Apr 28, 2024

It is popularly said that the ways of the Lord are unfathomable. But Pascal's new friends had the answer to everything

Nadine A. Brügger
NZZ
April 27, 2024
Google Translation

“ ... Switzerland, along with the USA, is the country with the most so-called sects,” says Christian Rossi, religious scientist at the University of Zurich and freelancer at Infosekta, the Swiss specialist office for sect issues. Rossi sees one reason for this in Switzerland's open and liberal tradition: "People don't judge other ways of life so quickly." Another in their wealth: “Swiss people, for example, often have enough free time to deal with religious topics and alternative models. You can afford to look for the meaning of life.”

It becomes problematic when a religious community works with different control mechanisms and instances. If dual thinking prevails - right or wrong, good or evil, us against others, salvation or hell - then there is usually something wrong, says Rossi. In such communities, answers to all the big questions in life are not a quality feature, but rather an alarm bell. New members are often consciously careful to either convert family members or friends or distance themselves from them.

A valuable person

Pascal felt that being part of a group greatly enhanced his own personality. The more a person gives to God, the new friends teach him, the more valuable he becomes. Pascal gave a lot. Read the literature of his church and spent his free time working for the community. But: “Your own appreciation went hand in hand with a devaluation of everyone else.” The relationship with his parents suffered as a result.

As a young man, Pascal saw no problem in the absorbing and highly judgmental structures of his community. “I didn’t know back then that community and friendship existed without pressure,” he says. Nevertheless, Pascal left for the first time in his mid-twenties: after completing his studies, he started an internship in another city. That was in the 1990s - the distance tore apart the connection to old friends and life took its course.

Pascal made his way in the working world, fell in love, celebrated his wedding and became a father. «But in the heart and mind this separation never took place. That's why my story with the free churches wasn't finished yet," says Pascal.

“Be brave”

On Hohlstrasse in Zurich, the worship team sings the first song on stage. However, this music has nothing to do with the ancient tunes in the heavy hymn books of the regional church. The songs are modern and catchy, and within a very short time the multi-purpose room feels like a pop concert. People dance and sing and praise God's love in parallel in English and Swiss German - each in the way that suits them. The texts are tailor-made for both languages.

The music written specifically for church services, which repeatedly makes it into the charts, especially in the USA and Australia, is an important feature of Hillsong. The Pentecostal Church was founded in Sydney in 1983 and is now celebrating global success. According to its own information, the self-proclaimed megachurch has hundreds of thousands of members internationally and earns millions from their donations. In countries like the USA, where there are no national churches but all churches are privatized, Hillsong is considered one of many churches.

In Switzerland, Hillsong is one of the free churches. Like many successful free churches, including ICF (short for International Christian Fellowship), its members are young, modern and international. This means that their appearance differs greatly from more dusty communities, such as the Brethren Association. But here too, the focus is on what once convinced Pascal: the feeling of community.

As with many successful free churches, the members of the ICF (short for International Christian Fellowship) are young, modern and international. Service in the Maag Hall in Zurich, 2016.

“Be brave,” one of the speakers on stage calls out to her audience. Anyone who feels that something stands between them and faith in Jesus should hold up their hand. The bystanders place their hands on the shoulders of the seekers. Short touches turn into long hugs. From individual people, balls and circles of many people who put their arms around each other's shoulders.

In the middle of it all is the newcomer who looked so lost at the entrance that morning. Just now alone, he now leans on a young man who hugs him. Suddenly tears stream down his cheeks. He needed this moment, this touch, this feeling of belonging. And with the touch comes a promise: You can always have this feeling of belonging - just come back. And bring something with you.

Free church or sect?

Distinguishing between free churches and groups with cult-like features is not always easy. That's why there is hardly any secured data. The Protestant information center Relinfo counts around 1,200 different communities in this country, around a quarter of which have the typical characteristics of problematic communities. How many communities existed beyond this cannot be determined.

The term free church means a Christian religious community that does not belong to an official regional church. The term “sect,” on the other hand, has historically always been used in a derogatory way. Today, a sect means a religious group that violates one or more fundamental rights. For example, they prohibit their members from freedom of religion or belief. The transition from a free church to a sect can be fluid. “There are many religious groups with more or less sect-like features,” says religious scientist Rossi.

