Showing posts with label Urantia Book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Urantia Book. Show all posts

Apr 28, 2022

CultNEWS101 Articles: 4/28/2022 (Event, Urantia Book, Aravindan Balakrishnan, Obituary, Trigger Warnings, Maharishi University, Legal)

Event, Urantia Book, Aravindan Balakrishnan, Obituary, Trigger Warnings, Maharishi University, Legal

Maria Peregolise; Sunday, June 26, 2022; 1:00 PM-1:50 PM
Culted Child is a memoir by the daughter of a Spiritual Prophet - a father who used the theology of The URANTIA Book as a framework for his secret conversations with her.

Belfast Telegraph: Cult leader's Belfast 'slave' defended evil rapist to the end
"In 2013, Ms Herivel called a charity to tell them that Balakrishnan's daughter was being held against her will, after which the sect was busted."
The Belfast woman who blew the lid off a Maoist cult that held her captive for 30 years was campaigning for its leader's release from prison until his death last week. 
Ex-Methodist College pupil Josephine Herivel was one of several women brainwashed by Aravindan Balakrishnan in his south London commune.
Last week, the 81-year-old died in Dartmoor Prison, where he was serving a 23-year sentence for rape, false imprisonment, child cruelty and assault.
One-time violin prodigy Ms Herivel, the daughter of Bletchley Park code breaker John Herivel, came to regret alerting the authorities and campaigned for his convictions to be quashed.
A small online community still proclaims Balakrishnan's innocence, but Ms Herivel is the only one who has given interviews.
She fell under Balakrishnan's influence in 1978 while studying at the Royal College of Music after attending a communist lecture with her then boyfriend.
She joined Balakrishnan's Workers' Institute of Marxism–Leninism–Mao Zedong Thought, based in a terraced house in Brixton, where followers referred to him as 'Comrade Bala'."

PsyPost: Trigger warnings might prolong the aversive aspects of negative memories
"Trigger warning" is a phrase we hear a lot in daily life now, but how effective is providing a trigger warning in preventing distress? A study published in Memory suggests that trigger warnings could actually be counterproductive and prolong effects of recalling a negative memory.

Trigger warnings are warnings that material may contain sensitive or difficult information that could serve to distress people. Topics can include shootings, sexual violence, racism, classism, and more. These warnings are meant to be considerate, hoping to minimize any negative feelings people may have about what they are about to encounter. Despite the good intentions, there is a possibility that warnings could do the exact opposite and make memories seem more distressing than they are, due to the fact that expecting something negative can cause or worsen distress.

For their study, researchers Victoria M. E. Bridgland and Melanie K. T. Takarangi utilized 209 participants over two sessions. Participants were asked to recall a negative event that took place within the past two weeks. They were separated into two groups: one which were given a warning that this negative memory task would be distressing, and one which were not given a warning. In session two, participants were asked to recall the negative event again. All participants completed measures on positive and negative affect, state-trait anxiety, memory phenomenology coping skills, centrality of the negative event, and emotional impact of events.

Results showed that as predicted, the warning message had a negative anticipatory effect. Despite this, there was no evidence that the warning made the initial recall of the event any more distressing. The distress and negative effects faded over time, which is consistent with previous research, but results did show that participants who were given a warning in session one showed higher impact of the event still during session two. This suggests that the warning did, in fact, "hamper the healing nature of time" and that the warning effects were delayed."

" ... 'In summary, this study is the first to examine the effects of warning messages on the recall of personal memories (rather than novel stimuli) with two important findings: first, we found that warning messages seem capable of prolonging aversive aspects of a negative event," the researchers concluded. "Second, if we turn to what we did not find, warnings do not seem to diminish the distress associated with recalling a negative memory or increase the reported use of coping strategies. These data have important implications for renewed calls to use trigger warnings to improve mental health by adding to the growing body of evidence that trigger warnings at best may have trivial effects or at worst cause harm.'"
Des Moines Register: Donor's wife sues Maharishi University in Fairfield over stock mixup, claiming she lost $500k
"In December 1984, Mary and Phillip Town gave a gift to Maharishi International University: 166,667 shares in their organic farming startup.

But, according to a lawsuit filed in federal court, officials at the Transcendental Meditation school in Fairfield, Iowa, preferred cash. So the Towns gave the school about $21,000 in exchange for the return of the shares, according to the lawsuit.

Mary Town said university officials never properly signed documents turning the shares back over, an issue that came to a head two years ago when an Austrian company bought the business that her husband and a business partner started.

Mary Town's lawyer estimated in a lawsuit filed against the university Thursday that it ultimately received about $500,000 because it was still the registered owner of those shares when the sale went through. She is demanding to be repaid the amount the school received.

"MIU's enrichment was at the expense of Town," her attorney, Jeff Stone of Cedar Rapids, wrote in the lawsuit.

Mark Zaiger, a Cedar Rapids lawyer representing the school, declined to address the details of the allegation.

