Peoples Temple

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Los Angeles (California)
Los Angeles
Los Angeles
San Francisco
San Francisco
Ukiah
Ukiah
Bakersfield
Bakersfield
Fresno
Fresno
Sacramento
Sacramento
Santa Rosa
Santa Rosa
Some of the Peoples Temple's locations in California.

Peoples Temple was an organization founded in 1955 by Jim Jones that, by the mid-1970s, possessed over a dozen locations in California including its headquarters in San Francisco. It is best known for causing the death of 918 people on November 18, 1978 in Guyana, at the Peoples Temple Agricultural Project (informally called "Jonestown"), a nearby airstrip at Port Kaituma, and Georgetown.

The tragedy at Jonestown resulted in the greatest single loss of American civilian life in a non-natural disaster until the incidents of September 11, 2001. At the airstrip, Temple members murdered, among others, Congressman Leo Ryan, the only Congressman murdered in the line of duty in United States history.

Contents

[edit] Peoples Temple before California

[edit] Indiana formation

Before forming a church, Jim Jones had become enamored of communism and frustrated by the harassment communists received in the U.S.[1] This, among other things, provoked a seminal moment for Jones, as he himself described on a biography tape, where he stated:[1][2]

I decided, how can I demonstrate my Marxism? The thought was, infiltrate the church. So I consciously made a decision to look into that pro— that prospect.

—Jim Jones

Although he faced backlash for being a communist, Jones was surprised that a Methodist superintendent whom he had not met through the American Communist Party helped Jones into the church despite his knowledge that Jones was a communist.[3] In 1952, Jones became a student pastor in Sommerset Southside Methodist Church in Indianapolis, but left that church because it barred him from integrating African Americans into his congregation.[2] In 1954, Jones began his own church in rented space in Indianapolis, at first naming it the Community Unity Church.[2]

Jones had previously witnessed a faith-healing service at the Seventh Day Baptist Church, observed that it attracted people and their cash and concluded that with financial resources from such healings, he could help accomplish his social goals.[2] Jones and Temple members knowingly faked healings because they found that the increased faith derived therefrom generated financial resources to help the poor and finance the church.[2] These faked healings involved using chicken livers and other animal tissue that existing Temple members and Jones claimed were cancerous tissues removed from the body.[4]

In 1956, Jones bought his first church building in a racially mixed Indianapolis neighborhood and named the church Wings of Deliverance,[5] and later that year the "Peoples Temple Full Gospel Church", the first title incorporating the name "Peoples Temple."[2] Jones' healings and purported clairvoyant revelations attracted spiritualists.[5]

[edit] Indianapolis expansion

Indianapolis (Indiana)
Indianapolis
Indianapolis
Indianapolis (Indiana)

In order to increase publicity, the Temple organized large religious "conventions" with other Pentecostal pastors, though Jones continued to disguise his atheism and the fact that he was using religion to further social goals.[5] Those conventions drew as many as 11,000 attendees.[5] Jones and the other preachers conducted "healings" and impressed attendees by knowing private information – usually numbers, such as addresses, phone numbers or social security numbers – that private detectives could easily discover beforehand.[5]

Jones and Temple members drove through various cities in Indiana and Ohio on recruiting and fund raising efforts.[6]

While the Temple had increased African-American membership from 15% to nearly 50%, in order to attempt further gains, the Temple hired African-American preacher Archie Ijames, who had earlier given up organized religion.[5] The Temple stressed egalitarian ideals, asking members to attend in casual clothes so poor members would not feel out of place and providing shelter for needy citizens.[7] Pastor Ijames was one of the first to commit to Jones' socialist collective program.[7] In 1959, the church joined the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), and was renamed the Peoples Temple Christian Church Full Gospel.[2] This affiliation was a successful attempt to both raise the dwindling membership and restore the reputation of the organization.

