EuroCult Report <german_scn_news@hotmail.com>
This includes a section on the Scientology-Narconon Purification
Program. It also includes a section on how cults used to object
to being called "youth religions" in Germany. Today,
cults are no longer called "youth religions" there.
Doctrines of salvation fly a perfidious flag
Occultism and the "Psychology of Lunacy"
Berlin, Germany
by Thomas Gandow
If people at first thought they were looking at another youthful fad like
the waves of Rock'n Rollers, idle wanderers, hippies or commune dwellers,
then today, more than ten years after the appearance of the first Krishna
monk in Berlin, it is obvious that the groups dubbed "youth religions" are
more than a passing fancy. Certainly there is no doubt that the problem is
no longer one solely of youth. Since their arrival, "youth religions" have
caught on with and influenced about 10,000 young people in Berlin,
doctors, lawyers and teachers among them.
Forms of escapism
Certainly the differences must be noted among heralds of foreign religions
which, in the era of the supersonic jet, have made the entire world into a
mission area, and heralds of various movements such as: a proselytizing
Hinduism (such as the Krishna movement); a wandering syncretism (such as
the Divine Light Mission of the now 22-year-old guru Maharaj Ji) on the
one hand; and meditation and therapy corporations that operate more openly
as businesses, such as science fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard's
"Scientology Church" and the "Transcendental Meditation" movement of the
prudently not so transcendentally meditating Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.
No matter how necessary and justified the efforts to differentiate among
these movements, however, the fact that all these groups deal in a
concentrated form of escapism should not be overlooked. Deplored by
political youth organizations throughout the country,
"anti-institutionalism," political resignation, apathetic refusal to work,
drug consumption, disco fever and alternative life forms are all forms of
escapism, some of these have even already been recognized and integrated
into social areas (fashion, music, distribution of alternative literature,
etc.).
"Youth religions," however, appear to be characteristic of the current
escapism in a special way. They have the capability of combining a number
of motives for the general tendency to escape, of relating them to each
other and of linking them together into an extensive, total worldview.
Their concepts of salvation, included in the all-encompassing and
all-enlightening knowledge of the group, basically embodies all occult
practices and concepts. So it is not surprising that the fundamentals of
the Rajneesh Meditation Centers and their spiritual background include not
only dance and light rooms, light organs and Hi-Fi equipment, but also
pendula, pyramid magic, astrology and ecstasy. These "therapy centers" are
described by several observers as extremely prosperous "syntheses of
western humanitarian psychology with eastern mysticism." Rajneesh himself
has described his system as "psychology of lunacy." This label is not
difficult to accept. A considerable share of his Outdrops Ashram in Poona,
India is staffed from the psychiatric wards of the major Indian city.
New Target Group: Seniors
While the Rajneesh movement appears to have a magnetic effect upon
professions in the academic sociological professions, the Maharishi's
Transcendental Meditation has come up with the "Association of German
Doctors for Improvement of Health through Transcendental Meditation." The
TM movement makes attractive advance promises of decreases in medical
costs through TM and recommends TM programs in connection with accident,
sickness and life insurance. Courses that teach the ability to fly and how
to make oneself invisible and travel through walls are given, and the
intention is for these to be taught in schools and in connection with
state defense and fulfillment of prison sentences.
It has been estimated that from 3,000 to 5,000 people have graduated these
courses in Berlin. About 250 of those have paid from 5,000 to 10,000 marks
for the so-called "flying course." That the effects of the TM ideology are
especially dangerous for children and young adults has been stressed by
the recently deceased director of the psychiatric university clinic in
Mainz, Prof. Dr. Langen, based on repeated clinical experiences. Lately
the group has been appearing in seniors homes and telling management that
with the TM program the aging process can be halted and turned around.
Purification Program
The controversial Scientology Church's drug withdrawal program, as it is
called by Narconon, the association that promotes it, has already appeared
at many levels in Berlin. By exploiting the needs of drug addicts and the
desperation of their relatives, Narconon has obtained large sums of public
money for a "drug withdrawal program" in which clients learn how to have
their "souls leave their bodies." At the higher grades, the promises
include having missing teeth or body parts re-grow themselves. The
Scientologists waste much energy in their reactions to criticism and in
their fight against psychiatry, who the Scientologists say have allied
themselves with other dark forces of the world to form a conspiracy
against them. To all appearances the founder has had repeated contact to
this effect.
