Jan 21, 2020

Survivor Recounts Confused, Chaotic Cult Rite That Killed 7

The Associated Press
January 20, 2020

SANTIAGO, Panama — A survivor of the cult ceremony that killed 7 people in a remote village in Panama says was ordered to close her eyes, was beaten and knocked unconscious during the ritual.

The account Monday by Dina Blanco suggests the 14 surviving participants were helpless, bound, unconscious or sightless much of the time.

So the truth about what happened in the bizarre ceremony may only come out at the trials of the nine villagers charged with killing their neighbors in the hamlet of El Terrón last week.

Blanco said from her hospital bed in the nearest city, Santiago, that she had gone to previous prayer meetings at the improvised church in a long wooden shed before. But this time, the tone had changed, and she didn't go willingly.

The cult, which had operated in the village for about three months, changed after a member had a vision, telling the lay preachers they had been "annointed" to exterminate unbelievers.

Blanco, 24, said a neighbor, Olivia, came to call her to the meeting of “the New Light of God” sect on Jan. 13, saying she would have to come “whether you like it or not.”

So she went — along with her 9-year-old daughter, who had epilepsy, her 15-year-old son and her father. Her father and her son managed to escape; Blanco and her daughter, Inés, were not so lucky.

When they arrived, they were told not to open their eyes, and to grab each others' hands and pray; the worshipers felt they were physically in the presence of the Lord.

“I felt something hit my head, and then I don't what happened to me. I dropped to my knees,” said the short, dark-haired Blanco.

Authorities say cult members used Bibles, cudgels and machetes to hit the congregants. Blanco still bears a broad bruise across her forehead from whatever hit her.

“When I came to, they kept telling me not to open my eyes,” she recalled. "I heard drums, an accordion, screams, crying. I was tied up."

Authorities say some of the congregants had been forced to strip, and walk across glowing embers.

But the worst was yet to come. Late that night or in the early morning hours of the 14th, a sect member approached and told her that her daughter Inés had died.

“The birds of the fields shall dispose of her body, ”the voice said.

In fact, Inés, like Blanco's pregnant neighbor and five of her children, had been murdered during the ritual — by some accounts, decapitated — and their naked bodies slung into hammocks and dumped in a freshly-dug common grave in the village cemetery.

Nine of the 10 lay preachers detained last week have been charged with murder and kidnapping.

Bibles still lay open and musical instruments lay scattered over the weekend in the shed where the killings took place.

Indigenous leader Evangelisto Santo has said that during the ceremony, “People were dancing and singing and nobody paid attention because we knew that they were in the presence of God."

But for Blanco, God was not among those present. “For me, it was hate that was there,” she said.

El Terron is nestled in the jungle of the indigenous Ngabe Bugle enclave on Panama’s Caribbean coast, and it is largely cut off from the outside world. Its 300 residents must walk hours along steep and muddy narrow roads to hail boats that can transport them along a river to other villages that have electricity, telephones, health clinics and a police presence.

In the city of Santiago, Blanco must still undergo scans to rule out internal injuries; she has bruises on her abdomen, back and hands from the beatings. But her what hurts most is in her heart.

“She was a disabled girl," she said of Inés. "I spent a lot of time on her, I bought her pills to treat her illness that cost $3,” a huge amount for impoverished farmers in Panama's poorest region. “Now I won't have her at home anymore,” Blanco said. “That is the greatest pain that I have.”



https://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2020/01/20/world/americas/ap-lt-panama-cult-killings-.html?auth=login-email&login=email

CultNEWS101 Articles: 1/21/2020




Events, Recovery,  Aharon Ramati, Israel, Twelve Tribes

Workshops: Former Members, Helping Professionals, and Families

Workshop Day 1 -- Saturday, February 8th -- Recovery Issues After Leaving an Abusive Church. Workshops aimed towards addressing the specific needs of former Jehovah's Witnesses and others recovering from spiritual abuse. A variety of topics will be covered to help former members identify psychological challenges that may arise when they leave the faith.

Workshop Day 2 -- Sunday, February 9th -- Helpers That Abuse. An educational and recovery workshop focused on serving the needs of those who have experienced abusive therapies, large group awareness trainings, and abusive bootcamps.

Workshops are 9:30-5:30 on February 8th and 9th
$50 one-day
$75 two-days includes ICSA Membership

1:45-2:00pm -- Break
2:00-3:15pm -- From Coping to Thriving - A Survivor's Perspective (Gary Alt)
3:15-3:30pm -- Break
3:30-4:45pm -- Relationship Dynamics and Jehovah's Witnesses (Jacqueline Johnson)
4:45-5:30pm -- How Female Former Cult Members Can Reclaim their Relationship with Knowledge and Self-Identity: An Interactive Workshop (Jacqueline Johnson)

Register: https://icsahome.networkforgood.com/events/17800-recovery-workshops-for-survivors-of-cultic-and-high-control-groups

Workshop Day 2 Schedule:
Workshop Day 2 -- Sunday, February 9th -- Helpers That Abuse. An educational and recovery workshop focused on serving the needs of those who have experienced abusive therapies, large group awareness trainings, abusive bootcamps, drug rehabs, and the troubled teen industry.