In February 1960, the Temple opened a soup kitchen for the poor and expanded social services, including rent assistance, job placement services and giving poor citizens canned goods, clothing and coal for winter heating.[7] After Ijames and his wife had "gone communal", the couple helped to increase the Temple's soup kitchen to an average of about 2,800 meals per month.[7]

The Temple's public profile was elevated when Jones was appointed to the Indianapolis Human Rights Commission, engaged in public attempts to integrate businesses and was the subject of much local media coverage. [8]

[edit] Changes and "religious communalism"

Jones had read extensively about Father Divine, the founder of the International Peace Mission movement.[9] Jones and Temple members visited Divine several times, while Jones studied his writings and tape recordings of his sermons.[10] The Temple printed Divine's texts for its members and began to preach that members should abstain from sex and only adopt children.[10]

In 1959, in a sermon in his Delaware Street Temple, Jones tested the new fiery rhetorical style that Divine had used.[11] His speech captivated members with lulls and crescendos, as Jones challenged individual members in front of the group.[11] The speech also marked the beginning of the Temple's underlying "us versus them" message.[11] Jones carefully weaved in that the Temple's home for senior citizens was established on the basis "From each according to his ability, to each according to his need," quoting Karl Marx's "Critique of the Gotha Program."[12] He did so playing upon the fact that his Christian audience would notice the similarities with text from Acts of the Apostles 4:34-35 which stated "distribution was made to each as any had need."[12] Jones would repeatedly cite that passage to call Jesus Christ a communist, while at the same time attacking the text of the Bible.[12]

The Temple began tightening its organization.[7] It asked more of its members than did other churches.[7] It also required that members spend Thanksgiving and Christmas with its Temple "family" rather than with blood relatives.[7] This began the Temple's procedures to wean members from families and redirect their lives toward a total commitment to the Temple's social and political goals.[7] Jones began to offer a deal towards a socialist collective, Jones then referred to as "religious communalism", in which members would donate their material possessions to the Temple in exchange for the Temple meeting those members' needs.[7] Pastor Ijames was one of the first to commit.[7]

However hard it tried, the Temple had little luck converting fundamentalist Christian midwestern capitalists to communist ideals, even if disguised.[13] After Jones admired Fidel Castro's overthrow of Batista in Cuba in 1959, Jones traveled to Cuba in 1960 to attempt to convert poor Cuban blacks to move to his congregation in Indiana.[13] The plan failed.[13]

The Temple's religious message changed in this period to one treading between atheism and the subtle notion that Jones was a Christ-like figure.[14] While Temple aides complained privately, Jones said that that message was needed to foster members' dedication to the Temple's larger goals.[14] Jones maintained such implications until the mid-to-late 1970s, when he dropped them.[14]

In 1961, Jones claimed he had a vision of Chicago coming under a nuclear attack.[15] He claimed that Indianapolis would also be destroyed.[15] This convinced aides that the Temple needed to look for a new location. A 1962 Esquire magazine article listed the nine safest places to be in a nuclear war, with Belo Horizonte, Brazil topping the list because of its location and atmospheric conditions.[16]

Jones traveled through Brazil from 1962 through early 1963.[17] He requested money from the Temple while in Rio de Janeiro, but the Temple lacked adequate funds for such a request because of shrinking finances in Jones' absence.[17] Jones sent a preacher that had become a follower of Jones in Brazil back to Indiana to help preachers there stabilize the Temple. [18]

[edit] Peoples Temple in California

[edit] Move to California

After traveling in Brazil, Jones returned to Indiana in 1963.[2] While Jones had always spoken of the social gospel's virtues, before the late 1960s, Jones did not reveal that his gospel was actually communism.[2] By the late 1960s, Jones began openly revealing in Temple sermons his "Apostolic Socialism" concept.[2][19] The concept often loosely mixed tenets of atheism and socialism.[note 1] During this period, Jones preached to new members that the Holy Spirit was within them, but that Jones' healing power demonstrated that he was a special manifestation of "Christ the Revolution."[2] He also preached that the United States was the Antichrist and capitalism was "the Antichrist system."[2]

Image from a Peoples Temple brochure, portraying leader Jim Jones as the father of the "Rainbow Family".

