[As you'll see here, the Scientology company's frauds are all about
extracting as much money out of gullible and ignorant victims as
possible.]
SUNDAY MIRROR INVESTIGATES: INSIDE TOM CRUISE CULT
Sunday Mirror - 20 November 2005
We go undercover to spend 4 weeks in the weird world of Scientology
-- 5 hours a day in a sauna "will purify the soul" -- at a
cost of £1,100 -- No sex if you're pregnant and you can't ever talk
to a sick child.
By Sharon Van Geuns
FIVE hours a day in a steaming sauna for three weeks at a cost of just
over £1,100... and my sullied soul will be purified.
At least that's what I am promised.
Welcome to religion, Scientology-style.
For one month I have been following in the footsteps of the controversial
cult's most famous torchbearer - Tom Cruise - to discover just what Katie
Holmes, his 26-year-old pregnant fiancee, is facing as one of the Church
of Scientology's latest recruits.
I resolve to tell them I am pregnant too. Is it really true I would have
to give birth in absolute silence? And what other strange rites - apart
from the sauna purification programme - would I have to follow?
A High Court judge once dismissed the organisation as "corrupt,
sinister and dangerous" but I arrive at their London HQ in
Tottenham Court Road prepared to be open-minded.
Over the course of the next few weeks I see and hear things that leave me
feeling very uncomfortable.
I learn I should be silent in the presence of a sick child - even if an
ambulance needs to be called. Instead of calling for help I would have
to "find a bit of paper" and write down any instructions to a
passer-by.
I am also asked to pass Scientology material to a teacher friend, to get
the cult's message across to schools.
And I discover at least one member of staff is sometimes paid as little
as £10 a week. Like many others, my first encounter with the Church is
outside one of their centres. As I make my way towards the building I
am accosted in the street.
"Hi!" and suddenly a face is beaming up at me. "Want a
free stress test? All you need to do is answer a few questions and we
can tell you exactly what areas in your life are stressing you out the
most," says the girl. "Then we can tell you how to combat
them."
This is Louise. "Please sit down," she says, before I have
even had a chance to answer. The "test" is set up outside
the front entrance. I am asked to hold two metal handles attached to
to a machine with a dial. After a series of questions, it's determined
that I am "highly stressed".
"You're at the right place," says Louise. "We can restore
calm and control over your life." Inside, most of the staff are
young and several are from overseas. Louise, 24, is from Australia
and has been working here two years.
She instantly probes me about my life. "What's the relationship
like with your boyfriend? Your mother?" I feel uncomfortable, but
strangely compelled to reveal some of my deepest secrets to a complete
stranger.
Louise says my troubles will be eased by taking a number of courses
on offer at the centre. They are designed by the cult's founder,
science fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard, who died in 1982. He established
the Church of Scientology in the 1950s after claiming to have discovered
the mysterious "truth" about human existence. I am introduced
to a procedure called "auditing". It's a crude form of
counselling which involves sitting opposite a person, getting them
to close their eyes before taking them back to a past experience.
You are supposed to take them through the experience time after time
until they become "cheerful" about it.
As I am new, I am sent for a practice session. I am not expecting to
find myself face-to-face with a 3ft soft toy in the form of Winnie
the Pooh.
The bear sits opposite me. Behind him sits Mike, who will answer on the
bear's behalf. I address the bear and read from a card of instructions.
"Please locate an incident you feel comfortable facing," I
say to the bear, trying hard not to laugh. "Well, there is this
one time," says the bear, or rather Mike. "My pot of honey
was stolen. It really upset me."
"Very good," I read, from the card. "Go to the beginning
of that incident and go through it and say what is happening as you go
along."
"OK," says the bear. 'Well I was out walking...' And so it
goes on. For half an hour. I am now apparently ready to listen and
audit a "real-life" person.
Louise calls me the next day and asks me to come in. At the centre I
meet Ajay, who has big problems. With no professional training I talk
to him about his strict Hindu background, and how he is struggling to
accept that his virgin girlfriend dated men before him. I can't voice
an opinion. Afterwards Ajay says he feels better for talking about
it, but nothing has really been resolved. Edith, who had been
supervising us, dismisses his concerns by telling him he simply needs
more "auditing".
Ajay and I had paid a fee of £34 for starting the beginner's auditing
course. If we want more auditing we will have to pay around £15 a
session. Next in the programme is "Purification" - the
sauna treatment. To reverse the spiritual and mental effects of drug
use, you are encouraged to sit in a hot sauna for up to five hours a
day for up to 21 days.
This will apparently rid the body of toxins and focus the mind. It will
cost £965 - but the books and vitamins needed on top come to an extra
£150. Later I discover that no scientific evidence exists to prove the
sauna treatment works.
I ask for information regarding pregnancy. I am introduced to Sarah,
a senior course administrator at the centre and a mother of five.
She tells me some very odd things. "The main thing to do when
you're pregnant is to learn to keep silent if you hurt yourself.
Anything you say can be registered in the baby's mind and may affect
it later in life." She also tells me to avoid sex during
pregnancy. "You might put stress on the baby or squash it and
thereby cause an engram (negative experience in their memory)."
Scientologists believe birth should be done in silence. I ask Sarah
how she dealt with the pain.
"Not easy," she admits, "but it will save a lot of
auditing in the future for the child." I ask about the belief
that parents should not make a noise in the presence of an injured child.
Scientologists believe that anything a child or person hears during a
painful experience will come back to haunt them later in life. How, I
wonder, will Katie Holmes cope with not being able to whisper
comforting words to her child when he or she is sick?
I mention a teacher friend of mine. Immediately a woman asks me whether
I am able to get any Scientology literature to my friend, so she
can take it into her school. I say I don't feel comfortable with this.
But by the end of the third week at the centre it is easy to see why
Scientology is popular. I found a whole new set of friends who seemed
to really care about me. If I am late or miss a session they call me.
When my car window is smashed by vandals I get three phone calls within
a couple of hours asking how I am.
I decide to take up an invite to the Church of Scientology's UK
headquarters in East Grinstead, West Sussex. To my amazement, I find
myself among 5,000 cheering and chanting followers in a
sumptuously-decorated marquee.
I am even more amazed to see Tom Cruise himself has flown in, bringing
a bemused-looking Katie with him. Another two celebrity Scientologists,
John Travolta and his wife Kelly Preston, are there too, but I can't
get anywhere near any of them because they are in the VIP section.
Next day, back at the centre, I'm offered a personality test - the
results suggest I am "very unbalanced". I'm also told I
am irresponsible, depressed, and highly critical. Louise suggests I
take one of their "Personal Values and Integrity" courses -
at a cost of £48.
Over a coffee Louise confides that as a staff member she gets benefits,
including free "auditing" and training. To my dismay, she
says sometimes she earns as little as £10 a week.
It is clear that Louise and her colleagues (who work at the lower ends
of the organisation) are on a bonus-style scheme.
If they bring in a lot of people like me, and sell a lot of courses
and books, they earn more money.
Louise believes in "the cause". Unfortunately for her, I don't.
I have found the whole experience very disturbing and this was where I
parted company with Scientology.
Katie Holmes might have bagged one of the most eligible men in the
Church but I don't envy her one tiny bit.
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