Jun 5, 2026

CultNEWS101 Articles: 6/5/2026

Culture & Media

Thursday, June 11, 2026
6:00 PM  7:00 PM

Daniel Shaw is an award-winning psychotherapist, practicing in New York City and in Nyack. He is the author of three books on the subject of traumatic narcissism, the latest being Traumatic Narcissism Theory: A Contemporary Introduction, published in May of 2026 by Routledge.

At this talk, Dan will share excerpts from this most recent book, providing insight into the specialty of his practice and answering questions from the audience.

As a psychoanalytically trained professional, Dan has been recognized for his impactful work with cult survivors by The International Cultic Studies Association who presented him with the Margaret Thaler Singer Award for advancing awareness of coercive control and undue influence.

Reservations are required as space is limited for this event.

Dan will have copies of his new book available for purchase at the event, or you can order one online through the link below.
Get your copy here!



Group Profiles

The Panacea Society was a fascinating, highly organized millenarian religious community founded in 1919 in Bedford, England. Originally calling themselves The Community of the Holy Ghost, the group was composed primarily of affluent, middle-class Edwardian women—many of whom were war widows and former suffragettes looking for a distinct spiritual and social purpose after the trauma of the First World War.

At its height in the 1920s and 1930s, the society grew from a localized commune into an international movement with thousands of external members, bound together by unique eschatological beliefs, a global healing ministry, and an incredibly persistent public advertising campaign.

Core Origins and the 'Visitation'
The theological roots of the Panacea Society rested on Southcottianism, a lineage of English prophetic tradition tracking back to Joanna Southcott (1750–1814), a self-proclaimed Devonshire prophetess. Southcott had declared that an imminent Millennium (a 1,000-year era of divine peace) was coming and that a final female spiritual avatar would appear before Christ’s return.

The Panacea Society was organized around the belief that this line of revelation, known as "The Visitation," was actively manifesting through their own leader:
  • Mabel Barltrop (Octavia): The widow of an Anglican clergyman, Barltrop emerged as the group's absolute spiritual authority. Her followers identified her as the "Divine Daughter of God" and the eighth prophet of the Visitation, giving her the name Octavia.
  • The Daily Script: Every evening, Octavia delivered written revelations—the "daily script"—prescribing both divine prophecy and strict, meticulous rules dictating how her followers should dress, behave, and maintain their households.

The Two Pillars of Activity
The group is remembered historically for two massive, highly funded initiatives that reached across the globe.
1. The Campaign to Open Joanna Southcott’s Box
Joanna Southcott had left behind a famous, tightly sealed wooden box containing her final prophecies. She left specific instructions that it must only be opened during a time of dire national crisis, and crucially, only in the presence of 24 bishops of the Church of England who were expected to spend days studying its contents.
The Panaceans believed the chaos of WWI and the interwar period was the exact crisis Southcott foretold. They spent vast sums of money on national billboard campaigns, newspaper advertisements, and petitions demanding that the Anglican episcopate fulfill its duty. They even purchased a large property adjacent to their headquarters specifically designed to host and house the 24 bishops when they finally arrived. The bishops, however, consistently ignored the requests.

2. The Universal Healing Ministry
The society adopted the name Panacea in 1923 to reflect a healing cure they offered freely to the world to eradicate all physical and mental illness.
The cure relied entirely on ordinary tap water energized by pieces of linen over which Octavia had breathed and prayed. The society shipped these small squares of linen completely free of charge to anyone who wrote to their Bedford headquarters. Recipients were told to immerse the linen in a pitcher of water to create "Water A," which they drank four times a day or diluted into bathwater ("Water B"). Remarkably, between 1924 and 2012, the society mailed out these healing packets to over 130,000 applicants across 90 countries, maintaining meticulous archives of the letters sent back by believers reporting their recoveries.

The Bedford Campus and Eden
The society acquired a series of Victorian villas along Albany Road in Bedford, creating an intentional, enclosed community campus. The members believed that Bedford was the literal, original geographic site of the Garden of Eden.
Within this secure enclave, they prepared for the apocalypse with pristine domestic order. They even meticulously maintained an end-of-terrace house known as The Ark, keeping it fully furnished, empty, and ready to serve as the immediate residence for the Messiah upon the Second Coming.