Jones preached of an imminent nuclear holocaust, and that the surviving elect would then create a new socialist Eden on earth.[2] In 1965, he predicted this would occur on July 15, 1967.[2] Accordingly, Jones preached that the Temple must move to Redwood Valley, California.[2] Jones led approximately 140 members, half of whom were black, to Redwood Valley in July of 1965 and officially opened church in Ukiah.[6][20] The addition of deputy district attorney Timothy Stoen greatly increased the Temple's credibility in the area, quickly increasing membership.[20]

Jones began deriding traditional Christianity as "fly away religion," and rejected the Bible as being white men’s' justification to dominate women and enslave people of color.[2] Jones authored a booklet he would distribute in the Temple titled "The Letter Killeth,"[21] pointing out what he felt were the contradictions, absurdities, and atrocities in the Bible, but also stating that the Bible contained great truths. Jones preached that the "Divine Principle" equated with "Love," and Love was equated with "Socialism."[2] He stated that the Bible only contained beliefs about a "Sky God" or "Buzzard God," who was no God at all.[2]

[edit] Urban expansion

Because of limited expansion in the Ukiah area, eventually moving the seat of power to an urban area appeared to be a strategic necessity.[22] In 1970, the Temple began holding services in San Francisco and Los Angeles.[23] It established permanent facilities in those cities in 1971 and 1972, respectively.[22]

By 1972 the Temple was calling Redwood Valley the "mother church" of a "statewide political movement." [22] From the start, the Los Angeles facility's primary purpose was recruitment and to serve as a way station for the Temple's weekly bus trips across California.[22] The Temple set up a permanent staff in Los Angeles and arranged bus trips to Los Angeles every other week.[22] The substantial attendance and collections in Los Angeles helped to support the Temple's inflated membership claims.[22] The Los Angeles facility was physically larger than that in San Francisco.[22] Its central location at the corner of Alvarado and Hoover streets permitted easy geographic access for a large African-American membership from Watts and Compton.[22]

Recruiting drives in Los Angeles and San Francisco cities helped to increase membership in the Peoples Temple from a few hundred to nearly 3,000 by the mid-70s.[24] Later, when the Temple's headquarters shifted from Redwood Valley to San Francisco, the Temple convinced many Los Angeles members to move north to its new headquarters.[22]

[edit] Organizational structure

Although some descriptions of Peoples Temple emphasize Jones’ autocratic control over Temple operation, in actuality the Temple possessed a complex leadership structure with decision-making power unevenly dispersed among its members. However, within that structure, Temple members were subjected unwittingly and gradually to sophisticated mind control and behavior-modification techniques borrowed from post-revolutionary China and North Korea.[25] The Temple brightly defined psychological borders over which "enemies", such as "traitors" to the Temple, crossed at their own peril.[25] While the secrecy and caution he demanded in recruiting led to decreased overall membership, they also helped Jones to better foster a hero worship of himself as the "ultimate socialist."[25]

In the early 1970s, the Temple established a more formal hierarchy for its socialistic model. [26] At the top were the Temple's "Staff", a select group of eight to ten unquestionably obedient college-educated women that undertook the most sensitive missions for the Temple.[26] They necessarily acclimated themselves to an "ends justify the means" philosophy.[26] The earliest member was Sandy Bradshaw, a 24 year old socialist from Syracuse, New York who had rejected God at age seven.[26] Others included Carolyn Layton, a 31 year old Communist since the age of 15 who was the mother of a child with Jones; Sharon Amos, who worked for the social services department; Patty Cartmell, Jones' secretary; and Terry Buford, a Navy brat turned pacifist.[26] The group was often scorned as being elitist the egalitarian Temple organization, and were viewed as Temple secret police.[26]

The Temple's "Planning Commission" was its governing board.[27][28] Membership quickly ballooned from 50 to over 100.[27][29] Members convened for meetings during the week in various Redwood Valley locations that sometimes ran until dawn.[27] The Planning Commission was responsible for the day-to-day operations of the Temple, including key decision-making, financial and legal planning, and oversight of the organization.[30] The Planning Commission sat over various other committees, such as the "Diversions Committee", which carried out tasks such as writing huge numbers of letters to politicians from fictional people mailed from various locations around the U.S.,[31] and the "Mertles Committee", which undertook activities against defectors Al and Jeannie Mills.[32]

