Jul 27, 1990

MOON BOLSTERING AREA BUSINESS ENTERPRISES

Peter Maass
Washington Post 
July 27, 1990

Jonathan Park's investment in the Nostalgia Network, a cable television channel, was incorrectly described yesterday as a controlling interest. Park owns 27.8 percent. The network also said its subscriber base has grown from 8.6 million households to 10.8 million since Park made his investment in May. (Published 7/28/90)

SEOUL -- The Rev. Sun Myung Moon's Unification Church has been spending $35 million a year to support its money-losing Washington Times newspaper and eventually plans to expand its burgeoning Washington video operations into a nationwide cable television system, according to the church's second-ranking official.

In a rare interview in his office in a church-run school here, Moon deputy Bo Hi Pak provided fresh details about the church's business affiliations -- ranging from a computer lab in Japan to a machine tool company in Germany to an Alaska fishing fleet -- that provide at least $100 million a year to support the church's activities.

And at a time when communist regimes are crumbling all around the globe, Pak said that the staunchly anti-communist Moon plans to move aggressively into China and the Soviet Union with business ventures aimed at winning both profits and religious converts for the Unification Church.

The foray into the communist world appears to be part of a broader strategy aimed at establishing a new footing for the Unification Church after Moon's tax-fraud conviction in the United States. Moon's two-year jail term, which ended in 1985, capped a tumultuous time in which his Unification Church became known as a right-wing cult accused of brainwashing some of its American members.

"They are seeking to become a mainline religion," said Spencer Palmer, a religion professor at Brigham Young University who has written about the Unification Church.

Pak is best known in the United States as the president of the Washington Times. As one of Moon's two chief political lieutenants, the former South Korean CIA official and military officer helps oversee the Unification movement's lobbying efforts on behalf of conservative causes in America and its economic projects around the world.

Pak said that the newspaper has lost about $250 million since its founding eight years ago, and he estimated that it continues to lose about $35 million a year. Nonetheless, he described the church and its component entities as "very glad to subsidize" the paper because it contributes to world peace, and he said it would not be sold or shuttered.

Another key U.S. holding is One Up Enterprises of McLean. Pak said the company owns a broad array of businesses: International Seafood, a fishing firm in Kodiak, Alaska; Atlantic Video, a production company based in Alexandria; and U.S. Property Development Corp., also of Alexandria, which recently added the 300,000 square feet MediaTech Plaza building in downtown Washington to its portfolio of real estate holdings in the area.

Atlantic and U.S. Property are both headed by Pak's son, Jonathan Park, who recently bought several small video production companies that provide footage of news events in Washington to U.S and foreign television stations, as well as a controlling interest in the Nostalgia Network, a national cable channel with 8.6 million subscribers in the United States. Eventually, Pak said, "we would like to have our own cable system," but he said the motivation was profit, not to use the electronic media as a propaganda tool.

In the area of culture, Pak is credited with bringing to Washington this fall the Universal Ballet Academy, a boarding school whose faculty is staffed by Soviets on work visas, according to Dossier magazine. While the Unification Church hopes to continue expanding its business operations in the United States, Pak said Moon's more recent focus has been toward making inroads in the communist countries where the hunger for capital and religion is particularly acute.

The church's new direction was laid down by Moon himself, who said in a speech in Moscow this spring, "I clearly envision a moral and economic renaissance for the Soviet Union that will dramatically affect the entire world. I will do all I can to encourage and support that renaissance."

A South Korean whose followers view him as fulfilling a messianic role, Moon was in the Soviet Union to address a conference cosponsored by his movement's World Media Association. While there he met for 30 minutes with Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev.

As a result of Moon's meeting with Gorbachev, business officials and economists affiliated with the church are to visit Moscow to discuss potential joint ventures. Pak said Moon already will cosponsor a trip by about 20 American economists to lecture at Moscow State University about capitalism and is considering opening a computer-training school in Moscow.

Pak said "the Unification movement" is pouring $250 million into the sprawling Panda Motors Corp. factory in China and is seeking at least $1 billion more from outside investors to complete the plant and an industrial city in Huizhou, about 50 miles from Hong Kong.

The car factory, one of the largest foreign investments in China, is to start operations in two years and by 1995 reach an annual output of 300,000 cars for export, Pak said. Money for the project comes from church-affiliated businesses outside the United States and is being channeled through Panda's headquarters in Tysons Corner, Pak said.

The key revenue sources for the church's expansion, outside of One Up Enterprises in McLean, are believed by church members and other observers to come from businesses in Japan and West Germany. The main holding company in Japan is Happy World Inc., whose holdings include businesses with more than 100 different products or services, such as fishing, clothing and computers, said Pak. He said the most important firm it owns in terms of revenue is Tokyo-based Wacom, which Pak said was involved in computer research and manufacturing, and which produces computers sold under different Japanese brand names, such as Mitsubishi.

In West Germany, the main church-affiliated holding company is HWH Group, whose Wonder and Hansburg subsidiaries produce high-tech machinery, according to Pak.

The firms in Japan, West Germany and the United States are not owned by the church itself, Pak said, but by church members and officials, who contribute surplus funds to church-related projects. Pak said the flow of money to church headquarters in Seoul is at least $100 million annually and sometimes well in excess of that figure. The bulk of the funds comes from business profits and the balance from church membership dues. However, Pak said he could not provide a breakdown of sales and profits by business.

Those funds go to support an expensive worldwide operation for the Unification Church. In South Korea, the church and its affiliated firms employ about 13,000 people and have extensive land holdings, according to a government official with access to information about the church. The church holdings also include a high school with an enrollment of more than 3,500 students, a new college and, since 1989, a national newspaper called the Segye Ilbo, which has cost about $140 million to start up, according to a senior editor.

Pak refutes skeptics who believe the church is also laying the foundation for recruiting a wave of new members in nations breaking away from atheism. The theory is that the Unification Church views the relatively godless masses in communist and once-communist countries as ripe for conversion to a religion that made anti-communism one of its precepts.

But Pak said, "Our goal is not to win members in China. Our job is to help them by creating a model city, a model industry, so that they can come out of {their} socialistic system {and} more embrace a market system or economy."

Even so, the church has not lost its evangelical urge. Several church members have said the church has been operating a small network of underground missionaries in Eastern Europe, the Soviet Union and China.

In its fight against communism, one key battle that remains for the Unification Church is opening up North Korea to God and capitalism. Pak has tried but failed so far to visit one of the last places on earth where Stalinism reigns supreme, but he is continuing an effort to persuade North Korea "Great Leader" Kim Il Sung to permit church-affiliated groups to hold a media or leadership conference in Pyongyang next year.

When Moon gathered more than 50,000 of his followers at Seoul's Olympic stadium last May to celebrate his triumphant visit to Moscow, a slogan was flashed on the huge stadium scoreboard that seemed to sum up the state of things. "This time Mikhail Gorbachev," the slogan said. "Next time Kim Il Sung."

Staff writer Paul Farhi contributed to this report from Washington.


https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1990/07/27/moon-bolstering-area-business-enterprises/34d4b751-247d-4f9d-911f-7a8664278b71/

Apr 21, 1990

Rosicrucian Leader Stole $3.5 Million, Sect Alleges

UPI
LA Times 
APRIL 21, 1990

SAN JOSE —  The leader of the Rosicrucian Order as been ousted as imperator and president of the mystic organization and is suspected of embezzling $3.5 million, a spokesman at world headquarters said this week.
Gary L. Stewart, installed in 1987 as head of the group that claims roots in ancient Egypt and about 250,000 members worldwide, left late Monday after police were summoned to enforce a restraining order, spokesman Carl La Flamm said.

A Superior Court suit had been filed against Stewart after he defied an unanimous vote by the board of directors on April 12 to remove himself as president and imperator of the Supreme Grand Lodge, a title normally held for life, La Flamm said.

Stewart was unavailable for comment.

The action to strip Stewart of his leadership came after the order’s secretary-treasurer discovered that he had transferred more than $3 million between March 28 and April 5 from the Rosicrucians’ account at Silicon Valley Bank, the suit said. The funds first went to a bank in Pittsburgh, then to a bank in the European republic of Andorra.

“Stewart has refused to explain his actions to the board of directors and has refused to disclose the account number of the (Andorran) account. Therefore Rosicrucian believes that Stewart has converted the funds to his own personal use,” the suit said.

A hearing was scheduled for May 1 on the lawsuit, which seeks placement of the order’s accounts in trust, return of the missing $3.5 million and legal costs.

The Rosicrucians Order, formally known as the Ancient Mystical Order Rosae Crucis, describes itself as a fraternity, a collective cosmic consciousness--but not a religion or sect. Its symbol is a budding rose, representing the human soul, on a cross, representing the physical state.

Apr 1, 1990

Ex-Employees Describe Abuse In Suit Against est's

Don Lattin
San Francisco Chronicle
April 3, 1990


Former employees of EST founder Werner Erhard say they were forced to obey the pop psychology guru in a manner ''akin to God'' and to submit themselves to ''numerous instances of verbally and physically abusive behavior.''

In sworn statements, the ex-employees also charge that they were required to worship Erhard as ''the Source'' and were controlled with exhausting work schedules, loyalty oaths, threats and emotional abuse.

The allegations -- by five former staff members of est, of the Forum and of Werner Erhard and Associates -- were filed last week in San Francisco Superior Court in support of a wrongful termination lawsuit against Erhard by Charlene Afremow, a longt ime associate of the human potential movement czar.

Vincent Drucker of San Anselmo, the former chief financial officer of est, said in one of the affidavits that a program begun in the late 1970s ''put great pressure on the executives, including myself, to surrender to 'Source.' ''

Erhard often compared the relationship between himself and his trainers ''to the bond between a samurai lord and the samurai vassals,'' Drucker said. ''Mr. Erhard threatened me with death on two occasions,'' he said, by citing ''certain people in the Mafia.''

Allegations Denied


In a statement released yesterday, Erhard denied all the allegations, calling them ''ridiculous fabrications from a few disgruntled former employees.''

''Responding publicly to these unsupportable accusations point by point would only further the malicious intent of the individuals in question,'' he said.

Erhard's weekend est trainings -- launched in 1971 and repackaged as the Forum in 1984 for a more corporate clientele -- are among the most financially successful human potential movement seminars. Nearly half a million people took the est training, and 500,000 have participated in the Forum, an Erhard spokesman said.

Werner Erhard and Associates, which runs the Forum and several other consulting businesses, last year took in $ 45 million in U.S. revenues, the spokesman said.

Born in 1935 as Jack Rosenberg, Erhard created his ''personal transformation'' empire by combining ideas from Zen Buddhism, Scientology and some of the alternative psychotherapy and self-motivation techniques developed in the 1950s and 1960s.

Today, initiates to the Forum pay $ 595 for two consecutive weekends designed to inspire ''a breakthrough in personal effectiveness'' and produce ''a new experience of vitality and aliveness'' through a ''challenging, rigorous inquiry . . . into the profound possibility of being.'' Groups of 100 to 250 people participate in the workshops.

Range Of Opinions


Opinions vary as to whether Erhard is a leading-edge thinker or slick purveyor of meaningless psychobabble, but the accusations in the court documents paint one of the darkest pictures yet of his San Francisco-based organization.

Former est trainer Irving Bernstein of Mill Valley, who quit in 1985, said in one affidavit that ''the Source'' was understood ''to mean that Erhard was akin to God.''

''Leaving WEA ( Werner Erhard and Associates) was looked upon as an act of heresy,'' stated Bernstein, who said employees ''essentially committed their souls forever to do the Work and do what Erhard asked.''

Michael Breard of Corte Madera said in his court declaration that his ''interview process'' for becoming a personal aide to Erhard involved spending two days ''cleaning the bilge of the boat on which Mr. Erhard was living with a toothbrush and Q-tip.' Breard, who said he was hired on Erhard's staff in 1984, stated that he was told by Erhard's brother, Harry Rosenberg, that he would be harmed if confidential information about Erhard's posh lifestyle were ever revealed.

Breard said he was told that ''Mr. Erhard had a friend in the Mafia'' who would ''take care'' of anyone who leaked information.

Wake-Up Massage


He said one of his duties was to wake Erhard up every morning by ''kneeling at the foot of the bed, putting my hands under the covers and massaging his feet and calves in a particular manner.'' Breard also was supposed to make sure that Erhard's toiletries were lined up in an exact row each morning. ''Mr. Erhard was an incredible perfectionist and was extremely verbally abusive if tasks were not performed according to his exact specifications,'' he said.

Breard said that he was physically struck on one occasion but that Erhard's usual way to ''berate me would be to scream obscenities at me in a voice which is louder than I can describe.''

At the request of Erhard's attorneys, the affidavits were put under court seal last week by Superior Court Judge Ira Brown. For a short time, however, they were open for public viewing and photocopying. The suit is set for trial April 16.