'MIU does not respond outside of court regarding pending litigation matters," he said in an email to the Des Moines Register. "I can tell you, however, that MIU has a policy to seek resolution of disputes as they arise.'"
 


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Apr 26, 2022

ICSA Annual Conference: My Father Leader: A Parent Cult from Inside Out

ICSA Annual Conference: My Father Leader: A Parent Cult from Inside Out Maria Peregolise; Sunday, June 26, 2022; 1:00 PM-1:50 PM
ICSA Annual Conference: My Father Leader: A Parent Cult from Inside Out
Maria Peregolise; Sunday, June 26, 2022; 1:00 PM-1:50 PM






A.) A Child Victim’s Perspective: Nightmares
1. The Well
2. The Eyes - Unseen Friends

B.) A Father’s Psychological Manipulation
1. Channels Michael of Nebadon
2. Adjudicates Satan
3. Deathbed Visits

C.) Adult Victim Processes Shattered Faith
1. Writing 3rd Person - Dad played by a Grandmother and Grandfather
2. Writing in 1st Person, Dad played by a Grandmother
3. Writing in 1st Person - Saying, “My Father...”

D.) Family Ostracizing - Shunned by Family
1. Recognizing I have already gone No-Contact
2. Mother “Takes Sides” when I verbalize this to her
3. Sibling follows mother’s lead, to “Take Sides”
4. When Writing gets healing just so far: Group Therapy with Former Cult Members, Individual Therapy

E.) Share Book Title: “Culted Child: The True Story of a Daughter Disciple
https://amzn.to/3HT5ZQ5

F.) Q & A


Maria Peregolise

Peregolise Interviews & Articles:

IndoctriNation with Rachel Bernstein presents Thought Adjusters w/ Maria Peregolise (https://soundcloud.com/indoctrinationshow/unseen-friends-w-maria-peregolise Cultedchild.com; https://cultedchild.com)

Igotout.org article Just Trust Me (https://www.igotout.org/written-stories-1/just-trust-me)

ICSA TODAY IT Vol. 11 No. 2 (2020) Arts: Poetry – Maria Peregolise (24-25), (https://www.icsahome.com/icsa-publications/icsatoday/issues)

Testimonial Art Ascent 2nd Article (https://artascent.com/artascent-has-helped-me-charge-through-a-terrifying-hurdle/)

Journal Entry at Age Thirteen, Peregolise, M. (2020). ICSA Today, Vol. 11, No. 2. (2020 - PDF of Issue). Arts: Poetry - Maria Peregolise (24-25). https://www.icsahome.com/memberelibrary/it#h.p_4tZX2OKSONVB


Conference Information
Agenda
Conference Registration





Aug 17, 2021

Culted Child: The True Story of a Daughter Disciple


 


Author: Maria Peregolise 
ICSA Bio Culted Child Video
Author and Educator Maria Peregolise was born into and raised in The URANTIA Book cult, with her father as her leader. Her interest is in sharing research that identifies aspects of how a coercive environment may affect the growing number of those born into and raised in manipulative systems.
Maria shares her experiences on Rachel Berstein's IndoctriNATION Podcast, “Thought Adjusters w/ Maria Peregolise,”
https://www.patreon.com/posts/thought-w-maria-40364743?utm_medium=post_notification_email&utm_source=post_link&utm_campaign=patron_engagement, or https://soundcloud.com/indoctrinationshow/unseen-friends-w-maria-peregolise

She has been published in Art Ascent Magazine, winning the Gold Writer Award, with “God the Father: A Portrait of Divinity,” https://artascent.com/maria-d-peregolise/, and has a testimonial article on the Art Ascent website, https://artascent.com/artascent-has-helped-me-charge-through-a-terrifying-hurdle/. Other articles are “Journal Entry at Age Thirteen,” Peregolise, M. (2020). ICSA Today, Vol. 11, No. 2. (2020 - PDF of Issue). Arts: Poetry - Maria Peregolise (24-25). https://www.icsahome.com/memberelibrary/it, and iGotOut, “Just Trust Me...,” https://www.igotout.org/written-stories-1/just-trust-me
She has a Bachelor of Science in Elementary Education, a Master of Science in Learning Disabilities, and has taught for more than 25 years. Married to her high-school sweetheart for 36 years, they have three grown children: a writer, a musician, and an artist.


Interviewer: Patrick Ryan

THE FIRST OF ITS KIND - Testimony from a 2nd Generation Adult, Born and Raised in, and Leaving a Cult Leader of The URANTIA Book.