A group of rank and file members, referred to by outsiders as "the troops", consisted of working class members that were 70-80% black that helped set up chairs for meetings, fill offering boxes and other tasks.[26] Most made the leap from Christianity to the Temple's quasi-socialism both because of the Temple's political reeducation and because "the troops" were responding to the form rather than the substance of the Temple's services.[26] Jones also surrounded himself with several dozen mostly white privileged members in their twenties and thirties that had skills in law, accounting, nursing, teaching, music and administration.[26] This latter group carried out public relations, financial duties and more mundane chores while bringing in good salaries from well-paying outside jobs.[26]

[edit] Recruiting, faith healings and fund raising

The Temple used ten to fifteen Greyhound-type bus cruisers to transport members up and down California freeways each week for recruitment and fund raising.[33] Jim Jones always rode bus number seven, which contained armed guards and a special section lined with protective metal plates.[33] Jones told members that the Temple would not bother scheduling a trip unless it could net $100,000-$200,000 dollars and the Temple's goal for annual net income from bus trips was $1 million.[33]

Beginning in the 1970s, the bus caravan also traveled across the United States quarterly, including to Washington D.C.[33] In June of 1973, Representative George Brown, Jr. entered a lengthy and laudatory description of the Temple into the Congressional Record.[33] The Washington Post ran an August 18, 1973 editorial page item stating that the 660 Temple visitors were the "hands down winners of anybody's tourists of the year award" after spending an hour cleaning up the Capitol grounds.[33]

The Temple distributed pamphlets in cities along the route of these fund raising trips bragging of Jones prowess at "spiritual healing", while not mentioning the Temple's Marxist goals.[33] Stops included large cities, such as Houston, Detroit and Cleveland.[33] Temple members pretended to be locals and acted as shills in the various faked healings and "revelations".[33] Local viewers did not realize that they were in the minority in the audience.[33] The weekly take from offerings and healing services was $15,000 to $25,000 in Los Angeles and $8,000 to $12,000 in San Francisco.[34] They were smaller collections from trips around the "mother church" in Redwood Valley.[34]

The Temple also set up "Truth Enterprises", a direct mailing branch that sent out 30,000 to 50,000 mailers monthly to people who had attended Temple services or had written to the Temple after listening to Temple radio shows.[34] Donations were mailed in from all over the continental United States, Hawaii, South America and Europe.[34] In addition to receiving donations, the Temple also sold trinkets, such as pieces of Jones' robes, healing oil and Temple rings, key chains and lockets.[34] In peak periods, mailer revenue grossed $300 to $400 daily.[34] This figure even surprised Jones.[34]

Although Jones had earlier asked Temple members to destroy photos of Jones because he did not want members worshiping him as Catholics worshiped plaster statues, Jeannie and Al Mills (who would later defect) convinced Jones to sell anointed and blessed photos to help raise money for the Temple.[34] Jones used to fret "they're gonna get me for mail fraud someday."[34] In 1973, the Temple also formed "Brotherhood Records", a subsidiary that produced records from the Temple's "large interracial youth choir and orchestra." [35]

[edit] Size and scope

Despite exaggerated claims by the Temple of 20,000 or more members, one source claims its greatest actual registered membership was around 3,000.[36] However, 5,000 individual membership cards photos were located in Temple records after its dissolution.[37] Regardless of its official membership, the Temple also regularly drew 3,000 people to its San Francisco services alone, whether or not they were technically registered members.[38] Of particular interest to politicians was the Temple's ability to produce 2,000 people for work or attendance in San Francisco with only six hours notice.[20]

Peoples Temple Dorm at Santa Rosa Junior College
(credit: Jonestown Institute)

By the mid-1970s, in addition to its locations in Redwood Valley, Los Angeles and San Francisco, the Peoples Temple had also established satellite congregations in almost a dozen other California cities.[25] Jones mentioned locations in San Francisco, Ukiah, Los Angeles, Bakersfield, Fresno and Sacramento.[39] The Temple also maintained a branch, college tuition program and dormitory at Santa Rosa Junior College.[40][41]