Rossi doesn't just know what he's talking about in theory. He was a member of Jehovah's Witnesses for ten years, from the ages of 14 to 24. He was also fascinated by the clear answers to his big questions. And the prophecies of Jehovah's Witnesses. One of the oldest states that Armageddon, the Day of Judgment, should have occurred in 1914. Instead of the apocalypse, World War I broke out. The sect's governing body reinterpreted the apocalypse, 1914 was now the beginning of Jesus' kingdom in heaven - and the year of Satan's expulsion near the earth. No wonder a world war broke out immediately. Rossi thought that a world war would come very close to the end of the world - and was impressed.

In addition to the end of the world, which has been repeatedly postponed to this day, the governing body also made less important predictions that did not come true. Some of them were secretly adapted or removed from their own writings. At some point Rossi felt manipulated and finally dropped out. His family was waiting for him “outside”. Rossi studied religious studies, psychology and biblical studies – “maybe also a little bit to treat myself,” he says.

For a handful of money and time

In the Zurich church service, Pastor Elli, young and dressed as if she had stepped out of a Zalando advertisement, reads her sermon from her smartphone. It's about a poor widow who donates two coins to Jesus while rich men arrive with hands full of gold. "But," says Jesus, "she gave more than all of you - because she has hardly anything and spared some of the little for me."

Soon, a donation cup goes around and a QR code appears on the screen behind the stage to pay digitally. Elli points out the envelopes that were on all the chairs at the beginning. If you turn the flyer over, you will no longer read “Become a part of our church”, but rather “Giving, Giving, Giving” in capital letters – “Give, give, give”, because “Hillsong's strength lies in the generosity and dedication of its members”.

A cash donation can be made using an envelope or a standing order can be set up straight away. On stage, Pastor Elli emphasizes again that it doesn't matter how much or how little you give - the only thing that matters is that you give something. Because by donating to Hillsong you are directly honoring God.

Later, the QR code for making the donation will be replaced by the next week's program. “Take a photo of this,” says someone from the worship team into the microphone, “these joint events are important for our church.” He says it emphatically and with an undertone that makes it clear that this is not just an offer. You shouldn't just give money, time is also expected.

Fear and zeal

Pascal was in his late thirties when he had his “second episode”. Once again he felt lost in the world, once again he was looking for meaning in life, and once again it was a free church from which he expected support and answers. But now he was no longer a young student, but a husband and father.

The new free church, which Pascal also does not want to name, asked its members to also recruit partners. The fact that his wife didn't want to go led to tensions in the community. It was only later that he realized that the situation had also been difficult for her and the child. “There is very little attention to the needs of those who are not in the group,” he says.

At first imperceptibly, but steadily increasing, fear became an important factor that bound Pascal to his community. “I felt very guilty because I didn’t quite live up to the strict standards that were preached. That put a lot of stress on me because it was God’s standard,” says Pascal. Was his faith and commitment enough to get him to heaven?

Although - or perhaps precisely because - his wife refused to join, Pascal became even more involved in the community. Writings had to be read, meetings had to be attended and church services had to be organized. Pascal also took on numerous “offices” and was eventually even allowed to preach and teach. This recognition again – that felt good. It also compensated Pascal for missing much of his son's childhood. His time belonged to God.

And yet the feeling remained that I wasn't quite enough for the Almighty. “I felt more and more guilty towards God. But the more energy I put into the group, the more it became clear to me that I couldn't do everything perfectly." The pressure increases, Pascal can hardly stand it anymore. Finally it doesn't work anymore. Diagnosis: depression.

For the first time, Pascal was concerned with a question to which his community had no answer: If our God is a good, loving God - why does he demand that I sacrifice myself to the point of exhaustion? Pascal found two answers. Either this God he believes in is not a good God. Or what his community preaches is not God's will at all.

A few weeks after this realization, Pascal got out. That was six years ago now. Instead of doing his church work, Pascal now spends his time with his now 14-year-old son and his wife. And with new people whose friendship does not depend on regular prayer and unpaid commitment to the community.

Signs and wonders

Music is still playing on Hohlstrasse in Zurich. Two lists appear on the screen behind the stage: debits and credits, simple accounting. Links Things Hillsong members want in their lives, miracles they pray for. On the right, wishes that have already been fulfilled and for which they are grateful.

