MANY PBS STATIONS WON'T SHOW KNOCKING !

by DannyHaszard 79 Replies latest watchtower scandals

  • Sunspot
    Sunspot
    After watching their documentary "Knocking," you might almost be tempted to invite the next Witness who shows up at your home in for a cup of coffee and a chat.

    And THIS is exactly what I fear the MOST in having the general public watch "Knocking" just to see what it is "all about". The average Joe that knows little or nothing about the WTS would be more amenable to inviting the JWs inside when they are " briefly stopping by", and the clever WTS indoctrination process is going full swing before the householder even knows what hit him.

    I don't fear "free speech" as such...but I DO FEAR what the WTS can do and the involvement of nice people and their families, having been a victim of their peculiar teachings and unchristian policies.

  • DannyHaszard
    DannyHaszard

    KNOCKING Update
    *please forward to friends*

    NATIONAL BROADCAST DAYS AWAY -- WILL IT BE SHOWN IN YOUR CITY?

    This is it. PBS will nationally offer KNOCKING for broadcast Tuesday
    May 22
    at 10pm on the documentary series "Independent Lens." IMPORTANT NOTE:
    Many
    local PBS stations have chosen to show KNOCKING very late at night,
    even
    after midnight. Some local stations are not showing it at all
    . You must
    check with your local PBS station to find out when KNOCKING will be
    shown.
    Be sure to mention the series "Independent Lens."

    Use this link to find out what day/time KNOCKING will be shown in your
    city:

    http://www.knocking.org/PBS.html

    DVD STILL AVAILABLE

    If you can't watch KNOCKING on PBS, you can still order the DVD for
    home
    viewing. The DVD version is longer than the PBS version and has 3 hours
    of
    extra video material and a 48-page study/discussion guide. The extras
    include expert interviews with scholars and historians on issues of the
    Holocaust, medical ethics and civil liberties. There are also official
    interviews with members of the Jehovah's Witness world headquarters.

    Order here:
    http://www.knocking.org/dvd_home_edition.lasso




    This Update is sponsored by Open Door Films, and is provided as a
    public
    service to support conversations around the film, "Knocking." If you
    wish
    to unsubscribe from this newsletter, just send a blank email to
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  • DannyHaszard
    DannyHaszard
    This is it. PBS will nationally offer KNOCKING for broadcast Tuesday
    May 22
    at 10pm on the documentary series "Independent Lens." IMPORTANT NOTE:
    Many
    local PBS stations have chosen to show KNOCKING very late at night,
    even
    after midnight. Some local stations are not showing it at all
    . You must
    check with your local PBS station to find out when KNOCKING will be
    shown.
    Be sure to mention the series "Independent Lens."
  • DannyHaszard
    DannyHaszard
    No comment box but check out the wrong information in the side bar and you can write the reporter. " ;Knocking," an inside look at Jehovah's Witnesses, will premiere ...
    NorthJersey.com, NJ - 39 minutes ago
    Journalist Joel P. Engardio -- whose parents were Jehovah's Witnesses -- produced and directed the Independent Television Service film with award-winning ... [email protected]write reporter J.W. FYI
    Known for their door-to-door ministry, Jehovah's Witnesses consider themselves Christians but differ in significant ways from traditional Christian denominations. They believe, for example: • The human soul ceases to exist at death. Only the righteous are awakened from their eternal "sleep." • Satan is the invisible ruler of the world. • Righteous people will be physically resurrected on a renewed Earth. • 144,000 specially chosen individuals will be born again and enter heaven. That number comes from the 12 Tribes of Israel. They do not believe:The Bible should be taken literally.They have their own version of the Bible, in which certain passages have been changed . In the divinity of Jesus or the Trinity of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost. • In the need for clergy. • In celebrating secular or religious holidays such as Christmas and birthdays. • That blood transfusions are ever permitted.
  • DannyHaszard
    DannyHaszard

    Know this,,,, PBS own market survey say's that 80% of viewers will be active and former JW's so don't fret as there is no way they will convert the world.