At the same time, Jones and his church earned a reputation for aiding the cities' poorest citizens, especially racial minorities, drug addicts, and the homeless. The Peoples Temple made strong connections to the California state welfare system.[42] During the 1970s, the Peoples Temple owned and ran at least nine residential care homes for the elderly, six homes for foster children, and a state-licensed 40-acre (160,000 m2) ranch for developmentally disabled persons.[43] The Temple elite handled members' insurance claims and legal problems, effectively acting as a client-advocacy group. For these reasons, sociologist John Hall described Peoples Temple as a "charismatic bureaucracy",[44] oriented toward Jones as a charismatic leader, but functioning as a bureaucratic social service organization.

[edit] Kinsolving series

In 1972, the San Francisco Examiner and Indianapolis Star ran the first four parts of a seven-part story on the Temple by Lester Kinsolving, its first public exposé.[45] Kinsolving reported on several aspects of church dealings, its claims of healings and Jones' ritual of throwing bibles down in church, yelling "This black book has held down you people for 200 years. It has no power."[46] The Temple picketed the Examiner, yelled at the Examiner's editor in a car (seated between burly Temple "Red Brigade" security guards) and threatened both papers with libel suits.[45] Both papers cancelled the series after the fourth of the seven installments.[45] Shortly thereafter, Jones made grants to newspapers in California with the stated goal of supporting the First Amendment.[47]

[edit] Defections

Some defections occurred,[48] most notably in 1973, when eight mostly young members, commonly referred to as the "Gang of Eight", defected together.[49] Because members of the Gang of Eight were aware of sinister threats to potentially defecting members, they suspected that Jones would send a search party to look for them.[49] Their fears proved to be correct when Jones employed multiple search parties, including one scanning highways from a rented airplane.[50] The Gang of Eight drove three trucks loaded with firearms toward Canada, avoiding watched U.S. Highway 101.[49] Because they feared bringing firearms over the Canadian border, the Gang of Eight traveled instead to the hills of Montana, where they wrote a long letter documenting their complaints.[50]

Former Temple member Jeannie Mills later wrote that Jones called thirty members to his home and forebodingly declared that, in light of the Gang of Eight defection, "in order to keep our apostolic socialism, we should all kill ourselves and leave a note saying that because of harassment, a socialist group cannot exist at this time".[51] Jones became furious, waving a pistol in his Planning Commission meeting while threatening potential defectors, and referring to the Gang of Eight as "Trotskyite defectors" and "Coca-Cola revolutionaries".[52] While the Temple did not execute the suicide plan to which Jones referred, it did conduct fake suicide rituals in the years that followed.[51]

[edit] San Francisco Temple

The move to San Francisco permitted Jones to return to urban recruitment and made better political sense because it permitted the Temple to show its true political stripes.[53] By the Spring of 1976, Jones openly admitted even to outsiders that he was an atheist.[54] Despite the Temple's fear that the IRS was investigating its religious tax exemption, by 1977, Jones' wife, Marcy, openly admitted to the New York Times that Jones had not been lured to religion because of faith, but because it served his goal of social change through Marxism.[20] She stated that, as early as age 18 when he watched his idol Mao Zedong overthrow the Chinese government, Jones realized that the way to achieve social change in the United States was to mobilize people through religion.[20] She admitted that "Jim used religion to try to get some people out of the opiate of religion," and had slammed the bible on the table yelling "I've got to destroy this paper idol!"[20]

With the move into San Francisco, the Temple more strenuously emphasized that its members live communally.[55] It stressed physical discipline of children first, and then adults.[56] The San Francisco Temple also carefully vetted newcomers through an extensive observation process.[22]

The Temple distinguished itself from most cults with its overtly political message.[25] It combined those genuine political sympathies with the perception that it could help turn out large numbers of votes to gain the support of a number of prominent politicians.[57] Jones made it known after he moved to San Francisco that he was interested in politics, and legal changes strengthened political groups, like the Temple.[58][59]

