Sydney Morning Herald: Economic Climate a Breeding Ground for Cults

by AndersonsInfo 11 Replies latest jw friends

  • AndersonsInfo
    AndersonsInfo

    http://www.smh.com.au/national/economic-climate-a-breeding-ground-for-cults-20111101-1mu6i.html

    Economic climate a breeding ground for cults

    Leesha McKenny RELIGIOUS AFFAIRS
    November 2, 2011 - 12:00AM

    Global fears of economic or environmental upheaval feed the growth of gurus and damaging cults that prey on the weak, a visiting French government expert has warned.

    Georges Fenech, president of France's Interministerial Mission for Monitoring and Combating Cultic Deviances, said it was working for greater international co-operation in dealing with sectarian abuses – with one in five French, or 12million people, affected in some way by a cult.

    "We're going through an age where there are numerous crisis, whether it's financial, climatic, pandemic, and these create favourable basis where the gurus can work for their own benefit," he said.

    The politician and former judge cited one instance where an Australian cult, the Order of St Charbel founded by the now-jailed "Little Pebble" William Kamm on the NSW South Coast, spread to France where members have since been imprisoned.

    "So that proves there are no borders for that kind of group and that's why it's so important to have this kind of exchange and common vision between countries," he said.

    The French government has a history of taking a strict line on monitoring what it considers negative “cultlike movements”. It has previously released a list of more than 170 groups deemed cults on the basis they met one or more of 10 characteristics.

    "Some of these organisations anyway are huge organisations, like the Church of Scientology and Jehovah's Witnesses, and of course these people are here [in Australia] as well."

    Mr Fenech said the French branch of the Church of Scientology, which the French government did not call a religion, will return to court this week to appeal its 2009 conviction on charges related to illegal pharmacology and organised fraud.

    But Australia was part of the Anglo Saxon world that had a very different approach – more of "a laissez faire attitude of tolerance towards all religion," he said.

    "In France we do respect all religions but at the same time we do not tolerate that under the aegis of some kind of church some types of behaviour take place, and we confront these."

    Mr Fenech said all religions had the potential to foster cultic deviances. His organisation had examined sub-cults established within the Catholic church.

    "We can't leave this problem to private initiative because the problem is too serious and too difficult. It's just too much for associations to deal with it," he said.

    Mr Fenech, who said he will address the federal Senate today, was invited to deliver the keynote presentation at a conference entitled "Cults in Australia: Facing the Realities" co-hosted by Liberal senator Sue Boyce and independent senator Nick Xenophon.

    Speakers also include 2010 Australian of the Year, Professor Patrick McGorry, and Tom Sackville, president of the European Federation of Centres of Research and Information on Sects or Cults.

    Mr Xenophon said it was vital that Australia look at laws similar to those of France that provide protection for victims of mental manipulation.

    “Right now some cults and groups here in Australia are getting away with unacceptable conduct and this is partly because our laws have failed to recognise the way people are controlled and coerced," he said.

    There were about 3000 cults operating in Australia, Cult Information and Family Support NSW president Ros Hodgins said.

    "We are asking that parliamentarians support measures to address the abusive groups we know as cults that have no accountability and cause psychological harm," she said.

    "Australia has not yet taken these issues as seriously as other countries, especially Europe."

    This story was found at: http://www.smh.com.au/national/economic-climate-a-breeding-ground-for-cults-20111101-1mu6i.html

  • james_woods
    james_woods

    Nobody likes cults - and it looks like least of all the French.

    However, I don't see that the French author has made a clear-cut case for the Economic Climate being a major cause of cult formation.

    The Scientologists, in particular, were started in the post-WW2 recovery era in the U.S.

    The Witnesses, while they did grow during the depression era (after the initial losses when Rutherford took over the Bible Students), were started in relatively stable economic times years earlier.

    You might make the case that Jim Jones and the Peoples Temple were sort of tied in to economic adversity, as most of the members were poor people that he took advantage of in California before moving them to Guyana to escape pending charges by the government on welfare and SS fraud.

    But I would say that cults in general are started by crazy cult leaders - who do this whenever the notion strikes them, good times or bad.

    BTW - it might be worth a thread to debate whether the French government's anti-cult stand is better or worse than the American and British attitude of leaning toward general freedom of religion.

  • thetrueone
    thetrueone

    Thanks for the Info Barbra, yes there are plausible connections connecting economic strife, as this results in increased insecurity and depression

    among the general population. But economic strife alone is not all of what makes cults attractive and alluring to people but it can create a social

    environment which vacillates their potential growth.

  • yesidid
    yesidid

    Mr Fenech, who said he will address the federal Senate today, was invited to deliver the keynote presentation at a conference entitled "Cults in Australia: Facing the Realities" co-hosted by Liberal senator Sue Boyce and independent senator Nick Xenophon.

    Speakers also include 2010 Australian of the Year, Professor Patrick McGorry, and Tom Sackville, president of the European Federation of Centres of Research and Information on Sects or Cults.

    Mr Xenophon said it was vital that Australia look at laws similar to those of France that provide protection for victims of mental manipulation.

    “Right now some cults and groups here in Australia are getting away with unacceptable conduct and this is partly because our laws have failed to recognise the way people are controlled and coerced," he said.

    That is the important part, (I think).

    He will bring a realistic view of Jehovah's Witnesses to the conference on cults.

  • AndersonsInfo
    AndersonsInfo

    Please note. This is an important article because of the implications of the Unthank criminal case against the WT. Read between the lines, please.

    Barbara

  • ABibleStudent
    ABibleStudent

    Thanks Barbara for the article!! Is there someway to get legislators to realize that not all religions are religious (i.e., Unification Church and the WTBTS)? I have been writing to legislators to revise the US tax codes so that cults would have a more difficult time qualifying as a charity, but I doubt anything will happen unless a legislator or one of his family members is affected by a cult, or a lot more people write to their legislators.

    Peace be with you and everyone, who you love,

    Robert

  • Joey Jo-Jo
    Joey Jo-Jo

    Thank you Barbara, I wish smh told me earlier.

    Outline

    http://www.cifs.org.au/CIFSCanberraConfFlyerfinal.pdf

  • LV101
    LV101

    Yes -- Thank you Barbara. Thank you ABibleStudent for all that you're doing.

  • Aussie Oz
    Aussie Oz

    Interesting, and testing times for the Watchtower...

    stay tuned!

    oz

  • sizemik
    sizemik
    There were about 3000 cults operating in Australia

    Very sobering stats . . .

    But heartening as well . . . to a degree . . .

    Will it be easier than fighting poverty do you think?

    Thanks for posting article.

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