The latest operation the Scientologist have set up is the "Purification
Program." In the text, "Purification Rundown and Atomic War," it is
asserted that this course, which consists of a combination of verbal
therapy, sweat sessions and the consumption of Niacin, can remove drugs
and toxic substances such as radiation from the body, and can even
"decrease the adverse consequences of future exposure to future radiation.
That brings us to the interesting aspect, that probably those people that
finish one complete and competently conducted purification rundown will
survive -- in contrast to others who are not so lucky," the text reads
under the title "I want Scientologists to survive the third World War."
False labeling of methods
Those who are susceptible to these recipes of salvation are not limited
only to young people. Even a formerly professional publishing house has
begun distributing a large number of an allegedly scientific series of
"do-it-yourself prophesy" books with instructions for spells, guru jargon
and promises of salvation.
If this sort of thing keeps up, then it might not be long before a
Rajneesh disciple appears in a public school as a teacher and gives his
students a guru medallion with a picture of the bearded "Bhagwan" Rajneesh
to charm away their headaches.
One method used by youth religions, as well as by others in the circle of
believers in the occult, is a reinterpretation of things, concepts and
words that borders on false labeling. Scientology, for instance, conducts
its "therapy" as a type of religious "confession," which is a legally
protected practice of religion. Even though "traditional medicine,"
meaning medicine based on science, is presented in a negative light by a
supposedly "holistic" medicine, skepticism is still advised.
In view of widespread chemical pollution, there is a potentially
justifiable tendency towards phytotherapy. The demand for this is
sometimes used to distribute the healing practices and substances of
anthrosophy or homeopathy under the label of "natural" healing as an
alternative to "traditional medicine."
The words used by youth religions and other groups to describe themselves
can also be misleading in that they use words that are generally perceived
to mean something else, such as "religion," "church" and "therapy." While
churches may justifiably feel that they are being imposed upon and, as a
result, carry out informational work [to counter this practice], this use
of the word "therapy" may pose a challenge to the medical department.
Sometime doctors feel it is below their dignity to tackle the fields of
paramedicine and therapy fraud. When the basic disadvantage of the
spreading loss of public confidence in the medical profession is weighed
against this inconvenience, however, it cannot be taken seriously enough.
Based on the principles of psycho-hygiene, indifference should not be
tolerated.
The advertisement for "therapeutic" or paramedical offers of youth
religions and other occult groups featuring educators, therapists or
doctors would be especially objectionable, or if these people appear to
personally endorse a product or method, as has already occurred repeatedly
in Berlin. Information and education about personal psychic or phsyical
harm is all the more important because of this, and the adverse social
impact is also a matter of concern for doctors.
sidebox 1
Psycho-technology of youth religions
A special technology of psychic redesign is used by these groups,
presumably deliberately and with the intention of obtaining a total
conversion. These include:
sidebox 2
"Youth religions" or "destructive cults"?
Groups that are called "youth religions" make the
following assertions:
The phrase "youth religion" is not without controversy. This
is primarily because the groups the phrase is applied to feel they are
being discriminated against. Would the phrase "destructive
cults," as it is used in the USA be more appropriate?
When these groups are spoken of as independent religions, it does not mean
they have the rights afforded to recognized religious denominations, only
that they are not dependent upon and do not wish to be dependent upon
other religious traditions, which is the case with a sect. Most of the
groups rely on some new form of revelation; they produce receivers for the
revelation and sometimes documents of revelation.
These groups were not called "youth religions" just because the
age of the majority of their members, and especially their leading
functionaries, ranged from puberty to late adolescence, but also because
they present a pubescent concept of changing the world. "We want
everything and we want it now." The mood and membership of the
group, in addition, is based on the creation of an infantile obedience,
which is obtained by regular suppression through use of various
psycho-technologies.
The effect is the dream of instantaneous gratification and infantile
fantasies of omnipotence. These, in turn, are projected upon the leader
and the hierarchy, thereby binding them to the constant fear of falling
from grace, fed all the more by the excessive punishments constantly meted
out by the leader.
---
- the above is not a literal translation
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Narconon Exposed web site.
1980: Purif disguised as therapy
Issue 7 / 1980
Special edition of "Die Berliner Aerztekammer"
- for non-commercial use only - visit http://cisar.org
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