After the Temple mobilized volunteers and voters instrumental in George Moscone's narrow election victory in 1975, Moscone appointed Jones as Chairman of the San Francisco Housing Authority Commission.[60][61] Jones and the Temple received the support of, among others, Governor Jerry Brown, Lieutenant Governor Mervyn Dymally, Assemblyman Willie Brown, San Francisco mayor George Moscone, Art Agnos, and Harvey Milk.[62] Willie Brown visited the temple many times and spoke publicly in support of Jones, even after investigations and suspicions of cult activity.[63][64]

After his rise in San Francisco political circles, Jones and Moscone met privately with Vice Presidential Candidate Walter Mondale in San Francisco days before the 1976 Presidential election.[65] Jones also met First Lady Rosalynn Carter on multiple occasions, including a private dinner, and corresponded with Mrs. Carter.[66][67]

Jones used his position at the Housing Authority to lead the fight for a period against the eviction of tenants from San Francisco's famous I-Hotel.[68] The Temple further forged an alliance with San Francisco Sun Reporter publisher Carlton Goodlett, and received frequent favorable mentions in that paper.[69] It also received frequent favorable mentions from famed San Francisco Chronicle columnist Herb Caen and other local newspaper and television reporters.[70]

The Temple aroused police suspicion after Jones praised the radical Bay Area group the Symbionese Liberation Army and its leaders attended San Francisco Temple meetings.[71] Further suspicions were raised after the defection of Joyce Shaw and the death soon after of her husband, Bob Houston.[72] After tension rose between the Temple and the Nation of Islam in San Francisco, the group held a large "spiritual" jubilee in the Los Angeles convention center attended by thousands, including prominent political figures, to heal the rift.[68] It also enjoyed long relationships with Angela Davis and American Indian Movement co-founder Dennis Banks.[73]

While the Temple forged media alliances, the move to San Francisco also opened the group to San Francisco media scrutiny. After Jones and hundreds of Temple members fled to Guyana following media investigations, Mayor Moscone issued a press release stating the Mayor's office would not investigate the Temple after Jones and hundreds of members fled to Jonestown following scrutiny by San Francisco media.[74][75] During this time, Harvey Milk spoke at Peoples Temple political rallies[76] and wrote a letter to President Jimmy Carter after the investigations began praising Jones and stating that the leader of those attempting to extricate relatives from Jonestown was telling "bold-faced lies."[77][78][79]

[edit] Tragedy at the Temple's Jonestown agricultural commune

Jonestown (Guyana)
Jonestown
Jonestown
Georgetown
Georgetown
Kaituma
Kaituma
Peoples Temple Agricultural Project ("Jonestown", Guyana)

In 1974, the Peoples Temple signed a lease to rent land in Guyana.[80] The community created on this property was called the Peoples Temple Agricultural Project, or informally, "Jonestown." It had as few as 50 residents in early 1977.[81]

Jones saw Jonestown as both a "socialist paradise" and a "sanctuary" from media scrutiny that had started with the Kinsolving articles.[82] Former Temple member Tim Carter describes the reason for the move to Jonestown as "in seventy four (1974), what we saw in the United States was creeping fascism."[83] Carter explained, "It was apparent that corporations, or the multinationals, were getting much larger, their influence was growing within the government, and the United States is a racist place."[83] Carter said the Temple concluded that Guyana was "a place in a black country where our black members could live in peace", "it was a socialist government" and it was "the only English speaking country in South America."[83]

Increasing media scrutiny based upon allegations by former members placed further pressure on Jones in 1977; in particular, an article by Marshall Kilduff in New West Magazine.[23] Just before publication of the New West piece, editor Rosalie Wright telephoned Jones to read him the article.[84] Wright explained that she was only doing so before publication because of "all the support letters we received on your behalf, from the Governor of California (Jerry Brown)" and others.[85] While still on the phone listening to the allegations contained in the article, Jones wrote a note to Temple members in the room with him that said "We leave tonight. Notify Georgetown (Guyana)."[85]

After Jim Jones left for Guyana, he encouraged Temple members to follow him there. The population grew to over 900 people by late 1978.[81][86] Those who moved there were promised a tropical paradise, free from the supposed wickedness of the outside world.[87]

Congressman Leo Ryan
Entrance to Jonestown (credit: Jonestown Institute)