9:15--Registration
9:45-11:00am -- The History of Mass Therapy With its Roots in Mind Dynamics Institute, Misuse of Zen Insights, and Hyping the Positive Thinking of New Thought Religion. (Joseph Szimhart, Patrick Ryan, and Joseph Kelly)

Lunch Break 11:00-12:30pm
12:30-1:45pm -- Program Title TBA -- Survivor of Straight Incorporated (Sunny Linkfield)
1:45-2:00pm -- Break
2:00-3:15 -- Program Title TBA -- Author of the Dead, Insane, or in Jail Memoir Series (Zach Bonnie)
3:15-3:30 -- Break
3:30-4:45 -- The Legal Case on the Kids of Bergen County (Bill Goldberg)
4:45-5:30 -- How to Choose a Therapist (Bill Goldberg) 

Register: https://icsahome.networkforgood.com/events/17800-recovery-workshops-for-survivors-of-cultic-and-high-control-groups 

Workshop Day 1 Speaker Bios:
Joseph F. Kelly, a graduate of Temple University, has been a thought reform consultant since 1988. He spent 14 years in two different eastern meditation groups. He has lectured extensively on cult-related topics, and is a co-author of Ethical Standards for Thought Reform Consultants, published in ICSA's Cultic Studies Journal. For many years, Mr. Kelly has also co-facilitated ICSA pre-conference workshops for ex-members. Recently, he helped to initiate ICSA's monthly meeting in Philadelphia. . Websites: intervention101.com; cultmediation.com; cultrecovery101.com Email: joekelly411@gmail.com Phone: (267) 679-5493. Pennsylvania

Patrick Ryan is a graduate of Maharishi International University. He has been a cult intervention specialist (exit counseling, mediation, religious conflict resolution, thought reform consulting) since 1984. Mr. Ryan is the co-founder of TM-EX, the organization of ex-members of Transcendental Meditation. He established ICSA's online resource (1995-2013), and has presented 50 programs about hypnosis, inner-experience, trance-induction techniques, communicating with cult members, conversion, cult intervention, exit counseling, intervention assessment, mediation, religious conflict resolution, thought reform consultation, eastern groups, transcendental meditation and workshops for educators, families, former members and mental health professionals at ICSA workshops/conferences.
Mr. Ryan received the AFF Achievement Award (1997) from AFF, the Leo J. Ryan "Distinguished Service Award" (1999) from the Leo J. Ryan Foundation, and a Lifetime Achievement Award (2011) from ICSA. Websites: intervention101.com; cultmediation.com; cultrecovery101.com Email: pryan19147@gmail.com Phone: (215) 467-4939. Pennsylvania (Philadelphia)

Lee Marsh is a retired Social Counselor with twenty years experience in private practice, specializing in trauma counseling, DID (Dissociative Identity Disorder), sexual abuse, domestic violence, addictions, homelessness and cult/spiritual abuse issues. She was a member of large faith based destructive group for 22 years before leaving in 1985. Lee was the founder of the Centre for Incest Healing in Montreal and former Coordinator of the Compulsive Coping Behavior Program in Winnipeg. Since her retirement, Lee has assisted survivors of cultic groups, moderated discussion forums, and written extensively online to help survivors of various kinds of abuse. She is also the President of Advocates for Awareness of Watchtower Abuses (AAWA) and one of the founders and coaches of Stronger after, a new program to help people who leave cults or high control groups.

Gary Alt was a Jehovah's Witness for just over forty years, finally leaving the religion in early 2016. He served at JW Brooklyn Headquarters in the 1980s, and also served as a congregation elder during the 1980s and 1990s. He is a prolific songwriter, musician, and indie recording artist. Gary has also written two books, Force of Will and Song of Gil, as well as short stories, based on his JW-related experiences. He currently resides in the Poconos of Pennsylvania, USA.

Jacqueline Johnson, DSW, LCSW-R, is a licensed clinical social worker with a certification in forensic social work. She obtained her master's degree in social work from Columbia University and her doctoral degree in social work from the University of Tennessee. Dr. Johnson is a SGA survivor, having spent 43 years in the Jehovah's Witnesses. Dr. Johnson has spent most of her career working in New York State juvenile justice, focusing on trauma-informed care. She is a presenter for the National Organization of Forensic Social Workers. In her private practice, Dr. Johnson focuses on assisting indoctrinated individuals find freedom from cultic and other high-demand groups and process the trauma they experienced while being involved in systems of control or coercive groups and relationships. She manages the Facebook social media page, Outside the Ark, which shares educational information about cult dynamics and coercive control. Her areas of research interest include the epistemology of women and how cultic, coercive, and misogynistic experiences influence the cognitive development of women. Dr. Johnson can be reached at drjacquelinejohnson@outlook.com. You can learn more about Dr. Johnson at her website, www.drjacquelinejohnson.com.

Workshop Day 2 Speaker Bios:
Joseph Szimhart began research into cultic influence in 1980, after ending his two-year devotion to a New Age sect. He began to work professionally as an intervention specialist and exit counselor in 1986 on an international scale. From 1985 through 1992, he was chairman of an interdenominational, cult information organization in New Mexico. Since 1998 he has worked in the crisis department of a psychiatric emergency hospital in Pennsylvania. He continues to assist families with interventions and former members in recovery, including consultations via phone and Internet. He maintains a cult informational website, lectures, consults for the media, and has published articles, book reviews, and papers related to the cult problem. His first novel, Mushroom Satori: The Cult Diary, was released in 2013 through Aperture Press. He produces art in his home studio in Stowe, PA. In 2016 he received an ICSA Lifetime Achievement Award at the Annual Conference in Dallas, Texas. Website: http://jszimhart.com/ Email: jszimhart@gmail.com