In previously filed court documents, Erhard's attorneys have denied Afremow's allegations of age discrimination, sex discrimination, defamation and the intentional infliction of emotional distress.''

Based in San Francisco, the Forum is offered through 35 Werner Erhard and Associates offices in the United States and 14 other offices around the world. Erhard has also expanded into the corporate consulting and personnel management business in recent years through a network of franchise businesses sold under the name Transformational Technologies, Inc. 

Jan 1, 1990

Avatar Training

Tracy Cochran
Omni Magazine
January 1990

Most of us think of an "avatar" as an altruistic, god-like being that assumes human form. Now, however, an entrepreneur named Harry Palmer says the tricky old business of being an avatar is a mere training course away.

Palmer, an ex-Scientologist, claims he discovered the secret to being an avatar while floating in an isolation tank in Ithaca, New York in 1986. During his immersion in this altered state, Palmer redefined the form as "a being who understands that beliefs create reality and not the other way around." Developing the concept further, Palmer created a week-long course, based on mental exercises. Using his exercises, Palmer declares, participants can "discreate," or dismantle, any unpleasant creation in the world.

"Beliefs are creations," says Gerald Epstein, a New York psychiatrist who has taken an additional week of training to become an Avatar Master. "With practice," he says, "discreation becomes a 15- to 30-second mental reminder to dispose of troubling or limiting thoughts." Different exercises, he explains, target different beliefs or creations. An exercise called Body Handle disposes of unpleasant sensations, an exercise called Limitation Handle enables participants to overcome "limiting thoughts" about what constitutes the self.

Epstein admits that Palmer's Avatar techniques are very similar to simple meditation. But while meditation requires a period of quiet calm, the Avatar exercises are "geared for a materialistic society so competitive that even twenty minutes of quiet meditation a day can be considered too long a time to spend on oneself."

On the other hand, Avatar is not cheap. The week-long course costs $2,000. The nine-day Avatar Masters course is an additional $3,000. And each time a Master trains a fledgling Avatar on his own, Palmer receives a royalty.

Palmer forbids freshly hatched Avatars to divulge the mechanics of his discreation exercises, because, he says, no one could understand the program without experiencing it anyway.

Sep 24, 1989

STUDY: CHRISTIAN SCIENTISTS DIE YOUNGER

Jon Van
September 24, 1989
CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Even though Christian Scientists abstain from tobacco and alcohol, they apparently die younger than the rest of the population, perhaps because they also shun most therapies offered by modern medicine, a new study has found.

The higher death rate among Christian Scientists was reported by a scientist on the faculty of Emporia State University, William Franklin Simpson, who compared longevity over the last 50 years of graduates from a Christian Science college with that of people attending a public university.

Although abstinence from tobacco and alcohol has been proven to extend life, graduates of Principia College in Elsah, Ill., a Christian Science school, didn`t live as long as liberal arts graduates of the University of Kansas in Lawrence who completed school at the same time, Simpson found.

The founder of the Christian Science faith, Mary Baker Eddy, taught that illness is just a product of the mind, and that all drugs do is tap into human faith and belief. Eddy urged members of her church to eschew most medical therapies and to instead treat illness and affliction with prayer alone.

Several states exempt from child-abuse laws those Christian Science parents who withhold medical care from their offspring. Medicare and some health insurance funds pay for Christian Science prayer care just as they do for orthodox medicine, Simpson noted in his report, which was being published in Friday`s Journal of the American Medical Association.

Studies of Christian Scientists and their health are rare because their church is secretive.

Simpson, a Principia alumnus, based his findings upon information taken from the Principia Alumni Directory, which regularly lists graduates of the college and provides obituaries when alumni die. Adherence to Christian Science beliefs is virtually a requirement for admission to Principia, Simpson said, and he assumed for purposes of the study that most of the graduates continued in that faith after graduation.

In analyzing death records of 5,558 people who graduated from Principia between 1934 and 1983 and those of 29,858 who graduated from the University of Kansas during the same period, Simpson found that the death rate among Principia graduates from cancer was double the national average and that 6 percent of the overall deaths of Principia graduates were due to causes generally regarded as preventable by orthodox medicine.

''If Christian Science healing methods work as well as medical healing methods, one would expect to see Christian Scientists live as long as non-Christian Scientists,'' Simpson concluded. ''However, this study has shown that this is not the case.

''Christian Scientists (at least people who claimed to be Christian Scientists at the time they were students at Principia College) have a lower life expectancy than a control group of students from the University of Kansas.''

https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1989-09-24-8901150766-story.html

Feb 23, 1989

Awareness of Satanism is up, Police are Told

Dave Condren, MIKE VOGEL AND DAVE CONDREN, SUSAN SCHULMAN AND DAVE CONDREN, TOM ERNST AND DAVE CONDREN
Buffalo News

February 23, 1989

Satanism may be on the increase across the nation, but to what extent is uncertain, an expert on the occult told about 75 police officers and youth counselors during a seminar Thursday in the Buffalo Hilton.

What is clear is that there is "a big increase in the awareness of it," reported the Rev. James J. LeBar, Catholic chaplain at the Hudson River Psychiatric Center in Poughkeepsie.

That is because some of the young people who have become involved with the satanic cults admit that they are, said Father LeBar, a consultant on satanism and the occult for the Archdiocese of New York.

The seminar, sponsored by the New York State Sheriffs' Association, was conducted by Father LeBar and Dale W. Griffis, a former police captain from Tiffin, Ohio, who is now one of the nation's leading consultants on satanism.

"I don't say you find it hiding behind every rock, but if you turn over a rock and see the symbols, there is a problem," Griffis said.

From his conversations with law enforcement representatives from about 12 counties in Western and Central New York, Griffis said, it appears that satanic-related activity in the region is limited to graffiti and animal mutilation.

On a nationwide basis, he said, there have been estimates that as many as 50,000 children and teen-agers are killed annually during satanic human-sacrifice rituals.

He said he seriously doubts that number and is in the process of making a survey of the United States and Canada to determine the extent of satanic activity.

Griffis warned that videotapes and books promoting satanism are olice Are Told readily available in most areas at book and record stores and can be sold legally.

He warned parents that some of the signs that their children might be experimenting with satanism include mental lapses, panic disorders, difficulty with language, a lack of a sense of humor, dressing in black and using satanic symbols, deteriorating physical condition and assumption of a different identity.

From a police point of view, Griffis noted, it is just another one of the many kinds of problems "that we can expect to run into."

https://buffalonews.com/news/awareness-of-satanism-is-up-police-are-told/article_f43878b4-638f-59f3-bcab-44897a4f3232.html

Jan 1, 1988

Molestations Alleged at Maharishi's Compound

Excerpts from "The Troubled Guru: Maharishi Mahesh Yogi Faces Tough Times," by Anuradha Dutt -- ® 1988, The Illustrated Weekly of India.

He's the ultimate dream merchant.

...Maharishi Mahesh Yogi offers you, on 70 mm screen, the biggest, brightest and most colorful dream of all time: peace. Merchandised under his trade name TM, short for Transcendental Meditation -- the shortcut to nirvana.

A fortnight back, the sleuths of the finance ministry suddenly swooped on his ashram in New Delhi and its branches and offices all over the country, claiming that the fabled guru had stashed away a fortune abroad and violated the fiscal laws of the land.

This may or may not be true. But the raids on the Maharishi have certainly created a furore[sic], for the high-flying guru with a penchant for the megabuck was never seen as a law breaker in the sense that Rajneesh or Chandra Swami may have been....

[The author provides a brief overview of the TM movement, Maharishi, and his place among modern "godmen" in India.]

In late 1984, just shortly after Indira Gandhi's assassination, the yogi moved into the ashram complex called Maharishinagar at the New Okhla Industrial Development Area (NOIDA) on Delhi's outskirts.... His assets in India are calculated at Rs 500 crores [$700 million US] at least, consisting of TM centres, land holdings, factories, buildings, business corporations and industrial cum agricultural complexes. Precise details of these, however, are a closely guarded secret....

[A discussion of Maharishi's rumored troubles with Indira Gandhi.]

The Swiss government, according to some reports, had made things difficult for him, allegedly for not paying taxes in full and also for transferring large sums of his money in the accounts there to other countries. Valuable foreign exchange to the extent of Rs 15 crores [$1.3 million US] is estimated to be coming into India alone each year for the upkeep of his many organizations....

[A description of the luxurious compound and its guards. Further detail about the government raids.]

Raids were simultaneously conducted at Jabalpur, where the Maharishi's associates and various organisations own a great deal of property..... This is not the first time that the revenue department has launched an offensive against TM adherents.... Late last year [1987], prosecution for tax evasion... was launched against the president of one of the trusts, a doctor by training, two accountants and the Maharishi's nephews, Anand and Ajay Srivastava....

Among the yogi's relatives, his brother J P Srivastava's sons, Anand and Ajay Prakash, seem to be in charge of accounts and administration. The [Maharishi's] brother, reportedly, is not given much importance in the family hierarchy, for reasons that date back to the illustrious younger sibling's youth. Mahesh Yogi, apparently, had early in life forsaken hearth and home after being allegedly ill-treated by his brother....

The yogi, is reportedly, fondest of his niece, Kirti, his sister Indira's daughter.... She has two brothers, Praful and Pramod. While Pramod has settled in West Germany through the benevolence of his uncle [the Maharishi], Praful operates from India, say sources. The Maharishi's munificence extends to more distant relatives as well. Girish Varna, the son of one of the yogi's paternal uncles, has comfortably settled at NOIDA....

Briefly the three most serious charges against him [the Maharishi] ar that, one, the acquisition of 600 acres of land at NOIDA, violates the Uttar Pradesh Land Ceiling act; two, the construction of the ashram is illegal as it falls within the green belt; and three, the young brahmin boys inducted for training as Veda pandits have been molested by their teachers and generally ill-treated....

[Discussions of the violations of the Land Ceiling act, which an ashram spokesman admits to, saying the TM movement has "appealed for exemption" after the fact.]

Even if the Maharishi manages to extricate himself from these difficulties, he still faces the spectre of a scandal revolving around reports of the reported death of some young boys in the custody of the ashram....

There appeared a spate of media reports in September last year [1987], on the ill-treatment meted out to the boys and how a few of them had died under research by vaids, at the ashram's clinic, Arogya Dham. The reports charged that at least five boys had died under mysterious circumstances and that about 8000 of the 10,000 children admitted to the vidya peeth in the past five years had run away because of the "torture" they had been subjected to inside.... The reports also said that the ashram had been abruptly closed after the staff union strike in June, in order to avoid a scandal....

Dr Govin Sharma, formerly employed at the ashram, charged that some of the boys were also subjected to sexual abuse by the teachers. ...A boy by the name of Bhagat Singh... [gave] testimony in this regard.

The boy... confirms that the reports of sexual abuse are indeed true.... He also says that living conditions in the ashram were poor.

[Some boys selected as spokespeople by the ashram dismiss reports of death, starvation, molestation, and homosexuality.]

Ashram officials in turn dismiss the reports as fabrication of "anti-social" elements and union members with "vested interest." In their account of things, the ashram was closed simply because that particular academic session had ended and not in order to hush up a scandal....

Mahapatra [directly in charge of the boys] points out that more deaths occur in a hospital every day. He finds the allegations of homosexuality equally preposterous and motivated. "We want want the boys to grow up in a satvic (holy) atmosphere," he says....

Brahmachari Nandkishore [the Maharishi's closest assistant] is of the opinion that some multinational pharmaceutical firms that fear the potential popularity of ayurveda, have been circulating these reports of deaths under research, in order to discredit the traditional system of medicine.

Sidebar: "Maharishinagar is Self-Styled" [excerpts from an interview with Indian Governement official Mahendra Singh Bhati, Lok Dal- B MLA from Dadri.]

Q: Where are they [the ashram boys] now? Have they been transferred elsewhere?

A: Transferred or left. Some of them were working here in tea shops, in Dadri.

Q: About these boys who left the ashram, can you say more?

A: One of the boys stayed at my house. I asked him whether I should write to his home or arrange to send him back. He said, "Guruji [the Maharishi] told me that if I ever saw my mother's face, she would die. I can't go home."

Q: They used to be brainwashed?

A: Brainwashed. He used to tell them that you are all going to rule the whole world. By the medium of Veda and science.

Q: How were the children treated?

A: Completely ill-treated. The food which was handled by someone else, contained insects in the rice, roti -- you can't imagine the ill-treatment.

Q: Were they clothed by the ashram authorities?

A: They gave them clothes. I've been to their sleeping quarters. Small rooms in each of which 12 to 15 boys slept. They had also got corrupted. Even the teachers were not proper.

Q: What do you mean by that? Are you referring to homosexuality?

A: Yes.

Q: And the teachers were also involved?