On November 17, 1978, Leo Ryan, a Congressman from the San Francisco area investigating claims of abuse within the Peoples Temple, visited Jonestown.[88] During this visit, a number of Temple members expressed a desire to leave with the Congressman,[89] and on the afternoon of November 18, these members accompanied Ryan to the local airstrip at Port Kaituma.[90] There they were intercepted by Temple security guards who opened fire on the group, killing Congressman Ryan, three journalists, and one of the Temple defectors.[91] A few seconds of gunfire from the incident were captured on video by Bob Brown, one of the journalists killed in the attack.[91]

On the evening of November 18, in Jonestown, Jones ordered his congregation to drink cyanide-laced Flavor Aid.[92][93] It was later determined that Jones died from a gunshot, with a contact wound in a location and angle consistent with being self-inflicted. His body was also found to contain high doses of drugs.

[edit] Aftermath

In all, 918 people died, including over 270 children. It was the greatest single loss of American civilian life in a non-natural disaster until the incidents of September 11, 2001.[94][95][96] This includes four that died at the Temple headquarters in Georgetown that night.[97] Congressman Leo Ryan became the only Congressman murdered in the line of duty in United States history.[98]

[edit] San Francisco Temple headquarters

The Temple's San Francisco headquarters came under siege by national media and relatives of Jonestown victims.[99] The event became one of the most known events in U.S. history as measured by the Gallup poll and adorned the cover of several magazines, including Time magazine, and newspapers for months.[100]

In addition, according to various press reports,[101][102] after the Jonestown tragedy, surviving Temple members in the U.S. announced their fears of being targeted by a "hit squad" of Jonestown survivors. Similarly, in 1979, the Associated Press reported the claim of a U.S. Congressional aide that there were "...120 white, brainwashed assassins out from Jonestown awaiting the trigger word to pick up their hit."[103]

[edit] Former members

Michael Prokes.

Temple insider Michael Prokes, who had been ordered to deliver a suitcase containing Temple funds to be transferred to the Communist Party of the Soviet Union,[104][105] committed suicide in March 1979, four months after the Jonestown incident. In the days leading up to his death, Prokes sent notes to several people, together with a thirty-page statement he had written about Peoples Temple. Columnist Herb Caen reprinted one copy in his San Francisco Chronicle column.[106] Prokes then arranged for a press conference in a Modesto, California motel room, at which he read a statement to the eight reporters who attended. He then excused himself, entered a bathroom and fatally shot himself in the head.[106]

Prior to the tragedy, Temple member Paula Adams had engaged in a romantic relationship with Guyana's Ambassador to the United States, Laurence "Bonny" Mann.[107] Adams later married Mann.[108] On October 24, 1983, Mann fatally shot both Adams and the couple's child, and then fatally shot himself.[108]

Defecting member Harold Cordell lost 20 family members that evening during the poisonings.[109] The Bogues family, which had also defected, lost their daughter Marilee (age 18), while defector Vernon Gosney lost his son Mark (age 5).[110]

[edit] Wrapping up

Temple building at 1366 S. Alvarado St., Los Angeles.

At the end of 1978, the Temple declared bankruptcy and its assets went into receivership.[111] A few Temple members remained in Guyana through May 1979 to wrap up the movement’s affairs, then returned to anonymity within the U.S.[111]

The Temple’s buildings in Los Angeles (1366 S. Alvarado St.), Indianapolis and Redwood Valley are intact, and some are used by church congregations.[111] The Central Spanish Seventh-day Adventist Church is currently located at the Temple's former Los Angeles building at 1366 South Alvarado St.[112]

President Bill Clinton signed a bill into law in the 1990s mandating the expiration of secrecy in documents after 25 years. The majority of Temple documents remain classified, despite Freedom of Information requests from numerous people over the past three decades.[113][114][115]

