House of Prayer, Legal, UK, Hebrew Israelites
"A man considered by many to be the leader of a cult was arrested by local and federal authorities at his Georgia mansion Wednesday.
The FBI and Columbia deputies raided the West Lake mansion and arrested the leader of the House of Prayer, a group critics say is a cult that scams veterans out of benefits.
Columbia County deputies assisted with the raid at 3816 Honors Way, but the case belongs to the Federal Bureau of Investigation and involves allegations of financial or identity theft and fraud.
The founder of the House of Prayer was taken into custody and booked into jail, but it is not clear who the mysterious man is."
"The head of an alleged cult kept his wife from working for 37 years, had her restrained to keep her from leaving their palatial home and committed adultery, she alleges in court filings.
Her filings for a temporary protective order and a divorce offer a glimpse into their luxurious but apparently tumultuous life at an 11,000-square-foot mansion in Columbia County's exclusive West Lake neighborhood.
Among her requests were that she be granted use of their Rolls-Royce and he pay her back for a ruined Chanel purse.
The FBI on Wednesday raided the nearly $2 million home at 3816 Honors Way, arresting the leader of the House of Prayer Christian Church.
He goes by the name Rony Denis, but authorities say he stole that identity in 1983, so they don't know his true name.
He and seven other church leaders are named in a federal indictment accusing them of various financial crimes that benefited themselves and a church, which some call a cult that targeted veterans in a scheme to soak up their benefits.
Marjorie Denis filed for the temporary protective order against her husband on Jan. 17, 2024, according to court documents obtained by News 12.
She asked that the court order Rony Denis to stay away from their home and child."
" ... Most people who live in areas of London with a significant black population will have come across the Hebrew Israelites. They're known for their impassioned preaching on street corners and, quite honestly, for their use of inflammatory language. You might spot them in Brixton, in Peckham, in Tottenham, even in Holborn. In their loudest moments, they designate non-black people as "edomite devils", or shout over those who challenge them on their belief systems.
They are part of the vast milieu of London faiths. The city is far more religious than the rest of the UK — with people in the capital more likely to pray and attend religious services. You could find a new group or church to join every day of the week. But, when it comes to IUIC, thought to be the largest Hebrew Israelite group in the world, there is something concerning. For the truth is that this is an organisation that has been accused of being a cult. Where a young woman was killed. And this so-called "cult" (the IUIC unsurprisingly denies it is a cult) is still operating as a church in Ilford, east London.
Joy Morgan, who grew up in Battersea, was a member of IUIC from her teens. She joined in 2016 after a series of losses. Her uncle and stepfather died of cancer; her father took his own life. Her home life was unstable, and according to her friends and family, she turned inward.
"It's like she disappeared completely," says Agnes Embi, one of Joy's best friends from secondary school. Though, even then, she didn't necessarily think anything particularly bad was happening. Joy was incredibly bright and she loved to study, her motto was " consistency causes change". Agnes presumed that's what she was doing: spending all her time with her head in a book. " I knew that the YouTube videos that she was watching were concerning, but…"
IUIC, led by a charismatic man named Bishop Nathanyel (an ex-NYPD cop), was a group that Joy found online, on YouTube. She started making comments about her classmates going to hell, and calling her little sister a devil. Soon enough, she started attending IUIC's services in Ilford. By 2018, Joy barely spoke to or saw her friends and family. In a video published by IUIC she suggests that the group has replaced them. "IUIC is my family and like the best family that I've ever had," she says, smiling. A few months later, aged just 20, she was murdered by a fellow member of IUIC — a man named Shohfah-El Israel. The motivation for her murder has never been revealed.
Social psychologist Alexandra Stein says that what happened to Joy resembles a pattern she's seen in her practice around cults. "What we can sometimes see is a situational vulnerability," says Stein, who was part of a Marxist-Leninist cult named The O in the 1980s. "Your normal social fabric is loosened, or broken, and you're looking for new social connections in what is normally a healthy way. We need new support. But if you're unlucky, you come across one of these groups."
The Hebrew Israelites believe that black people are descended from a lost Israelite tribe, with some scholars calling the origins of their faith an African American form of Judaism. They developed out of the late 19th century, and continued to evolve through the civil rights era, when black Americans were looking to challenge and make sense of their disenfranchisement."
No comments:
Post a Comment