told the inquiry she had no access to education, vaccinations or medical treatment when she was a child.

"I broke my nose and never saw a doctor," she said. 

"I suffered many childhood illnesses and even my basic need for glasses wasn't addressed. I had debilitating migraines growing up."

The inquiry's public hearings have been running since July, with multiple witnesses reporting a lack of public understanding about these religious groups.

Ms Esguerra said within her former church, sex was called "sharing" — posing a risk that if a child reported to police that someone had shared with them, authorities might not know they were reporting an assault.

She also alleged that within the church, sexual assault was deemed as Godly or the fault of the child.

"My mother told me to pick my nose to turn off a perpetrator rather than intervening," she said.

In a 2023 statement to the ABC's Believing in Australia TV series, The Family International said it "has had a zero-tolerance policy in place for nearly four decades for the protection of minors, and is diametrically opposed to the abuse of minors in any form."

It also said it has issued official apologies on several occasions to anyone who was hurt in any way during their membership.

Inquiry hears calls for stronger laws
The inquiry has heard evidence from dozens of people, from representatives of churches to former members demanding changes to stop trauma in high-control groups.

But inquiry members have questioned how best to do that without impinging on religious freedoms. 

For many, it comes down to definitions of what a cult is and how to define coercive control.

MP and inquiry member Jackson Taylor said he would propose a national inquiry and a permanent independent watchdog, as well as lend his support to a new offence recognising group-based coercive control.

New Zealand-based journalist and author Anke Richter has been investigating cults for a decade.

She told the inquiry she wants shunning and group-based coercive control to be criminalised, helplines and safe transitional housing for people leaving cults, public awareness campaigns, and sustainable funding for grassroots organisations helping leavers.

She pointed to Europe, where there are support services for cult leavers, including Austria's Society against Sect and Cult Dangers.

"They are there to stop recruitment, to put up public information, to run information campaigns, to advise people who come and need support," she said.

The committee will continue public hearings before releasing its findings in September next year.

https:// www. abc. Net. au/news/2025-11-06/former-scientologist-fronts-cult-fringe-group-inquiry/105979444

CultNEWS101 Articles: 11/10/2025


EckankarThe Church of Immortal Consciousness, NXIVM

RNS: New Age spiritual group Eckankar will soon have its first new leader in 44 years
" ...Some of the world's ECKists, who reside in more than 120 countries, predominantly in Europe and Africa, will converge at the ... [Temple of ECK in rural Minnesota] for their annual Worldwide Soul Adventure seminar. This year, they will also celebrate 60 years since Eckankar's founding and ring in a new spiritual year, themed "the year of light and sound."

But this year's gathering is significant for another reason: Sri Harold Klemp, the living ECK master, will formally introduce his successor, marking the first leadership transition in Eckankar in more than 4 decades. An unknown male, considered to be part of Klemp's spiritual lineage, to be announced at the event, is to carry the group into the next 60-year cycle."

A Little Bit Culty: The Church of Immortal Consciousness wasn't precisely a "chess cult."
But it did produce a master chess player and tomorrow's guest, Danny Rensch.

Danny's journey within the Arizona-based group led to his affinity and passion for chess, as well as some severe mental and physical trauma.

Tomorrow kicks off our two-parter with Danny, where he covers everything from growing up in the group, how chess became his "purpose," and how he walked away from immortal consciousness.

Plus, he talks about his memoir "Dark Squares" and the role chess continues to play in his life today. Danny's story is one of the most captivating we've heard recently, and we can't wait for you to listen to it too.

Yahoo: Smallville's Allison Mack to Speak About Her Experience in NXIVM Cult for First Time in New Podcast Series
• Allison Mack, a former Smallville actress, held a high-level position in the NXIVM cult, recruiting women, branding them, and collecting blackmail "collateral" to ensure compliance.
• Mack is set to share her story in a new podcast series, Uncover: Allison After NXIVM, exploring her life before and after her involvement in the cult.
• Mack pleaded guilty to charges of racketeering and racketeering conspiracy, serving 21 months of a three-year sentence before her release in July 2023.

News, Education, Intervention, Recovery


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Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.

CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families in making the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.

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Nov 7, 2025

Kim Keon-hee, Han Hak-ja Indicted in Unification Church Party Scheme

Charged with violating Political Parties Act over collective entry into People Power Party

Kim Na-yeong
Chosun Daily 
November 7, 2025

The special prosecutor’s team, led by Min Joong-ki, investigating various allegations against former first lady Kim Keon-hee, announced on the 7th that it had additionally indicted Kim, Unification Church leader Han Hak-ja, and others in connection with the alleged "collective entry of Unification Church members into the People Power Party."