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ The Temple openly preached to established members that "religion is an opiate to the people." (Jones, Jim. "Transcript of Recovered FBI tape Q 1053." Alternative Considerations of Jonestown and Peoples Temple. Jonestown Project: San Diego State University.) Accordingly, "those who remained drugged with the opiate of religion had to be brought to enlightenment – socialism." (Layton, Deborah. Seductive Poison. Anchor, 1999. ISBN 0-3854-8984-6. page 53). In that regard, Jones also openly stated that he "took the church and used the church to bring people to atheism." (Jones, Jim. "Transcript of Recovered FBI tape Q 757." Alternative Considerations of Jonestown and Peoples Temple. Jonestown Project: San Diego State University). Jones often mixed those concepts, such as preaching that "If you're born in this church, this socialist revolution, you're not born in sin. If you're born in capitalist America, racist America, fascist America, then you're born in sin. But if you're born in socialism, you're not born in sin."(Jones, Jim. "Transcript of Recovered FBI tape Q 1053." Alternative Considerations of Jonestown and Peoples Temple. Jonestown Project: San Diego State University.)

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Jones, Jim. "Transcript of Recovered FBI tape Q 134." Alternative Considerations of Jonestown and Peoples Temple. Jonestown Project: San Diego State University.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Wessinger, Catherine. How the Millennium Comes Violently: From Jonestown to Heaven's Gate. Seven Bridges Press, 2000. ISBN 978-1889119243.
  3. ^ Horrock, Nicholas M., "Communist in 1950s", New York Times, December 17, 1978
  4. ^ Layton, Deborah. Seductive Poison. Anchor, 1999. ISBN 0-3854-8984-6. p. 65-6.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Reiterman, Tim and John Jacobs. Raven: The Untold Story of Rev. Jim Jones and His People. Dutton, 1982. ISBN 0-525-24136-1. p. 49-52.
  6. ^ a b Reiterman, Tim and John Jacobs. Raven: The Untold Story of Rev. Jim Jones and His People. Dutton, 1982. ISBN 0-525-24136-1. p. 57.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Reiterman, Tim and John Jacobs. Raven: The Untold Story of Rev. Jim Jones and His People. Dutton, 1982. ISBN 0-525-24136-1. p. 54-55.
  8. ^ Reiterman, Tim and John Jacobs. Raven: The Untold Story of Rev. Jim Jones and His People. Dutton, 1982. ISBN 0-525-24136-1. p. 68-72.
  9. ^ Reiterman, Tim and John Jacobs. Raven: The Untold Story of Rev. Jim Jones and His People. Dutton, 1982. ISBN 0-525-24136-1. p. 59.
  10. ^ a b Reiterman, Tim and John Jacobs. Raven: The Untold Story of Rev. Jim Jones and His People. Dutton, 1982. ISBN 0-525-24136-1. p. 59 and 65.
  11. ^ a b c Reiterman, Tim and John Jacobs. Raven: The Untold Story of Rev. Jim Jones and His People. Dutton, 1982. ISBN 0-525-24136-1. p. 60.
  12. ^ a b c Reiterman, Tim and John Jacobs. Raven: The Untold Story of Rev. Jim Jones and His People. Dutton, 1982. ISBN 0-525-24136-1. p. 61.
  13. ^ a b c Reiterman, Tim and John Jacobs. Raven: The Untold Story of Rev. Jim Jones and His People. Dutton, 1982. ISBN 0-525-24136-1. p. 62.
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  109. ^ The Congregation of Peoples Temple. PBS.org.
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  112. ^ Central Spanish Seventh-day Adventist Church. AdventistChurchConnect.org.
  113. ^ McGehee, Fielding M. III. "Attempting to Document the Peoples Temple Story: The Existence and Disappearance of Government Records." Alternative Considerations of Jonestown and Peoples Temple. San Diego State University: Jonestown Project.
  114. ^ Richardson, James. "Jonestown 25 Years Later: Why All The Secrecy?". http://jonestown.sdsu.edu/AboutJonestown/Articles/richardson.htm. Retrieved on 2008-08-25. 
  115. ^ Taylor, Michael; Lattin, Don (1998). "Most Peoples Temple Documents Still Sealed". San Francisco Examiner. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/1998/11/13/MN107219.DTL&hw=Most+Peoples+Temple+Documents+Still+Sealed&sn=002&sc=468. Retrieved on 2008-08-25. 

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