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The Independent II
THE PRISONERS OF SAINT HILLby Tim Kelsey and Mike Ricks Saint Hill, the 17th-century manor house in East
Grinstead, West Sussex, which is the British headquarters of the
Scientologists. Photographs: Nick Turpin/Camera Press.
The Scientologists call it "baby-watching", but it has nothing to do
with looking after infants. TIM KELSEY and MIKE RICKS investigate the
potentially dangerous, and possibly illegal, secret treatment that the
world's largest cult uses to deal with difficult members
The middle-aged German student started screaming. He seemed to have
lost control. He was a Scientologist, a member of the world's largest
cult, on a course of study that, he had been promised, would bring him
closer to the secrets of the universe and, eventually, give him the
key to eternal life.
According to eyewitnesses, the man, whose name is known to the
"Independent", was taken to an isolated room in a communal building
not far from Saint Hill, a 17th-century manor house in East Grinstead,
West Sussex, and the UK headquarters of the cult.
For two weeks,the room was locked. The German had been placed on an
"isolation watch" - or what Scientologists more informally refer to as
a "baby watch". It is a treatment that was prescribed by the founder
of the cult, L. Ron Hubbard, a science fiction writer, for members
showing signs of psychosis or mental ill-health -- people who are,
literally, plagued by evil spirits. It is the last resort for dealing
with difficult Scientologists. It is a treatment that the organisation
has so far kept secret.
The subject of the watch is observed at all times, and not allowed to
talk to anybody. He or she is, in the language of the cult, "muzzled".
Our witnesses, who have asked to remain anonymous, remember that the
German was sometimes incontinent and that they had to wash him down at
the sink in the otherwise bare room. The five people who guarded him
were only allowed to communicate with him in writing. Eventually he
was allowed to return to Germany.
Scientology stand accused of many things: of warping people's minds,
of financial corruption, of preying on the vulnerable. Thirty years
ago, a group of Members of Parliament tried to have it banned in the
United Kingdom after a girl with a history of mental illness was found
wandering around East Grinstead, having a nervous breakdown. Finally,
the Government banned all foreign nationals coming to the UK to work
or study in Scientology, until 1980.
Since then, the Scientologists have worked hard to improve their
image. But they remain a secretive, frightening group. Despite the
proliferation of their "literature", little is known of the inner
workings of their organisation.
Most people have walked past high street shops outside which smiling
youngsters offer free "personality tests". Russell Miller, in his
biography of Hubbard, showed that Scientology is a monumental con and
that its founder was a charlatan. Almost everything Hubbard said was
palpably untrue - he claimed to have been awarded a Purple Heart for
being wounded in action, which was false; he claimed he was crippled
and blinded at the end of the Second World War, also false. Despite
these fabrications, dedicated loyalists believe Hubbard was a genius,
the designer of a new path that could lead people to a secular Eden.
In the main, they are educated, white and middle class.
For the past few months, the "Independent" has been investigating
claims that the cult employs quasi-psychological techniques that are
possibly illegal and potentially dangerous to the longterm health of
its more vulnerable members. Disturbing new evidence, provided, at
some risk to themselves, by existing and former members of the cult
may renew calls for Scientology to again be banned from the UK. In the
United States, the cult was recently granted the tax exemption enjoyed
by genuine churches, but this may soon be overturned. In November, in
a landmark ruling, the Californian Court of Appeal agreed that the the
techniques of Scientology constitute "brain-washing" and
"thought-reform" similar to that practised by the Chinese and North
Koreans against American prisisoners of war.
Hubbard regarded the law as a tool to be used to the advantage of the
cult (he once said: "The law can be used very easily to harass"), and
the cult has become notorious for issuing injunctions and taking out
libel actions - none of which it has so far won. But the tide seems to
be turning: there are a series of legal actions pending from former
members seeking damages for a variety of reasons, including false
imprisontnent.
The "baby-watching" incident with the German student occurred in 1991.