A: Yes. The teachers were involved in this too. Out of fear some of the children became homosexuals.

Sidebar: "Many Anti-Social Activities Went on" [an interview with Govind Sharma, a former ayurvedic physician at the Maharishi's ashram from 1894-1987]

They make many ayurvedic drugs without licences and sell them abroad. They don't sell these here. They do have licences for some of the drugs but use these for exporting other drugs too.... There was a pharmacy as well but the government cancelled the licence over six months ago. They do not bother to get licence renewed for years....

The strike began at the end of June [987]. The reason was that in June and the month before, some of the children at the ashram had died because of neglect. While the officials and their wives all have cars at their disposal, to go wherever they wanted, there were never any cars available for sick children or workers. As a result, every year there were four to six deaths. One boy... died due to severe dehydration... [Another] was under treatment by an unqualified vaid.... The vaid was of the view that he would recover.... He died because of sheer callousness.

The children used to suffer from malnutrition. The food was cooked in unhygenic conditions and it was so bad that even animals would not have been able to eat it. When people went to complain to the Mahesh Yogi, even showing him the bugs in the rise and roti, he would get agitated and say that this was being done deliberately, to defame him and that some disruptive elements had entered his ashram. He disliked hearing complaints of any kind....

In certain cases the boys never went back. Till today their parents are searching for them....

http://minet.org/www.trancenet.net/news/molest.shtml

Aug 29, 1987

Hare Krishna Killer Named Guru, Shocks Sect

THOMAS FERRARO
United Press International
August 29, 1987

MOUNDSVILLE, W. Va. — One of the newest swamis in the Hare Krishna religion is a convicted killer and drug dealer charged with the suspected murder-for-hire of an excommunicated member of the India-based sect.

The swami, Thomas Drescher, No. 150196 at the West Virginia State Penitentiary, denies slaying anyone and says, "My business, my mission, is to preach."

Drescher, 38, is a key figure in a 15-month investigation of nearby New Vrindaban, the biggest Krishna community in North America, with several hundred saffron-robed, shaven-headed devotees.

Law enforcement authorities suspect that Drescher gunned down Steven Bryant, 33, in Los Angeles on May 22, 1986, to silence the dissident, who had alleged criminal activity at the mountain commune, from child abuse to drug dealing.

The case has placed a spotlight on New Vrindaban and has enlarged an existing wedge between it and the Governing Body Commission of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON), which has an estimated 5,000 full-time devotees, half in North America.

Last March, the commission excommunicated New Vrindaban's spiritual leader, Kirtanananda Swami Bhaktipada, formerly Keith Ham.

In doing so, it cited investigations of the community that stem from Bryant's death and allegations, and accused Bhaktipada, 50, of insubordination and of trying to form his own movement.

On July 22, when New Vrindaban ordained Drescher as a swami, a post normally given after longtime service, the Governing Body Commission denounced the move as unwarranted and invalid.

Drescher was convicted in 1979 of manufacturing and distributing drugs and was found guilty last January of the 1983 slaying of a Krishna devotee. He is awaiting trial for the murder of Bryant.

Drescher carries prayer beads in his right hand and has tattoos of Lord Krishna on both forearms.

Bhaktipada says Drescher went from a "fringie," one who strayed from Krishna tenets, to a "good devotee" since being imprisoned a year ago, and deserved becoming a swami.

William Deadwyler, chairman of the North American Governing Body Commission and president of the Krishna temple in Philadelphia, disagreed. "We are all a little outraged. . . . It's upsetting. It's shocking."

Deadwyler says he fears that the ordination, plus the investigations of New Vrindaban, could result in a public relations nightmare for the Krishna society and could damage a reform drive.

Since 1977, seven of the original 11 gurus named by the modern movement's founder have been removed, for reasons ranging from drug use to sexual promiscuity. The sect has also been strained by power struggles.

Dozens of new gurus have been named in recent years, and Deadwyler said: "There is now a spirit of cooperation.

"I just wish that people would understand that this man (Bhaktipada) is not part of ISKCON. We have done all we can to put distance between ourselves and him."

Bhaktipada replied, "I am ISKCON." He said he and his followers--and not the Governing Body Commission--are adhering to the sect's principles.

Bhaktipada said his expulsion by the commission was meaningless, denounced the criminal investigations as religious persecution and denied any wrongdoing.
No criminal charges have been brought against Bhaktipada, but a federal grand jury is to resume an investigation in September.

Bhaktipada said he is unconcerned.

"My own feeling is that it's up to God. I'm here to do His service."

In the meantime, his attorneys are fending off multimillion-dollar civil suits recently filed by Peanuts' cartoon creator Charles Schulz and major league baseball interests.

They allege that New Vrindaban unlawfully used their trademarks in a nationwide panhandling operation that distributed sports souvenirs in return for contributions.

Sources close to the murder investigation say authorities believe Drescher was paid $4,000 to kill Bryant, and that the money came from New Vrindaban.
At the time of his arrest, sources say, Drescher had a notebook--Drescher denies it--that had a description of Bryant's van and addresses where Bryant might be found.

At an Aug. 13 court hearing, four Krishna members, in testimony a prosecutor said seemed "fabricated," said they saw Drescher in Columbus, Ohio, within a day or just hours of when Bryant was killed in Los Angeles.

A Los Angeles car rental agent said in a statement that he rented a car to Drescher two days before Bryant was murdered, and that on the morning of the slaying got a call from Drescher saying he had left the vehicle at Los Angeles International Airport.

The judge ordered Drescher extradited to Los Angeles, but gave him until Sept. 4 to appeal.

Before being led from the courtroom, Drescher again professed innocence.
"They're trying to use me to attack New Vrindaban. They're going to try to prove a conspiracy between myself and New Vrindaban to kill someone. They aren't going to find it."

Back at the penitentiary, Drescher said, "I consider myself a political prisoner."
He said expects to go to California and when he gets there, regardless where he is imprisoned, "I'll preach."

"The business of a sanyassa (swami) is to travel and preach."
If convicted of killing Bryant, Drescher could get the death sentence.

http://articles.latimes.com/1987-08-29/local/me-1178_1_hare-krishna

Jul 12, 1987

Group Says Movement a Cult

By Phil McCombs
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, July 2, 1987; Page C03
On the eve of a "yogic flying" demonstration by followers of His Holiness Maharishi Mahesh Yogi set for the Rayburn Building of the U.S. House of Representatives next week, a group of concerned parents and others known as the Cult Awareness Network (CAN) has gathered here to debunk the flying as fake and sound an alarm about cults.
The group charged in a press conference yesterday that the maharishi's Transcendental Meditation (TM) movement, of which yogic flying is an advanced stage, is not simply a method of relaxation through meditation, but a cult that ultimately seeks to strip individuals of their ability to think and choose freely.
"They want you to dress and think and speak in a certain way and not to ask questions," said Steven Hassan, a former follower of the Rev. Sun Myung Moon who has studied cults for a decade. "They go into hypnotic trances and shut off who they are as a person."
A spokesman for the maharishi, Mark Haviland of MIU's College of Natural Law here, said yesterday that "TM is a very simple, useful thing {with} practical benefits of relaxation, of increased inner potential." He added that TM is "not a philosophy, a life style or a religion."
Two former TM adherents who studied yogic flying at the Maharishi International University (MIU) in Fairfield, Iowa, Joe Kelly and John Taity, gave a demonstration of it at the press conference by sitting cross-legged on the floor and hopping in an awkward forward motion that lifted them completely off the floor a few inches.
"It's strictly physical exercise," said Kelly. "There's nothing spiritual about it."
"It's purely physical," said Taity.
Another former MIU student, Patrick L. Ryan, said that he studied yogic flying there in a "totalitarian environment" where every minute of his day was programmed.
Yet, he said, "I never saw anybody fly."
Dean Draznin, who teaches TM here and identified himself as a spokesman for the movement, discounted CAN's claims, saying that TM is "a very simple, effortless mental technique that's practiced 20 minutes, two times a day. It doesn't involve beliefs or a life style. It gives more energy, more dynamism."
Draznin also disagreed that TM involves any mind control. "We don't force people to take courses," he said. "They can take advanced courses if they choose."
A press release from the maharishi's Age of Enlightenment News Service advertises his "program to create world peace" and is headlined: "TM-Sidhi 'Yogic Flying' Technique to Be Demonstrated in the Nation's Capital."
Haviland said yesterday that "hopping" is the first stage of yogic flying. He added that "hovering" and "actual flight" -- the second and third stages -- have not yet been achieved.
"Given the results we've experienced so far, we feel that it won't be long before we'll be getting onto the second and third stage," Haviland said. He said the important thing is the "coherence" that the "flying" creates individually and collectively, "which leads to world peace."
Ex-members of the TM movement said at their press conference that TM is in fact a religion for its adherents with the maharishi seen as a god. Patrick Ryan has sued the maharishi for compensation for the eight years he said he devoted to raising money and promoting the cause. In leaving TM, Ryan said he had help from CAN and a related group, FOCUS, which offers support for those seeking to leave "cultic or totalistic involvement."
These groups are holding an anticult conference open to the public at the Shoreham hotel starting at 9:30 a.m. today and continuing through tomorrow.
A new group called TM-EX, for those leaving the TM movement, is being formed, according to Ryan.
A spokesman for Rep. Jim Leach (R-Iowa) said yesterday that the congressman set up a room in the Rayburn Building for the maharishi's adherents to demonstrate yogic flying after receiving a request from the MIU, which is located in Leach's congressional district.
The presentation will be made for the benefit of members of Congress and their staff, according to spokesmen for Leach and the maharishi.
Leach'sspokesman said the congressman, after being told of yesterday's criticisms of the TM movement, responded that MIU is "accredited by the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools and also recognized by the Federal Interagency Commission on Education."
He quoted Leach as saying, "I have no objection to any American citizen expressing their First Amendment rights on Capitol Hill or elsewhere."
Hassan said at the press conference -- held at the Shoreham yesterday at the same time that the Maharishi Continental Assembly, a conference for followers of the maharishi, was getting underway in another part of the hotel -- that TM adherents suffer a "destruction of personality. It's an addiction, akin to alcohol and drugs."
He handed out a pamphlet saying that "physical and psychological harm" may result by using TM techniques "even if only for a short time."
Patricia Ryan, the daughter of Leo J. Ryan (D.-Calif.), the representative who was shot to death on Nov. 18, 1978, in Guyana as the Rev. Jim Jones led hundreds of his followers in a mass suicide, said that "bright, idealistic people are the most vulnerable" to movements such as TM. "They become unsuspecting victims."
TM became popular in the 1960s when a number of celebrities, including the Beatles, traveled to India to study with the maharishi. Draznin estimated that 1.5 million Americans have learned TM techniques.
Outside the hotel yesterday, a group of parents from CAN carried pickets against the maharishi's conference.
The signs said: "Don't Be Fooled by Maharishi's Flying Circus," "Parents Against Cults" and "Cults Steal Minds."
One of the parents, Rudy Arkin of Washington, said he lost his son to the Hare Krishnas several years ago. The son eventually "walked out, but without deprogramming. I fear he's out there floating, because we haven't heard from him in over a year."
© Copyright 1987 The Washington Post Company

Jul 2, 1987

Group Says Movement a Cult

Phil McCombs
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, July 2, 1987; Page C03

In the eve of a "yogic flying" demonstration by followers of His Holiness Maharishi Mahesh Yogi set for the Rayburn Building of the U.S. House of Representatives next week, a group of concerned parents and others known as the Cult Awareness Network (CAN) has gathered here to debunk the flying as fake and sound an alarm about cults.

The group charged in a press conference yesterday that the maharishi's Transcendental Meditation (TM) movement, of which yogic flying is an advanced stage, is not simply a method of relaxation through meditation, but a cult that ultimately seeks to strip individuals of their ability to think and choose freely.

"They want you to dress and think and speak in a certain way and not to ask questions," said Steven Hassan, a former follower of the Rev. Sun Myung Moon who has studied cults for a decade. "They go into hypnotic trances and shut off who they are as a person."

A spokesman for the maharishi, Mark Haviland of MIU's College of Natural Law here, said yesterday that "TM is a very simple, useful thing {with} practical benefits of relaxation, of increased inner potential." He added that TM is "not a philosophy, a life style or a religion."

Two former TM adherents who studied yogic flying at the Maharishi International University (MIU) in Fairfield, Iowa, Joe Kelly and John Taity, gave a demonstration of it at the press conference by sitting cross-legged on the floor and hopping in an awkward forward motion that lifted them completely off the floor a few inches.

It's strictly physical exercise," said Kelly. "There's nothing spiritual about it."

"It's purely physical," said Taity.

Another former MIU student, Patrick L. Ryan, said that he studied yogic flying there in a "totalitarian environment" where every minute of his day was programmed.

Yet, he said, "I never saw anybody fly."