Joseph F. Kelly, a graduate of Temple University, has been a thought reform consultant since 1988. He spent 14 years in two different eastern meditation groups. He has lectured extensively on cult-related topics, and is a co-author of Ethical Standards for Thought Reform Consultants, published in ICSA's Cultic Studies Journal. For many years, Mr. Kelly has also co-facilitated ICSA pre-conference workshops for ex-members. Recently, he helped to initiate ICSA's monthly meeting in Philadelphia. . Websites: intervention101.com; cultmediation.com; cultrecovery101.com Email: joekelly411@gmail.com Phone: (267) 679-5493. Pennsylvania

Patrick Ryan is a graduate of Maharishi International University. He has been a cult intervention specialist (exit counseling, mediation, religious conflict resolution, thought reform consulting) since 1984. Mr. Ryan is the co-founder of TM-EX, the organization of ex-members of Transcendental Meditation. He established ICSA's online resource (1995-2013), and has presented 50 programs about hypnosis, inner-experience, trance-induction techniques, communicating with cult members, conversion, cult intervention, exit counseling, intervention assessment, mediation, religious conflict resolution, thought reform consultation, eastern groups, transcendental meditation and workshops for educators, families, former members and mental health professionals at ICSA workshops/conferences. Mr. Ryan received the AFF Achievement Award (1997) from AFF, the Leo J. Ryan "Distinguished Service Award" (1999) from the Leo J. Ryan Foundation, and a Lifetime Achievement Award (2011) from ICSA. Websites: intervention101.com; cultmediation.com; cultrecovery101.com Email: pryan19147@gmail.com Phone: (215) 467-4939. Pennsylvania (Philadelphia)

Sunny Linkfield is a survivor of Straight Incorporated. This abusive teen "rehab" center, convinced thousands of parents that normal behavior was a sign of "druggie" behavior. Sunny was an over achiever but became a moody teenager, experimenting with pot, alcohol and a few other drugs. After her parents read an article in Reader's Digest, they dropped her off in a warehouse called Straight Inc. Straight, Inc. was an abusive mind control cult that practiced torture techniques formerly used in Communist China and North Korea on youth. These techniques were ostensibly employed to help Straight's victims overcome the problems and addictions that Straight claimed they had. Spin-offs still exist today. Sunny is now a make-up artist/esthetician and a trainer in retail cosmetics. She was recently interviewed in the new documentary, Fix My Kid, and was also the lead make-up artist for the film. Ms. Linkfield is active with the International Cultic Studies Association. She has been interviewed for NBC Nightly News and has spoken at Columbia University about the troubled teen industry. In April, 2013, Sunny spoke with Congressman Miller's office to modify the bill: Stop Abuse in Residential Treatment Centers for Teens Act. She also organized a seminar in DC on The Abuses in the Troubled Teen Industry. Sunny is active in raising awareness abroad on these abusive teen programs and is fighting for the US to ratify the United Nations Convention for the Rights of a Child. Currently, the US and Somalia are the only two countries who have not ratified the treaty.

Zack Bonnie is the author of the Dead, Insane, or in Jail memoir series, about his experience as a troubled teen incarcerated in the 80s at a cultish, Synanon-influenced facility called Rocky Mountain Academy. With a solid background in the entertainment field, he proposes that art is the antidote to thought reform. His presentation will encompass the mechanics of undue influence and cultic dynamics focusing on coercive institutionalized persuasion. His hope is to reach younger audiences as they enter careers in psychology and other social sciences. He works to create and promote media to illustrate the common dynamics of high-control groups wherever they appear: in the teen-treatment related programs, in religious failure, in strife at home, and as part of the US court system. Part of a larger plea for increased individual awareness, Zack Bonnie's mission is to educate the public - through the arts - about the systems applied in these institutions.

William Goldberg, LCSW, PsyA, is a clinical social worker and psychoanalyst with over forty years' experience working with former cult members. He and his wife, Lorna, co-lead a support group for former cult members, which has been meeting for over forty years. It is the oldest group of its kind in the world. In 2007, Bill retired from the Rockland County, NY Department of Mental Health, where he directed several programs and clinics. He is presently an adjunct professor in the social work and social science departments of Dominican College and he is on the faculty of the Institute for Psychoanalytic Studies. Bill has published numerous articles in books and professional journals, and he is one of the editors of a soon to be published book, sponsored by ICSA, which will focus on clinical work with former cult members. Bill is a frequent speaker at ICSA conferences, and he and Lorna have been the recipients of the Authentic CAN Hall of Fame Award and the Leo J. Ryan Award. In 2010, Bill was the recipient of ICSA's Lifetime Achievement Award. He is also co-editor of ICSA's Cult Recovery: A Clinician's Guide to Working With Former Members and Their Families, which is due to be published in 2017. (201) 894-8515 Website: blgoldberg.com Email:bill@blgoldberg.com New Jersey (Englewood) 

Register: https://icsahome.networkforgood.com/events/17800-recovery-workshops-for-survivors-of-cultic-and-high-control-groups    




"Aharon Ramati, 60, was named on Tuesday as the rabbi arrested one day earlier after a police raid in Jerusalem found roughly 50 women and children kept in near slavery-conditions in a residential facility, Maariv, the sister publication of The Jerusalem Post, reported.







Ramati will be kept under arrest for a week, the Jerusalem Magistrate's Court ruled.







Police are investigating the possible abuse of children ranging from five to 11 years old in the sect.