Evolution into a Modern Trust
Following Octavia's death in 1934 and the subsequent passing of her successor Emily Goodwin in 1943, the community’s resident numbers steadily dwindled. However, because early members had systematically signed over their personal wealth and real estate legacies to a formal structural framework established back in 1926, the society became extraordinarily wealthy.
By the early 2000s, the society held millions of pounds in property assets but had only a single digit number of surviving members. The last resident member, Ruth Klein, passed away in 2012.
Following her death, the organization officially closed its religious era and transformed into the Panacea Charitable Trust. Today, the historic campus operates as The Panacea Museum in Bedford, preserving the extensive archives of scripts, global healing correspondence, and the famous unopened box, while using its substantial endowment to fund local social initiatives and mental health services.
....


The  Ark
Gulf Harbour Tragedy: Inside "The Ark" and the Trial of Kaixiao Liu and Lanyue Xiao
A major trial underway in the Auckland High Court has pulled back the curtain on a secretive, isolated religious environment operating out of a residential home in Orewa, New Zealand. What began in March 2024 as a disturbing mystery—when a fisherman discovered the body of an elderly woman wrapped in plastic bags floating in Gulf Harbour—has evolved into a complex prosecution involving allegations of extreme coercive control, forced isolation, and fatal physical abuse.

The Discovery and the Investigation
On March 12, 2024, the remains of 70-year-old Shulai Wang, who had traveled to New Zealand from China’s Hainan province in 2023, were found wrapped in layers of plastic bags.
The breakthrough in the police investigation came down to the specific retail packaging used to conceal the body:
• The Clue: The body was bound with black tape and enclosed in two distinct, large plastic rice bags. Garden stones had been placed inside to weigh it down.
• The Paper Trail: Using the serial numbers printed on the 10-kilogram rice bags, police tracked a bulk purchase of 15 identical bags to a North Shore supermarket.
• The Suspects: The bank account used for the purchase belonged to 38-year-old Kaixiao Liu. In July 2024, Liu and his wife, 38-year-old Lanyue Xiao, were arrested at Auckland Airport.
Inside "The Ark"
Crown prosecutors allege that Kaixiao Liu operated a high-demand, highly regimented communal home that he and his followers referred to as "The Ark."
When police executed a search warrant at the Orewa residence, they uncovered a deeply insular environment. Living in the home were Liu, Xiao, their four young children, Liu's parents (Xiuyun Li, 63, and Jingui Liu, 65), and five other adult women who had moved into the home.

Key Elements of the Group's Beliefs and Dynamics
• The Leadership Structure: Shulai Wang reportedly traveled to New Zealand specifically to seek "religious instruction" from Kaixiao Liu, who acted as the spiritual leader of the household.
• Ethereal Worship Culture: In the years leading up to the trial, Liu heavily invested in projecting a specific spiritual identity. In the summer of 2020/2021, he hired dozens of freelance classical musicians and high-end recording studios in Auckland to record complex orchestral music he composed. Freelancers reported he described the music as an "ethereal, god-like" tool meant to "connect people across the universe." Following his initial arrest, a YouTube channel under his name continued to upload original Mandarin worship videos focusing on salvation and Jesus.
• Extreme Rules and Punishment: According to Crown Prosecutor Emma Kerr's opening statement, life inside "The Ark" was governed by rigid, absolute household rules. The Crown alleges that Wang was subjected to severe discipline for allegedly breaking these rules.
• The Charges: Prosecutors state that before her death, Wang suffered blunt force injuries to her head, face, and arms, was denied food, and was locked away inside a tent in the home. Four family members—Kaixiao Liu, Lanyue Xiao, and Liu's parents—now face charges of kidnapping and manslaughter.

The Intersection of Isolation and Coercive Control
For researchers and practitioners monitoring high-demand groups, "The Ark" presents a classic text-book case of rapid isolation. By blending traditional religious themes (salvation, Christian-adjacent worship) with idiosyncratic household rules, total physical isolation from the broader New Zealand community, and severe physical punishments, the environment cross-sections how coercive control operates behind closed doors in small, family-centric high-demand cells.