Dean Draznin, who teaches TM here and identified himself as a spokesman for the movement, discounted CAN's claims, saying that TM is "a very simple, effortless mental technique that's practiced 20 minutes, two times a day. It doesn't involve beliefs or a life style. It gives more energy, more dynamism."

Draznin also disagreed that TM involves any mind control. "We don't force people to take courses," he said. "They can take advanced courses if they choose."

A press release from the maharishi's Age of Enlightenment News Service advertises his "program to create world peace" and is headlined: "TM-Sidhi 'Yogic Flying' Technique to Be Demonstrated in the Nation's Capital."

Haviland said yesterday that "hopping" is the first stage of yogic flying. He added that "hovering" and "actual flight" -- the second and third stages -- have not yet been achieved.

"Given the results we've experienced so far, we feel that it won't be long before we'll be getting onto the second and third stage," Haviland said. He said the important thing is the "coherence" that the "flying" creates individually and collectively, "which leads to world peace."

Ex-members of the TM movement said at their press conference that TM is in fact a religion for its adherents with the maharishi seen as a god. Patrick Ryan has sued the maharishi for compensation for the eight years he said he devoted to raising money and promoting the cause. In leaving TM, Ryan said he had help from CAN and a related group, FOCUS, which offers support for those seeking to leave "cultic or totalistic involvement."

These groups are holding an anticult conference open to the public at the Shoreham hotel starting at 9:30 a.m. today and continuing through tomorrow.

A new group called TM-EX, for those leaving the TM movement, is being formed, according to Ryan.

A spokesman for Rep. Jim Leach (R-Iowa) said yesterday that the congressman set up a room in the Rayburn Building for the maharishi's adherents to demonstrate yogic flying after receiving a request from the MIU, which is located in Leach's congressional district.

The presentation will be made for the benefit of members of Congress and their staff, according to spokesmen for Leach and the maharishi.

Leach'sspokesman said the congressman, after being told of yesterday's criticisms of the TM movement, responded that MIU is "accredited by the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools and also recognized by the Federal Interagency Commission on Education."

He quoted Leach as saying, "I have no objection to any American citizen expressing their First Amendment rights on Capitol Hill or elsewhere."

Hassan said at the press conference -- held at the Shoreham yesterday at the same time that the Maharishi Continental Assembly, a conference for followers of the maharishi, was getting underway in another part of the hotel -- that TM adherents suffer a "destruction of personality. It's an addiction, akin to alcohol and drugs."

He handed out a pamphlet saying that "physical and psychological harm" may result by using TM techniques "even if only for a short time."

Patricia Ryan, the daughter of Leo J. Ryan (D.-Calif.), the representative who was shot to death on Nov. 18, 1978, in Guyana as the Rev. Jim Jones led hundreds of his followers in a mass suicide, said that "bright, idealistic people are the most vulnerable" to movements such as TM. "They become unsuspecting victims."

TM became popular in the 1960s when a number of celebrities, including the Beatles, traveled to India to study with the maharishi. Draznin estimated that 1.5 million Americans have learned TM techniques.

Outside the hotel yesterday, a group of parents from CAN carried pickets against the maharishi's conference.

The signs said: "Don't Be Fooled by Maharishi's Flying Circus," "Parents Against Cults" and "Cults Steal Minds."

One of the parents, Rudy Arkin of Washington, said he lost his son to the Hare Krishnas several years ago. The son eventually "walked out, but without deprogramming. I fear he's out there floating, because we haven't heard from him in over a year."

https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/cult/trans_med/tm2.htm

Group Says Movement a Cult

Phil McCombs
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, July 2, 1987; Page C03

On the eve of a "yogic flying" demonstration by followers of His Holiness Maharishi Mahesh Yogi set for the Rayburn Building of the U.S. House of Representatives next week, a group of concerned parents and others known as the Cult Awareness Network (CAN) has gathered here to debunk the flying as fake and sound an alarm about cults.

The group charged in a press conference yesterday that the maharishi's Transcendental Meditation (TM) movement, of which yogic flying is an advanced stage, is not simply a method of relaxation through meditation, but a cult that ultimately seeks to strip individuals of their ability to think and choose freely.

"They want you to dress and think and speak in a certain way and not to ask questions," said Steven Hassan, a former follower of the Rev. Sun Myung Moon who has studied cults for a decade. "They go into hypnotic trances and shut off who they are as a person."

A spokesman for the maharishi, Mark Haviland of MIU's College of Natural Law here, said yesterday that "TM is a very simple, useful thing {with} practical benefits of relaxation, of increased inner potential." He added that TM is "not a philosophy, a life style or a religion."

Two former TM adherents who studied yogic flying at the Maharishi International University (MIU) in Fairfield, Iowa, Joe Kelly and John Taity, gave a demonstration of it at the press conference by sitting cross-legged on the floor and hopping in an awkward forward motion that lifted them completely off the floor a few inches.

"It's strictly physical exercise," said Kelly. "There's nothing spiritual about it."

"It's purely physical," said Taity.

Another former MIU student, Patrick L. Ryan, said that he studied yogic flying there in a "totalitarian environment" where every minute of his day was programmed.

Yet, he said, "I never saw anybody fly."

Dean Draznin, who teaches TM here and identified himself as a spokesman for the movement, discounted CAN's claims, saying that TM is "a very simple, effortless mental technique that's practiced 20 minutes, two times a day. It doesn't involve beliefs or a life style. It gives more energy, more dynamism."

Draznin also disagreed that TM involves any mind control. "We don't force people to take courses," he said. "They can take advanced courses if they choose."

A press release from the maharishi's Age of Enlightenment News Service advertises his "program to create world peace" and is headlined: "TM-Sidhi 'Yogic Flying' Technique to Be Demonstrated in the Nation's Capital."

Haviland said yesterday that "hopping" is the first stage of yogic flying. He added that "hovering" and "actual flight" -- the second and third stages -- have not yet been achieved.

"Given the results we've experienced so far, we feel that it won't be long before we'll be getting onto the second and third stage," Haviland said. He said the important thing is the "coherence" that the "flying" creates individually and collectively, "which leads to world peace."

Ex-members of the TM movement said at their press conference that TM is in fact a religion for its adherents with the maharishi seen as a god. Patrick Ryan has sued the maharishi for compensation for the eight years he said he devoted to raising money and promoting the cause. In leaving TM, Ryan said he had help from CAN and a related group, FOCUS, which offers support for those seeking to leave "cultic or totalistic involvement."

These groups are holding an anticult conference open to the public at the Shoreham hotel starting at 9:30 a.m. today and continuing through tomorrow.

A new group called TM-EX, for those leaving the TM movement, is being formed, according to Ryan.

A spokesman for Rep. Jim Leach (R-Iowa) said yesterday that the congressman set up a room in the Rayburn Building for the maharishi's adherents to demonstrate yogic flying after receiving a request from the MIU, which is located in Leach's congressional district.

The presentation will be made for the benefit of members of Congress and their staff, according to spokesmen for Leach and the maharishi.

Leach's spokesman said the congressman, after being told of yesterday's criticisms of the TM movement, responded that MIU is "accredited by the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools and also recognized by the Federal Interagency Commission on Education."

He quoted Leach as saying, "I have no objection to any American citizen expressing their First Amendment rights on Capitol Hill or elsewhere."

Hassan said at the press conference -- held at the Shoreham yesterday at the same time that the Maharishi Continental Assembly, a conference for followers of the maharishi, was getting underway in another part of the hotel -- that TM adherents suffer a "destruction of personality. It's an addiction, akin to alcohol and drugs."

He handed out a pamphlet saying that "physical and psychological harm" may result by using TM techniques "even if only for a short time."

Patricia Ryan, the daughter of Leo J. Ryan (D.-Calif.), the representative who was shot to death on Nov. 18, 1978, in Guyana as the Rev. Jim Jones led hundreds of his followers in a mass suicide, said that "bright, idealistic people are the most vulnerable" to movements such as TM. "They become unsuspecting victims."

TM became popular in the 1960s when a number of celebrities, including the Beatles, traveled to India to study with the maharishi. Draznin estimated that 1.5 million Americans have learned TM techniques.

Outside the hotel yesterday, a group of parents from CAN carried pickets against the maharishi's conference.

The signs said: "Don't Be Fooled by Maharishi's Flying Circus," "Parents Against Cults" and "Cults Steal Minds."

One of the parents, Rudy Arkin of Washington, said he lost his son to the Hare Krishnas several years ago. The son eventually "walked out, but without deprogramming. I fear he's out there floating, because we haven't heard from him in over a year."


© Copyright 1987 The Washington Post Company

Jan 14, 1987

Man Who Said He Didn't Get To Fly Awarded $138,000

Man Who Said He Didn't Get To Fly Awarded $138,000
From News Services and Staff Reports
January 14, 1987
The Washington Post; Page B04

U.S. District Court jury here ordered two Transcendental Meditation organizations yesterday to pay almost $138,000 to a man who contended said the organizations falsely promised he could learn to fly.

The World Plan Executive Council-United States and the Maharishi International University of Fairfield, Iowa, were held liable for fraud and negligence by the federal court jury.

The jury awarded Robert Kropinski $137,890 but refused to grant the punitive damages he had sought in a $9 million lawsuit.

Kropinski, 36, contended he suffered psychological and emotional damage during his 11-year association with Transcendental Meditation.


He testified that he was given false promises including that twice-daily practice of chanting a single sound, would reduce stress, improve his memory, reverse the aging process and promote good health.

Jurors in the month-long trial before U.S. District Judge Oliver Gasch heard testimony about Transcendental Meditation followers reading books with their eyes closed and attempting to fly through a technique known as self-levitation.

The suit alleged that students learned only to "hop with the legs folded in the lotus position."

Mike Tompkins, a spokesman for the organizations, said the groups were deciding whether to appeal the verdict.

Case was overturned on appeal.

Aug 11, 1984

Happy Landings A Foam 'Flight Cushion' For Levitational Letdowns

Quentin Wood  Happy Landings
Quentin Wood

St. Louis Post-Dispatch
August 11, 1984
FAIRFIELD, Iowa 


(AP) Thousands of people who claim to be able to levitate owe their "happy landings" to Quentin Wood. 


Wood, 28, developed a foam "flight cushion" late In 1977, shortly after he said he had learned to levitate by taking a Transcendental Meditation-Siddhi course at Maharishi International University in Fairfield.

Adherents claim they can lift themselves off the ground while sitting cross-legged and practicing TM, a form of mind concentration.

"You could say I had a crash landing," Wood recalled, with a laugh. "I found I needed something to protect myself while I was doing the flying program." 

Wood said he had designed the high-density "portafoam" to give the flying meditator a maximum of "comfort and function." 

The design lends itself to flying in the cross-legged, lotus or kneeling positions, he said. The bottom of the cushion Is nylon for "smooth sliding over any surface," while the entire casing removes for easy washing, be said. All four sizes are equipped with adjustable safety belts. 

Wood used an $800 investment to begin producing and selling the product In 1978. By the end of the year, he had sold $65,000 worth of the cushions, he said. 

"Everyone (who levitates) uses foam or mattresses or something. These cushions really turned out to be the best They're very comfortable and very strong they have to be, they take a real beating," he said. 

Non-meditators are not allowed into the university's Golden Dome of Pure Knowledge, where mass levitations are reported to take place. That prohibition leads most non-meditators to be non-believers. But Wood Insists that levitation is for real. 

"Yeah, we do lift off. That's why we sell so many of these cushions. These cushions cost $50. No one is spending $50 on something they don't use. People are needing this product," he said. 

Wood estimates that he has sold 7,000 portafoams, called "Happy Landings," through the mail and out of his store In the past six years. He also sells several accessories, such as a $1 2 bag to carry the portafoam, and a "portapad" for levitating in rooms that already have foam or mattresses on the floor.

Jul 19, 1984

CADRE OR CULT?

Jeff Whitnack
July 19, 1984

GINO PERENTE, NATLFED & THE PROVISIONAL PARTY

This article appeared in the 1984 issue of The Public Eye magazine

It’s Northern California in early 1971. On an island in the Feather River, about thirteen people are busy with shovels and picks digging a deep hole. The purpose of their endeavor is to enable them all to have a place to hide in case of a feared upcoming police dragnet. Soon the hole becomes so huge that the diggers need to be pulled up from the bottom before they can climb out.

Suddenly a motorboat is heard approaching the island. In the boat are two game wardens. Everyone scrambles and hides in the hole — except for one man left standing near the island’s shore clutching an M-1 rifle in his hand.

Attempting a ruse, he waves to the game wardens and shouts, “Sure hope I can get a big buck!”

“You’d better not, son,” yells back one of the game wardens as they putt-putt on down the river, “It isn’t deer season yet.”

BEWARE THE IDES OF MARCH!