Culted Child is a memoir by the daughter of a Spiritual Prophet - a father who used the theology of The URANTIA Book as a framework for his secret conversations with her. These secrets shared his daily communications and miracles from God... Packed with research references and resources, Culted Child utilizes Peregolise's turbulent childhood experience as an opportunity to communicate the signs and symptoms of being raised in a Cultic or Manipulative Environment.
“This harrowing and tragic story speaks to the mind-shattering complexity a child faces in surviving loving and being loved by a malignant narcissist . . . For the many, far more than we realize, who have grown up under the extraordinary control of a powerful, charismatic and deeply delusional parent, Peregolise’s story of survival and ultimate freedom is a revelatory and inspiring gift of hope.”
-- Daniel Shaw, LCSW -- Traumatic Narcissism: Relational Systems of Subjugation, and Traumatic Narcissism and Recovery: Leaving the Prison of Shame and Fear “Culted Child does indeed read like a novel, made all the more frightening by the fact that it is real. It really happened.” -- Ron Burks, PhD -- Damaged Disciples: Casualties of Authoritarian Churches and the Shepherding Movement
“Vivid episodes from childhood frame her memories with rational insights she discovered through her research in the cult recovery field. Culted Child shows Maria's strength of spirit, and will validate others who grew up in coercive families or groups.” -- Nori Muster -- Betrayal of the Spirit
“. . . discusses the signs and symptoms of being raised in a cult or narcissistic environment, as well as the fantastical and outlandish content of the controversial book and the effects it has on its followers.” -- Rachel Bernstein, LMFT -- IndoctriNATION Podcast
“. . . a marvelous memoir of her heroic struggle to both emerge from her father’s cult and to reveal the story behind the formation of The Urantia Book cult.” -- Joe Szimhart, Cult Information Specialist -- Santa Fe, Bill Tate, and Me: How an Artist Became a Cult Interventionist

Rachel Berstein, IndoctriNATION: Thought Adjusters w/ Maria Peregolise, iGotOut, Art Ascent, Gold Writer Award, ICSA Today. cultnews101.com

Jul 7, 2021

Book Launch Zoom: Culted Child: The True Story of a Daughter Disciple

Join the online book launch on Zoom: Culted Child: The True Story of a Daughter Disciple.

Book Launch and Q & A, Maria D. Peregolise, with Special Guest Ron Burks, PhD, Hosted by Patrick Ryan of Cult Recovery 101.

Time: Jul 31, 2021 12:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)
Join Zoom Meeting link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/3678063940
Meeting ID: 367 806 3940


Description - Book Launch Q & A: Culted Child: The True Story of a Daughter Disciple, Maria D. Peregolise. “Culted Child” and its website,  presents a true story & research on cults, spiritual abuse, narcissistic behavior, memory loss, etc. with links, books, & articles from qualified sources: Ph.D., LMFC, Psychology Today, F.B.I., ICSA, etc. To share new resources for consideration -- contact: cultedchild@gmail.com


Culted Child is a memoir from the daughter of a Spiritual Profit - a father who used the theology of The URANTIA Book as a framework for his secret conversations with her. These secrets shared his daily communications and miracles from God: being “Given to Know” when someone was going to die, attending death beds at God’s behest, visions of angels, channeling Michael of Nebadon (Jesus), confronting Satan as God’s Chosen Representative of Mankind, describing Spontaneous Combustion as the ultimate manner of death as one reaches perfection and Fuses with their Thought Adjuster, sharing documents from Celestial Beings, called The Unity Treatise - a severe warning to the three branches of The URANTIA Movement, and more.

Packed with research references and resources, Culted Child utilizes Peregolise’s turbulent childhood experience as an opportunity to communicate the signs and symptoms of being raised in a Cultic or Manipulative Environment. In recognition of the increasing number of second-generation adults currently leaving intensely personal small cults or one-on-one manipulative relationships, her story is pertinent to today’s new landscape of numerous small cults compared to the fewer, larger cults of forty years ago.


Interviews & Articles:



Endorsements:

Ron Burks, PhD: “Culted Child brings the reader into a very toxic family, made more so by the subtlety by which The Father matter-of-factly abuses his children and spouse with what seems to be every word he says. It does indeed read like a novel, made all the more frightening by the fact that it is real. It really happened. No, not the stuff in The URANTIA Book, Maria’s life story. Sadly, it happens with almost pandemic like frequency all over this planet. (I am not as certain as The Father is about what happens on other planets.)”


- Ron Burks, PhD, holds an MDiv and an MA in counseling from Asbury Theological Seminary and a PhD in Counselor Education from Ohio University. He worked for many years at Wellspring Retreat and Resource Center in Albany, Ohio, alongside founder Dr. Paul Martin. Wellspring serves as one of the few residential facilities in the nation that specifically treats victims of cults, domestic abuse, and other coercive situations. Ron is a former president of the Wellspring board and is a clinical advisor to both Wellspring and Meadowhaven, a similar treatment center near Boston.

Ron and his wife Vicki wrote Damaged Disciples: Casualties of Authoritarian Churches and the Shepherding Movement, published by Zondervan. His other publications include a chapter on a connection between cults and addiction in the medical reference, Substance Abuse: A Comprehensive Textbook, published by Williams and Wilkins. He and his wife Vicki are licensed mental health counselors and currently operate an intensive outpatient substance abuse program at Tallahassee Memorial Hospital.