Nine women, including Ramati's wife, were arrested under suspicion of aiding and abetting the alleged abuse. Sexual abuse is also under investigation. Police said more arrests would likely take place."



" ... Ten people were arrested in the raid, including a 60-year-old man who ran the school located on the premises, along with nine female suspects.

Authorities suspect the school, which operated as a separate and tightly knit-community, was in practice a cult which used coercion and abuse to force dozens of women and children to remain there against their will.

The ten suspects arrested in the raid were taken into custody on suspicion of holding victims in slave-like conditions, child abuse, and sexual abuse.

Last night the court ordered the release of three women arrested as part of the investigation. Attorney Dotan Danieli, who represents one of the women, said: 'It was clear at the beginning of the case that the heavy suspicions had no basis. Police conduct has led to serious and unnecessary harm to the young women's privacy.'"



"A Twelve Tribes community moved to Warsaw in the late 1990s and opened up a Common Ground restaurant on Main Street. In the twenty plus years that they have been settled in the area, they have quietly worked at providing a comfortable and tasty place to eat, and at the same time have been available if anyone wants to know more about their lives or religious beliefs.

As in most cases where a group of people are a little different from the mainstream, there has been some suspicion about the Twelve Tribes members. They wear modest clothing, live in big houses together, and share money, possessions and work. There have been stories told in the past about how they over-disciplined their children, and they have been labeled a cult."

The website (good dot) has "recently reported an example of a 15-year-old girl, Shuah Jones, who chose to leave a community in another part of the country. Her father was a founding member of the Twelve Tribes, so she sneaked out of the house at night and called a brother for help. Her young age allowed her to catch up on education by studying for a GED with the help of family members who lived outside her former community. She eventually went to college and is presently an insurance agent. Jones said that Twelve Tribes bans outside materials and offers only minimal education to children. She said that she had no decision-making skills and didn't know how to protect herself. Jones believes that others who leave a community have difficulty with social interaction that makes it hard to navigate the resources that might be available.

There is apparently a network organized by some people who have left Twelve Tribes to provide support for one another and help current members leave when necessary. The network mainly tries to offer one a place to stay and a job.

In Warsaw, there seems to be a peace between this religious community and its neighbors, but there are still a lot of unknowns. Andrew, who helps run the Warsaw restaurant, now known as the Yellow Deli, talked at length over the weekend about what it means to be in the Twelve Tribes. He also described some of the unfavorable stories being told about the group a rehashing of old news from the past."




News, Education, Intervention, Recovery

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.
Cults101.org resources about cults, cultic groups, abusive relationships, movements, religions, political organizations and related topics.

Selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not mean that Patrick Ryan or Joseph Kelly agree with the content. We provide information from many points of view in order to promote dialogue.

Jan 16, 2020

Jerusalem cult investigation compromised by leaks before arrests began

Police escort Rabbi Aharon Ramati for court hearing
Rabbi Aharon Ramati's impending arrest was leaked even before operation, interrupting investigative proceedings, allowing Ramati to prepare



Arutz Sheva
Mordechai Sones
Israel National News
January 16, 2020

The police investigation into the compound in Jerusalem suspected of housing a cult was compromised by leaks before arrests commenced, reports Channel 13 News reporter Yossi Eli.

The suspicion is that dozens of women and children were held in the compound against their will. Information about Rabbi Aharon Ramati's impending arrest was leaked even before the operation, leading to serious interruption of investigative proceedings in the case, allowing Ramati to hide some of the minors and warn his people.

Police arrested a relative close to Ramati who was the individual who warned him, but police are currently focused on trying to determine the source of the leak.

Ten people were arrested in the raid, including a 60-year-old man who ran the school located on the premises, along with nine female suspects.

Authorities suspect the school, which operated as a separate and tightly knit-community, was in practice a cult which used coercion and abuse to force dozens of women and children to remain there against their will.

The ten suspects arrested in the raid were taken into custody on suspicion of holding victims in slave-like conditions, child abuse, and sexual abuse.

Last night the court ordered the release of three women arrested as part of the investigation. Attorney Dotan Danieli, who represents one of the women, said: "It was clear at the beginning of the case that the heavy suspicions had no basis. Police conduct has led to serious and unnecessary harm to the young women's privacy."

http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/274643

Warsaw Man Details Life Inside The Twelve Tribes

Twelve Tribes
County Reporter
Benton County Enterprise
January 15, 2020

A Twelve Tribes community moved to Warsaw in the late 1990s and opened up a Common Ground restaurant on Main Street. In the twenty plus years that they have been settled in the area, they have quietly worked at providing a comfortable and tasty place to eat, and at the same time have been available if anyone wants to know more about their lives or religious beliefs.

As in most cases where a group of people are a little different from the mainstream, there has been some suspicion about the Twelve Tribes members. They wear modest clothing, live in big houses together, and share money, possessions and work. There have been stories told in the past about how they over-disciplined their children, and they have been labeled a cult.

www.good.is recently reported an example of a 15-year-old girl, Shuah Jones, who chose to leave a community in another part of the country. Her father was a founding member of the Twelve Tribes, so she sneaked out of the house at night and called a brother for help. Her young age allowed her to catch up on education by studying for a GED with the help of family members who lived outside her former community. She eventually went to college and is presently an insurance agent. Jones said that Twelve Tribes bans outside materials and offers only minimal education to children. She said that she had no decision-making skills and didn’t know how to protect herself. Jones believes that others who leave a community have difficulty with social interaction that makes it hard to navigate the resources that might be available.