This group of California hole-diggers was only one of several paramilitary squads organized during 1970-1971 by West Coast political organizer Gerald William Doeden, who apparently now uses the name Eugenio Perente.

Calling themselves the Liberation Army Revolutionary Group Organization (LARGO), they operated out of the Little Red Bookstore at 3191 Mission St. in San Francisco. According to several former LARGO members, Doeden had told them they were all a part of an organization called Venceremos. (Venceremos Organization was a revolutionary west coast political group active in the early seventies. It disbanded in October, 1973, and had been a prime target of the FBI’s COINTELPRO disruption activities.)

Gerald Doeden’s group had actually declared war on the State of California. To enunciate this position of armed struggle, LARGO mailed mimeographed proclamations in March of 1970 to several California county governments declaring that a “fully trained, equipped, and manned army of revolution will be operating in Northern California beginning March 15th.”

The squad which was to lead the attacks got cold feet and backed out at the last minute. Following the collapse of the scheme to overthrow the government of California with a handful of earnest, but misguided revolutionaries, LARGO’s leader–the self-appointed latter-day Lenin of the loose-knit adventurist Left, Gerry Doeden of California–simply vanished. Unlike the real Lenin, Doeden has not yet returned–at least not as Doeden–resurfacing instead as Eugenio Perente in Brooklyn, New York.

While LARGO would have undoubtedly failed to overthrow any government, it was large enough, armed enough, and fanatical enough to do real political and physical damage; not to the government, but to themselves and legitimate social change activists. Had LARGO actually launched its woefully-premature attempt at armed military campaigns, the resulting tragedy might have eclipsed the Symbionese Liberation Army’s travails.

DANGEROUS DEJA VU


Today another Doeden-controlled political group is digging a similar, but far deeper and more dangerous hole. Under the umbrella name of the National Labor Federation (NATLFED), and operating through a large number of front groups, Doeden (as Perente) is secretly collecting naive recruits for what could easily become another LARGO-type fiasco.

NATLFED groups include the California Homemakers Association, Eastern Farm Workers Association, the Western and Eastern Service Workers Association, Coalition of Concerned Medical Professionals, Coalition of Concerned Legal Professionals, Temporary Workers Organizing Committee, National Equal Justice Association, and so on. A clandestine core group, thinly buried under all these organizations, calls itself the Communist Party USA (Provisional), Provisional Party, Provisional Communist Party, or Order of Lenin.

Most unnerving is the fact that the person who controls this vast web of interlocking organizations–Eugenio (Gino) Perente–is actually Gerald William Doeden; and further, that Perente is up to the same scenario as before, but this time using a sophisticated nationwide recruitment apparatus which has been successful in attracting volunteers, members to its associations, donations, etc., as well as avoiding any serious scrutiny by the progressive forces in this country. Perente has also apparently called himself Gino Savo and Vincente E. M. Perente-Ramos.

LOOKING UNDER THE RUG


At first glance, the umbrella National Labor Federation may appear to be coordinating just another grass roots organizing drive. And, at first glance, the Provisional Party may appear to be just another communist party in the alphabet soup world of American communist parties. But investigations by several reporters, activists, and volunteer group coordinators suggest otherwise.

There is much evidence to suggest that NATLFED uses consciously implemented, psychologically manipulative techniques as part of its organizing recruitment program; its leadership purposely misrepresents the size, influence, and goals of the group to attract new recruits; it falsely claims to have an official or “special relationship” with several Latin American revolutionary organizations and socialist countries; diverts donations of food, clothing, and cash collected for the needy to the personal use of NATLFED cadre; recruits are required to provide the organization potentially-embarrassing personal information which can–and has–been used to blackmail members into discipline, and former members into silence; death threats are made to members who leave (or attempt to leave) the organization; and that NATLFED circulates false and defamatory information about its critics to community and progressive organizations throughout the country.

The above charges have been made not only by the Public Eye, but by other investigators, journalists, psychological counselors, as well as both former volunteers and volunteer coordinators who have had very negative experiences with NATLFED-controlled agencies engaged in social service activity.

Currently NATLFED is embroiled in a battle over control of a church-related volunteer agency–the Commission on Voluntary Service and Action, publishers of the volunteer service guide Invest Yourself. . . .

The purpose of this article is not to question the right of a revolutionary group to organize, but to examine serious charges of unethical procedures used to recruit individuals into the group, the unsavory and psychologically manipulative methods used to keep members in the group, and the deceptive and fraudulent organizing and fundraising practices of the group both inside and outside of its membership.

Furthermore, the article is intended to expose NATLFED as primarily a self-perpetuating cult, with no legitimate claim to being interested in social activism, Marxism, or revolutionary change.

THE NATIONAL LABOR FEDERATION


The National Labor Federation began with the founding of the Eastern Farm Workers Association on Long Island, NY, in 1972. The Association was founded by Perente and other organizers who apparently were unable or unwilling to work with Cesar Chavez’s United Farm Workers Organizing Committee.

Although the details are unclear, Perente may have spent some time after the LARGO fiasco and prior to organizing the Long Island [Eastern] Farm Workers Association engaged in farmworker organizing. Perente himself claims to have co-chaired the UFW boycott in New York City, although UFW officials deny Perente had any official post in that organization. Nevertheless, 1972 found Perente on the East Coast, having dropped the name Doeden, and involved with the fledgling Long Island association. Since then, Perente and his inner circle have launched other outreach associations which have formed the National Labor Federation.

NATLFED has expanded steadily, so that current organizing drives are located on the East Coast in New York, (New York City, Brooklyn, Utica, Long Island, Lyons, Northport, Smithtown, Bellport, Rochester) New Jersey(Atlantic City, Trenton, New Brunswick) Pittsfield and Boston, Massachusetts, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. On the West coast NATLFED is active in Medford, Oregon; and in the California cities of Redding; Sacramento; Oakland; San Francisco; Santa Cruz; Anaheim; and San Diego. [Webmaster note: This article was written in 1984. Check this site’s current list of entities.] [This was the original web site’s note, not that of anti-fascism.org]

You may have already run into this organization in any one of several ways–their door to door canvassing in low-income neighborhoods in search of members to sign cards and pay dues; their bucket drives in front of shopping centers in search of donations and volunteers; baked goods sales at college campuses; speaking engagements to churches; and their information tables. Or, you may have been the object of one of their drives to target a specific professional group for recruitment, such as has happened with sociologists, lawyers and medical professionals.

To understand NATLFED, one must first be aware that beneath that public reality is a secretive directorate, the “Provisional Party.” The organizational structure of the various groups is best illustrated by visualizing onion-like layers.

The outer layer consists of what NATLFED cadre describe as their “mutual benefits associations,” such social welfare organizations as the California Homemakers Association or the Eastern Farm Workers Association.

These “mass-based” associations are purportedly organized in the interest of the “unrecognized strata” of the labor force such as farmworkers, domestic workers, attendant care workers, and temporary workers. Cadre and volunteers busy themselves with such tasks as signing up low-income people as members, collecting and distributing various benefits such as food, legal services, and medical aid. This mixture of charity, social work, and advocacy obviously brings a small, but steady stream of both volunteers and needy people into their doors.

Parallel to this outward charitable effort by cadre and volunteers, two aspects are immediately evident insofar as their office style are concerned.

One aspect is the fact that the social work functions primarily as a framework for the collection, recording, and cross-referencing of all new information and names into a large and elaborate system of files and paperwork. NATLFED maintains massive files on the political views of thousands of social change activists across the country, with notations as to the potential for recruitment.

[Ed. Note: This habit led the Public Eye to charge in its first (1977) article on NATLFED that the information being collected by NATLFED was identical to that being collected by government agencies targeting activists, and to speculate as to the possibility of the NATLFED information reaching intelligence agency hands.]

Another notable aspect of NATLFED is the organization of all activity and information according to a pre-coded structure of workflow, hierarchy, abbreviated titles, jargon or special language. (Much of this descriptive language–used by NATLFED itself–is borrowed from regular communist organizational structure and theory.) Commonly, volunteers and cadre work late into the night bolstered by a steady stream of freely supplied coffee and cigarettes.

The next level of organization consists of Sponsors, Volunteer Coordinators, and various “Commissars” who provide the bureaucratic elbow grease to speed the flow of information toward the New York headquarters, and motivate–and sometimes coerce–volunteers and recruits.

The final innermost levels are within the Provisional Party. Many volunteers with NATLFED front organizations are unaware of the existence of the secret “Party.”

Most members of the “Party” are expected to quit their jobs, and sever meaningful outside personal ties.

Former members tell of being ordered to “denounce” old friends, receiving letters censored by superiors, and being forced to write return letters to friends that were actually dictated by higher-ups in the organization.

Members are expected to work constantly, often operating at the point of exhaustion with an eighteen hour per day, seven day per week schedule while working both in a NATLFED front organization, as well as attending the various activities connected to the Provisional Party.

Professionals such as doctors, lawyers, and college professors are sometimes allowed to keep their well-paying, influential jobs while turning over money and contacts to NATLFED, but many others are told to quit and devote their time to the “Party.” In either case, their time is still accountable to NATLFED on the same eighteen hour/day, seven day/week schedule.

Party members are willing to do this because they sincerely believe the revolution is imminent–so imminent that the Party has decided the date for the revolution to begin is sometime in early 1984.

[Ed. Note: Although the Provisional Party, in fact, had set the exact date for their attempted overthrow of the government, we feared that revealing this date–which we were totally convinced was merely another in a long series of fraudulent boasts used to keep cadre under discipline–would expose the members of the Provisional Party to the type of government repression the Public Eye has historically exposed and denounced.]A HIDDEN AGENDA

Critics of NATLFED charge it has a hidden agenda: the organizing by the mutual aid associations is not really to solve or address the specific problems of low-income persons, but rather to attract recruits to the Provisional Party. The organizing drives are the bait, which is one explanation for the inability of NATLFED groups to sustain any long-term program beyond the door-to-door level. The outward establishment of the “mutual benefits associations” provides a structure to sign up members in various communities through door-to-door canvassing, the canvassing itself then helps convince potential volunteers they are part of a legitimate grassroots organizing drive, the ongoing social service programs are used to attract well-meaning and idealistic volunteers, as well as to solicit goods and services from merchants–some of which goes to the needy, but much of which goes to the sustenance of the NATLFED cadre.

This merchant solicitation process has become so pressured at times as to be considered extortion by ex-members of NATLFED. One ex-member described a situation where organizing efforts in one area began to fail. The ranks of donating merchants dwindled and NATLFED organizers began to intensify their demands and finally resorted to actual threats. This led to a vicious circle where fewer and fewer merchants donated goods and services, less chance for the cadre to develop new contacts, and an ill-fed, undernourished cadre already short of medical services and unable to work productively for the expected 18-hour days.

INFUSING NEW BLOOD


NATLFED has been fairly successful in getting college students assigned to projects for college credits in social work and related studies. For example, at Sacramento State College, California students are currently assigned to work with the California Homemakers Association (CHA) for credit. Friends World College in Huntington, Long Island, assigns students to the Eastern Farm Workers.

Antioch College in Ohio used to send students to the California Homemakers Association for course credit, but then canceled the arrangement when the charges of cult-like conditions at CHA started to surface in the mid-’70s.

One Antioch school administrator remarked, “much of what you’re telling me about this group I’ve already heard from students. We canceled the program due to the lack of ‘truth in advertising.'”

Another source of recruits for many years was the listing of numerous NATLFED fronts in a legitimate volunteer service catalog published by the church-related Commission on Voluntary Service and Action.

Like an auto-dealership, Perente’s group works very hard using a variety of strategies to get interested people coming through the doors of their outlets. Then a pre-planned, stepwise recruitment protocol guarantees a steady influx of those volunteers into the full-time status of members in the Provisional Party.

In pulling in new recruits and keeping them in, a carrot and stick approach is used. The carrot is the slowly acknowledged and revealed projection of a powerful, large, and committed “party of revolution,” with gross lies about its true history and strength.

NATLFED offers its volunteers training to become “certified” as “professional organizers” if they, in turn, make a definite commitment of their time. The chance is extended to be a “subject of history, and not just an object.” Selected volunteers are given the chance to become “professional revolutionaries” as described in Lenin’s “What Is To Be Done?”

Tidbits of information regarding NATLFED and the Provisional Party are meted out only after commitments are made–they’ll tell you what lies inside the cookie jar if you agree with them as to the color of the jar and promise to help them bake the next batch.

But, like a Kafkaesque nightmare, inside the cookie jar lies another cookie jar with more of the same. It is this arrangement of revelation predicted on prior and unquestioning agreement and commitment that is typical of many cult organizations, be they religious or political in nature.

“We have to remember that people who walk in our doors don’t know how to make a revolution or they would already be doing what we’re doing,” an Oakland member of the Provisional Party once told her fellow members in one of their clandestine meetings. “We’re looking for people who want a revolution.” That’s the “Party Line.”

