A Response to Scientology
By Abraham L. Halpern, M.D., and Alfred M. Freedman, M.D.
We read with great interest your article in the October 18 issue on the Church
of Scientology's Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR) titled "APA Helps
Members Respond to Scientology's Attacks."
We would like to present some firsthand information concerning the destructive
influence of the CCHR.
In 1986 the Special Rapporteur of the United Nations Subcommission on
Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities submitted a report
that was published and widely distributed by the United Nations. The report
(known as the "Daes Report" but officially titled "Principles, Guidelines, and
Guarantees for the Protection of Persons Detained on Grounds of Mental III
Health or Suffering from Mental Disorder") was presented as "A contribution to:
(a) the protection of the fundamental freedoms, human and legal rights of
persons who are mentally ill or suffering from mental disorder; (b) the
abolition of psychiatric abuses; (c) the promotion of mental health law and
medical practice; and (d) the improvement of mental health care and mental
institutions."
In fact, the report was an attack on psychiatry embodying all the distortions
and outright lies invented and promulgated by the antipsychiatry movement over
the years. The contribution of Scientology's CCHR, as one of the special
organizations whose advice was sought by the Rapporteur, was prominently
mentioned in the report. The United Nations document, quoting from the CCHR,
included the following:
"All over the world, branches of CCHR offered help to members of parliaments to
increase their awareness of mental health situations, so that actual reform
could occur. CCHR made the following basic suggestions in connection with the
subject under study:
"(a) Governments should start immediately to investigate psychiatry and the
mental health field and get the real facts;
"(b) The CCHR and others should provide governments with workable methods to
handle the mentally ill;
"(c) An amnesty should be granted to all psychiatrists who admit to having
engaged in abusive practices and human rights violations and who have ceased to
do so;
"(d) All community health centers and other mental care homes should be run by
churches or other religious groups who have a real care for patients and a
workable method;
"(e) The use of all drugs, whether street drugs or psychopharmacological drugs,
should be discontinued.
"The conclusion of CCHR is, 'There will be peace on earth when the mental
health field has been reformed and is clean'."
In a 1986 "report" submitted to the International Congress on Law and
Psychiatry, the CCHR used scurrilous and inflammatory statements to denounce
the professions of psychiatry and psychology including the following:
"It is no longer a case of 'the cure being worse than disease.' It is now a
matter of the 'cure' causing the 'disease.' Psychiatry has long looked upon and
dealt with nearly all behavior and manifestations of life from a purely
biological, genetic, and medical viewpoint, i.e., 'man is an animal.' Perhaps
it is now time to apply this medical viewpoint to the field of psychiatry and
to eradicate this criminal 'cancer' that is consuming society.
"Most of the famous assassins and mass murderers are products of psychiatry and
the mental health profession."
We were most dismayed at this brazen step to incorporate the malicious CCHR
position in a United Nations document and began strenuous efforts to oppose it.
In collaboration with colleagues at home and abroad, including an APA task
force, we were able to mount a coordinated counterattack involving the World
Psychiatric Association, the World Health Organization, and many others. As a
result of our efforts, revised guidelines consistent with principles long
accepted by American psychiatry were eventually approved by the U.N. General
Assembly in a resolution adopted December 17, 1991.
In retrospect, instead of resting on our laurels, we should have called for
eternal vigilance regarding CCHR activities and for rapid response by APA and
other mental health organizations to the diabolical misrepresentations by CCHR.
It is gratifying to see that APA, at the urging of the California Psychiatric
Association, is undertaking a reasoned and responsible rebuttal.
We note that APA President Harold Eist, M.D., and Dorothy W. Cantor, Psy.D.,
president of the American Psychological Association, are working together to
combat the policies and practices of the managed care industry that impede
psychiatric and psychological treatment of mental illness. We urge Drs. Eist
and Cantor to join forces to deal with the CCHR's anti-mental health
depredations.
(Psychiatric News, December 6, 1996)