There is apparently a network organized by some people who have left Twelve Tribes to provide support for one another and help current members leave when necessary. The network mainly tries to offer one a place to stay and a job.

In Warsaw, there seems to be a peace between this religious community and its neighbors, but there are still a lot of unknowns. Andrew, who helps run the Warsaw restaurant, now known as the Yellow Deli, talked at length over the weekend about what it means to be in the Twelve Tribes. He also described some of the unfavorable stories being told about the group a rehashing of old news from the past.

He said that in the 1970s, he and his wife were Christians in North Virginia, when they met some people who were moving from Chattanooga, TN to Vermont. The couple took an interest in these Twelve Tribes members and found out that they lived together. At the time Andrew and his wife also lived in a house with another Christian couple and they each had a small child. Andrew and his family visited Vermont and decided that they wanted to be a part of that life, so they sold their property and moved there.

“I have been asked Why Twelve Tribes?” said Andrew. “The heart of what we are doing is that we each individually have chosen to give our life, and serve, and follow the Son of God and give everything to Him. The scriptures say we can do that by caring for each other.”

After years in the community life, Andrew transferred to Warsaw when Common Ground was opened. A similar restaurant had first been opened in St. Joseph, MO, and the members thought Warsaw would be a good spot to open another one because the city was between two lakes and a good place to meet people. Andrew explained that meeting people meant that restaurants were good places for income, but also were places to meet without going to see the house where the community lived. The exception is on Friday evenings when the community gets together to celebrate with food, dancing, worshipping and singing, and the public is invited.

“A few years after moving to Warsaw, I spent a lot of time in a Boulder, CO, community,” said Andrew. “But, all of us go wherever the need is pressing, so I recently came back here where we needed people.”

Andrew talked about the local community’s children, health care, income and the procedure for leaving Twelve Tribes.

“Our children are home schooled so we can teach and train them from the scriptures,” said Andrew. “Our discipline also includes corporal punishment that is done with love, is gentle and in line with scripture. What we use is a thin reed, which will not cause harm even if someone gets out of control.”

He said that in cases of medical needs, the community tries to do what it needs to stay healthy, but when medical care is essential they pay as they go. They also take advantage of public health.

Sources of income for the local community come from the Yellow Deli and a construction and cabinetry business. The construction business provides more income at the present time. There is also a community farm located south of Topeka, KS, that provides some of the produce used in the restaurant, but the emphasis is to try and grow more of their own local crops.

“If someone chooses to leave the community, he or she lets that preference be known and the community does the best it can for that person,” said Andrew. “However, everyone is told when they join that any money they bring into the community may not be available to them if they leave. The community only keeps savings to pay taxes.”

When asked about the time a few years ago when the Warsaw community was trying to sell Common Ground, he said the money from the sale was going to help a community in Boulder to buy suitable property for the members to live in. However, about that same time, a young member came of age for an inheritance and that money was used to purchase the property. The Warsaw community questioned themselves about moving to Colorado at that time, but now know “This is the place where we need to be.”

Andrew and his wife have six grown children and 28 or 29 grandchildren. All but their oldest child live in Twelve Tribe communities.

The Twelve Tribes organization got its beginnings about 46 years ago when Gene Spriggs, from Chattanooga, TN began opening his home to anyone who wanted to come and learn about Jesus. As he became disillusioned with traditional churches, he and his young followers became a separate entity called the Vine Christian Community where they lived together and supported themselves by opening the first Yellow Deli restaurant. It has prevailed and spread to communities around the world. Twelve Tribes.com lists over 90 communities in the U.S. and abroad. Andrew said that a new community has recently been added in Japan and that there are Yellow Delis in Spain and England.

The Twelve Tribes web site states “The Twelve Tribes is a confederation of twelve self-governing tribes, composed of self-governing communities. We are disciples of the Son of God whose name in Hebrew is Yahshua. We follow the pattern of the early church in Acts 2:44 and 4:32, truly believing everything that is written in the Old and New Covenants of the Bible, and sharing all things in common.”

http://www.bentoncountyenterprise.com/content/warsaw-man-details-life-inside-twelve-tribes

CultNEWS101 Articles: 1/15/2020

Event, UK, Netherlands, Brahma Kumaris, Legal, Malaysia, Sexual Abuse



"Psycho-educational Support Group for those whom have been affected by a wide variety of cults or extremists groups.

Date And TimeJanuary 28, 20206:30 PM – 8:30 PM GMT
LocationManchester Town HallAlbert SquareManchesterM2 5DBUnited Kingdom

The Family Survival Trust invites you to attend our Psycho-educational Support Group.

Our next meeting will be at 6.30-8.30pm on Tuesday 28th January 2020, in Manchester City Centre.

Please reply for more/address details. Exact will be comm to ticket holders on contact.

This group is open to people affected by a wide variety of cults (eg political, therapy, religious/spiritual, business, sports - among others) and extremist/exploitative groups.

A short educational presentation on a topic related to the psychology of coercive control will be the basis for sharing experiences and having reflective discussions. The session will be facilitated by those who have educational and/or personal experiences in this area, namely Charlie Kalra, Linda Dubrow-Marshall and Rod Dubrow-Marshall.

This is neither a therapy/counselling nor 'deprogramming' group, though often attendees report to have found it helpful, at an appropriate stage of their journey, with contextualising their experiences in abusive groups.

Hearing and sharing of experiences can be illuminating and validating, and at times also evocative and challenging.

When we meet we'll agree terms of confidentiality at the start of each session.