On the day of their recruitment into the Provisional Party the cadre are told the tale of NATLFED’s “historic genesis” which is claimed to have given rise to the Provisional Party, as well as the group’s claims to have their secret headquarters in Cuba.

The “genesis” tale traces a trail from the old Communist Party, through the Progressive Labor groups guerrilla training in Cuba during the early sixties, guerrilla struggles in Guatemala around 1966, the Bay Area Revolutionary Union, United Farmworkers Union, and, just prior to forming the Eastern Farm Workers, the Venceremos Organization.

That’s the carrot–a chance to be part of an historic struggle in an organization with real credentials and history.

The stick is the physical harm threatened to any one who would challenge or leave the Provisional Party. While there has not been any documented case of violence on this group’s part, threats of both an overt and implied nature are common practice. Many ex-members go underground and fear for their personal safety. Many of the sources for this article agreed to talk to the Public Eye only if we absolutely guaranteed their anonymity.

The author himself received a direct threat when the Oakland leader warned him, “Whatever you have, you’ll lose it.” She then pointedly inquired as to my personal relationships with certain other persons she listed by name.

What distinguishes the Provisional Party from many other groups using the name of a communist party is not only that they lie about their past and present activities, but that the entire organization is actually a brilliantly conceived and self-sustaining cult community. The cult aspects start with the recruitment program and become increasingly evident as one scales up their hierarchical ladder.

The whole question of what makes a group a cult is a difficult and controversial topic, but in this case I speak from my own experience.

MY LIFE AND TIMES WITH NATLFED

I first ran into NATLFED in early 1981. Prior to that I had worked hauling garbage for six years in Chico, Fairfield and Richmond, California. Hauling garbage had been good money and exercise. I was used to the work and we would run through the route in 4-5 hours and still get paid for eight hours work. I liked the work outdoors and felt good about the fact that I could get up and go anywhere in the country and, without too much trouble, find a job making a living wage.

In addition to this work, I had recently been taking nursing prerequisites at a local community college, in anticipation of maybe someday entering the nursing program there.

But a back injury on the job soon changed my life. One day, while at work, I lifted a particularly heavy can. Suddenly it felt as if someone had plugged my lower back into a live wire. Thus began an Alice in Wonderland type journey into the reality of Workman’s Compensation–waiting for months for late checks from the insurance company, constant and demeaning visits to various doctors and lawyers offices with constant innuendo from these professionals, as well as casual acquaintances, that I was perhaps faking my back injury.

Finally, after a year of going back to work, repeated back injuries, etc., it was medically decided that I would be unable to continue hauling garbage for a living. I was then eligible for a rehabilitation program and opted for a career in respiratory therapy–a field I had never heard of before, but since nursing wasn’t offered to me, respiratory therapy seemed a related field where I could use my accumulation of knowledge gained from my nursing prerequisite classes.

In my classes and at hospital clinical rotations, I soon began to learn the high technology practice of ventilator management in intensive care units. While giving breathing treatments to patients with emphysema and bronchitis, and certain other aspects, were rewarding, I saw many people being kept “alive” on ventilators after every organ save the heart had failed. I began to witness capitalistic medicine carried to the extreme. Whereas I had started my career in nursing filled with idealistic notions about my possible role in the health care field, I began to find myself trained for what often were bizarre and cruel situations.

Both my frustration over my back injury and the subsequent loss of my job, along with my revulsion over certain aspects of medicine I was being trained for, spurred on another problem–the growing state of profound alienation I was developing with the local Bay Area left political scene.

It seemed to me that “respectable leftists” did their “political work” in trendy, short-term support groups for Gays, the Third World, prisoners, whales. Or they would travel to the latest mecca of revolution, returning to talk only to each other in endless forums and cafes, where the best of coffee and the richest of chocolates were served. I felt this “let them eat theory” perspective probably had more to do with the addition of croissants on the menu of Jack-In-the-Box that with any real political impact in this country.

To sum up–I was in a state of personal, economic, and ideological crisis. (I used to joke to my friends that I should sue over my back injury for developing a secondary disease called “Pol Potitis”–affecting the politically sensitive areas of the brain and leading to chronic outbreaks against the bourgeoisie and their professional henchmen.)

So, when NATLFED called, I was ready to answer.

THE RECRUITMENT PITCH

I had been involved with a political group collecting medical supplies from the East Bay to be sent to aid Nicaragua. One Saturday afternoon in early 1981, I was busy sorting through some of the supplies which had been stored in the basement of a Berkeley church. Several other people were also there helping out, among them an old acquaintance of mine, a Dr. Garth Shirnbaum. [Ed. note: all names of NATLFED cadre other than Perente’s name have been altered.]

Towards the end of the sorting session, Shirnbaum called me aside and in private, with an air of great importance, told me he had something to talk to me about alone after the work was done. I was very curious as to what he had to say.

As soon as the sorting of medical supplies was over for the day, we both walked out the back door of the church and went and sat in his new Volkswagen Rabbit to talk. On the way out of the church, he asked me if I was cadre to any organization. When I said, “No,” he seemed relieved and began talking.

It took two hours to hear him out. Shirnbaum started out by referring to the recent trip he had made to Nicaragua. He then moved on to painting a picture of the Nicaraguan revolution as one instigated by a super-clandestine group (the Sandinistas) who operated helpful associations to aid the poor of Nicaragua (like mutual benefits associations).

Then came the dares from Dr. Shirnbaum, “Would you have joined the Sandinistas if you had lived in Nicaragua then?

“I maintain that such an organization of revolutionary intent exists in this country now,” asserted Shirnbaum with an air of total seriousness.

Then, without revealing much more, Dr. Shirnbaum gave me two phone numbers–one was for the Oakland chapter of California Homemakers Association (CHA). The other for the Coalition of Concerned Medical Professionals (CCMP), also in Oakland. I was to call either number and use a code to signify that I had had the introductory lecture. Using the code meant saying that I was of “friend of Carlos” and then ask to speak to a woman named “Brook.” (Looking back now, this code routine didn’t seem to serve any real purpose of security, rather it acts as another screening filter. If, after having the canned rap, you then call up their office and use the code, it signifies that you accept their game of intrigue. But, if the person is too skeptical or scared, well then, there are other fish in the area.)

I had never heard anything negative about either CHA or CCMP before. That, combined with my knowing Shirnbaum personally, made it seem like a reasonable (and intriguing) thing to check out. That week, during a lunch break at one of my hospital clinical sites, I called up the CHA office and used the code, saying that I was a “friend of Carlos.” That week, I casually asked several friends what they had ever heard of either CHA or CCMP. All I got back in reply was, “California Homemakers–aren’t they the people that organize domestic workers? I think I hear them talking over KPFA (local radio station) a few years ago.”

SIZING THINGS UP

So, the next Saturday I toured both the CHA and CCMP offices, went on a neighborhood canvass to sign up and collect dues from members in the low income neighborhoods of Oakland.

I was impressed. The volunteers and cadre I met seemed real sincere, dedicated and interested in their projects. These people, combined with the intrigue created by the talk with Dr. Shirnbaum and the vast array of activities–canvassing, housemeetings, outreach phoning, bucket drives, general medical sessions, well-child sessions, combined with the vast membership base in low income areas from coast to coast, all seemed to give them more legitimacy in my eyes. “What a contrast,” I thought, “with the let’s-talk-to-each-other nature of other left groups in the Bay Area.”

Part of the bait that really hooked me was their Coalition of Concerned Medical Professionals. Since I had been studying nursing earlier and most recently had entered respiratory therapy, this aspect of their organization held particular appeal. The CCMP held weekly General Medical Sessions and bi-weekly Well Child Sessions. At these sessions, community members receive “free comprehensive medical care” from medical professionals, supplies, and volunteers that had been organized by NATLFED.

Providing medical services is a much needed service in the Oakland community. More than enough cases of TB, anemia, malnutrition, idiotic health regimens, etc. came to my attention to contrast starkly with my study of spinning dials on ventilators.

Against this background of projected community organizing drive, developed the pitch to join the Provisional Party. Every other Sunday, they hold huge (two hundred people approximately) revivalist-style meetings, which they call the National Labor College. After a few weeks of volunteering with NATLFED, I was invited to join with them at one of these affairs.

These meetings are arranged to have a clandestine, serious and intriguing air. As one leader later remarked to me, “We want to hit them (new recruits) with formality.” One Sunday, prior to leaving the CHA office, I gathered with several other new recruits and waited to set off. We were given a speech on the secretive nature of the upcoming meeting. Envelopes were handed to the NATLFED drivers which contained the address of the meeting. These envelopes were opened only after we had all gotten in the car. We drove across the Bay to San Francisco and entered a hall at the UCSF campus which had been reserved for the occasion. Prior to entering, you signed in and had to sign out before going to the bathroom.

The speaker at these meetings on the West Coast was Dr. Marcus Selene, a former sociology professor from a college in Ohio, who is now “Western Regional Political Commissar.” At one National Labor College, Dr. Selene claimed to the audience that a Provisional Party member had just recently been killed in El Salvador after having been sent there “on assignment” from the Provisional Party to fight alongside their purported sister organization, the FMLN of El Salvador. This lent an air of importance and seriousness to the group.

At another of these meetings, held in May of 1981, one of their Hispanic leaders, a medical student named Alfred Damu, got up dressed in full military uniform and spoke to the assembled crowd. He proceeded to claim that he knew for a fact that a revolution would occur in Chile within two years. This tidbit of alleged internationalist knowledge was dropped on us to bolster the group’s claim of ties to the international revolutionary movement.

Two weeks earlier, another NATLFED leader claimed, “This organization has just placed one of our members on the Teamsters’ Union Executive Council.” The idea was that NATLFED and the Provisional Party was a large and growing movement with increasing power and influence, both domestically and internationally.

During my Easter break from Respiratory Therapy school, I worked full time with NATLFED in Oakland. Working over eighteen hours a day and participating in many of their activities (and meeting their organizers), I became more enthused about the organization. At the end of my one week vacation, I dropped out of my Respiratory Therapy classes, as requested by NATLFED, and became a full-time “organizer” for NATLFED.

THE ‘GENESIS RAP’

Just prior to the decision I made to join NATLFED, I was taken to a secret screening meeting in San Francisco with their West Coast leadership. It was here that, finally, their purported history (or “genesis” as they refer to it), along with the name “Provisional Party” was revealed to me by Dr. Marcus Selene. I paraphrase it here:

In 1958 our people were active in the CPUSA . . . then we were part of the Progressive Labor Movement . . . some 18 of our people went to Cuba in the 1960’s (with Phillip Abott Luce) and were signatories to the founding OSPAAL accords. [Ed. note: OSPAAL is a Cuban solidarity agency.] These same people went to Guatemala where they participated in, and learned from, a disastrous Cuban- sponsored foco attempt at guerrilla warfare. . . . By 1968, our people returned from Guatemala and we were then active in the Bay Area Revolutionary Union on the West Coast. During the San Francisco State strike, the Progressive Labor Party set up a picket against our activities, so we shot seven of them to prove that we were serious . . . our tendency then became the Venceremos Organization. We sprang Ron Beatty from a prison van and hid him in Venceremos safehouses. . . . He turned state’s evidence and so Venceremos had to be officially disbanded . . . but we formed “columns of forty” and later recontacted many of these former Venceremos members . . . this is how our present organization came to be.

Helping to substantiate their claims of “genesis” in my mind was an article I vaguely remembered from an old issue of The Nation. Rummaging through my old copies, I found it–May 17, 1980, “What’s Left–A View of the Sectarian Left,” by George Vickers.

The article contained the following sketch:

Within the BARU, however, a major rift appeared over the role of armed struggle in the party-building process. While one faction emphasized party-building, and changed its name to the Revolutionary Union (RU), Stanford Prof. Bruce Franklin, and others who advocated greater emphasis on armed struggle, broke off to form a new group called Venceremos. Many of the most militant Venceremos members were soon underground or in jail, and within a year those remaining in Venceremos dissolved the organization.

Unofficially, however, many of these former Venceremos members formed a clandestine group called the Communist Party USA (Provisional), which continues to organize through a front body, the National Labor Federation, which in turn is comprised of groups like the Eastern Farm Workers Assoc., Calif. Homemakers Assoc., and other projects set up to organize seasonal workers, temporary workers, and the unemployed. These groups currently have a total of perhaps 200 party members nationally.

Included in the “genesis” initiation lecture of the Provisional party is the claim that Perente’s group is the officially recognized representative of Cuban solidarity in the United States, supposedly through the Organization of Solidarity with the Peoples of Asia, Africa, and Latin America (OSPAAL) in Havana, Cuba. The Provisional Party tells its members that, like the old Comintern based in Moscow, OSPAAL is now the centralized Western Hemisphere communist clearinghouse, based in Cuba. They further claim that their sister organizations in OSPAAL include the Cuban Communist Party, the Nicaraguan Sandinistas, El Salvador’s FMLN, Chile’s MIR, etc.