Daniel Shaw, LCSW: “Children brought up in cults often realize as adults that their parents, following the cult leader’s demands for ideological purity, prioritized idolization of and submission to the leader over the protection and safety of their own children. Feeling cruelly betrayed, these adult children struggle to reconcile what they thought was love with the recognition of how conditional this love actually was. In this insightful and poignant memoir, Maria Peregolise chronicles her life as a child in a cult led by her own father. This harrowing and tragic story speaks to the mind-shattering complexity a child faces in surviving loving and being loved by a malignant narcissist, one who believes themself to be Omnipotent. For the many, far more than we realize, who have grown up under the extraordinary control of a powerful, charismatic and deeply delusional parent, Peregolise’s story of survival and ultimate freedom is a revelatory and inspiring gift of hope. “

- Daniel Shaw, LCSW, is the author of Traumatic Narcissism: Relational Systems of Subjugation, and Traumatic Narcissism and Recovery: Leaving the Prison of Shame and Fear.

Joe Szimhart: “Growing up with a father indoctrinating you with his strong beliefs is hard enough. When those beliefs are rooted in the obscure Book of Urantia, you have little chance of relating your inner world with those outside your closed family system. Maria Peregolise has written a marvelous memoir of her heroic struggle to both emerge from her father’s cult and to reveal the story behind the formation of the Urantia book cult.”

- Joe Szimhart, Cult Information Specialist and author of Santa Fe, Bill Tate, and me: How an artist became a cult interventionist.

Apr 13, 2016

Book Examines 1994 Supreme Court Case on School District for Hasidic Sect

Mark Walsh
Education Week
April 12, 2016


The Curious Case of Kiryas Joel: The Rise of a Village Theocracy and the Battle to Defend the Separation of Church and State
Twenty-two years ago this month, I flew to Newark, N.J., rented a car, and drove north, crossing the border into New York state to find, in the foothills of the Catskill Mountains, the village of Kiryas Joel, an enclave of Hasidic Jews of the Satmar sect.

I was there to gather information for an Education Week story previewing a U.S. Supreme Court case that would soon be argued about the public school district created by New York state lawmakers for the village.

Members of the Satmar sect, which originated in what is now Hungary and Romania, had migrated to the area from more than 50 miles away in the Williamsburg section of the New York City borough of Brooklyn. They were looking for space, and quiet, as the secular world was closing in on their Williamsburg neighborhood, but also a place where they could maintain an insular community of their conservative Jewish faith.

Children in the village attended private yeshivas, segregated by gender, but the education of the village's inordinate number of children with disabilities had presented challenges for parents and policymakers for years. Ultimately, the politically well-connected sect sought and received help from the New York legislature and then-Gov. Mario M. Cuomo—a school district for the village of Kiryas Joel, and millions of dollars of state and federal aid that came with it, to serve children in special education.

The village had had difficult relations with the surrounding Monroe-Woodberry school district, compounded by the Supreme Court's 1985 decision in Aguilar v. Felton that meant teachers from the public school district could no longer provide services in the private religious schools. The few Kiryas Joel parents who were willing to send their children with disabilities to Monroe-Woodberry schools faced insensitivity, including episodes in which one Satmar child was cast as Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer in a Christmas pageant.

Louis Grumet was the executive director of the New York State School Boards Association at the time, and a former aide to Cuomo, a Democrat. He could not believe that Cuomo would sign the bill creating what Grumet believed was a violation of the state and federal constitutions.

In a new book about the episode, The Curious Case of Kiryas Joel: The Rise of a Village Theocracy and the Battle to Defend the Separation of Church and State (Chicago Review Press), Grumet recounts his role in the unusual case and provides an engaging historical account that is generally fair to the Satmars' arguments as well.

Grumet had grown up as a Jew in West Virginia, so he knew something about being a religious minority in America. He had gone to work for Cuomo when the future governor was secretary of state of New York.

"Over the next few years, I became Cuomo's go-to 'bleeding heart'—handling issues related to poverty, integration, Native Americans, people with disabilities, and similar matters," Grumet writes. "It was some of the most enjoyable work of my career, and I had a near worshipful relationship with Cuomo, whom I saw as a brilliant lawyer and committed progressive politician."

Grumet went on to become assistant New York state commissioner of education for more than five years before settling in as head of the state school boards association.

In 1989, as Gov. Cuomo considered the bill sent to him by the legislature to create the Kiryas Joel Village School District, Grumet went to see his old boss, thinking there was no way that Cuomo, whom he viewed as a committed constitutionalist, would sign a measure creating a public school district for a theocratic religious sect.

Grumet was disappointed to learn that Cuomo intended to sign the bill, and that the governor was angered by Grumet's objections at this late stage of the process. 

