Home › Forum Online Discussion › General › Migrant parents separated from children (article)
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June 20, 2018 at 12:04 pm #52638c_howdyParticipant
Sorry for my broken English.
Sorry, this is not any kind of propaganda on behalf of Scientology from my part, but it’s just interesting to contrast this with these recent happenings.
HOWDY
…”Thetans” don’t have families…there are no families among thetans. Thetans are god-like individuals with dominion over “matter, energy, space, and time”…children are ageless thetans who choose their parents in order to “pick up a body” in which to be reborn. Parents serve only a biological function in creating the “meat-body” a ‘thetan’ can inhabit…a thetan is on a passage to eternity. Scientology places family as just one out of eight “dynamics” a thetan relates to in the course of its journey. In practice this simply means the family must accept the thetan as a Scientologist. Any family member critical of Scientology impedes the thetan’s passage and must be shunned, which the church terms “disconnection”… thetan and it’s relationship to Scientology is the fundamental feature of the universe. The first principle in Scientology is “survive”. A thetan survives by adherence to Scientology doctrine and dedication to the church…no matter how much the church of Scientology tries to propagandize that it helps families, all that can ever mean, is – Scientology helps families understand they are NOT families, but individual thetans – that’s Scientology’s foundational doctrine… “internal staff member’s” concluding response summarizes Scientology’s doctrine and attitude toward family quite succinctly. Thetans don’t have families. Parents are no more than “genetic entities.” The thetan’s relationship to the family is unimportant and merely biological etc.
-http://whyweprotest.wikia.com/wiki/Children_in_Scientology_and_the_Sea_Organization-
Scientologists believe children are ageless souls in small bodies. What religions call the “soul” and philosophy terms “consciousness” – is called a “thetan” in Scientology. Since thetans are forever mature, a child thetan requires no special nurturing…these beliefs have a profound effect on how children are treated in Scientology. A child is expected to act as an adult, and work as an adult, because a thetan has been an adult in prior lifetimes. A child’s deficiency is simply the temporary physical limitation imposed by a smaller body…additionally, since a thetan is a mature “able-being”, a child has the same responsibility to work and pay it’s way as an adult. Scientology teaches that every human interchange requires fair compensation. Failure to compensate for something received is called “out-exchange” and children are not exempt. A child must contribute the equivalent work of an adult to pay for food, clothing, or shelter…PScientology’s conviction that children are mature souls devalues physical and psychological nurturing. Thetans don’t require nurturing. They are also capable of taking care of themselves. As a result, parental supervision is not a high priority in Scientology…children live in dormitories or nurseries separate from parents employed on Scientology staff or in the cult’s Sea Organization. “Family time” is set at 1 hour per day, when children share a meal with parents, typically in a crowded cafeteria… work assignments at distant locations keep parents separated from their children for long periods. Scientology staff and Sea Organization members are expected to take up new duties, anywhere in the world, at a moments’ notice. In that regard, communal child-care serves the church, but possibly not the children who have no idea when their parents may return. Children are not part of a family unit, they are part of Scientology’s production machinery…like a modern factory, Scientology organizations manage every activity by production statistics. These industrial efficiency tools may be useful in Scientology’s accounting and production departments, but are not what most people consider appropriate to child rearing. Raising children in a ‘production environment’, Scientology relies on the older children to help untrained nannies to keep up with the work flow…children receive little medical attention and have to ‘tough out’ illness. Scientologists believe disease is negative energy “pulled-in” by a thetan. Since children are thetans illness is something they bring upon themselves. Illness is not the result of germs or viruses, so medicine is inefficacious. Scientology spiritual “technology” is the only real cure for disease, so there’s not much to be done for children. As a result, Scientology parents and caregivers often neglect the earaches and fevers so common with children… as mature thetans, children also partake in the same rigorous training protocols as adult Scientologists. Two weeks (or more) of repetitive stints in a scalding sauna, while taking large doses of vitamins (particularly Niacin) is one of Scientology’s first training routines. Scientology calls this the “Purification Run-down” and it has caused severe medical distress even for adults. Medical authorities have warned that the program can cause liver and kidney damage. Nonetheless, even preschoolers take part in “the purif”… like kids everywhere, children in Scientology want to emulate and be praised by their parents. The church takes advantage of this enthusiasm to recruit children into Scientology’s paramilitary Sea Organization…Sea-Org recruiters use hard-sell tactics to get youngsters to sign “billion year contracts” even though few even understand what a contract means. The recruiters usually approach and solicit these children without the permission or knowledge of their parents… the Sea Organization performs many functions in Scientology, but for the most part it supplies a flexible labor force to the church. Unfortunately, Sea-Org recruits, attracted by the image of handsome uniforms with gold braid, usually wind up serving in clerical, janitorial, construction and maintenance functions in Scientology’s ‘Estates Project Force’…youngsters who join the Sea Organization usually find it’s not the exciting and romantic experience they expected. Instead they embark on the heavy stage of Scientology indoctrination. Many describe the long hours of repetitive drill, manual labor and verbal abuse as mind control, likened to the kind of discipline associated with the military… children work long hours at demanding tasks in the Sea Organization. In public interviews, Scientology officials misrepresent this work as chores of the kind that any youngster might do at home or in school. The reality is much different…youngsters assigned to the “Commodore’s Messengers Organization” take care of laundry and other chores for Scientology executives. “Commodore” refers to Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard who created the “Messengers Organization” as his personal staff…very heavy labor is a disciplinary action in Scientology. Kids (being kids) sometimes break rules. Refractory youngsters in the Sea-Org are assigned to Scientology’s “Rehabilitation Project Force”. The “RPF” is a penal labor camp isolated from the rest of Scientology. Sea-Org members of any age may be punished on the RPF… manual labor and enforced physical exercise (mostly running) are common punishments in Scientology, for all ages. Not surprisingly, youngsters endure this better than adults. Some even suggest that ‘at the time’ the experience was, ‘fun’. And while most ex-Sea-Org-kids agree their time would have been better spent in school, some claim the construction projects and manual labor was instructive… schooling for children varies with the affluence of the Scientology parent, but is generally haphazard. Thetans don’t require schooling because of all they’ve learned in prior lifetimes. School subjects are usually restricted to the writings and methods of L. Ron Hubbard… Scientology teachers are typically not certified by the state and the schools not accredited. For Sea-Org members, work takes priority over schooling. Educational instruction is sacrificed to projects and fitted around work assignments, to the point that it becomes largely meaningless. Many Ex-Scientology Kids (“ESKs”) claim that the bulk of their education came from personal reading, consisting mostly of Hubbard’s books)…
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