There's no obligation to say anything you don't want to.

You're free to attend without commitment and feedback is welcome.

A donation of £5 pounds would help to cover the cost of the venue; greater or lesser amounts are also welcome. Please do not feel obligated to do so if your circumstances do not allow it.

Confirmation of attendance will be appreciated to help us anticipate numbers for the venue.

For more details or if you'd like to be added to the mailing list for emails related to these meets please email thefamilysurvivaltrustuk@gmail.com"

"Last year, 103 worried phone calls arrived at SektesIGN, which belonged to the same organization as Meld Misdaad Anoniem. That is a lot more than the years before, when serious reports were made every year between the sixties and eighties. 

A striking number of phone calls were about mindfulness and happiness courses, which eventually degenerated into sexual and / or financial abuse of the participants. This often concerns women around 30, says Karin Krijnen, spokesperson for the organization that has since disappeared.

The task of Sektes signal was to bring serious signals to the attention of the right authorities. The hotline ceased to exist on 1 January, because the House of Representatives decided a few years ago to stop the subsidy. There will be no successor."

"KUALA LUMPUR: A devoteee with the Brahma Kumaris spiritual centre told the Session's Court today that she was raped by a religious teacher in Bangsar in September last year despite telling him that she wanted to keep her virginity.

The 26-year old final year psychology student with International University of Malaya-Wales said the incident took place at the Brahma Kumaris hostel in Jalan Limau Purut, Bangsar.

The Brahma Kumaris follower from Jasin, Melaka, said she had been a devotee since she was 7 years old and had been living in the hostel since the end of 2017.

"I got a job at Pantai Hospital, Bangsar, and because it was near Brahma Kumaris, my grandmother told me to live in the hostel for safety reasons," she told the court on the first day of trial of religious "guru" S Baskaran, 47.


S Baskaran, a senior Brahma Kumaris teacher, is charged with raping a devotee.

Baskaran, an engineer, was charged in the Sessions Court in September last year with raping the devotee on Sept 14, 2018.

He has pleaded not guilty."

"KUALA LUMPUR: A devoteee with the Brahma Kumaris spiritual centre told the Session's Court today that she was raped by a religious teacher in Bangsar in September last year despite telling him that she wanted to keep her virginity.

The 26-year old final year psychology student with International University of Malaya-Wales said the incident took place at the Brahma Kumaris hostel in Jalan Limau Purut, Bangsar.

The Brahma Kumaris follower from Jasin, Melaka, said she had been a devotee since she was 7 years old and had been living in the hostel since the end of 2017.

"I got a job at Pantai Hospital, Bangsar, and because it was near Brahma Kumaris, my grandmother told me to live in the hostel for safety reasons," she told the court on the first day of trial of religious "guru" S Baskaran, 47.

Baskaran, an engineer, was charged in the Sessions Court in September last year with raping the devotee on Sept 14, 2018.

He has pleaded not guilty."




News, Education, Intervention, Recovery

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.
Cults101.org resources about cults, cultic groups, abusive relationships, movements, religions, political organizations and related topics.

Selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not mean that Patrick Ryan or Joseph Kelly agree with the content. We provide information from many points of view in order to promote dialogue.

Please forward articles that you think we should add to CultNEWS101.com.

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Workshops for Former Members, Helping Professionals, and Families

When: February 8th and 9th, 9:30-5:30
Where: Sofitel Hotel, 120 S 17th St., Philadelphia, PA

Participants also have the option to attend virtually! Click here to register for this workshop: https://icsahome.networkforgood.com/events/17800-recovery-workshops-for-survivors-of-cultic-and-high-control-groups

Please email ICSA at mail@icsamail.com if you need financial assistance to attend this event.

Workshop Day 1 Schedule:
Workshop Day 1 -- Saturday, February 8th -- Recovery Issues After Leaving an Abusive Church. Workshops aimed towards addressing the specific needs of former Jehovah's Witnesses and others recovering from spiritual abuse. A variety of topics will be covered to help former members identify psychological challenges that may arise when they leave the faith.

9:15 -- Registration

9:45-11:00am – Building Bridges; Leaving and Recovering from Cultic Groups and Relationships: (Patrick Ryan and Joseph Kelly)

Lunch Break 11:00--12:30pm

12:30-1:45pm -- New Perspectives on the Core or Original Self (Lee Marsh)

1:45-2:00pm -- Break

2:00-3:15pm -- From Coping to Thriving - A Survivor's Perspective (Gary Alt)

3:15-3:30pm -- Break

3:30-4:45pm -- Relationship Dynamics and Jehovah's Witnesses (Jacqueline Johnson)

4:45-5:30pm -- How Female Former Cult Members Can Reclaim their Relationship with Knowledge and Self-Identity: An Interactive Workshop (Jacqueline Johnson)

Register: https://icsahome.networkforgood.com/events/17800-recovery-workshops-for-survivors-of-cultic-and-high-control-groups

Workshop Day 2 Schedule:
Workshop Day 2 -- Sunday, February 9th -- Helpers That Abuse. An educational and recovery workshop focused on serving the needs of those who have experienced abusive therapies, large group awareness trainings, abusive bootcamps, drug rehabs, and the troubled teen industry.