"I asserted that if the governor signed it, the courts would knock it out," Grumet writes. Cuomo ushered him out of his office with a dismissive question, "Who's going to sue?"

"'I will,' I responded," Grumet writes. "The governor smiled at me with a condescending grin that I had seen many times when I worked for him."

The rest of the book is a crisp account of the legal odyssey of the school district, which was struck down by the New York state courts, including its highest court. To the joy of the Satmar sect, the U.S. Supreme Court stepped in to issue a stay of the New York high court's decision, and it soon granted full review of the case. Many legal experts thinking the court might use the case to bring some clarity to its often-confusing church-state jurisprudence, particularly the three-part "Lemon test" for evaluating government action on religion, from the 1971 case of Lemon v. Kurtzman.

Grumet describes a meeting at National Education Association headquarters in Washington of all the groups on his side, including the teachers' union, civil liberties groups, and religious groups such as the American Jewish Committee and the Baptist Joint Committee. Most of these groups had participated in religion cases at the Supreme Court for decades, and they were a bit concerned Grumet was planning to entrust the oral argument to his relatively green staff counsel, Jay Worona.

"During the meeting, the various groups managed to divide the important legal and policy arguments among themselves, and it wasn't until Worona left to take a personal phone call that an ulterior motive for the meeting became apparent," Grumet writes. "The instant Jay left the room, the meeting abruptly shifted to a discussion of whether this wet-behind-the-ears whippersnapper from Upstate New York was of sufficient experience, stature, and pedigree to take this important case to the U.S. Supreme Court."

Grumet stuck by his man, and Worona argued the case against Nathan Lewin, a high-powered attorney hired by Kiryas Joel.

In the end, the Supreme Court did not use the case to reconsider the Lemon test, which remains in force. On June 27,1994, the court ruled 6-3 in Board of Education of the Kiryas Joel Village School District v. Grumet to uphold the New York Court of Appeals, with a splintered majority.

"In this case, we are clearly constrained to conclude that the statute before us fails the test of neutrality," Justice David H. Souter concluded in a part of the decision that was joined by four other justices. "It delegates a power this court has said ranks at the very apex of the function of a state, to an electorate defined by common religious belief and practice, in a manner that fails to foreclose religious favoritism. It therefore crosses the line from permissible accommodation to impermissible establishment."

Throughout the process, Grumet relished his time in the media spotlight and in constitutional battle. 

"As I finished reading the opinion and paused to ponder the fact that I had been part of a case that upheld the establishment clause, I was overwhelmed and humbled," he writes. "But there was little time for reflection. ... There were calls to make and calls to return."

Grumet stresses that throughout the legal battle, he remained convinced that the children with disabilities in Kiryas Joel would not suffer because some way of educating them would be worked out. He details the epilogue of what happened after the U.S. Supreme Court finished with the case, which itself is an interesting tale of Empire State power and politics.

There is one little flaw in this otherwise fine book: Grumet, and his editors at Chicago Review Press, failed to catch multiple misspellings of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's name. It is spelled "Ginsberg" several times, even on the same page or the same sentence in which the name is correctly spelled.

Grumet writes that after the decision, he held out hope that he and Cuomo could "resume our friendship and let bygones be bygones." That was not to be, as the governor continued backing new forms of legislation designed to maintain a separate school district for Kiryas Joel until he was defeated for re-election in 1994 by Republican George Pataki.

It isn't quite clear if, or how much, Grumet spoke to Cuomo after the episode. Cuomo died Jan. 1, 2015. Grumet says in his note on sources that he conducted interviews with "virtually all the major actors" in the curious case of Kiryas Joel—"the exception being Governor Cuomo, who would not submit to an interview."

http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/school_law/2016/04/book_examines_1994_supreme_cou.html

Jan 28, 2016

Urantia Book: Cults, Conspiracies and the Twisted History of Sleepytime Tea

Megan Giller 
January 28, 2016


Urantia Book
Urantia Book

Its calming combination of chamomile, spearmint and other herbs might seem benign, almost boring — the ideal formula for lulling you to sleep. But there’s a peculiar story lurking in your cup of Sleepytime tea, one that concerns involuntary trances, communication with aliens and a eugenics plot to eliminate the “inferior races” of our great nation.

Before Sleepytime became the crown jewel of Celestial Seasonings, with 1.6 billion cups sold per year, before the company became the largest tea manufacturer in North America, the tea was nothing more than a dream in the heads of a few flowerchildren hiking up the Rocky Mountains in search of herbs. 

One of the friends, Mo Siegel, was serving an Asian herbal tea to customers in a local shop to much success in 1969. The concept that “tea” could be herbal was innovative in itself, since up until then, all tea in America and Great Britain was made of the plant Camellia sinensis. The group wanted to get into the business.