“Look, someone wishes you health!” The speaker on stage points to the left column. “And someone thanks you for your health!” She points to the right column. Two completely independent keywords are applauded as evidence of God's power. Afterwards the believers pray. Not quietly and alone, but as a community. Some mumble, others rock to the beat, raise their hands in the air. Something feverish is suddenly in the air. Something urgent, demanding.

Karin’s family also had a big wish. They hoped for nothing less than a miracle from God: Karin's older sister had Down syndrome. When she was born, her parents were overwhelmed. It was the 1980s and no ultrasound had prepared her for the disabled child. The doctors spoke of networking with other affected people and medical support. Nobody talked about healing.

Karin actually has a different name too. Like Pascal, she also wants to remain anonymous. Karin's story begins with her mother's despondency: she had been a believer for a long time, and she had also been desperate since the birth of her disabled daughter. That's when she heard about the Revival Fellowship, like Hillsong, a Pentecostal church founded in Australia that also has congregations in Switzerland and Germany, where Karin's family lives. This church was a place, she was told, where miracles could happen. Why not one for your daughter too?

After her departure, Karin went through an emotional phase: “Mourning for the missed golden twenties, in which I had denied myself almost everything except Bible study and friendships with women in the community.”

A new focus

Friends and neighbors had withdrawn; no one knew how to deal with the disabled child and the mother's desperation. With Revival Fellowship, on the other hand, people prayed for the child together with the parents. Although this did not cause the extra 21st chromosome to disappear, it still healed the family.

The focus shifted and the family gained a common goal. The healing of the disabled daughter was no longer important, but rather the preparation for the return of Jesus. This is what people prayed for and evangelized for. At the same time, the family remained surprisingly liberal.

Karin and her brother were allowed to continue to maintain friendships with non-members, although Revival Fellowship actually only allowed this for missionary purposes. The parents also did not implement absolute abstinence from alcohol because it is not explicitly required anywhere in the Bible. At home at the kitchen table, the Bible and community were also discussed critically. This gave the family a rebellious reputation within the church.

Karin, who was eight years old when she joined the sect, attended high school and graduated from high school. Karin says today that hers wasn't that different from a childhood outside the church. It wasn't until she was a teenager that she felt the rules more clearly. Falling in love with someone who doesn't belong to the church: not possible. Sex before marriage: forbidden.

Doesn't God even exist?

When Karin was in her mid-twenties, she changed communities and moved from Germany to Switzerland. She had hoped that this would give her more freedom and a greater say in the still young Bern community. Instead, the critical spirit and free discussion at the kitchen table at home were missing. Karin was unhappy, but she wanted to hold on.

Then everything happened in quick succession.

Her best friend died of cancer and her brother suffered from severe depression. Two years later, Karin's father died, and a year later her big sister died. But in the community the motto was still: Pray and everything will be fine. “But I saw that that wasn’t true,” says Karin. The more questions she asked, the fewer answers she got.

The Swiss community leader said: "If these people couldn't be healed, then their faith wasn't strong enough." Karin thought: “Either God doesn’t care – or he doesn’t even exist.” The community leader's wife said that what was important was life after death, that with God, not that on earth. Karin saw it differently: “I wanted to live before it was too late.” She no longer wanted to give all her time to the Revival Fellowship, missed meetings, and began to become detached.

The community responded with isolation. “I was literally told I was a bad influence.” A threat to the unity of the community. Sometimes it occurred to Karin that her community might have cult-like characteristics. But she pushed him away. Because: If that were the case, then she would have to leave. And then what? Start from scratch again. She hardly remembered life before church."

https://www.nzz.ch/feuilleton/sekten-freikirchen-in-der-schweiz-ld.1825746

The Secret of the Mantras

The Secret of the Mantras
Richard Blakely 


Fleeing the country in its headlong rush to war in Vietnam, a young American drops out of school and goes to Paris to write. After a year and a half, he realizes that if you have to work to live there, Paris is a lot like any other city, except that it’s full of Americans who came there to write. One night he and a friend go to the Paris Hilton to attend a lecture on a “great new movement that is sweeping the world.” A month later the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi invites him to India to attend a three-month teacher-training course on Transcendental Meditation.