At the end of this recruitment session, I agreed to join with them. While enthusiasm did play a major role in my decision, after hearing the grisly “genesis” lecture, I was more than a little afraid of what would happen to me had I refused. I was already in so deep and besides, no one else knew where I was that afternoon.

DROPPING OUT

Two months after joining this group, I left it. One day, while returning from taking some new volunteers out on a canvass, I asked a woman volunteer to pull her car over, whereupon I opened the door and got out. I walked to a nearby BART station and escaped. I never went back. It was for the following reasons that I left:

While it was bad enough that we all had to work over 18 hours per day, I became even more angry and suspicious when I was expected to accomplish about eighty hours of work in those 18 hours. I slowly began to suspect that the whole situation was purposefully set up to create a pressure cooker, “boot camp”-type atmosphere where people had neither the physical or emotional energy to question their assignments, much less engage in meaningful ideological discussions.I witnessed how Provisional Party members go around passing themselves off as actual members of the Nicaraguan FSLN on assignment in the USA. I happened to know that these people didn’t belong to the FSLN and, so, it made me wonder about the other claims I had heard. It was just another total fabrication designed to impress members and potential recruits.It began to dawn on me that these people’s idea of what it meant to be a cadre in their organization was somewhat a mixture of a con-artist and a hitman. I began to wonder if they had learned their style from reading J. Edgar Hoover’s Masters of Deceit.At first, the Provisional Party’s deadline for revolution (33 months as of mid-1981) was downplayed to me since I was skeptical. When I first hear of this deadline, I told my Oakland leader that I thought it all a little unrealistic. “While I am impressed with this organization and its potential for growth, I don’t expect to see us holding power that soon,” I told her during one meeting I had where just the two of us were present.
Seeing my skepticism, she replied that the deadline was nothing really definite, but was rather an adjustable guideline to keep them from becoming too complacent. Then, a month-and-a-half later, I was at a National Labor College meeting and one of the national leaders blusters out: “The 33-month deadline is real! The leadership of this organization has their theoretical and real necks on the line! So if you’ve been just an irregular volunteer on some half-assed schedule–GET REAL!” I began to consider the potential for both physical and political disaster implicit in the execution of this deadline. I began to trust nothing and suspect everything regarding the Provisional Party.While in NATLFED, I had never met its leader, Gino Perente However, an old friend of mine had read the earlier 1977 issue of the Public Eye, which named Gino Perente as the leader of NATLFED. This friend of mine had known a “Gino Perente” from back in 1971 as actually being Gerald Doeden. This friend had heard Doeden go by the name “Gino Perente” on several occasions.
Over the years, I had heard bizarre and harrowing tales from several old friends about the old LARGO group and its leader, “Gino.” When members of the SLA died in the LA shootout, one of them commented to me, “That’s how we almost ended up.” Now, ten years later, the circle was completed when my friend stopped by the NATLFED office I worked at and told me, “It’s the same guy–the same Gino you’ve heard of from us before!”
“Gulp,” I thought to myself, “You’ve been had.”I caught a bad case of the flu and was very sick for a few days. This gave me a rare opportunity, for a cadre in NATLFED, to think things over thoroughly. It seemed ridiculous and dangerous to me, at the time, to bring up my fears and concerns to NATLFED leaders. I resolved to leave and did so at the first available opportunity.

I have since become convinced that deception was used to attract me to NATLFED, and cultic techniques were used to keep me in. My welfare and destiny was controlled by a group in New York I really knew nothing about–other than the lies I had been told. I resolved to find out the truth.

THE INVESTIGATION

After discussing NATLFED over the phone with Public Eye editor Chip Berlet, he asked me if I would be willing to write an article for publication. Upon agreeing to do so, I launched an investigation into NATLFED, its claims, and its leader, Gino Perente.

At first, my research centered around their tales of historic “genesis” and claimed international ties. Not really knowing about, or feeling secure with, the cult issue, I wanted to pin down some purely “political” issues.

If one stands back and looks at their whole “genesis” story, it does begin to make sense from one angle. If you wanted to make something up which would be almost impossible to disprove totally (groups such as Progressive Labor Movement, BARU, and Venceremos have since disbanded and former members are somewhat reluctant to discuss past activities), would impress new recruits with a picture of a wise, and an experienced leadership and, perhaps most importantly, would instill fear into new recruits of ever crossing or leaving the organization, then the NATLFED/Provisional Party’s tale is perfect–except research proves it to be a fabrication.

As one ex-member who helped to found CHA in Sacramento in 1973 remarked to me, “I heard people claim that they were in Venceremos when I knew they weren’t. I don’t doubt they would lie if they thought they could use it to their advantage.”

In researching their claims, I talked with several people who went to Cuba in the early 60’s with the Progressive Labor tour at the same time as Phillip Abbott Luce. None knew of any such political tendency or OSPAAL signatures, as claimed by the Provisional Party.

I spoke with an ex-BARU and Venceremos members who felt that the Provisional Party’s genesis tale was unfounded in fact. One of these people was H. Bruce Franklin, former Central Committee member of Venceremos Organization. Franklin explained to me that he doesn’t claim to know everyone who was or wasn’t in Venceremos, nor does he usually like to talk about other people’s involvement in that organization. But, Franklin did know the Gino Perente who ran the Little Red Bookstore in San Francisco in 1971. Franklin emphatically denied to me that Gino was ever a member, or involved with, Venceremos Organization. I believe him.

Then I contacted George Vickers, the author of The Nation article which gave credence to NATLFED Provisional Party’s claim of having descended from Venceremos. It seems that Vickers made an honest mistake and merely took on faith what Gino Perente told him. He had no other source of information. Vickers now disbelieves the tale of the Provisional Party springing from Venceremos.

CLAIMED INTERNATIONAL TIES

As part of the introduction to the Provisional Party, Nicaragua’s revolutionary history was twisted around to parallel the present efforts and projected organizing drives of the Provisional Party. After researching Nicaragua’s road to revolution it became patently obvious that the Provisional Party’s rendition of history was a fairy tale. The prestige of the recent Nicaraguan revolution was used to impress potential recruits and lead them into the Provisional Party.

I also had come to learn that the two-hour “first person rap” I had heard detailing the Provisional Party’s ties to the Nicaraguan revolution had first been prepared and taped by someone else, then later memorized by various NATLFED cadre, including Dr. Shirnbaum. A few months after joining the Provisional Party I witnessed another NATLFED cadre, this one having never been to Nicaragua, giving the same canned rap to several other targeted recruits, It was all a cheap, yet sophisticated trick.

As for the claims of a headquarters in Cuba, the claim that The Provisional Party is given special status through the OSPAAL accords, and all the other claims regarding a so-called “special relationship with the government and Party in Cuba–they are all false. When the Public Eye contacted the Cuban government regarding this investigation, the proper agency for coordinating international friendship and support work (ICAP-not OSPAAL) supplied an official document outlining their policies which include the stated decision not to recognize any political formation or group in the United States as having a “special” or superior status. . . .

Leaders in several groups who regularly send support and friendship delegations to Cuba called the Provisional Party’s claims not only false but also dangerous to Cuban-American Friendship work.

DECEPTION AS PRACTICE

One former NATLFED organizer admits the organizing and distribution of benefits was not primarily aimed at those people who needed assistance, but was aimed at providing as context from which discipline and commitment would be instilled in the cadre. He insists this was a conscious organization-building policy and justifies those occasions when cadre used donations for their own food, travel and lodging needs.

The theory seems to be that since a successful Marxist revolution will in the long run greatly benefit the working class and disadvantaged, it’s OK to rip off a few poor people and workers along the way in order to build the “true” revolutionary party. In short: The ends justify the means–any means.

Most Marxists and Leninists interviewed for this article found such rationalizations obnoxious and a distortion of the writings of Marx and Lenin. Several pointed out that this type of distortion was popularized by anti-communist and right-wing groups who pull quotes out of context and ignore the large number of statements which contradict this inference in the voluminous writings of Marx and Lenin.

As far as I’m concerned, calling NATLFED a Marxist organization is like calling the “Moonies” a Christian organization. Just because they claim to be Marxists and revolutionaries doesn’t make it so.

Are other distortions and deceptions commonplace within NATLFED? This is how one former Volunteer with NATLFED’s Oakland branch phrased it:

At first sight the work here seems ideal–Low income people have an organization which is working in their interest. . . . You read about this positive impression in my previous reports. After three months of experience with this project [however, I must report that] reality is very different.

Members are told that this is their organization. To the contrary, most members [outside New York] do not even know about the National Labor Federation. The structure is ambiguously organized from top to bottom. Members are at the [bottom] of the hierarchy. . . . No decisions are made collectively, members do not have any power of decision. . . . It is a lie if they are told that they themselves are deciding about the organization. . . . I have been told that volunteers are not supposed to be thinking about what they are doing.

Volunteers and members are not taken seriously, but [are being] used. They are being lied to if it is useful to the organization. I have experienced [these lies] often….

Financial matters are totally obscure. Some money goes to the top, but almost nobody knows where to–particularly not the members….

As soon as a volunteer criticizes anything he will be interviewed by a trained co-worker . . . [it appears to be] just like an interrogation. Systematically, he will be driven into defense. Nobody will listen to the problem, he is just a ‘stupid’ volunteer. I have never [known] criticism [to be] really listened to.

Contacts to the outside are [severely limited], I do not know anything but work. You may ask why I do not face my conflicts here–the militarist structure and the way in which conflicts are dealt with are incompatible with [raising criticisms internally]. It is assumed that anyone who does not like [the way things are] leaves. All who are of different opinions are stupid [and] ridiculous. . . . One who does not cooperate is a murderer because he allows [poor people to] continue to starve. [I am told that] the only way for real change is [through] this organization.

I do not want to cause any panic, but this organization is dangerous, at least incalculable.

The above excerpt not only discusses the conscious deception that is integral to the NATLFED organizing style, but makes several references concerning enforced allegiance techniques which some critics charge make NATLFED a cult group.
Is NATLFED a Cult?

Now that I look back at my experience in NATLFED, it sure seems to fit all the criteria for being a dangerous cult:

a schedule designed to produce chronic exhaustion,long droning lectures while followers are already exhausted,wild ideas and beliefs which attain the force of psychotic delusion,predictions of change or doom around the corner,the POW camp-type atmosphere,followers quitting their jobs and severing outside personal and economic ties,the historic sense of mission,the operating under tight discipline and secrecy,the extolment of qualities of ruthlessness and fanatical determination,a “Triumph of Will” approach, eventually pushing cult members to adopt a “beyond good and evil” mentality,the kneejerk calling of any critics “government agents.”THIS IS GINO PERENTE’S NATIONAL LABOR FEDERATION.

Being a political cult, the Provisional Party distorts Marxist classics much the same way the Moonies distort Biblical passages. Religious cults prey upon the guilt feelings of recruits who are systematically made to be ashamed of not living up to Christian or other religious ideals. In the Provisional Party, recruits who sincerely want to be involved in social change are psychologically manipulated into believing that they would be traitors to the “Cause” if they rejected the discipline of the only “true” revolutionary party in America.

To ensure that recruits never successfully challenge the carefully orchestrated apocalyptic reality within NATLFED, emotionally disruptive and fatigue-producing techniques are used. Writing in the religious magazine Christian Century, associate editor Jean Caffrey Lyles put it this way:

Some former recruits describe NATLFED as both militaristic and cult-like (“like the Moonies,” said one), an organization that works recruits up to 18 hours a day, keeping them in a state of chronic fatigue, subjects them to droning sessions of indoctrination, and discourages critical thinking. New arrivals at the local units are given books by Marx, Lenin and Stalin as assigned reading.

Volunteers have no permanent base but are moved from place to place, sleeping in a different location each night. Two volunteers are rarely left alone together, and are told only as much as they need to know to carry out an assignment. One former volunteer recalled: “A lot of the time you wanted to go up to somebody and ask them, ‘What are we doing?’ but there was no one to go up to.

Another former member described being shuttled from house to house, sometimes sleeping on the floor of the local NATLFED office, or even a garage. Food was plentiful when visitors and potential recruits were around, but other times cadre would go whole days without food depending on the success of local solicitations and organizing drives. Ideological discussion was not available since the cadre were simply lectured to and were ordered to work from pre-written instructions given political questions and situations. Copies of some of these instruction sheets obtained by the Public Eye show attempts to control behavior in virtually any situation cadre would encounter.

WHO’S IN CHARGE HERE?