On those first hikes, the team harvested enough herbs for 500 pounds of a blend they called Mo’s 36 Herb Tea, and the sleep-conjuring tea made of chamomille, spearmint and other herbs soon followed. In no time the friends were sauntering into the local bank to get a loan for their new business, “wearing jeans, smelling of herbs, and armed with Tupperware containers of Mo’s 36 and Sleepytime blends.” They called their company Celestial Seasonings, after co-founder Lucinda Ziesing’s flowername.

But there might be another reason they named it “celestial.” Mo Siegel and John Hay, two of the founders, were avid believers in a new-age bible called The Urantia Book, which followers call “an epochal revelation authored solely by celestial beings.” The book touches upon everything from mind control to a eugenics plot to eliminate the “inferior races” of our great nation.

In fact, the religious text is responsible for much more than the name of the company. In You’ve GOT to Read This Book! 55 People Tell the Story of the Book That Changed Their Life Siegel discloses that the ideals he gathered from The Urantia Book guided how he ran Celestial Seasonings from the beginning and provided a moral compass for himself and his employees. “I had wanted bold; I found bold,” he wrote. “I wanted spiritual adventure, and I was on the ride of my life. I was searching for truth and the book was loaded with it.”

THE ORIGINS OF URANTIA


The Urantia Book, a 4.3-pound, 2,097-page tome, published first in 1955, is a modified Seventh-Day Adventist text supposedly communicated to an anonymous man in a trance by aliens. In reality, it was likely authored in the early 1900s by a psychiatrist named William Sadler who used it as a vessel for his racist ideas. (You can download the entire thing for free: Because the Urantia Foundation asserts that its authorship is superhuman, an Arizona court ruled in 1995 that it’s not protected by copyright and is, thus, in the public domain.)

There are so many wild ideas in The Urantia Book that it’s hard to know where to start. “Lucifer, Satan, Melchizedek, Adam and Eve, and Jesus are all extra-terrestrial beings who have visited earth,” Mo Siegel, who is still intimately involved with The Urantia Book and the Urantia Book Fellowship, tells us in “The Twenty Most-Asked Questions”. In fact, Adam and Eve were brought to earth to “upstep the human race” (more on that later).

The first three parts of The Urantia Book describe a complicated universe with invisible seraphim and spirit and semi-spirit beings of all sorts; the last part tells the story of Jesus’ entire life in detail, all 36 years. Though it has just a few thousand followers, the book has been translated into 20 languages, including Arabic, Chinese, Croatian and Portuguese. There’s even a famous operatic cycle based on it, as well as at least four fantasy novels.

“The Urantia Book itself does not represent a destructive cult,” said Rick Ross, a cult expert who helped in Waco with the Branch Davidians. “But some of its self-proclaimed prophets lead groups that can be seen as destructive cults.”
The book also purports that there have been many, many sons of God like Jesus on many different planets, because there are a billion worlds. When evolution is complete, each of these worlds will have 100,000 local universes with 10 million inhabited planets. Our earth is called Urantia, and it's number 606 in a planetary group named Satania, the headquarters of which is called Jerusem. When we die, we’re reincarnated from planet-to-planet, then finally to Paradise, where the Deity lives. There is a little piece of the Deity in each of us, called a Thought Adjuster.

The Fellowship will tell you that it’s not a cult, but in The Urantia Book, the revelator named the Brilliant Evening Star of Nebadon calls for Urantians to replace Christianity with a “new cult” that will be the “true religion” of the future.

“The Urantia Book itself does not represent a destructive cult. But some of its self-proclaimed prophets lead groups that can be seen as destructive cults.”

So how did this insightful book come to be? Well, there are many origin stories, but everyone seems to agree that it’s a “direct-voice” book, meaning that it wasn’t written by a human. Instead, aliens communicated the text directly to a person, or in the words of the Urantia Book Fellowship, “numerous supermortal personalities…made contact through the Thought Adjuster (indwelling spirit of God) of a particular human being on our world.”

According to William Sadler, the leader of the movement, a “Divine Counselor” presented the ideas in a language called Uversa, which had to be translated into Salvington and then into Satania before it could be translated into English and communicated to a human being.

The Urantia Book, a 4.3-pound, 2,097-page tome, published first in 1955, is a modified Seventh-Day Adventist text supposedly communicated to an anonymous man in a trance by aliens.
The most accepted story, found in How to Know What to Believe by Harold Sherman, quoted and summarized in Martin Gardner’s Urantia: The Great Cult Mystery, is that around 1911, a man in Sadler’s apartment building began having fits and spells at night. Eventually he started speaking in other voices and revealed that he was “a student visitor on an observation trip here from a far distant planet.” William Sadler and his wife, Dr. Lena Sadler, had conversations with these voices for almost 10 years while their adopted daughter, Christy, took notes.

In the 1920s a group of friends (eventually called the Forum) put together a list of 4,000 questions for these beings, and lo and behold, a few weeks later the sleeping man furiously wrote a manuscript that answered all of them.