Excerpt:
" ... That morning started out like all the others, with her talking and him listening and sometimes asking questions but then there was a long silence, and after a while Maharishi asked Birgitta to get up and shut the door behind her.  He had never asked her to do that before, but she didn’t think much about it except that maybe he had something confidential to tell her and he wanted to make sure no one would overhear.  So she got up and shut the door and sat back down in front of him and after she was settled comfortably on the mat he asked her if she would do something for him.  Birgitta said the question took her by surprise because she’d never thought of her being able to do anything for him, it was always the other way around, so she said sure she would love to do something for him for a change and what could it be and he said take off her shirt.  He said he would like to see her naked---well, from the waist up at least.  She said she hesitated for a few seconds and then said of course, why not, one should never feel ashamed of one’s body.

 “Especially you,” I said.
 Birgitta blushed and looked down at her hands in her lap.
 “And so?”
 “Well of course, what do you expect?  I took off my shirt.”
 “And your bra.”
 “I was not wearing one.”
 “That’s right.  I remember.  And so?”
 “And so I sat there like that, and at first he just laughed and waved his head, you know?  And said I was so beautiful.”
 “How did you feel?”
 She was still looking down at her hands.  For a while she said nothing but then she bit her lower lip and said, “Honestly, I felt…  well, I would say I felt both excited and… ashamed.”
 “Ashamed.  Why?”
 “I don’t know.  It’s strange, I never felt that before, but I felt like I wanted to cover myself, with my arms.  You know?”
 “Yeah,” I said. 
 It suddenly seemed to me that this was none of my business.  I had no right to know what happened next, and was not sure I wanted to. 
 “Do you want to go on?” I asked.
 “Of course.  I don’t mind.  I want you to know this.”  She shifted her position, bringing her legs up underneath her on the bed and tucking them in and pulling the little robe around her shoulders.  I thought the robe must have been something her mother had given her when she was very young.  It was that old.  
 “After a while he asked me to move closer,” she said.  “And then closer still.  And then…” she shook her head and smiled, “Rikard it was so funny.”
 “What?”
 “With both his hands he reached forward and held my, my…”
 “Your boobs.”
 “Yes.  And then he shook them.  Just shook them back and forth.  No one has ever done this to me and it felt so strange and so silly that I almost burst out laughing.”
 “And then?”
 “Then he stopped and leaned back again and said he was tired.”
 “Tired.”
 “Yes.  I guess the psychic energy.”
 “Oh yeah.  And then?”
 “And then he well, kind of pulled his shawl off his sholders and lay down on his back.”
 “On the bed.  With you just sitting there.”
 “Ja.”
 “Yeah, well, so did he, was he…?”
 “Ja.  I think so.  He was,… how do you say?”
 “He had a hard on.”
 She giggled.  “Well, at least I think so.”
 “You don’t know?”
 “I couldn’t tell for sure.  His dhoti was all around him, and I didn’t really want to… to look, you know?”
 “Yeah, right.  But then you…”
 “No.”
 “No what?”
 “You think I did him a blow job?”
 It was an expression I had taught her.  One of the first.
 “Well didn’t you?”
 “No!”
 “So what did you do?”
 “I just…  After a while I just put on my shirt again and said goodbye and left.”
You all would find this book interesting: https://amzn.to/49XpHIB. The Secret of the Mantras. There are some interesting stories in it about one of the early TTCs, including that all initiators were given just one mantra to initiate with, and a story about MMY asking the author's girlfriend to remove her blouse, then to come closer, and the wiggling her breasts back and forth as though he were playing with a couple of water balloons. Then lying down and inviting her to join him, but she put her blouse back on and left. Later on he asked her to stay behind and be his partner, and that the was going to retire from teaching."

https://www.amazon.com/Secret-Mantras-Richard-Blakely/dp/1484002113


Apr 27, 2024

Regnum Christi: ‘It would have been easy to run and hide,’ but the Church is ‘purifiying’ us

Nicolás de Cárdenas
ACI Prensa Staff
April 27, 2024

The Regnum Christi Federation will hold its first general convention in Rome from April 29 to May 4, the first such assembly since its statutes were approved in 2019 after a long process of listening, purification, and a hopeful look toward its future.