References & Further Reading
1. Radio New Zealand (RNZ) / Otago Daily Times (May 25, 2026): "Religious group accused of killing woman, dumping body in harbour" – Details from the High Court opening statements, the retail tracking of the rice bags, and the conditions inside "The Ark."
2. Otago Daily Times / RNZ Investigation (September 18, 2024): "Body in bag accused releases Christian music videos" – Background on Kaixiao Liu’s musical projects, interviews with hired freelance orchestral musicians, and his YouTube presence.
3. Matakana Coast App / NZ Herald (August 2, 2024): "Gulf Harbour body: Pair charged in relation to woman found dead in bag named" – Coverage of the initial court appearance, identification of Kaixiao Liu and Lanyue Xiao, and their arrest at Auckland Airport.

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 make 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.

Facebook

Twitter

Instagram



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


Please forward articles that you think we should add to cultintervention@gmail.com.


WORLD RECEIVER



“WORLD RECEIVER” is an audiovisual piece from my experimental album of the same name. It merges layered vocals, psychedelic visuals, ritualistic symbolism, and futuristic world-building.

Musically, the project is deeply influenced by my Bulgarian heritage. These ancestral vocal techniques are reimagined through an experimental and contemporary lens, transforming ancient human resonance into something futuristic, spiritual, and transcultural.

Visually, the piece draws inspiration from Kukeri — traditional Bulgarian masked ritual figures associated with transformation, protection, and the crossing between worlds. Rather than recreating folklore literally, I reimagine these symbols, combined with other diverse elements from different cultural contexts and reinterpret them through glitch aesthetics, saturated colours, fragmented digital textures, and sci-fi-inspired imagery, creating a world that feels simultaneously ancient and post-human. 

The video is shot in the Global Capital of world peace, at Maharishi Mahesh Yoghi’s Peace Palace - a symbol of unity, harmony and transcendence of all borders. It explores the idea of humans as temporary vessels or holographic identities through which a larger universal consciousness manifests itself.

The track exists between stillness and overload.

Between the sacred and the synthetic.
Between human consciousness and the accelerating machinery of modern culture.

There is no traditional narrative here. The video unfolds as a fractured ritual: glitching dimensions, saturated colour, collapsing identities, digital ghosts, and moments of transcendence. It moves like a meditation interrupted by data streams — a search for the divine inside technological reality.

At the center is the “World Receiver”:
an avatar, antenna, vessel.
A being tuning into invisible channels and translating what it captures into reality itself — becoming a bridge between dimensions, frequencies, and states of consciousness.

The work explores fragmentation of the self in the age of hyper-speed culture, while simultaneously longing for timelessness, presence, and spiritual unity. It reflects on the idea that we may all exist as holographic projections of one consciousness — temporary avatars through which the universe experiences itself.

Ancient ritual filtered through digital decay.

A metamodern collision of sincerity, irony, technology, mysticism, and emotional vulnerability.

CREDITS
Written, performed, recorded, shot, directed, edited by Nora Mincheva (E0N)
Envisioned and blessed by the Cosmic Consciousness

LYRICS:
Stream from my consciousness
World receiver

They keep on…

I don't wanna leave
until the party’s over…

We thought that we could stay
we thought that we could play
we thought that we could be
thought that we could see….

*

If you enjoy my work, feel free to support by liking, commenting or sharing with someone who might be inspired by it. Thank you!

Jun 4, 2026

CultNEWS101 Articles: 6/4/2026


Ongoing Focus

"...The NYPD released footage of the backpack-wearing, hoodie-donning suspects on Sunday. It showed some of them appearing to smirk as they barged into the facility, knocking over a storage container and nearly trampling over each other as one appeared to take photos and another sprayed silly string at a security camera.
 
The hooligans – who the church said appeared to have been inspired by a social media “speed running” trend – inflicted $10,000 worth of damages and kicked a 30-year-old male employee in leg, police said.

He sustained minor injuries and was not hospitalized, authorities said.