9:15--Registration

9:45-11:00am -- The History of Mass Therapy With its Roots in Mind Dynamics Institute, Misuse of Zen Insights, and Hyping the Positive Thinking of New Thought Religion. (Joseph Szimhart, Patrick Ryan, and Joseph Kelly)

Lunch Break 11:00-12:30pm

12:30-1:45pm -- Program Title TBA -- Survivor of Straight Incorporated (Sunny Linkfield)

1:45-2:00pm -- Break

2:00-3:15 -- Program Title TBA -- Author of the Dead, Insane, or in Jail Memoir Series (Zach Bonnie)

3:15-3:30 -- Break

3:30-4:45 -- The Legal Case on the Kids of Bergen County (Bill Goldberg)

4:45-5:30 -- How to Choose a Therapist (Bill Goldberg)

Register: https://icsahome.networkforgood.com/events/17800-recovery-workshops-for-survivors-of-cultic-and-high-control-groups

Workshop Day 1 Speaker Bios:
Barbara Anderson was a member of Jehovah's Witnesses from 1954 to 1997. She worked at their headquarters in Brooklyn, NY from 1982 to 1992, where during her last three years there she researched the movement's official history (published in 1993) and did research as well as wrote a number of articles for their Awake! magazine. She has done extensive research on issues related to child sexual abuse in the religion leading to interviews on major TV and radio programs as an outspoken critic of Jehovah's Witnesses sexual abuse policies.

Joseph F. Kelly, a graduate of Temple University, has been a thought reform consultant since 1988. He spent 14 years in two different eastern meditation groups. He has lectured extensively on cult-related topics, and is a co-author of Ethical Standards for Thought Reform Consultants, published in ICSA’s Cultic Studies Journal. For many years, Mr. Kelly has also co-facilitated ICSA pre-conference workshops for ex-members. Recently, he helped to initiate ICSA’s monthly meeting in Philadelphia. . Websites: intervention101.com; cultmediation.com; cultrecovery101.com Email: joekelly411@gmail.com Phone: (267) 679-5493. Pennsylvania

Patrick Ryan is a graduate of Maharishi International University. He has been a cult intervention specialist (exit counseling, mediation, religious conflict resolution, thought reform consulting) since 1984. Mr. Ryan is the co-founder of TM-EX, the organization of ex-members of Transcendental Meditation. He established ICSA's online resource (1995-2013), and has presented 50 programs about hypnosis, inner-experience, trance-induction techniques, communicating with cult members, conversion, cult intervention, exit counseling, intervention assessment, mediation, religious conflict resolution, thought reform consultation, eastern groups, transcendental meditation and workshops for educators, families, former members and mental health professionals at ICSA workshops/conferences.
Mr. Ryan received the AFF Achievement Award (1997) from AFF, the Leo J. Ryan "Distinguished Service Award" (1999) from the Leo J. Ryan Foundation, and a Lifetime Achievement Award (2011) from ICSA. Websites: intervention101.com; cultmediation.com; cultrecovery101.com Email: pryan19147@gmail.com Phone: (215) 467-4939. Pennsylvania (Philadelphia)

Lee Marsh is a retired Social Counselor with twenty years experience in private practice, specializing in trauma counseling, DID (Dissociative Identity Disorder), sexual abuse, domestic violence, addictions, homelessness and cult/spiritual abuse issues. She was a member of large faith based destructive group for 22 years before leaving in 1985. Lee was the founder of the Centre for Incest Healing in Montreal and former Coordinator of the Compulsive Coping Behavior Program in Winnipeg. Since her retirement, Lee has assisted survivors of cultic groups, moderated discussion forums, and written extensively online to help survivors of various kinds of abuse. She is also the President of Advocates for Awareness of Watchtower Abuses (AAWA) and one of the founders and coaches of Stronger after, a new program to help people who leave cults or high control groups.

Gary Alt was a Jehovah's Witness for just over forty years, finally leaving the religion in early 2016. He served at JW Brooklyn Headquarters in the 1980s, and also served as a congregation elder during the 1980s and 1990s. He is a prolific songwriter, musician, and indie recording artist. Gary has also written two books, Force of Will and Song of Gil, as well as short stories, based on his JW-related experiences. He currently resides in the Poconos of Pennsylvania, USA.

Jacqueline Johnson, DSW, LCSW-R, is a licensed clinical social worker with a certification in forensic social work. She obtained her master’s degree in social work from Columbia University and her doctoral degree in social work from the University of Tennessee. Dr. Johnson is a SGA survivor, having spent 43 years in the Jehovah’s Witnesses. Dr. Johnson has spent most of her career working in New York State juvenile justice, focusing on trauma-informed care. She is a presenter for the National Organization of Forensic Social Workers. In her private practice, Dr. Johnson focuses on assisting indoctrinated individuals find freedom from cultic and other high-demand groups and process the trauma they experienced while being involved in systems of control or coercive groups and relationships. She manages the Facebook social media page, Outside the Ark, which shares educational information about cult dynamics and coercive control. Her areas of research interest include the epistemology of women and how cultic, coercive, and misogynistic experiences influence the cognitive development of women. Dr. Johnson can be reached at drjacquelinejohnson@outlook.com. You can learn more about Dr. Johnson at her website, www.drjacquelinejohnson.com.