Along with later communications from the “revelators,” that manuscript became The Urantia Book. These “direct-trance” mediums were hugely popular in the second half of the 1800s, and apparently even the famed psychologist philosopher William James was lured by one. (In the 1990s many followers of The Urantia Book started to hear celestial voices of their own, though the Foundation hasn’t acknowledged that any are legitimate but, instead has done quite a bit to discredit them.)

“Psychoanalysis, hypnotism, intensive comparison, fail to show that the written or spoken messages of this individual have origin in his own mind,” Sadler wrote in his 1929 book The Mind at Mischief: Tricks and Deceptions of the Subconscious and How to Cope With Them. 

The original human transmitter’s name is never revealed, but in Urantia: The Great Cult Mystery, from which much of the above is found, author Martin Gardner (who for many years wrote for Scientific American and other legitimate publications) makes the case that it was Sadler’s brother-in-law, Wilfred Custer Kellogg. Sadler had been duped by other channelers in the past, most notably Ellen White, the founder of Seventh-Day Adventism, but he believed his brother-in-law was the real thing. 

THE SPELL ON MO SIEGEL


“I thought that was just the goofiest thing I’d ever heard,” Mo Siegel wrote of The Urantia Book in You’ve GOT to Read This Book: 55 People Tell the Story of the Book That Changed Their Life. “After I read it, I was not concerned about who had written it or how it had been written because it was so powerful.”

Siegel, who is now the current president of the Urantia Foundation and hosts a weekly study group at his house, discovered The Urantia Book in 1969, the same year he started hiking up the Rockies for herbs. In fact, the text was a major reason he decided to found Celestial Seasonings.

"The ideas [in The Urantia Book] were the inspiration for the uplifting quotes we print on the side of our tea boxes and on our teabag tags!"
“After studying the teachings in The Urantia Book, I knew that it would feel selfish and wasteful to simply focus on material success,” he said. “So, as a young man, when I began thinking of what I could do to make a living, I immediately turned to the health food industry…The ideas [in The Urantia Book] were the inspiration for the uplifting quotes we print on the side of our tea boxes and on our teabag tags!”

“Mo and John used it as a guiding principal and continually quoted from The Urantia Book,” Caroline MacDougall, the company’s fifth employee and the current founder and CEO of Teecino told Van Winkle’s. At staff meetings they would even use quotes to bolster their arguments. “It was a guide for making sure of the moral values that underlay the company at that time,” she added.

But which morals?

THE HATE WITHIN


In The Twenty Most-Asked Questions about The Urantia Book, Siegel is careful to say that “all persons are equal in the sight of God” and that “race should become irrelevant.” But the text itself is weighed down with some of the most racist ideas I’ve read in a long time.

For example, starting around 500,000 years ago, six colored races appeared on Urantia (i.e., earth): red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and indigo

“The earlier races are somewhat superior to the later; the red man stands far above the indigo — black — race,” says Paper 51 of The Urantia Book, and “each succeeding evolutionary manifestation of a distinct group of mortals represents variation at the expense of the original endowment.” Furthermore, “The yellow race usually enslaves the green, while the blue man [which corresponds to Caucasians] subdues the indigo [black].”

“[The Urantia Book] was a guide for making sure of the moral values that underlay the company at that time.”

On every planet throughout every universe, fair-skinned, blue-eyed aliens named Adam and Eve appear to “upstep” the natives. When their progeny mate with the acceptable inhabitants of the planet, the “inferior stocks will be eliminated and there will be one purified race, one language, and one religion,” as Gardner explains it in Urantia: The Great Cult Mystery. 

But before that can happen, Paper 51 of The Urantia Book says, “the inferior and unfit are largely eliminated… it seems that you ought to be able to agree upon the biologic disfellowshiping of your more markedly unfit, defective, degenerate, and antisocial stocks.”

This process happens on every planet when Adam and Eve appear. But on Urantia (i.e., earth), it didn’t go according to plan. Adam and Eve messed up. So, “having failed to achieve race harmonization by the Adamic technique,” Part II: The Local Universe section of book tells us, “you must now work out your planetary problem of race improvement by other and largely human methods of adaptation and control.”

“Biologic renovation of the racial stocks — the selective elimination of inferior human strains,” Paper 70 of The Urantia Book says, will “tend to eradicate many mortal inequalities.”
In fact, per the text, evil, in the form of illness and disease, exists because “unfit” peoples like “Australian natives and the Bushmen and Pygmies of Africa…these miserable remnants of the nonsocial peoples of ancient times” haven’t been eliminated. Eugenics is the way to correct this error.

“Biologic renovation of the racial stocks — the selective elimination of inferior human strains,” Paper 70 of the Urantia Book says, will “tend to eradicate many mortal inequalities.”

Compare that to Hitler’s words in Mein Kampf: “The demand that defective people be prevented from propagating equally defective offspring represents the most human act of mankind.”