The ecclesial movement was shaken to the core by the revelation of numerous cases of sexual abuse and abuses of power primarily involving Father Marcial Maciel, the deceased founder of the Legionaries of Christ and the Regnum Christi movement.

The Regnum Christi Federation is comprised of four vocations: the Legionaries of Christ (priests), Consecrated Women of Regnum Christi, Lay Consecrated Men of Regnum Christi, and lay members.

Regnum Christi is now defined as an apostolic body and spiritual family led by a general board of directors, consisting of the directors general of the Legionaries of Christ and the Consecrated Men and Women of Regnum Christi, with the assistance of two laypeople who both have an advisory voice and vote.

Since 2019, ‘we’re walking without crutches’

Layman Álvaro Abellán-García explained to ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner, that the institution has spent “many years in the intensive care unit, with the healing presence of the Holy See” and that, “although it would have been easy to run and hide, the Lord, through the mediation of the Church and thanks to the testimony of many whom we didn’t know how to listen to in time, led us to the light and in the light is purifying us.”

Since 2019, with the new statutes, “we are already walking without crutches,” a time in which “collegial government, the growing co-responsibility of the laity, and the greater participation of all in apostolic discernment” have been fundamental, he noted.

“We still have a way to go and we’re not all at the same point,” Abellán-García acknowledged. However, he is convinced that the federation “is today more prepared than 15 years ago to make the kingdom of Christ present.”

‘Taking responsibility for the past without being paralyzed by it’
Nancy Nohrden, director general of the Consecrated Women of Regnum Christi, said that an important path of renewal has been followed “full of experiences and learning, taking responsibility for the past without being paralyzed by it, seeking to respond to the needs of the world and of the Church.”

The general convention, which opens Monday, begins with some progress already being made and with the conviction that “hope for the future and trust in what God wants for us are ever more present.”

The convention represents, Nohrden said, a hope “that remains fresh, even when we realize that we are fragile, because God is more powerful. And a hope that is not frightened in the face of apparent human failure, because God has other criteria, another logic, other plans.”

A discernment ‘that reaches out’

Francisco Gámez, the other layman who is a member of the board of directors as an assistant, explained that between 2013 and 2019 when the new statutes were approved, the federation experienced “a process of discernment from within” in which institutional renewal went hand in hand with spiritual renewal.

Since 2019, the task has been to “implement both dimensions,” which are the canonical organization and the spiritual aspect. “Now that 2024 is here, the Holy Spirit asks us for a discernment that goes out, that looks outward, apostolic discernment,” Gámez explained.

This means that “God asks us to go out, carrying in our traveling bags our lived experience, the sufferings and the joys we have gone through, to give a testimony of hope and of a God who is all mercy and love.”

Finding a way to have that presence in a world “that is full of distractions,” Gámez pointed out, is demanding, even more so when “with all humility, we see what God is calling us to do,” he commented. However, the lay leader is confident because “for God nothing is impossible.”

“Putting all this into prayer and communion will be precisely the discernment we hope to have,” he said, adding that one of the main fruits of the convention would be to determine what God wants for Regnum Christi.

Beyond the difficulties

As is evident, the road traveled by those who make up the new federation has not been without difficulties.

Félix Gómez Rueda, director general of the Consecrated Laity of Regnum Christi, shared that “facing the difficulties of implementing a new form of government is not easy, taking into account the complexity of the extension of the presence of Regnum Christi in the world [present in nearly 40 countries on five continents] and a large number of practical and operational issues.”

For Gómez, the general convention “is a very important way to face these difficulties” and will analyze the limitations, progress, and challenges.

However, he emphasized, “we don’t want to stop there.” The objective is to find “ways to better serve the evangelization of society” aided by “the contributions of the different places where Regnum Christi is present and always open to the action of the Holy Spirit.” 

Father John Connor, LC, director general of the Legionaries of Christ, told ACI Prensa that the members of the religious congregation are approaching the first general convention “out of a commitment to be apostles for the Church and for the world, but not alone, but in Regnum Christi, as a single apostolic body and spiritual family.”

Furthermore, they will do so by “promoting and participating generously in collegiality, mission, discernment, prayer; together with all the vocations of Regnum Christi and promoting the growing co-responsibility of the laity.”