But the technique has been used more recently, according to
confidential church documents dating from September 1993, which have
been leaked to the "lndependent". These show that the Scientologists
mounted an internal investigation after a baby watch conducted on
another German, again at Saint Hill, last year. The investigation was
instigated because the woman put in isolation was already suffering
from an acute mental disorder - in the terminology used by the
investigating officer, she was Type III, which translates as "insane".
She went insane, according to the document, while she was working for
the organisation in Europe. In early 1993, she arrived in Saint Hill
and was put on a baby watch because she was thought to be a "security
risk". Her boyfriend was put in charge of the watch. But something
went badly wrong, and the watch was "very extended" because of
incompetence by local officials, reports the document. It is not clear
whether she was locked in a room throughout or allowed, as is
sometimes the case, to walk around during the watch. There seems to be
some dispute about whether the local staff were adequately trained to
deal with such a case, and permission for her "treatment" finally had
to come directly from the American leadership of the cult.
Several of the most senior officers of the British arm of the cult
were blamed for allowing this woman to remain a member of the cult --
according to the internal memo, she apparently had a history of drug
abuse. These senior members were ordered to attend an internal
tribunal. If found guilty of failing to ensure the "security" of the
member, they will be demoted and sentenced to a period of
"rehabilitation" through hard labour. According to the report, it
seems that the woman escaped from Saint Hill, was arrested by police
and then returned to Germany.
One former senior cult official who worked in the Californian section
of the organisation was involved in several baby watches. On one
occasion, a woman staff member was put in isolation after she started
throwing furniture out of the window of her flat, which overlooked
Hollywood Boulevard. She was then locked in her room. "We had to take
all the furniture out of the room, strip it completely and leave her
in there on her own for more than a week," the official said. "She was
just crazy, talking to herself and screaming." This woman had been
engaged in one of the most demanding of the Scientology courses,
during which students are taught that 75 million years ago the earth
was part of a galactic confederation ruled by an evil prince called
Xenu. He shipped the inhabitants of 76 planets to earth. The spirits
(or thetans) of these extra-terrestrials inhabit the souls of
contemporary human beings and have to be exorcised.
Dr Betty Tylden, a retired consultant psychiatrist who is regularly
called as an expert court witness on cults, has treated Scientologists
recovering from the effects of baby watches -- both the victims and
the guards. She has seen several in the past six months alone. "People
are terribly frightened of it," she said. "They come out of it
suffering from something very similar to Post-traumatic Stress
Disorder, the "prisoner" syndrome. There is hyper-arousal, flashbacks,
fear and obsessions. It is very nasty, and even if it doesn't break a
law, it is a gross curtailment of an individual's liberty."
It is not just baby-watching that is causing concern. One Zimbabwean
man, Noel Matarandirotya, who has now left the organisation and has
been advised by his legal counsel that he may have grounds to seek
compensation from the Scientologists for, among other things, false
imprisonment, claims that he collapsed as a result of intensive
interrogation. He came to Saint Hill in 1991, on a ticket paid for by
the cult, but the following year he was suspected of subverting the
interests of the organisation. He alleges that he was interrtogated
for two or three hours every day often with a lie detector connected
by electrodes to his hands.
His concerns about the cult started before this, while he participaled
in a Scientology coursc called a "purification rundown" -- during
which members spend long periods in a sauna and take large quantities
of vitamin pills. According to Dr Tylden, the massive quantity of
pills, combined with the physical stress of spending long periods at
high temperatures, could be fatal. "I found it very difficult," said
Mr Matarandirotya. "There were some children doing the course when I
did it. I saw at least two, the youngest around 10, and they were
taking the vitamins, too."
He is prepared to speak out. Most are not. Scientology has a
reputation for hunting down its critics. One man has taken to wearing
an armoured vest because of alleged threats against his life. One
American former cult member claims that he was ordered to kill two
opponents of the organisation.
Those claims will shortly be tested in court. If they prove true, they
could mark the beginning of the end for one of this century's most
bizarre, powerful and secretive social phenomena. Related: Lisa McPherson ( Washington Post ) |
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