Workshop Day 2 Speaker Bios:
Joseph Szimhart began research into cultic influence in 1980, after ending his two-year devotion to a New Age sect. He began to work professionally as an intervention specialist and exit counselor in 1986 on an international scale. From 1985 through 1992, he was chairman of an interdenominational, cult information organization in New Mexico. Since 1998 he has worked in the crisis department of a psychiatric emergency hospital in Pennsylvania. He continues to assist families with interventions and former members in recovery, including consultations via phone and Internet. He maintains a cult informational website, lectures, consults for the media, and has published articles, book reviews, and papers related to the cult problem. His first novel, Mushroom Satori: The Cult Diary, was released in 2013 through Aperture Press. He produces art in his home studio in Stowe, PA. In 2016 he received an ICSA Lifetime Achievement Award at the Annual Conference in Dallas, Texas. Website: http://jszimhart.com/ Email: jszimhart@gmail.com

Joseph F. Kelly, a graduate of Temple University, has been a thought reform consultant since 1988. He spent 14 years in two different eastern meditation groups. He has lectured extensively on cult-related topics, and is a co-author of Ethical Standards for Thought Reform Consultants, published in ICSA’s Cultic Studies Journal. For many years, Mr. Kelly has also co-facilitated ICSA pre-conference workshops for ex-members. Recently, he helped to initiate ICSA’s monthly meeting in Philadelphia. . Websites: intervention101.com; cultmediation.com; cultrecovery101.com Email: joekelly411@gmail.com Phone: (267) 679-5493. Pennsylvania

Patrick Ryan is a graduate of Maharishi International University. He has been a cult intervention specialist (exit counseling, mediation, religious conflict resolution, thought reform consulting) since 1984. Mr. Ryan is the co-founder of TM-EX, the organization of ex-members of Transcendental Meditation. He established ICSA's online resource (1995-2013), and has presented 50 programs about hypnosis, inner-experience, trance-induction techniques, communicating with cult members, conversion, cult intervention, exit counseling, intervention assessment, mediation, religious conflict resolution, thought reform consultation, eastern groups, transcendental meditation and workshops for educators, families, former members and mental health professionals at ICSA workshops/conferences. Mr. Ryan received the AFF Achievement Award (1997) from AFF, the Leo J. Ryan "Distinguished Service Award" (1999) from the Leo J. Ryan Foundation, and a Lifetime Achievement Award (2011) from ICSA. Websites: intervention101.com; cultmediation.com; cultrecovery101.com Email: pryan19147@gmail.com Phone: (215) 467-4939. Pennsylvania (Philadelphia)

Sunny Linkfield is a survivor of Straight Incorporated. This abusive teen "rehab" center, convinced thousands of parents that normal behavior was a sign of "druggie" behavior. Sunny was an over achiever but became a moody teenager, experimenting with pot, alcohol and a few other drugs. After her parents read an article in Reader's Digest, they dropped her off in a warehouse called Straight Inc. Straight, Inc. was an abusive mind control cult that practiced torture techniques formerly used in Communist China and North Korea on youth. These techniques were ostensibly employed to help Straight's victims overcome the problems and addictions that Straight claimed they had. Spin-offs still exist today. Sunny is now a make-up artist/esthetician and a trainer in retail cosmetics. She was recently interviewed in the new documentary, Fix My Kid, and was also the lead make-up artist for the film. Ms. Linkfield is active with the International Cultic Studies Association. She has been interviewed for NBC Nightly News and has spoken at Columbia University about the troubled teen industry. In April, 2013, Sunny spoke with Congressman Miller's office to modify the bill: Stop Abuse in Residential Treatment Centers for Teens Act. She also organized a seminar in DC on The Abuses in the Troubled Teen Industry. Sunny is active in raising awareness abroad on these abusive teen programs and is fighting for the US to ratify the United Nations Convention for the Rights of a Child. Currently, the US and Somalia are the only two countries who have not ratified the treaty.

Zack Bonnie is the author of the Dead, Insane, or in Jail memoir series, about his experience as a troubled teen incarcerated in the 80s at a cultish, Synanon-influenced facility called Rocky Mountain Academy. With a solid background in the entertainment field, he proposes that art is the antidote to thought reform. His presentation will encompass the mechanics of undue influence and cultic dynamics focusing on coercive institutionalized persuasion. His hope is to reach younger audiences as they enter careers in psychology and other social sciences. He works to create and promote media to illustrate the common dynamics of high-control groups wherever they appear: in the teen-treatment related programs, in religious failure, in strife at home, and as part of the US court system. Part of a larger plea for increased individual awareness, Zack Bonnie's mission is to educate the public - through the arts - about the systems applied in these institutions.

William Goldberg, LCSW, PsyA, is a clinical social worker and psychoanalyst with over forty years’ experience working with former cult members. He and his wife, Lorna, co-lead a support group for former cult members, which has been meeting for over forty years. It is the oldest group of its kind in the world. In 2007, Bill retired from the Rockland County, NY Department of Mental Health, where he directed several programs and clinics. He is presently an adjunct professor in the social work and social science departments of Dominican College and he is on the faculty of the Institute for Psychoanalytic Studies. Bill has published numerous articles in books and professional journals, and he is one of the editors of a soon to be published book, sponsored by ICSA, which will focus on clinical work with former cult members. Bill is a frequent speaker at ICSA conferences, and he and Lorna have been the recipients of the Authentic CAN Hall of Fame Award and the Leo J. Ryan Award. In 2010, Bill was the recipient of ICSA’s Lifetime Achievement Award. He is also co-editor of ICSA's Cult Recovery: A Clinician's Guide to Working With Former Members and Their Families, which is due to be published in 2017. (201) 894-8515 Website: blgoldberg.com Email:bill@blgoldberg.com New Jersey (Englewood)

Register: https://icsahome.networkforgood.com/events/17800-recovery-workshops-for-survivors-of-cultic-and-high-control-groups