While police did not address a motive for the attack, The Church of Scientology International, based in Los Angeles, said that they believe it is part of the recent viral trend.

“Some online have referred to these incidents as ‘speed running.’ In reality, they involve organized trespasses into religious and public information facilities for social media attention,” the church said."

"...'The disruption endangered staff, parishioners and visitors, including individuals attending a seminar at the time. This was not a peaceful visit or lawful protested. It was a coordinated act involving forced entry, property damage, and physical aggression inside a house of worship.'"

International News
The article and corresponding court reporting outline details from the High Court trial in Auckland, New Zealand, regarding the high-profile 2024 "Gulf Harbour body bag" homicide case.

The Case Context
In March 2024, a fisherman pulled plastic bags out of Auckland's Gulf Harbour and discovered the remains of 70-year-old Shulai Wang, a Chinese national. The Crown alleges that Wang had traveled to New Zealand to receive religious instruction from 38-year-old Kaixiao Liu, who referred to himself as "Lord."
Wang lived at Liu’s Orewa residence—referred to as "the Ark"—alongside Liu's wife (who called herself "Queen"), Liu's parents, and five other Chinese women. Prosecutors allege that these women were kept in conditions of "practical servitude." When Wang allegedly broke house rules and attempted to escape, she was locked in a tent, deprived of food, bound, and eventually died before her body was weighed down with stone-filled rice bags and dumped in the harbor. Four family members—Kaixiao Liu, Lanyue Xiao, Xiuyun Li, and Jingui Liu—faced charges of manslaughter and kidnapping.

The Immigration Interview and the "Smiling" Incident
The specific detail regarding the women who "simply smiled" emerged during trial testimonies from Immigration New Zealand officers regarding a July 2024 police raid on "the Ark."
  • Discovery of Overstayers: During the execution of a police search warrant, authorities found five other Chinese women living at the property. All of them had overstayed their visas, some having been unlawfully in New Zealand since 2020.
  • Refusal to Engage: Crown witness and immigration officer Alexander Ballerau testified that when individual interviews were conducted with the five women using Mandarin interpreters, they completely refused to speak or engage with authorities regarding Wang's death or their living conditions.
  • The Reaction: Ballerau noted that during these serious interviews, three of the five women "simply smiled" throughout the process and maintained their silence.
  • Deportation: Because the women refused to cooperate and police stated they were no longer required for the homicide investigation, Immigration New Zealand proceeded with standard protocol and deported all five women back to China in August 2024.
Developments at the Trial
The defendants, representing themselves in court with the help of standby lawyers and interpreters, questioned immigration officials during cross-examination about the deportation.
Sect leader Kaixiao Liu questioned whether the immigration officers could help bring the deported women back to New Zealand to testify, claiming they wanted to return for "open justice" and the "search of truth." Officials noted that while the Immigration Minister has the power to override entry prohibitions, a formal legal process would have to be initiated by their legal council.

Group Profile
The Ark beliefs
Lanyue Xiao and Kaixiao Liu are the central figures in a controlling, self-styled religious group that operated in Auckland, New Zealand. Followers referred to Liu as "the Lord" and Xiao as "the Queen".

They are on trial for kidnapping and manslaughter following the 2024 death of a 70-year-old follower.The group's belief system and practices, as presented in court by prosecutors:
  • Messianic Authority: Kaixiao Liu claimed absolute religious authority over his followers, requiring them to live in servitude to him and his family.
  • Original Worship: The couple ran a YouTube channel dedicated to original Mandarin worship songs authored by Liu, which focused heavily on themes of "real salvation," God, and Jesus.
Physical Discipline and Control: The group's belief system and practices, as presented in court by prosecutors: Messianic Authority: Kaixiao Liu claimed absolute religious authority over his followers, requiring them to live in servitude to him and his family.

Original Worship: The couple ran a YouTube channel dedicated to original Mandarin worship songs authored by Liu, which focused heavily on themes of "real salvation," God, and Jesus.

Physical Discipline and Control: The group practiced strict obedience. Prosecutors stated that members were taught that transgressors were "evil". The victim, Shulai Wang, was allegedly subjected to starvation, locked in a tent, and physically punished for breaking house rules before her death.