The innermost onion core behind the Provisional Party is controlled by Gino Perente and a handful of his very trusted followers. Several of these followers joined with Perente as adolescents over ten years ago, and have subsequently spent their entire adult lives with him and his cause. Headquarters for the Provisional Party is a Brooklyn brownstone house referred to as “the Cave.” Maps are on the wall, desks are crowded with members busily filing and doing correspondence and research, walkie-talkies are used for communication between the floors of the “Cave.” A former member of NATLFED on the East Coast: “You asked me why I left the organization. The reason was Gino. Before you ever met him there is a big buildup that you’re going to meet ‘The Old,’ as they refer to him. You’re taken to a room where he sits alone with you and reads from a book.” She assumed that she was expected to be in awe of Gino. She was not sufficiently impressed to remain in the organization. Many members are.

As for what Gino gets out of all this–another former member who knew Gino well remarked, “Look, he gets a following, he’s comfortable, and the culture and intrigue are exciting to him.” Yet Gino Perente is a far more complex person than that description implies.

PERENTE AS DOEDEN

Gerald William Doeden was born in 1937, reportedly in Twin Falls, Idaho. Gerald’s father was an old Wobblie (member of the activist International Workers of the World, IWW) who died when Gerald was a young boy.

By 1957, Gerald and his mother, Irene, moved to Marysville, California–a Northern California agricultural town situated near the juncture of the Feather and Yuba Rivers.

This author interviewed over a dozen Marysville residents who remember Doeden well, and confirm each other’s accounts. One interviewee asked, “Is he still calling himself Gino Perente?” He is remembered as somewhat of a town character. From all these interviews, one common picture emerges of Doeden–that of an extremely brilliant, well-read con artist with a reputation among friends for heavy drinking and a difficulty handling recreational drug use. He is said to have lived by a cynical twist of the Biblical saying, “A stranger came along and I ‘took him’ (in).”

When Gerald Doeden was offered a scholarship to Yuba College, he refused it, telling his friends, “If I can’t steal it, then I don’t want it.”

Several of Doeden’s old friends related a tale of how when they all once went out drinking together with Doeden, he actually paid for drinks with a check he’d signed, “Jesus H. Christ.” Doeden was never prosecuted, apparently because the merchant did not wish to appear in court and publicly admit he’d actually accepted such a check.

Hearing this story reminded me of a taped lecture by Perente that I had heard while a member of NATLFED, when Perente exclaimed, “Joe Hill was guilty as hell. After he died, every socialist cocksucker wrote a book about him. What about the guy who helped him rob the market? That’s our hero–he robbed a capitalist and got away with it.” Perente seems to consider such activities to be salutary and romantic.

Doeden’s physical impairment is a result of his tendency to drive like a maniac, according to several old friends. Once he was involved in a serious car accident and fractured his leg in several places as well as sustaining other major injuries to his legs. The doctors wanted to amputate, but Doeden refused and had his leg in a cast for several years, developing osteomyelitis.

“He refused to wear crutches. I remember him always hopping around with that bad leg,” said Milt Carland of the Marysville Appeal Democrat. Doeden carries that limp to this day and some reports say his leg continues to deteriorate.

One woman who was very close to Doeden in the late sixties described him as an “extraordinarily sensitive, sad, crippled genius, with an enormous amount of anger.”

Once, while out drinking coffee at an all-night Marysville restaurant, a fellow customer called Doeden “uncouth.”

“What do you mean, uncouth?” replied Doeden, who then proceeded to recite, from memory, entire sections from Shakespeare’s play As You Like It.

Doeden worked in Marysville as a disc jockey and newscaster for local radio station KAGR, as well as doing some freelance advertising sales for the station. He also moonlighted as a local Shakespearean actor. Toward the late sixties, Doeden sought help for his drinking and drug problems. Friends say he went first to Alcoholics Anonymous and later to Synanon.

I raise this issue not to smear Doeden by mentioning his personal problems, which he apparently successfully overcame, but because there are some troubling and important similarities between the style and practice of Perente’s Provisional Party cult and the picture of Synanon portrayed in David Gerstel’s account of his experience in Synanon: Paradise, Inc.

PARADISE, INC. — PARADISE LOST

In Gerstel’s account, Synanon leader Charles Dederich is referred to as “The Old Man” by Synanon followers. In the Provisional Party, Gino is referred to as “The Old.” In both Synanon and the Provisional Party, members are exhorted to “walk the walk, not just talk the talk.”

Doeden’s exact activities from 1969 to early 1970 are still a mystery. But, by late 1970, Gerald Doeden, recently rehabilitated Shakespeare enthusiast, with the blood of his Wobblie father coursing through his veins, apparently discovered his political self when he created LARGO. Amidst the sub-culture and intrigue of militant politics, Doeden found he could gather a following, thereby encapsulating himself from reality. He got the first real taste of the potential power of his charismatic leadership.

So, by 1971, Doeden had opened the Little Red Bookstore in San Francisco. Going by the name Gino Savo, he proceeded to organize local activists throughout Northern California into his LARGO group. They proceeded with plans of launching military war against the government beginning March 15, 1970.

The plans collapsed. Gerry Doeden faded away.

In 1972, Doeden turns up on Long Island to organize the Long Island Association, now the Eastern Farmworkers’ Association (EFWA).

According to two ex-NATLFED members I talked with, Perente started the EFWA after being fired by the United Farm Workers from his job as co-coordinator of the UFW New York boycott office. The United Farm Workers have denied to me that Perente (or Doeden) was ever on the staff of the UFW. There is agreement that there never have been any formal working ties between the UFW and any part of NATLFED.

Whatever the technical truth may be about Perente’s claimed relationship in the past to the UFW, several things of interest do stand out regarding Synanon and UFW. Synanon did have a relationship with UFW. Charles Dederich and Cesar Chavez apparently were personal friends. For awhile, Chavez incorporated a Synanon group activity called “The Game” into the UFW’s internal structure. It is perhaps in this milieu of relationships that Doeden further consolidated his development and style.

Tactics used by NATLFED, such as housemeetings and canvassing, as well as the name “Eastern Farm Workers” and other organizational paraphernalia, certainly point to the possibility that Perente was exposed enough to the UFW in order to copy and later project some of its appealing organizational style. Unlike the UFW, however, Perente’s group seldom achieves anything of lasting significance for the membership base they maintain in their “mass based association.” Those people only serve as a fly-paper used to attract new cult members. Any long-term successful struggle for real gains would focus attention on NATLFED’s activities, and public scrutiny is not something Perente values.

While Perente’s exposure to the UFW may have provided him with an appealing model, it seems that his dealings with other groups in addition to Synanon have provided him with models of more concrete internal cult-like structures. I am now speaking of Fred Newman’s International Worker’s Party (IWP) and Lyndon LaRouche’s National Caucus of Labor Committees (NCLC), both based in New York City.

Newman is now best known for his work with the New Alliance Party and the New York Institute for Social Therapy, both labeled cultic by some critics. LaRouche is currently once again seeking the Presidency of the United States, this time as the Democratic Party nominee, but using the organization front: The National Democratic Policy Committee.

NATLFED’s preposterous claim of having placed one of their members on the Teamster’s Union Executive Council does actually parallel a real achievement of LaRouche’s NCLC who did see one of their close Teamster allies reach that office. This Teamster/NCLC relationship was detailed in Dennis King’s December 1981 article in High Times magazine: “Hippocrites — Anti-Drug Cult Linked to Mob Cronies.”

According to King, NATLFED’s relationship with LaRouche was shorted-lived. “Much more significant was NATLFED’s relationship with the Newmanites [IWP]. That relationship went on at least through 1977, and still to this day there is some communication between them. In 1976 fusion talks were held between NATLFED and IWP.”

Says King, “Although Gino worked with Fred Newman, he had a certain contempt for him–referring to him as ‘Fat Freddy’ and regarding Newman’s group as not altogether reliable.” [Ed. Note: Fat Freddy is a disheveled underground comic character].

Specific similarities can still be seen between the style of NATLFED and the IWP, which now uses the name New Alliance Party; the use of bucket drives to solicit funds and pitch for volunteers; the vast amount of mindless paperwork that followers must devote themselves to; and, according to King, “the surfacing of selected cult members to participate in the normal life of the community while keeping their real agenda hidden.”

For both the old IWP and NATLFED, says King, the use of what they call “strata organizing” exists “merely to give a sense of mission to the cult, feed the vanity of the cult leaders, and provide a cover for various fund-raising and recruitment rip-offs.”

[Ed. Note: [T]he Public Eye no longer feels it is accurate to call Newman’s political network a cult. We do feel that at one point in its development it was fair to characterize the group as a cult, and we still have strong criticisms of the group’s organizing style and the relationship between Newman’s Therapy Institute and his political organizing.]

While the possibility of an ongoing relationship between NATLFED and NCLC has long been a matter of speculation and concern, this relationship seems doubtful. Unfortunately, most concern about NATLFED has revolved around this point to the exclusion of other concerns. No matter their past or resent ties to LaRouche– Perente’s group is a potentially dangerous cult in its own right. There are some critics of NATLFED who strongly feel that the whole organization is part of an FBI COINTELPRO-type operation designed to gather information on, and disrupt, the American left. While not dismissing this as a possibility, I have found no direct evidence to support this view. But NATLFED is so far over the edge that it really may not matter whether or not they are part of any pre-planned plot or conspiracy in terms of the potential for disaster. They are dangerous to themselves, the progressive movement and the real interests of poor and working people.

Perente appears to be extending his political influence. Using the name Eugenio Vincente Perente-Ramos, Perente is listed as the business agent of the Texas Farm Workers Union, and his cadre are involved in producing literature for that group. Already this relationship has further isolated the Texas Farm Workers from broad- based support from labor unions and the progressive community.

The Texas Farm Worker connection provides NATLFED with yet another cover to rope in more recruits and connections. NATLFED is currently organizing TFWU Support Committees on the East Coast.

Further, it would be callous to disregard the plight of those sincere individuals who have been snared by NATLFED and the Provisional Party through the use of psychologically-manipulative techniques–and more potential cult members continue to be fed into Perente’s operation through the reputation it gained while publishing the Commission on Voluntary Service and Action’s guide Invest Yourself, which NATLFED continues to publish unilaterally. . . . Another group which appears to be a source of volunteers is the legitimate Hispanic law student organization, La Raza Legal Alliance.

Perente also seems to be moving in the direction of penetrating organized labor in the role of a consultant and through the provision of legal and support services.

Where Perente is heading is difficult to predict. It is ludicrous to expect that the timetable for “revolution” in early 1984 will be adhered to; but Perente shows no signs of fading away; rather he shows signs of extending his influence.

As one sociologist whom Gino tried to recruit said, “I think that Gino sees himself as some kind of modern-day American version of Lenin, who plans to rise to power by playing off one group against the other–a kind of double, double agent.”

CLEANING OUR OWN DIRTY LINEN

So, how can we, the progressives of this country, allow this group to operate in our midst unchallenged? Part of the reason Perente’s group may appear to be part of the left political spectrum is that we allow them to do so. Any group may label itself a communist party, or have a progressive exterior front, and seek to operate clandestinely. But, this group is not really hiding from the government, but rather from the public in general and the left in particular.

Look at the history of any past revolutionary movement forced to struggle through a clandestine organization. What was clandestine has usually been only the identity of local members, the location of leadership, and very specific strategy or tactics. But the long-term goals of the organizations, and the group’s ideology are usually public knowledge, so that there can be discussion, feedback, and trust from all sectors of the people seeking the revolutionary transformation of society. And real revolutionaries are often willing to risk paying a heavy price for making such information available to the working class because they know it is an indispensable part of the process.

Nor should we hesitate to challenge NATLFED on the basis of its claims to be a labor organization. NATLFED itself has denied being a labor organization to the Department of Labor and there is no evidence to suggest that NATLFED represents workers before management anywhere in the United States. The only labor NATLFED is truly organizing is the hard labor of its exploited cadre and volunteers.

The organizations described in the church-related volunteer guide Invest Yourself are neither labor organizations nor “mutual benefit” associations. They are in fact local service organizations where free legal and medical help is traded for the recipients’ signed pledge of “membership” in the organization. These one-time benefits recipients are the source of NATLFED’s claims of vast numbers of members and supporters.

Although it is admittedly somewhat embarrassing, it has not been really too hard for me to face up to the fact that I was stupid enough to be conned by this cult group. I’ve been conned before and will probably be conned again. There are far more intelligent people than I, with fine motivations, still trapped in the NATLFED cult.

What profoundly disturbs me is this group has been out canvassing in poor neighborhoods across the country and drawing in young (and some old) people with idealistic, progressive ideas for over ten years now. And, for the most part, they have gone unchallenged, unexposed, and in some cased, even aided by the progressive movement
This entry was posted in Articles, Eyes Right Blog and tagged army revolutionary group organization, cadre or cult, gino perente, ides of march, jeff whitnack, largo,


http://www.politicalresearch.org/1984/07/19/cadre-or-cult/