  • DannyHaszard
    DannyHaszard
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    10:00 Independent Lens "Knocking" Filmmaker Joel P. Engardio, who was raised in a Jehovah's Witness family, follows two families like the one he grew up in. Their personal stories illuminate the unlikely ways in which Jehovah's Witnesses have protected freedom of speech for the public at large, and have advanced scientific research despite their religious objections to medical procedures.G
  • DannyHaszard
    DannyHaszard

    Documentary tells the story of Jehovah's Witnesses
    Houston Chronicle , TX -16 minutes ago
    But over the course of four years, this woman's knocking and her message got to Stevens and his family, and in 1973 they became Jehovah's Witnesses. ... .....Houston's Stevens said he hopes the masses will watch the documentary and feel compelled to learn more. Before a district convention of Witnesses next month, Witnesses will be blanketing the area with invitations to attend, he said. "The thing is that if they see the film and they want to learn more, all they have to do is wait for someone to knock on the door.".... [email protected] reporter

  • J-ex-W
    J-ex-W

    This is an outage Joel Engardio was what the Watchtower would have defined as a "rebellious child" who refused his 'obligation' to get baptized possibly to evade accountability and in fact is now an outspoken homosexual political activist. The Watchtower condemns homosexuality as a fundy religion and has disfellowshipped thousands of gays and lesbians I was forced to get baptized at age 11 and consequently was made to be held accountable for my later dissident views on the Jehovah's Witnesses religion. The watchtower is NOW using Joel as their advocate

    Yep. And this while my JW son was just telling me last night that he is going to get rid of a music CD he really likes because he just realize/ suspects the musician is GAY................... I had to seriously hold my tongue on this so I wouldn't be outed as defending homosexuality and having dissident views myself.

  • DannyHaszard
    DannyHaszard
    BeliefWatch: Witness
    Newsweek - 12 minutes ago
    What interests Engardio—who was raised as a Jehovah's Witness by his mother and has since left the church—is that despite their fierce separatism and ...

    [email protected] Email newsweek editors BeliefWatch: Witness By Lisa Miller Newsweek May 28, 2007 issue - With a presidential candidate, a recent television special and 13 million adherents worldwide, the Mormons have gotten an extra dose of media attention lately. But there's another indigenous American religion that is now making a bid for the spotlight. Formed in the 19th century, four decades after the Latter-day Saints, it, too, emphasizes a bizarre-seeming afterlife, attracts clean-cut and socially conservative adherents, encourages its members to evangelize and raises the ire of more-mainstream believers suspicious of its claims to Christianity. With "Knocking," a documentary airing this week on PBS, director Joel Engardio draws back the curtain on America's million Jehovah's Witnesses. People know of Witnesses, if they know of them at all, as the folks who refuse to say the Pledge of Allegiance. They also don't celebrate birthdays or Christmas, they don't vote, they don't fight in wars and they refuse to accept blood transfusions, even in life-threatening circumstances. They believe the end of the world is coming soon, and they bear witness to God by knocking on doors. What interests Engardio—who was raised as a Jehovah's Witness by his mother and has since left the church—is that despite their fierce separatism and fundamentalism, they use the courts to fight for their right to worship as they please and their legal battles, he argues, have made the world a better place for everyone else. In "Knocking," a young man who needs a liver transplant but refuses a transfusion is admitted to one of a growing number of hospitals that are experimenting with bloodless surgery. Engardio's own story is compelling. Witnesses, like the Amish, are baptized as teenagers or young adults; at that moment, they accept the mantle of their faith. Engardio declined to be baptized, he says, because he thought he could do more good in the world than out of it. He is also gay. His sexual orientation didn't lead him to abandon the church, but long term, "it wouldn't have been a good fit," he says. "I broke my mother's heart. Twice." (Unlike some other fundamentalist sects, the Witnesses condone recreational sex, as long as it's within marriage; they prohibit homosexual sex.) And what of all the knocking, which so many people find so irritating? Witnesses knock on doors, he explains, in order to live as much as they can like the disciples of Jesus. That way, they will be prepared for Armageddon and for the perfect world of peace and health on Earth that will follow.

  • DannyHaszard
    DannyHaszard
    Engardio declined to be baptized, he says, because he thought he could do more good in the world than out of it. He is also gay. His sexual orientation didn't lead him to abandon the church, but long term, "it wouldn't have been a good fit,"

    WOW how many of us got that choice and then become a WTBS spokesperson for newsweek?

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