The special counsel stated, “Kim, Han, Jeon Seong-bae (a shaman also known as Geonjin), Yun Young-ho (former Unification Church global head), and Jeong (a former Unification Church secretary-general), among five individuals, were additionally indicted on charges of violating the Political Parties Act.” The law stipulates that no individual shall be coerced into joining or leaving a political party against their free will.

The special counsel alleged that Kim and Jeon colluded to request the Unification Church in November 2022 to organize a collective entry of its followers into the People Power Party, with the aim of ensuring the election of their preferred candidate ahead of the party’s leadership race in March 2023. According to the indictment, “In return, they promised the Unification Church policy support, financial benefits, and a proportional representation seat in the National Assembly for the church’s share, which Han and others accepted.”

In relation to this allegation, the special counsel reportedly seized and searched a server containing the People Power Party’s membership list on September 19, extracting a list of approximately 110,000 to 120,000 individuals suspected of being Unification Church followers. On September 30, they also raided the party’s Gyeongnam provincial chapter and discovered bundles of membership applications presumed to have been submitted by Unification Church adherents.

Earlier, the special counsel reported that the Unification Church had systematically supported former President Yoon Suk-yeol’s government by donating funds to 17 city and provincial chapters of the People Power Party around the time of the 20th presidential election. On the 10th of last month, Han was referred to trial on charges including violations of the Political Funds Act. Kim was arrested and indicted in August on charges of violating the Capital Markets Act, the Political Funds Act, and solicitation of bribes under the Act on the Aggravated Punishment of Specific Crimes.

This article has been translated by Upstage Solar AI.

https://www.chosun.com/english/national-en/2025/11/07/3KL37M4CTFBPPLDUAOGC6WINKY/

Unification Church leader returns to jail after eye surgery

SEOUL, Nov. 7 (Yonhap) -- Unification Church leader Han Hak-ja returned to jail Friday upon completing eye surgery, after a court rejected her request to extend her temporary release.

Han, who is standing trial for alleged bribery linked to former President Yoon Suk Yeol's administration, was granted temporary release from a detention center on Tuesday to undergo eye surgery with a deadline to return by 4 p.m. Friday.

The church leader later requested an extension, however, citing the need to recover from surgery. The Seoul Central District Court rejected it on Friday.

Han has been in custody since September over charges of bribing People Power Party Rep. Kweon Seong-dong in 2022 in exchange for his help in gaining favors for the church from the future Yoon administration.

She is also accused of involvement in gifting a luxury necklace and Chanel bags to Yoon's wife, Kim Keon Hee, while requesting favors, embezzling the church's money to purchase the gifts and ordering the destruction of evidence ahead of a police investigation into her alleged overseas gambling.

https://m-en.yna.co.kr/view/AEN20251107009800315

CultNEWS101 Articles: 10/7/2025


Clergy Sexual Abuse, Unification Church, Opus Dei

"The first research study into the sexual abuse of women religious in German-speaking countries has shown a typical pattern of spiritual abuse with global cases and highlighted that the majority of abuse is perpetrated by men, although some sisters were abused also by women superiors.

The study titled "Sexual Abuse of Catholic Women Religious Victims, Perpetrators and (Non)consensual Relationships" is the culmination of three years' work by Barbara Haslbeck, professor of pastoral theology and homiletics at the University of Regensburg, Germany.

Speaking to OSV News about the new study, published on Sept. 15, Haslbeck explained that 15 women who experienced sexual abuse as religious in German-speaking countries were interviewed for the study.

"Given the sensitive nature of the subject matter, this is a major study," Haslbeck told OSV News.
The aim of this pioneering research project is to gain an understanding of "the systemic conditions of abuse and determine the consequences of the abuse," the researcher said.

It also aimed to shed light on the characteristics of the perpetrators, the grooming, the extent of the abuse, the occasions of the abuse, and identify spiritual manipulation in the abuse process.

The assumption that priests are "harmless" was highlighted as an enabling factor in the communities in which the women lived, the research director said. Other issues included obedience as "a vulnerability factor." At the same time, chastity and the "bridal motif" were identified by the victims as "ambivalent ideals" in the face of abuse, used by perpetrators to lure their potential victims."
"With the special counsel team investigating the Unification Church's alleged bribery scheme now having arrested its leader, Han Hak-ja, the probe is likely to set its sights on former President Yoon Suk-yeol next by tracing the flow of church funds.

Early on Tuesday, a judge from the Seoul Central District Court's warrant division issued an arrest warrant for Han, citing "concerns over destruction of evidence." Han currently faces suspicions of violating the Political Funds Act and the Improper Solicitation and Graft Act, embezzling church funds, and instructing the destruction of evidence.

The key allegation requiring further investigation is that Han delivered 100 million won (US$72,000) in illegal political funds to PPP lawmaker Kweon Seong-dong in January 2022 through Yun Young-ho, the former global operations director of the Unification Church. Yun has been indicted and is currently behind bars.