The teachings and structural dynamics of the group surrounding Kaixiao Liu, Lanyue Xiao, and "The Ark" have come to light following a criminal trial in the Auckland High Court in New Zealand.
The group operated as a highly insular, secretive, and authoritarian family-centered sect. Rather than a formalized or widely published theology, the group's "teachings" functioned as a rigid framework of absolute control, severe domestic servitude, and strict behavioral rules imposed on a small, dedicated circle of followers.

The core components of their doctrine and operational structure include:
1. The Divine Hierarchy ("Lord" and "Queen")
The group operated under an absolute spiritual hierarchy centered entirely around the couple:
• Kaixiao Liu was referred to by followers as the "Lord." He positioned himself as a supreme spiritual guide, composer of original Mandarin Christian worship music, and the ultimate arbiter of salvation and divine truth.
• Lanyue Xiao was referred to as the "Queen." Together with Liu, she held absolute authority over the living conditions, daily routines, and spiritual status of those inside the house.

2. The Concept of "The Ark"
The group’s communal headquarters—a residential home in Orewa, North Auckland—was explicitly designated as "The Ark."
• In alignment with the biblical narrative of Noah's Ark, the home was taught to be a literal and spiritual sanctuary of safety and salvation from a corrupt outside world.
• This dynamic fostered intense isolation. Followers—primarily women from China seeking intensive religious instruction—moved into the home, cutting off outside ties to live under the direct supervision of Liu and Xiao.

3. Total Servitude and Rigid "House Rules"
The everyday reality within "The Ark" was dictated by extreme legalistic and punitive demands:
• Servitude: Unrelated women who entered the home to receive Liu's spiritual instruction were subjected to lives of strict domestic servitude to Liu, Xiao, and their extended family (which included the couple's four children and Liu's parents).
• Punitive Compliance: The "teachings" of the house demanded flawless obedience to a strict set of internal rules. According to evidence presented by the Crown, any perceived infraction or "breaking of the rules" was viewed as a spiritual and communal violation that required severe physical and psychological punishment.
• Diaries and audio recordings recovered by authorities documented severe deprivation, including locking non-compliant followers in outdoor tents on the deck, denying them food, and enforcing physical isolation to correct their behavior.

Context and Current Status
The group was exposed to the public after a 70-year-old follower, Shulai Wang (who traveled from China's Hainan province in 2023 for Liu's religious instruction), died following alleged prolonged abuse, starvation, and restraint after attempting to escape the property.
Kaixiao Liu, Lanyue Xiao, and Liu's parents were arrested at Auckland Airport and face trial in the Auckland High Court on charges including kidnapping and manslaughter. While Liu continued to upload original worship songs to YouTube detailing themes of Christian salvation, Jesus, and the universe during his bail period, the group's operational doctrine is characterized by experts and prosecutors as an extreme manifestation of coercive control and abusive cultic dynamics hiding behind a religious veneer.

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 make 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.

Facebook

Twitter

Instagram



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


Please forward articles that you think we should add to cultintervention@gmail.com.



Jun 3, 2026

CultNEWS101 Articles: 6/3/2026

Culture & Media

New Videos:
Jon Atack Family and Friends: Surviving Stolen Youth with Felicia Rosario, MD
"Felicia came to international fame when she helped to convict Larry Ray for sixy years. The documentary Stolen Youth shows how she was lured into the Sarah Lawrence cult after two of her siblings had joined.

After asking Jon a couple of questions about Tom Cruise and Scientology, Felicia describes her recruitment while she was interning as a doctor at the University of South California. Felicia had full scholarships to both Harvard and Columbia. She testified against Ray at his trial after almost ten years in his cult. Her recovery is nothing short of amazing. She now works helping other survivors, consulting to litigation and working against human trafficking."

Updates

Legislative & Legal
A major trial underway in the Auckland High Court
has pulled back the curtain on a secretive, isolated religious environment operating out of a residential home in Orewa, New Zealand.

