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News about cults, sects, alternative religions... An Apologetics Index research resource |
Religion News ReportDecember 8 1999 (Vol. 3, Issue 141) Many of the items reported here stay online for only a day or two. If you can not find a story online, Read this.
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Religion News Report - December 8 1999 (Vol. 3, Issue 141) ================================================================ === Aum Shinrikyo 1. Prosecutors demand death for cultists in subway attack 2. Two anti-Aum laws promulgated === Ho No Hana Sanpogyo 3. Ex-followers finger Fukunaga for false foot findings 4. Cult interested 'only in greed' 5. Ho-no-Hana eyed existing members' cash 6. Cult cans huge fund-raiser 7. Ex-assemblyman raided over sole cult 8. 32 more cult facilities targeted by authorities 9. Foot cult is sued over £500m 'to ward off strife' === Falun Gong 10. China blasts U.S. for stance on banned sect 11. China Against U.S. Double Standard on Falun Gong Cult 12. Quick action 13. Falun Gong Members to Hold Conference in Hong Kong, SCMP Says === Scientology 14. Scientologists facing protest 15. Scientology foe moves in, digs in for a long fight 16. Scientology TV 17. City prevails over Scientology 18. Scientology Bug in Windows 2000 === Unification Church 19. Rev. Moon's followers turn Brazil swamp into paradise === Concerned Christians 20. More suspected American doomsday cult members deported from Greece 21. Expelled Sect Members Make Way to New York 22. Deported cult members arrive in U.S. 23. Suspected American cult members deported to U.S. 24. Greece expels 18 suspected members of millennium cult === Cults - General 25. Allure of cults hard to resist 26. Ho no ... this heel's after soles in cult-crazed Japan === Militias 27. Alleged Calif. Bomb Plot Sought Revolution -FBI === Mormon Church 28. LDS Church Donates to Polygamy Tapestry === Other News 29. Michigan man charged with conspiring to kidnap atheist leader 30. Sikh Cleric Knife Charge Dropped 31. Navajo legislators stuggle with peyote issue 32. Attorney General Warns of Illegal Building on Temple Mount 33. Waqf works go on 34. Trying to keep a sect going (Sufi) === Noted 35. Reformation Top Religious Event === Interfaith 36. Spirits and cash raised at religious parliament (PWR) === Science 37. Dead Sea Scrolls Broke 19 Centuries of Silence === Books 38. The cult that sought to end our world === The Lawyer Around The Corner 39. Judge Throws Out Suit Against Holiday === Aum Shinrikyo 1. Prosecutors demand death for cultists in subway attack Japan Times, Dec. 7, 1999 http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/news12-99/news.html#story1 Prosecutors demanded the death penalty for two former Aum Shinrikyo followers Tuesday for carrying out the March 1995 nerve gas attack on the Tokyo subway system. (...) Kenichi Hirose, 35, and Toru Toyoda, 31, stand accused of releasing sarin on subway trains during the morning rush hour in an attempt to avert the attention of investigative authorities from Aum. The gassing killed 12 people and injured more than 5,500. The prosecution also demanded life in prison for Shigeo Sugimoto, 40, for chauffeuring one of the gas-attackers to a train station and for his involvement in the killing of followers in January and July 1994. (...) Hirose, a graduate of Waseda University, and Toyoda also joined in the cult's attempt to manufacture 1,000 rifles between June 1994 and March 1995. Only one rifle was produced. In addition, Toyoda, who received a master's degree in physics at Tokyo University, took part in the May 1995 cyanide gas attack at Shinjuku Station by producing the gas, prosecutors said. After that attack failed, Toyoda and other members sent a letter bomb to then-Tokyo Gov. Yukio Aoshima later in the month, they said. The bomb tore off the fingers of the governor's secretary. Prosecutors added that Sugimoto lynched and strangled to death his fellow follower Toshio Tomita in July 1994 and cremated his body in a microwave incinerator. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 2. Two anti-Aum laws promulgated Japan Times, Dec. 7, 1999 http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/news12-99/news.html#story2 Two laws aimed at cracking down on the activities of Aum Shinrikyo were promulgated Tuesday by the Justice Ministry. (...) The laws will take effect Dec. 27, and the Public Security Investigation Agency, after consulting with the National Police Agency, is expected to ask the Public Security Examination Commission on the same day to consider putting Aum under surveillance, Justice Minister Hideo Usui told a regular news conference Tuesday. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] === Ho No Hana Sanpogyo 3. Ex-followers finger Fukunaga for false foot findings Japan Times, Dec. 7, 1999 http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/news12-99/news.html#story3 Five former followers of the Honohana Sampogyo religious sect Tuesday filed a criminal complaint against its guru, Hogen Fukunaga, and 12 other cult executives, their lawyers said. The former followers filed the suit because fraud allegedly committed by the sect has become a serious social issue and needs to be stopped before more people are victimized, their lawyers said. A total of 1,107 people from across the nation, including the five who filed the complaint, have already filed damages suits against the group. The suits seek a total of 5.389 billion yen. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] * Currency converter: http://www.cnn.com/TRAVEL/ESSENTIALS/ 4. Cult interested 'only in greed' Asahi News (Japan), Dec. 7, 1999 http://www.asahi.com/english/enews/enews.html#enews_26374 The cult Ho no Hana Sanpogyo was so concerned with making money that followers felt compelled to slavishly borrow once they had given everything, according to a former member. (...) The 39-year-old man served as the group's branch chief in the Hokuriku region. He said branch managers were required to meet new membership targets, with many resorting to unorthodox methods to achieve their goals. (...) Recruits were called "hearts'' and branch managers were paid up to 90,000 yen when they found new recruits. "Many of the branch managers were already deep in debt because they had to donate millions of yen before they were allowed into managerial positions,'' the former member said. They therefore tried to collect as many 'hearts' as possible, just so they repay their debts. The man reasoned that every time he collected a "heart'' he had "saved'' someone. (...) Potential new members were first asked to write down details of their life, prior to being given a "consultation.'' If someone wrote that he or she was in debt, they were told they didn't have the "soul'' to get any money. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 5. Ho-no-Hana eyed existing members' cash Daily Yomiuri (Japan), Dec. 6, 1999 http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/newse/1206so06.htm The Ho-no-Hana Sanpogyo religious group began offering new training sessions earlier this year for existing followers to raise funds because an increasing number of lawsuits filed against the group made it difficult to recruit new followers, according to sources close to the group. (...) The group offered a new training seminar titled "Chojin Ningen Shacho Juku" (Superhuman President School) for followers, according to the sources and bulletins issued by the group. To enroll in the session, a follower had to meet four conditions, such as rounding up more than seven people to join a five-day training session that cost between 1.25 million yen and 2.25 million yen; participating in a session for middle-aged people that cost more than 7 million yen; or joining a session for young people that cost about 3.8 million yen. To be entitled to enroll in the special seminar, a follower had to pay a total of about 20 million yen. (...) Senior members of the group told the followers that the session aimed "to nurture new leaders to save companies and society in the 21st century." They also said that the followers were assured to have opportunities to use their abilities in fields such as education, politics, medicine, economics and science once they completed the session. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 6. Cult cans huge fund-raiser Mainichi Daily News (Japan), Dec. 5, 1999 http://www.mainichi.co.jp/english/news/news02.html The Ho no Hana Sanpogyo foot-reading cult canceled its biggest event of the year to be held in Yokohama on Dec. 15 - pulling the plug just a day before police raided it on Wednesday, the Mainichi has learned. (...) Ho no Hana Sanpogyo claimed that, despite the last-minute cancelation, the festival would still go ahead on time, just at another venue. Until a few years ago, the "Tengyo-riki Taisai" ("Grand Festival of Heavenly Power)" was held every year at the Tokyo Dome in the capital's Bunkyo-ku, with around 10,000 people participating in the biggest moneymaking event on the cult's calendar, police said. According to Ho no Hana leader Hogen Fukunaga, tengyo-riki is heavenly power that gives life to all creations, and the taisai is the day that the power falls on the face of the Earth most strongly. Many "miracles," such as a case in which a wheelchair-bound person could walk again, regularly occurred during the grand festival, cult publications claim. All first-time participants of the event have to buy a tengyo-riki pocket diary - which the cult claims is a transmitter of the heavenly power to holders - with its price starting from 50,500 yen. Repeat participants can join the event for a participation fee of 20,000 yen or over, plus a 500 yen booking fee. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 7. Ex-assemblyman raided over sole cult Mainichi Daily News (Japan), Dec. 5, 1999 http://www.mainichi.co.jp/english/news/news01.html The home of a former speaker of the Fuji Municipal Assembly in Shizuoka Prefecture and a resort hotel owned by the Ho no Hana Sampogyo cult were among the locations raided by police Saturday over the group's alleged fraud, investigators said. (...) Police said the search was necessary partly because the cult tried to destroy evidence prior to the first raids on 73 other locations in Tokyo, Shizuoka and seven other prefectures last Wednesday. (...) Also among the premises targeted by police in Saturday's raids was Ningen Yuin (human healing house), a resort hotel owned by Ho no Hana, in the Shizuoka Prefecture city of Atami. Ho no Hana officials are named as executives of the hotel that the cult purchased from an Osaka real estate agency in September last year. One of the cult-related Web sites claims that the hotel is filled with "minus ions" produced by 50 tons of expensive binchotan charcoal stacked on its basement floor. Minus ions "purify" the whole hotel complex and increase natural healing power of human bodies, the home page claims. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 8. 32 more cult facilities targeted by authorities Asahi News (Japan), Dec. 5, 1999 http://www.asahi.com/english/enews/enews.html#enews_26344 (...) The most recent searches included the group's branch offices in Akita, Nagano and Miyazaki prefectures, and a sanatorium in Atami, Shizuoka Prefecture. A private company in Shibuya Ward, Tokyo, that is affiliated with the religious organization, was also targeted by police investigators. The 11-story sanatorium, named "Ningen Yuin" (house to cure humans), was formerly a members-only hotel. Ho no Hana Sanpogyo bought the hotel through its affiliate and uses it as a sanatorium for cult members. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 9. Foot cult is sued over £500m 'to ward off strife' Electronic Telegraph, Dec. 2, 1999 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ (...) Police searched 74 facilities of Hono hana Sanpogyo in connection with more than 1,000 law suits brought by followers seeking £337 million in compensation because they say they were forced to give the cult money. The cult's name translates roughly as Flower of Law and the Three Law Practice but more people in Japan know it as Heavenly Energy, the slogan that shines out from huge red and white neon hoardings in key locations in Japanese cities. The cult's literature claimed that since it was incorporated as a religion in 1987 more than 30,000 people have attended its seminars seeking help with any problem from terminal illness to marital strife. It said it had collected £500 million from followers. (...) The group's leader, Hogon Fukunaga, 54, has justified the high fees by saying the funds were a "contribution to heaven". (...) He claims to be the next saviour after Christ and Buddha. His foot philosophy is loosely based on Buddhism, in which feet are the untouchable part of the anatomy, being closest to earth. The cult's main temple has a garish fountain in gold shaped like Buddha's footprints. (...) He said his own £20,000-a-month salary was dictated by heaven. But many former followers complain that despite handing over thousands of pounds their problems were not solved. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] === Falun Gong 10. China blasts U.S. for stance on banned sect Nando Times, Dec. 7, 1999 http://www.nando.net/noframes/story/0,2107,500139305-500163939-500588832-0,00.html China on Tuesday accused Washington of ignoring abuses by the Falun Gong spiritual movement, which communist Chinese leaders have banned as a menacing cult. On Monday, in his first comments about China's crackdown on the sect, President Clinton criticized the imprisonment and detention of Falun Gong members as a "troubling example" of the government acting against those "who test the limits of freedom." Without mentioning Clinton by name, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Zhang Qiyue said Tuesday that the U.S. government was ignoring the dangers posed by the multimillion-member spiritual movement. "The U.S. government has adopted a double standard on the cult, and also turned a deaf ear to the adverse effect and the damage of Falun Gong to the Chinese people and society, and even tried to beautify this cult and interfere in China's internal affairs," she said when asked about Clinton's remarks during a briefing for reporters. (...) Zhang also expressed "strong indignation" over a recent U.S. government decision to extend a ban on exports of crime control and detection equipment to China for another two years because of continuing religious repression. The decision followed a U.S. State Department report in September that criticized Chinese mistreatment of Tibetan monks, underground Christians and Muslim Uighurs from western China. (...) Falun Gong members from the United States, Canada, Japan, Taiwan, Singapore, Australia, England, France and other countries plan to meet this weekend in Hong Kong, it said. Hong Kong's autonomous status has allowed Falun Gong members to continue to practice openly there. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 11. China Against U.S. Double Standard on Falun Gong Cult Northern Light/Xinhua, Dec. 7, 1999 http://library.northernlight.com/FA19991207730000080.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0 (...) In reply to a question that U.S. President Bill Clinton expressed concern over China's stance on dealing with the Falun Gong cult yesterday, Zhang Qiyue said China urges the U.S. government to take back comments made on the sect that might place new obstacles to Sino-U.S. relations. According to incomplete statistics, more than 1,400 people have died practising Falun Gong. Many practitioners have lost their mind and families have broken up, causing untoll social problems, she said. "Numerous undisputed facts have shown that the Falun Gong cult undermines Chinese society and harms the Chinese people," said Zhang, adding that the vast majority of Falun Gong practitioners have come to realize the destructive nature of the cult and that the Chinese government banned the cult according to law, protecting basic human rights and freedom of all Chinese citizens. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] * Xinhua is a state-controlled news agency 12. Quick action Yahoo! Asia/AP, Dec. 6, 1999 http://asia.dailynews.yahoo.com/headlines/newspapers/wisers/article.html? s=asia/headlines/991206/newspapers/wisers/Quick_action.html About 20 members of the banned group Falun Gong sat down together in a protest at Tiananmen Square and were quickly whisked away by police. (...) Falun Gong members have been going to the square to protest against the government's declaration in July that the group is an illegal cult. Police who patrol the square in large numbers immediately stop any protests and detain participants. (...) Meanwhile, public security officials have removed more than 100 followers of the Zhong Gong movement from one of its bases, a Hong Kong-based rights group said in a statement yesterday. The removal represents the last batch of followers who were dispersed from the Chinese Traditional Culture Training Institute at Mei Xian in Shaanxi province, Zhong Gong's largest base in the country, a statement from the Information Centre for Human Rights and Democratic Movement in China said. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 13. Falun Gong Members to Hold Conference in Hong Kong, SCMP Says AOL/Bloomberg, Dec. 7, 1999 http://my.aol.com/business/story.tmpl?table=n&cat=01&id=1999120708064427 About 1,000 Falun Gong members from Hong Kong and overseas will hold a conference in Hong Kong and perform a mass exercise outside the Xinhua news agency headquarters on Saturday, the South China Morning Post reported. It will be the first significant Falun Gong gathering in the city since the Chinese government outlawed the sect in July and later branded it an ``evil cult.'' [...entire item...] === Scientology 14. Scientologists facing protest MSNBC, Dec. 4, 1999 http://www.msnbc.com/local/WFLA/66076.asp (...) Scientologists are keeping a low profile this year. One high ranking church leader says the community just wants to move beyond discussion fo Lisa McPherson’s death. According to the Associated Press, lawyers for the Church of Scientology have given the Pinellas-Pasco Medical Examiner new evidence on the 1995 death of Scientologist Lisa McPherson. The evidence turned over to Joan Wood, the examiner, casts doubt on her original opinion: that McPherson was severely dehydrated when she died while in the care of Scientology staffers, claim lawyers for the church. (...) Wood originally listed the manner of McPherson’s death as ``undetermined.” She said it is possible her review could lead to a finding of accidental death. (...) Wood said she will review the materials and will join a church-hired toxicologist in testing a second sample of McPherson’s eye fluid, which has been stored by Wood’s office since the autopsy. That test could take place as early as next week at a lab near Philadelphia. (...) McPherson was hospitalized in December 1995 after police found her disoriented following a fender bender. Several Scientologists showed up at the hospital and checked her out against doctor’s advice. Scientologists kept McPherson in the hotel room blocks from the hospital for another 13 days. She was eventually taken to another hospital 45 minutes away and pronounced dead from a blood clot. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 15. Scientology foe moves in, digs in for a long fight St. Petersburg Times, Dec. 5, 1999 http://www.sptimes.com/News/120599/news_pf/TampaBay/Scientology_foe_moves.shtml An opposition group to the Church of Scientology said Saturday it is well-financed and "here to stay" with plans for a variety of activities, from speaking to school children and civic groups to counseling Scientologists about leaving their church. The group is called the Lisa McPherson Trust Inc., named for the 36-year-old Scientologist who died in 1995 while in the care of church staffers. Its intentions were made public during a "Scientology/Clearwater Relations Conference" at a local hotel. (...) Robert Minton, the New England millionaire who formed the new trust, said its offices would be a "safe zone" for Scientologists and others who find fault with the church or have questions that only its critics would answer. "We will be encouraging people to think for themselves, and we will be offering people any information they want to listen to," Minton said as he waved and held a picket sign at downtown's main crossroads, Cleveland Street and Fort Harrison Avenue. (...) When the trust registered with the state in October as a for-profit corporation, church officials said it was a scheme by Minton to recoup the $2.5-million he has spent so far on anti-Scientology causes. But Minton, a 53-year-old retired investment banker, said Saturday that if his motivation was money, he wouldn't be giving it away so readily to anti-Scientology causes. He said he registered the group as a for-profit to avoid the open financial reporting requirements of non-profits and to prevent Scientology from harassing potential donors. (...) Alexander, a former Scientologist, said he spent $1-million on Scientology over 20 years and last year moved his business from Clearwater to Tampa to get away from the church. As one of the trust's 23 board members, he tried to find office space for the group but was met, he said, with resistance from downtown landlords fearful of Scientology. Alexander said the new trust would be "the force that people can get behind so they won't be afraid any more." [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] * About the Lisa McPherson Trust http://www.apologeticsindex.org/l31.html 16. Scientology TV taz Hamburg Nr. 6010 Seite 21 (Germany), Dec. 7, 1999 Translation: CISAR http://cisar.org/991207b.htm "I know only too well what master and what purpose they are serving," said Walter Zuckerer. A recently installed video camera on the roof of the building at 9 Dom Street has come under the scrutiny of the current chairman of the SPD faction of the state representatives. There, in the middle of the city, is where Scientology's Germany Central has been located since November 27. And Zuckerer does not at all like the Scientologists having "public thoroughfares being under private surveillance. That could be an "illicit encroachment of the personality rights of specific people," unsuspecting passersby, for example. Therefore, he has submitted an extensive inquiry to the Senate yesterday as to whether they or the Hamburg Data Security Commissioner were already involved with the matter. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 17. City prevails over Scientology Sueddeutsche Zeitung (Germany), Dec. 2, 1999 Translation: CISAR http://cisar.org/991202a.htm The provincial capitol of Munich prevailed against Scientology in court today. The city had prohibited Scientologists from accosting pedestrians on Leopold Street to talk them into taking a personality test so that they would buy courses and books. Scientology had object, but lost in Administrative Court. The planning office which had jurisdiction in the area had founded its decision on the idea that this type of recruitment activity bothered pedestrians and was impermissible on public land. [...entire item...] 18. Scientology Bug in Windows 2000 Der Spiegel (Germany), Dec. 3, 1999 Translation: CISAR http://cisar.org/991203a.htm One of the software components integrated into Windows 2000 comes from Executive Software, a California company led by a Scientologist. That was reported in the latest edition of "c't", a computer technical magazine. Craig Jensen, head of Executive Software, lets the public know via the internet that his corporation follows the controversial methods of Scientology's founder, L. Ron Hubbard. (...) In contrast, churches and agencies do not regard the the Scientology business' software to be safe: "That interests not just the Catholic Church, but also all German provinces, Constitutional Security and even German industry," said Harald Baer, one of the German Bishop Conferences sect and worldview commissioners. According to Ursula Caberta, Director of the Hamburg Interior Agency's Work Group on Scientology, Executive Software is one of the leading enterprises of Scientology's WISE (World Institute of Scientology Enterprises.) WISE is said the "decisive arm of Scientology for the purpose of infiltration and covert data collection." She pointed out decisions in the German provinces of Bavaria and Hamburg which state that no products or services may be purchased from Scientology corporation, especially not in the area of information services. (...) The argument of the churches that the purchase of Windows 2000 could contribute to Scientology's finances was rejected by Microsoft. "Whoever has such objections is free to express them in his decision to buy," said Braatz. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] === Unification Church 19. Rev. Moon's followers turn Brazil swamp into paradise Detroit News, Dec. 6, 1999 http://detnews.com/1999/religion/9912/06/12070007.htm (...) In just five years since that revelation, the controversial leader of the Unification Church has built a secretive community for his followers -- known to their critics as "Moonies" -- in an area roughly the size of Chicago. (...) "Why Brazil? Because this place is so underdeveloped and and protected from the evils of civilization. The Reverend thinks this is the best place to practice heavenly life on Earth," said Joo Hyun Lip, education leader for Moon's believers in Jardim. (...) Several hundred church members from the United States, Japan and South Korea flock to this no-man's-land every month, paying a $1,000 fee to pray under the scorching sun and fish in "sacred" lakes once visited by their leader. (...) Some 100 locals, mostly unmarried, now come to New Hope every month to learn how to read and write. They also receive free meals if they will tolerate several hours of sermons. (...) This is Moon's way of enlisting new followers from Brazil -- the country with the world's largest Catholic population -after suffering a drop of popularity in South Korea, Japan and his adopted home, the United States. (...) Authorities started questioning Moon's ambitious expansion plans after local police reported two foreigners were found drowned in nearby lakes last