For Connor, the specific way in which the Legionaries of Christ are going to take part in the general convention also involves participating “as a community of apostles together with all the members, making contributions and complementing each other.”

“We are constantly praying to God to be able to continue being docile to his Spirit that renews, refreshes, and brings newness,” he said.

Apr 26, 2024

Federal Judge Grants Class Action to Students Alleging Coercion in Religious Rituals in Chicago Public Schools

(April 24, 2024 – Chicago) 
A petition for class action status by a former Chicago Public School student (Kaya Hudgins) who alleged that her school coerced her to participate in Transcendental Meditation (TM) and Hindu practices has been granted by a federal judge in a lawsuit against the Board of Education of the City of Chicago and the David Lynch Foundation. Attorneys at Mauck & Baker, representing Kaya Hudgins, received an order from The United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois awarding class certification to Hudgins and her peers. The class action lawsuit alleges that while minor students were attending certain Chicago Public Schools (who chose to participate in the David Lynch Foundation “Quiet Time” program), they were required to participate in Transcendental Meditation that incorporated Hindu religious rituals, which Hudgins claims on behalf of the class is an egregious violation of their constitutional rights. 

The design, implementation, and conduct of a Chicago Public Schools program, dubbed Quiet Time, was handled by the David Lynch Foundation for World Peace, an organization teaching Transcendental Meditation. As alleged in Hudgins’ First Amended Complaint, the Foundation worked together with Chicago Public Schools and the University of Chicago to implement the program at Chicago Public School high schools.

Hudgins, by her own Declaration, was made to take part in Quiet Time.

“A Chicago Public Schools teacher told me and my entire class to sign a consent form to participate in Quiet Time,” Hudgins wrote. “My entire class and I signed the consent because we felt pressure to sign. Our teacher told us that we would get in trouble and be sent to the dean if we did not consent. The teacher also told us that not signing the consent would affect our academics. We also received the same kind of pressure to participate in the Quiet Time program on a regular basis.”

Hudgins was 16 years old at the time.

“Additionally, I, like many of my classmates, signed a nondisclosure not to tell anyone, including our parents, about the program,” added Hudgins. “My classmates and I were particularly warned by a David Lynch Foundation representative not to tell our parents if our parents were ‘religious.’”

“Not only were these minor school children coerced by Chicago Public School teacher into signing a document they had no business signing,” shared John Mauck, a partner at Mauck and Baker, “They were duped into practicing Hindu rituals and Transcendental Meditation during class time and instructed to hide their mandated participation in them from their parents.”

Hudgins recalled being escorted into an uncomfortably private one-on-one Hindu “Puja” worship ceremony in a darkened room, with chanting and a variety of religious paraphernalia. During instruction about meditation the adult woman who was alone with her whispered a “mantra” into her ear and told Hudgins not to disclose the mantra to anyone. However, Hudgins revealed that she and her classmates discussed their mantras with each other.

“Eventually I researched on the internet many of our mantras and they turned out to be the names of Hindu gods,” reported Hudgins. “My classmates and I were very hurt to learn how the school and the instructor had us participating in a religious practice without our knowledge.”

Hudgins explained how the meditation sessions, a required part of the Quiet Time curriculum, “felt like hypnosis or being in a trance.” Despite the fact that these situations felt “abnormal,” according to Hudgins, she took part because she was informed that not participating would negatively affect her grades and her academic record.

Additionally, Hudgins recounted how students were rewarded with pizza for promoting Transcendental Meditation, which her instructor referred to as “following orders,” and how one friend was offered $100 by program coordinators to participate in promote Quiet Time.

“I complained a few times to my teacher about not wanting to participate in the Quiet Time program,” shared Hudgins. “Once, my teacher sent me to the dean's office because I was questioning why we had to participate in the program. I felt angry and hurt because the school did not care whether or not I wanted to participate.”

Now 21 years old, Hudgins has talked about the damaging effect that Transcendental Meditation had on her. At the time, she was a practicing Muslim and what the school was pushing on her contradicted her religious Islamic beliefs and caused her to question her Islamic beliefs particularly whenever they said that there was a different higher power than the god she believed in.

“This was extremely offensive and very confusing,” Hudgins intimated. “It made me feel guilty and sinful because Muslims are not to worship men.”