What began in March 2024 as a disturbing mystery—when a fisherman discovered the body of an elderly woman wrapped in plastic bags floating in Gulf Harbour—has evolved into a complex prosecution involving allegations of extreme coercive control, forced isolation, and fatal physical abuse.

Ongoing Focus

This Guardian profile and interview with actress Hannah Murray (best known for playing Cassie in Skins and Gilly in Game of Thrones) discusses her departure from acting, her experience being drawn into a dangerous wellness cult, and her subsequent mental health crisis.
Key Points of the Article:
  • Life After Acting: At 36, Murray has left acting behind entirely, expressing a profound sense of relief and joy about no longer being in the industry. She opens up about the immense pressures she faced as a young actress, including being sexualized at a young age, enduring relentless public scrutiny over her weight, facing demanding and invasive audition expectations, and relying on a reckless lifestyle to cope.
  • The Search for "Specialness": Murray explains that the acting world left her on a constant "hamster wheel" of seeking external validation. To find a permanent sense of being "special" and to heal from the traumas of her career—including a particularly harrowing and physically exhausting experience filming intense, abusive scenes for the 2017 movie Detroit—she began exploring the self-help and spiritual world.
  • Falling into a Cult: At age 27, while emotionally vulnerable and exhausted, Murray was introduced by a personal trainer to an "energy healer." This became her gateway into a mysterious, unnamed spiritual "organisation" (a wellness cult). The group cost her thousands of pounds through escalating fees for classes and rituals involving shamanic ideas, "spiritual DNA" activation, and crystals. Murray stresses that anyone, regardless of intelligence or education, can be seduced by these groups when looking for a "magic wand" to fix their lives.
  • Psychotic Episode and Diagnosis: The combination of the cult's psychological manipulation and her own underlying mental health struggles culminated in a catastrophic psychotic episode. Murray truly believed she was "the saviour of the planet." The crisis resulted in her being sectioned in an acute mental health unit. She was later diagnosed with bipolar disorder, a diagnosis that finally helped her make sense of the "high highs" and "low lows" she had experienced for years.
  • Recovery and Memoir: In the nine years since her psychotic break, Murray has completely distanced herself from the wellness industry, avoiding even mild practices like yoga or meditation. She has processed her experiences by earning a Master's degree in creative writing and writing a memoir titled The Make-Believe. The book explores the dangerous underbelly of the modern wellness industry and how easily it can exploit vulnerable people.
International News

The Guardian: Family of missing woman hope raid on UK-based sect will bring answers
Seven years after Lisa Wiese went missing, a police raid on the Ahmadi Religion of Peace and Light has given her family a glimmer of hope.

Here is a summary of The Guardian article regarding the disappearance of Lisa Wiese and the recent raid on a UK-based sect:
  • The Disappearance: Lisa Wiese, a 30-year-old German national, vanished in March 2019 during a trip to Kerala, India. She had converted to Islam in 2011 and joined the Ahmadi Religion of Peace and Light (AROPL)—an Islamic sect blending theology with internet conspiracy theories (it is entirely unrelated to the mainstream Ahmadiyya Muslim community). Shortly after arriving in India with another sect member, she sent final messages to her family, her Gmail account was deleted, and she was never seen or heard from again.
  • The Recent Raid: In April 2026, around 500 police officers raided AROPL’s UK headquarters—a former orphanage in Crewe, England—under "Operation Decker." Twelve people were arrested and later bailed on suspicion of modern-day slavery, human trafficking, forced marriage, and rape.
  • The Connection to the Case: The police raid stems from allegations made by a woman in Ireland and does not directly involve Wiese's disappearance. Furthermore, AROPL has previously stated they have no information regarding her whereabouts. However, German and Indian authorities have long wanted to question a specific AROPL member who they have been unable to reach due to complex transnational legal systems.
  • Family's Hope: Wiese’s ex-husband, AbdelRahman Hashem, who is raising their two children (now aged 11 and 12) in the United States, hopes that the massive Cheshire police operation will prompt UK authorities to expand their investigation and assist German and Indian police in finally questioning the group member to bring long-awaited answers to his family.



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 make 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.

Facebook

Twitter

Instagram



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


Please forward articles that you think we should add to cultintervention@gmail.com.