year. Police said the victims had actually drowned fishing, but the incident aroused suspicion and the state government of Mato Grosso launched an investigation with the Federal Police into Moon's activities. (...) "The Federal Police's major concern is that a lot of drug trafficking goes on in the very region where Moon is buying land," said Rilton Araujo, police chief in Jardim, some 50 miles from the border with Paraguay and not far from Bolivia. (...) Jardim Mayor Marcio Monteiro also fears New Hope could be used as a tax haven, pointing to Moon's history of being jailed for tax evasion in the United States in the 1970s. "They should be paying taxes in Jardim. They are not just a religious organization but they are actually in a business of accommodation," he said of the thousands of Moon's followers who stay at New Hope. (...) While locals generally welcome his largess, the Catholic Church is not happy to see his preaching, blending Buddhism, Christianity and Confucianism, spread its influence in Jardim. "Their geographic expansion is worrying," local priest Bruno Brugnolaro said. "Moon's belief of substituting for Jesus Christ is absurd." [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] === Concerned Christians 20. More suspected American doomsday cult members deported from Greece Nando Times/AP, Dec. 7, 1999 http://www2.nando.net/noframes/story/0,2107,500139561-500164300-500591350-0,00.html Greek authorities deported two suspected members of an American doomsday cult on Tuesday, the second group expelled from Greece ahead of the millennium. Under police guard, the members of the Denver-based group Concerned Christians were put on a plane to New York at Athens international airport, police said. Eighteen others were expelled Sunday amid fears the group was planning to mark 2000 with mass suicide. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 21. Expelled Sect Members Make Way to New York New York Times, Dec. 7, 1999 http://www.nytimes.com/99/12/07/news/national/regional/ny-millenium.html Members of a doomsday sect, expelled from Israel this year, arrived at Kennedy International Airport on Sunday night after being expelled once again, this time from Greece. Greek authorities rounded up 18 members of the Concerned Christians over the weekend, saying they feared that the group might be planning a mass suicide or other violence for the millennium. The officials said the group members were being deported after overstaying their residence permits. At a brief, impromptu news conference and meeting with worried relatives at the airport, group members denounced America as "the great Babylon." Then they departed in taxis, destination unknown. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 22. Deported cult members arrive in U.S. Denver Rocky Mountain News, Dec. 6, 1999 http://insidedenver.com/news/1206cult1.shtml (...) Some Colorado relatives of the members of the group, Concerned Christians, waited in the New York airport in the hope of speaking with their loved ones. Group members severed their family ties, sold their homes and quit their jobs when they joined the group. (...) Dave Cooper of Boulder succeeded in talking briefly with his brother, John Cooper before the members left the New York airport by taxi for destinations unknown. (...) Another woman learned she is a grandmother and -- although she wasn't allowed to hold the baby -- was able to embrace her daughter. Both women wept. A member of the group read a statement during the broadcast calling America "Babylon the Great," meaning America is evil. He said the group has been subjected to "extreme slander and prejudice." (...) Denver police officer Mark Roggeman, who monitors cults on his own time, said he didn't know which members of the group were on the plane. "I don't think they'll come to Denver," Roggeman said Sunday. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 23. Suspected American cult members deported to U.S. Denver Post/AP, Dec. 6, 1999 http://www.denverpost.com/news/news1206h.htm (...) The suspects were living in towns near Athens, where the group is believed to have settled after 14 alleged members of the group were expelled from Israel in January. Police sources said officials feared the group members may have planned violence or suicides on the eve of the millennium. The group's leader, Monte Kim Miller, has said he would die in the streets of Jerusalem this month and be resurrected three days later. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 24. Greece expels 18 suspected members of millennium cult Nando Times/AFP, Dec. 5, 1999 http://www.nando.net/24hour/adn/global/story/0,1970,500138559-500162650-500576921-0,00.html Greece on Sunday expelled 18 U.S. citizens believed to be members of the controversial Concerned Christians sect, police said. The 18, including five children, were taken to Athens airport under police escort and put on a plane to New York, police said. (...) Sixteen had been detained Friday in the coastal town of Rafina, about 30 miles southeast of Athens, and the other two were picked up Saturday. Informed police sources said other presumed members of the sect, most of them Americans, were under surveillance in Rafina and Larisa, central Greece. (...) An Israeli newspaper, citing U.S. police sources, reported at the end of October that 90 members of the millennial sect, based in Denver, were now in the Athens area. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] === Cults - General 25. Allure of cults hard to resist Sydney Morning Herald, Dec. 4, 1999 http://www.smh.com.au/news/9912/04/text/world16.html (...) This week, newspapers here were filled with album pictures of Mr Fukunaga shaking hands with Mikhail Gorbachev, raising glasses with Margaret Thatcher and presenting his church canon to the Pope. According to Mr Fukunaga's account of the papal meeting, the Pope told him three times, to ''please take care of things after I'm gone''. (...) Mr Fukunaga, who claimed to be able to cure cancer and AIDS because he could hear ''the voice of heaven'', cannot be found. His embattled group is fighting court cases in which more than 1,100 people are seeking 5.4 billion yen ($83 million [australian]) in damages. (...) The huge revenue stream says as much about the gullibility of the sect's followers as it does about the rapacity of its organisers. Ho No Hana is one of several of religious and quasi-religious bodies which have risen to public prominence in recent weeks, suggesting that they retain a stubborn allure for many disaffected people. Despite the notoriety surrounding the Aum Shinrikyo sect, the Government had to legislate this week to curb its activities. Last month, the previously unknown Life Space cult made headlines when police discovered a mummified corpse in an airport motel room. It had been kept there by sect members who argued the body was still alive. (...) Concerns have also been expressed about the emergence of several radical Buddhist groups. Kensho Kai, which advocates revising the country's Constitution to establish the group's philosophy as a national religion, boasts a membership of about 600,000, including many senior-ranking members of the armed forces. Some experts blame the apparent susceptibility of many Japanese to the charms of dubious cults on the country's World War II excesses, which prompted United States occupying forces to go to great lengths to rid the system of ''state Shintoism''. The strict separation of church and state left Japan without a spiritual core, they say. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 26. Ho no ... this heel's after soles in cult-crazed Japan AFR (Australian Financial Review) news, Dec. 6, 1999 http://www.afr.com.au/content/991206/world/wtokyo.html The Aum Shinrikyo ("Supreme Truth") cult was founded by a near-blind yoga teacher who claimed he was Jesus Christ in a former life. Shoko Asahara, whose real name is Chizuo Matsumoto, told his followers they would be able to read minds and levitate if they obeyed the religion he pieced together from strands of Buddhism and Hinduism. (...) There has been a surge in cult news in Japan recently, although it probably has little to do with the looming millennium as we are only in the 11th year of the Emperor's rule in Japan - the official measure of years. Also last week, police raided facilities of the Ho no Hana Sanpogyo cult ("Flower of Law") in the biggest operation since Aum was investigated in 1995 to collect evidence relating to claims the cult fraudulently obtained money, primarily through its foot-reading activities. (...) And in perhaps the most bizarre incident, a mummified corpse was found in the cupboard of an airport hotel where it had been kept by the family of the deceased who believed their relative was only "resting" while their cult, Life Space, cured his brain haemorrhage by patting him on the head. Seminars on proper living from that cult cost up to ¥5 million ($70,000 [Australian]) each. (...) Many Japanese who would not describe themselves as religious move happily between Buddhist, Shinto and Christian teachings and are often superstitious. The New Komeito, part of the coalition Government, is backed by the incredibly rich "sect", Soka Gakkai, a relatively benign but nevertheless secretive organisation often likened to a Japanese Salvation Army. (...) Rather than looking for some cultural predisposition it is more instructive to see cults as a symptom of sometimes unacknowledged stresses in a society. The Chinese cult Falun Gong, for example, attracted many followers because it appeared to offer sanctuary to those who fell through the cracks of an inadequate communist health and welfare system. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] === Militias 27. Alleged Calif. Bomb Plot Sought Revolution -FBI Excite/Reuters, Dec. 6, 1999 http://news.excite.com/news/r/991206/22/news-crime-militia Two suspected militia members arrested in connection with an alleged plot to blow up a California propane plant had been involved with a group that hoped to use violence to spark the overthrow of the U.S. government, court documents released on Monday said. (...) An FBI affidavit said a report found that an attack on either of the two storage tanks could cause a deadly firestorm. "The ... report concluded, in part, that a successful attack on either of the larger 12 million gallon storage tanks would likely result in a firestorm that could reach as far out as 14 kilometers from the site and could cause a fatality rate as high as 50 percent up to five miles away," the affidavit said. (...) The affidavit also said both men had past involvement with the right-wing San Joaquin County Militia, which had planned on using violence to bring about martial law in the belief that this would help the group attract a public following to launch a revolution. "It was further believed that if the government declares martial law, the militia will develop a public following and the current United States government will be overthrown by revolution," the affidavit said. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] === Mormon Church 28. LDS Church Donates to Polygamy Tapestry Salt Lake Tribune, Dec. 4, 1999 http://www.sltrib.com/1999/Dec/12041999/Religion/3191.htm The LDS Church has made a "modest" donation to Tapestry of Polygamy, a group devoted to helping women and children escape polygamous families. (...) Morrison, of the church's First Quorum of Seventy, said leaders in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints are concerned with all victims of abuse, including at the hands of polygamous husbands. "I was glad to visit with them [Tapestry representatives]," Morrison said this week. "I think their position is just." (...) The LDS Church once condoned polygamy but disavowed it in 1890. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] === Other News 29. Michigan man charged with conspiring to kidnap atheist leader CNN/AP, Dec. 7, 1999 http://www.cnn.com/1999/US/12/07/missingatheist.ap/index.html An ex-convict in custody in Detroit was indicted Tuesday on charges that he conspired to kidnap Madalyn Murray O'Hair, the atheist leader who has been missing since 1995. A federal grand jury accused Gary Karr, 51, of conspiring with others to plot and carry out the kidnappings and extortion of Ms. O'Hair, her son Jon Garth Murray and adopted daughter Robin Murray O'Hair. Authorities have said the three were killed, but their bodies have not been found. (...) American Atheists Inc. spokesman Ron Barrier called the indictment against Karr "a step in a positive direction towards clearing the American Atheists' name and our founders." [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 3. Sikh Cleric Knife Charge Dropped New York Times/AP, Dec. 7, 1999 http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/a/AP-Sikh-Knife.html A charge of carrying a concealed weapon was dropped Monday against a Sikh cleric who carries a 6-inch knife as a sign of his religious faith. (...) Bhatia, 69, of Cleveland, began wearing the knife 20 years ago when he was baptized in India. The kirpan, which is kept in a sheath and harnessed to a shoulder strap, symbolizes his willingness to defend his faith and his promise to fight injustices. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 31. Navajo legislators stuggle with peyote issue Arizona Central/AP, Dec. 6, 1999 http://www.azcentral.com/news/1206peyote.shtml As illegal use of hallucinogenic peyote buttons rises, including Navajo teens who are smoking it, Navajo Nation legislators are looking for ways to restrict the drug's usage without obstructing those who use it for religious purposes. Under federal law, only American Indians can use the hallucinogenic cactus button as part of their religion. Native American Church members ingest the peyote cactus in a tea, mush or powder form. Seeing visions is part of the spiritual experience. Sun Dancers and Navajo traditionalists also use the cactus button for religious purposes. It is the nonbelievers who use peyote to get high or to make money the Navajo lawmakers are concerned about. (...) A proposed new section of the law would authorize the use, possession, sale, trade and delivery of peyote by an Indian for bona fide ceremonial purposes in connection with a Navajo religion or a Native American Church. (...) The federal law protects the use of peyote as a part of any Indian religion, Boos said. Some practitioners of the traditional Navajo religion and the Sun Dance ceremonies have incorporated peyote into their rituals. In New Mexico and Arizona, there are Anglos who practice the peyote way. An occasional non-Indian can be seen inside prayer meetings on the Navajo Nation, too. So Navajo lawmakers must decide how strict the law will be for those people, including non-Indian spouses of Indians. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 32. Attorney General Warns of Illegal Building on Temple Mount Israel Wire, Dec. 3, 1999 http://www.israelwire.com/New/991203/9912035.html Attorney General Elyakim Rubinstein charged Wednesday that the Moslem Wakf on Jerusalem's Temple Mount had "trampled" remnants of Jewish history by proceeding with illegal construction projects. "Remnants of the history of the Jewish people are being trampled," Rubinstein said at a debate hosted by Internal Security Minister Shlomo Ben-Ami. "We have tolerance for ritual, but we must tell the Wakf and the Muslims that we too have a history. You will not trample our history." [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 33. Waqf works go on Arutz Sheva (Israel National Radio - offshore), Dec. 6, 1999 http://www.a7.org/English/newspaper/news/news.htm#one Despite Jerusalem Affairs Minister Chaim Ramon's announcement today that the Waqf construction works on the Temple Mount have ceased, Knesset Members touring the site this morning learned that such is not the case. (...) Chairman Zevulun Orlev said, "There is no ethnic dispute here, it is a dispute over sovereignty - does the State of Israel enforce its laws on the Temple Mount or not?" Committee member MK Silvan Shalom (Likud) disagreed: "It is not just a question of violating the Antiquities Law, which is an important issue in itself. There are also deep religious-political ramifications: We heard from several sources that the reason the Waqf is doing this is to prevent the Jews from being able to pray on the only place on the Temple Mount where they are halakhically permitted to do so." (...) Gershon Solomon, head of the Temple Mount Faithful: "We plan to petition the Supreme Court tomorrow - this will be our second petition on this matter. Until now, the Court has shown a tendency to justify the Waqf positions and its right to act on the Temple Mount as if it was its own. I'm a bit more optimistic regarding tomorrow's petition, but the government will still claim - falsely - that the Waqf activities were done with its consent." [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] 34. Trying to keep a sect going Philadelphia Inquirer, Dec. 3, 1999 http://www.phillynews.com/inquirer/99/Dec/03/international/DERVISH03.htm (...) Mohammed and Maher al-Jamal are members of a nearly 800-year-old branch of Sufi Islam, a mystical movement that uses poetry, singing and dancing to reach a trancelike state of communion with Allah. The Jamal brothers are known as whirling dervishes - masters of a spinning dance that they say channels God's energy earthward. By day, Mohammed is a furniture builder and vendor, and Maher works as an accountant. But their true calling is Sufi dance. (...) As part of an end-of-century wave of interest in mystical and spiritual teachings from eastern Buddhism to Jewish Kabbalism, Sufi whirling has attracted new devotees in North America. But in Syria, where the art is passed from grandfather to father to son, the ranks of the initiated are dwindling. (...) Often performed in larger groups, the ritual seeks to unite three aspects of human nature - the mind, the heart, and the body - in an exercise aimed at intimacy with God. The choreography and costumes are laden with symbolism. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] === Noted 35. Reformation Top Religious Event Yahoo!/AP, Dec. 7, 1999 http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/ap/19991207/bs/top_religion_events_2.html The nation's religion newswriters have selected the Protestant Reformation and the invention of the movable type printing press as the leading religious events of the second millennium. The newswriters also picked the Nazi Holocaust and resulting establishment of Israel as the top event of the last century. The Second Vatican Council and the Russian Revolution rounded out the century's top three. Survey responses came from 30 members of the Religion Newswriters Association, made up of specialists covering the field for the general media. (...) Richard DuJardin of the Providence Journal-Bulletin administered the newswriters survey. Full results, and other top events listed on survey ballots, are posted on the association's Web site, www.rna.org. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] === Interfaith 36. Spirits and cash raised at religious parliament Sunday Times (South Africa), Dec. 5, 1999 http://www.suntimes.co.za/1999/12/05/insight/in04.htm (...) A firebrand representative of the United Democratic Movement in the national assembly, Mndende proved she may have friends in almighty places when she received a R300 000 cash donation from a little-known spiritual leader from the Far East on the opening day of the week-long, multi-faith event. Mndende said the donation had done more for traditional religion than her months of lobbying in the corridors of power and could even be a sign from above. (...) The mystery benefactor turned out to be Supreme Master Ching Hai - little-known in the West but much-loved in the East due to widespread humanitarian and disaster-relief work - one of the many outspoken spiritual leaders who landed in Cape Town this week. As one delegate observed, the only person missing from a procession of gurus, swamis, priests, nuns, pharaohs, white witches and saffron devotees was God. In contrast, many delegates - Mndende included - said God was plainly visible in the spirit of tolerance and learning that prevailed at the event, which drew together thousands from diverse faiths. (...) The gathering also offers spiritual teachers the chance to meet representatives of lesserknown religious groups or cults from around the world, which are seldom given the chance to air their views. As such, it has earned praise from many quarters, particularly the fast-growing neo-pagan movement interested in reviving ancient traditions. It has also sparked outrage from fundamentalist groups opposed to globalisation and the multi-faith principle. Sternfaced Islamic protesters made their presence felt at Wednesday's opening ceremony, brandishing banners decrying the event as a global conspiracy. A small group of Christians huddled outside Company Gardens and asked God to combat the "demonic" world gathering. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] === Science 37. Dead Sea Scrolls Broke 19 Centuries of Silence Los Angeles Times, Dec. 6, 1999 http://www.latimes.com/news/state/19991206/t000111216.html (...) By the mid-1980s, scholars outside the scroll cartel, as it was derisively called, had become increasingly restless, fearing that they might never see the work finished. Then, in 1991, the Huntington Library in San Marino changed everything, announcing that it had in its vaults a set of photographs covering the entire body of scroll fragments and that the library would release microfilm copies of them. That move, in turn, prompted the Israeli Antiquities Authority to end all restrictions on scholarly access to the scrolls, leading to a deluge of new scholarship. During the years of waiting before the scrolls were fully revealed, many extravagant hopes and fears were attached to them. Perhaps among the fragments would be some contemporaneous proof of the events of the New Testament, some speculated. Perhaps a piece of parchment would contain a description of John the Baptist. Maybe Jesus himself would figure in one of the writings. Others feared the opposite--an ancient document that would undermine the faith. The reality was less dramatic, but no less wondrous. The ancient writings included more or less complete texts of almost every book of the Hebrew Bible--versions whose closeness to the modern texts demonstrate the amazing fidelity with which generations of scribes copied the Scriptures. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] === Books 38. The cult that sought to end our world Philadelphia Inquirer, Dec. 5, 1999 http://www.phillynews.com/inquirer/99/Dec/05/books/WORLD05.htm Destroying the World To Save It Aum Shinrikyo, Apocalyptic Violence, and the New Global Terrorism By Robert Jay Lifton Metropolitan Books. 374 pp. $26 Reviewed by Daniel Berger (...) Lifton, a professor of psychology and psychiatry at John Jay College and the City Univeristy of New York, is the latest in the line of post-war writers - including Erich Fromm, Rolly May and Erik Erikson - who have sought to develop a "psycho-social" or "psycho-historical" perspective on society, culture and contemporary affairs. Lifton's new book is a fascinating (if frightening) investigation into the psychology of the Aum cult and the dangers posed in the modern age by the accessibility of weapons of mass destruction. (...) Lifton's book is a valuable aid to understanding the old problem of fanaticism in a new, particularly sinister form. (...) Lifton gives an ingenious and plausible account of why apocalyptic thinking turned up, of all places, in Japan. His explanation lies in the "psycho-historical dislocation" that has buffeted Japanese society over the last century and a half. According to Lifton, Japan has modernized (that is, it adopted Western ways), suffered a crushing military defeat in World War II, was occupied by an alien (if benevolent) power, the United States, and adopted the trappings of a Western-style consumerist culture. Wrenching changes such as these left portions of Japanese society - particularly young people who were preyed upon by Aum - vulnerable to extremist belief. Thus, while Lifton makes clear that peculiarly Japanese conditions are at the root of the Aum phenomenon, Aum's apocalypticism embodied views that have a particular resonance in the West. Moreover, the psycho-historical dislocations experienced by Japan in its transformation to modernism have been repeated in the West, although not in such a disruptive fashion. Indeed, societies in the West, including the United States, exhibit the same type of alienation and psychic distress that could, if conditions got worse, be a breeding ground of extremist or even nihilistic groups like Aum. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] * Destroying the World To Save It: Aum Shinrikyo, Apocalyptic Violence, and the New Global Terrorism === The Lawyer Around The Corner 39. Judge Throws Out Suit Against Holiday Excite/Reuters, Dec. 7, 1999 http://news.excite.com/news/r/991207/08/odd-christmas Ruling that Christmas is celebrated by non-Christians as well as Christians, a judge late on Monday threw out a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of observing Dec. 25 as a federal holiday. U.S. District Judge Susan Dlott said in her dismissal of the lawsuit that just as Christians observe Christmas as a celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ, non-Christians celebrate the occasion to welcome the arrival of Santa Claus. Therefore, she said, Christmas cannot be regarded as a holiday that establishes one religious faith above all others in violation of the demand for a separation of church and state enshrined in the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment. (...) Richard Ganulin, 48, a lawyer who filed the suit, told Reuters he would appeal the dismissal to the Cincinnati-based U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals on grounds that the judge did not treat the issue with the "strict scrutiny" it deserved. (...) A Washington-based organization of U.S. Christian employees was granted its request to be added to the lawsuit as a defendant along with the U.S. government. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this] |
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