“As a Muslim, I was supposed to pray five times a day,” said Hudgins. “Although the school made me take time away from class to practice in Transcendental Meditation, it would not allow me to take time away from class for those five daily prayers.”

Hudgins and her Mauck & Baker attorneys petitioned the court on her own behalf and for other students similarly situated, asking them to hold the Board of Education of the City of Chicago and the David Lynch Foundation accountable for deprivations of these students’ Constitutional rights.

District Judge Matthew Kennelly granted class action status for all students who participated in the Quiet Time program in Chicago Public Schools during the academic calendar for Fall 2015 through Spring 2019 and reached age eighteen on or after January 13, 2021.

In a similar case, former Chicago Public Schools student Mariyah Green, also represented by Mauck & Baker, received $150,000 in damages and legal fees in an agreed Offer of Judgment entered by the Northern District of Illinois on October 23, 2023. The monies were an agreed judgement in Green’s favor for alleged Constitutional violations of her rights by the Board of Education of the City of Chicago and the David Lynch Foundation, over mandated participation in Hindu rituals while attending a Chicago Public School. Green’s Complaint was brought to the court in February, 2023 in an effort to hold educators and program developers responsible for requiring participation in a disingenuously promoted program that violated her Christian beliefs.

Read the Memorandum Opinion and Order issued April 19, 2024, by District Judge Matthew F. Kennelly of the United States District Court – Northern District of Illinois Eastern Division granting class certification in Kaya Hudgins v. Board of Education of the City of Chicago et al., under the Establishment Clause claim, for all students who participated in the Quiet Time program in Chicago Public Schools during Chicago Public School's academic calendars for Fall 2015 through Spring 2019, and reached age eighteen on or after January 13, 2021, here [https://www.scribd.com/document/725965003/Kaya-Hudgins-v-Board-of-Education-City-of-Chicago-et-al-Memorandum-Opinion-and-Order-04-19-2024].

Read the First Amended Complaint in Kaya Hudgins v. Board of Education of the City of Chicago et al. as filed on February 3, 2023, by Mauck and Baker attorneys on behalf of Kaya Hudgins in United States District Court – Northern District of Illinois – Eastern Division here[https://www.scribd.com/document/725967561/Kaya-Hudgins-v-Board-of-Education-City-of-Chicago-et-al-First-Amended-Complaint].

 About Mauck & Baker, LLC
Mauck & Baker, established in Chicago in 2001, is nationally known for its practice in the area of religious liberty. It works with individuals, religious institutions, and businesses. For more information, please visit mauckbaker.com.

Contact: Tom Ciesielka, 312.422.1333, tc@tcpr.net

Apr 25, 2024

Judge denies reduced sentence for former NXIVM leader Clare Bronfman

NXIVM leader Clare Bronfman
Alex Weidner
WRGB
April 25, 2024

New York, NY (WRGB) — A federal judge on Monday denied a motion from Clare Bronfman to have her sentence reduced. Bronfman is serving a six year, nine month sentence for her role in the NXIVM sex cult.

In 2019, Bronfman pleaded guilty to identity theft, and a conspiracy involving undocumented immigrants. The former NXIVM leader and Seagram's liquor heiress recruited individuals into groups associated with NXIVM, then fraudulently sought visas for them.

Bronfman sought to have her sentence reduced under Amendment 821 of the United States Sentencing Guidelines, arguing she "did not personally cause substantial financial hardship" as required by the guidelines. District Court Judge Nichoals Garaufis writes Bronfman cannot prove her qualifications under Amendment 821. Judge Garaufis adds that even if Bronfman were eligible for a reduced sentence, it would not be warranted.

NXIVM was founded in Albany in 1998 by Keith Raniere and Nancy Salzman, operating as a self-improvement multi-level marketing scheme. The company was a front for criminal activity, including sex trafficking and various forms of fraud.

Raniere is serving a 120-year sentence for racketeering and sex crimes. Salzman was released from federal prison in 2023, spending time at a halfway house until April 2024.

A home once owned by NXIVM, referred to in court documents as "The Library," recently hit the market. Neighbors previously told CBS 6 about late night parties at the home, 8 Hale Drive in Halfmoon. Listed on Zillow.com, photos show the home is almost entirely gutted. Asking price is $148,000.