The special counsel team is considering the possibility that this sum reached the former president himself. During the investigation, it was revealed that Yun, who managed Unification Church finances, placed half of the 100 million won delivered to Kweon in a separate bundle that bore the Chinese character for "king" in embroidery. This suggests Yoon may have received or been aware of a portion of the Unification Church's bribe.

The team will likely turn up additional funds beyond the aforementioned 100 million won that the Unification Church handed Kweon."
"An ex-assistant numerary, Anne Marie Allen held the lowest rank of Opus Dei's hierarchical structure, where she spent almost seven years with the conservative Catholic group in Ireland, starting when she was 15.

"I think it is the voice of the weakest that will bring Opus Dei down," Allen says matter-of-factly.

In Serve: My Lost Years at the Heart of Opus Dei, the 62-year-old documents the domestic servitude that she and other Irish women say they were lured into with the promise of vocational training. Her criticism of Opus Dei, including that the promised training never materialized, echoes that of other ex-numerary assistants around the world, including in Argentina, where a criminal investigation involves 43 former members who say they were trafficked and exploited.

Opus Dei is a conservative and notoriously secretive Catholic group founded in 1928 in Spain by Fr. Josemaría Escrivá de Balaguer y Albás (1902-1975). Dogged by controversy from the beginning, the group's stated aim is to help lay and clerical members sanctify their daily lives. While this mission has resonated with a post-Vatican II church, critics say Opus Dei seeks to influence the powerful and wealthy to increase its own access to the levers of power within both the church and society. This blending of faith and political lobbying has been powerful in the United States and Spain.

Assistant numeraries — Opus Dei's lowest rank — are women who primarily attend to the domestic needs of the organization's centers, including cooking and cleaning. The women live and work under the obedience of Opus Dei and commit to celibacy and to sanctifying their lives.

Opus Dei is believed to have 90,000 members in up to 70 countries, though exact figures are elusive due to the group's discretion — or secrecy, depending on your viewpoint."


The selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not imply that Patrick Ryan or Joseph Kelly endorse the content. We provide information from multiple perspectives to foster dialogue.


CultNEWS101 Articles: 11/7/2025


Unification Church, Conspiracy

"GROWING up, Sam Park always knew he was a 'Blessed Child,' but discovering his real father was the 'Second Coming of Christ' who 'owned the universe' was a lot to live with.

Especially since his dad, the founder of Unification Church – better known as The Moonies – was busy positioning himself as the Messiah who would save the world from hell.

This revelation was to have a damaging lifelong effect on Sam as he learnt how his Korean-born father, the Reverend Sun Myung Moon, used the church to satisfy his voracious sexual appetite.

The cult leader indulged in group sex with his "Disciples" and made couples drink "Holy Wine", laced with his own semen, in mass wedding ceremonies.

There were also accusations that he brainwashed young, impressionable people drawn to the movement, looking for a purpose in life.

But even darker and more personal for Sam was the sexual abuse he received from the woman he later learnt was his biological mother, which began when he was just five years old.

"I am the product of the evilness that they hid and I'm not going to be silent about it anymore because it's destroyed my life," says Sam, who features in the documentary, The Moonies: Married to the Cult, which can be seen on Amazon Prime."

MIT Technology Review: How to help friends and family dig out of a conspiracy theory black hole
"Someone I know became a conspiracy theorist seemingly overnight.

It was during the pandemic, and out of nowhere, they suddenly started posting daily on Facebook about the dangers of COVID-19 vaccines and masks, warning of an attempt to control us and keep us in our places. The government had planned it all; it was part of a wider plot by a group of shadowy pedophile elites who ran the world. The World Economic Forum was involved in some way, and Bill Gates, natch. The claims seemed to get wilder by the day. I didn't always follow.

As a science and technology journalist, my duty was to respond. So I did, occasionally posting long debunking responses to their posts. Facts alone (uncertain as they were at the time) would help me win the argument. But all I got was derision. I was so naive, apparently. I eventually blocked this person for the sake of my own mental health.

Over the years, I've often wondered: Could I have helped more? Are there things I could have done differently to talk them back down and help them see sense?

I should have spoken to Sander van der Linden, professor of social psychology in society at the University of Cambridge. He is the author of Foolproof, a book about misinformation and how we make ourselves less susceptible to it.

As part of MIT Technology Review's package on conspiracies, I gave him a call to ask: What would he advise if one of our family members or friends showed signs of having fallen down the rabbit hole?"



News, Education, Intervention, Recovery


CultMediation.com   

Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.

CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families in making the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.

CultNEWS101.com news, links, resources about: cults, cultic groups, abusive relationships, movements, religions, political organizations, and related topics.

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