THE URANTIAN PHILOSOPHY


While Hitler didn’t have anything to do with writing The Urantia Book, William Sadler did. One of the most well-known psychiatrists of his era, Sadler got his start working for Dr. John H. Kellogg at the famous Battle Creek Sanitarium, which treated celebrities like the Rockefellers, Montgomery Ward and even Thomas Edison. Kellogg was a notorious eugenicist and founded the Race Betterment Foundation, whose goals were “to call attention to the dangers which threaten the race.”

Influenced by Kellogg’s ideas, Sadler published three eugenicist books: Long Heads and Round Heads; or, What’s the Matter With Germany (1918), Racial Decadence: An Examination of the Causes of Racial Degeneration in the United States (1922) and The Truth About Heredity (1927). The Urantia Book echoes the ideas presented in these books, and in some cases, it reproduces the text word for word.

In Racial Decadence, Sadler expresses, among other notions, that the “unfit” should be sterilized, that “morality is heredity” and that “some races are more moral than others.” And in The Truth About Heredity, Sadler writes that marriage between races “is to be deplored when one of the races would be inferior as compared with the other, which happens to be the biologic fact as concerns the White and Negro races in this country.”

His wife, Lena Sadler, who was John Kellogg’s niece, had equally damning words. In a paper called “Is the Abnormal to Become Normal” delivered to the Illinois Federation of Women’s Clubs in 1932 and published in a collection called A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, she calls for a mandatory sterilization law and says that if we do not practice good eugenics, “ultimately this monster will grow to such hideous proportions that it will strike us down.”

If we practice eugenics correctly, she continues, we’ll eliminate “at least 90 percent of crime, insanity, feeblemindedness, moronism, and abnormal sexuality, not to mention many other forms of defectiveness and degeneracy. Thus, within a century, our asylums, prisons, and state hospitals would be largely emptied of their present victims of human woe and misery.”

Lena Sadler’s speech was written nearly 100 years ago. Maybe things have changed for such modern-day followers of The Urantia Book as Mo Siegel?

Unfortunately not.

“Illness and disease result from evil and cause suffering,” Siegel writes in “The Twenty Most-Asked Questions” on The Urantia Book Fellowship website. “Unfortunately, several factors hinder progress toward the development of a disease-free world. The laws of genetics are immutable, and form the physical cornerstone of evolution. At the present time mankind loses about as much progress as it makes by ignoring eugenics.”

Little information on the panel’s current activities could be found, and repeated attempts to reach Mo Siegel and the Urantia Foundation were met with resounding silence.

The Fellowship is putting its money where its mouth is, too. In a 2010 email sent to “readers with advanced information and forward looking perspectives that are not suited for being posted on the website,” a follower named Martin Greenhut writes that the trustees have convened a panel on eugenics. He names all of the panel members, the most striking of which is Kermit Anderson, who at that time was the genetic screening program director at Kaiser Permanente in California and the author of much genetics research (he has since died).

Little information on the panel’s current activities could be found, and repeated attempts to reach both Mo Siegel and the Urantia Foundation were met with resounding silence.

CELESTIAL SEASONINGS TODAY 


So where does this leave Celestial Seasonings? The company also declined to comment for this piece, which means we don’t know if The Urantia Book still guides their business decisions. Most likely not: Siegel retired in 2002, and John Hay, the other Urantia Book believer and co-founder, left even earlier, in 1985, pushed out by Siegel’s desire to become a big company “like Coca-Cola,” Caroline MacDougall recalled. (Hay went on to be the CEO of Rudi’s Organic Bakery, WhiteDove Herbals, and more than a few technology companies.)

Siegel got his wish: Since 2000, the company has been part of Hain Celestial Group, a massive multibillion-dollar corporation that also includes Arrowhead Mills, MaraNatha, Spectrum Nationals and Jason. Celestial pretty much invented an entire category that we now take for granted: natural health foods. And they do it well. HowGood, which rates packaged food products, told me that Celestial’s products receive a “great” rating, which means that in terms of social and environmental impact, according to HowGood, they’re 85 percent better than all of the food produced in the United States.

Like any big company, though, over the years they’ve faced a few class-action lawsuits. The largest one is still ongoing: It accuses Celestial of falsely labeling products including Sleepytime Tea as “all natural” even though they allegedly contain pesticides. Propachlor, which is said to be in Sleepytime Kids Goodnight Grape Tea, is “a Bad Actor Chemical (meaning it is toxic, carcinogenic, or a known reproductive or developmental toxicant), a carcinogen and a developmental or reproductive toxin.” Hain has countered that it had teas tested by the National Food Lab, but there’s been some controversy about whether or not it is impartial, as the National Food Lab lists Celestial as one of its clients on its website, saying, “somewhere along the line, we have had a hand in their success.”

That may be. And the same could be said for The Urantia Book and its racist celestial and not-so-celestial creators. 


http://vanwinkles.com/the-sordid-history-of-sleepytime-tea