X-No-Archiv: Yes Is he brainwashed?
The Chicago Sun-Times 9.12.2001 By Michael Sneed John Walker, an American who joined and fought with the Taliban, has been branded a traitor to his country.
His mother, Marilyn, a Buddhist, claims he was brainwashed.
His father, Frank Lindh, is trying to "connect the dots between where John was and where John is."
And I'm trying to connect a few dots myself.
The story of Walker, a Roman Catholic who converted to Islam--and then traveled to Yemen to study Arabic before winding up in the Taliban--sent me back to a time when, as a journalist, I first encountered people who were brainwashed.
It took me back to 1978 and a remote village in the jungles of Jonestown, Guyana, where 974 people were led to their death in a cult killing heard around the world. At gunpoint, the nearly 1,000 Americans were led to vats laden with cyanide-laced grape Kool-Aid.
My colleagues Tim McNulty and Val Mazzenga and I were the first to report that murder rather than suicide led to their deaths after our exclusive interviews with a man who had escaped the "White Night"
massacre by becoming a gun-toting guard who helped lead the sheep to their slaughter.
It was difficult to watch the cool composure of this guy detailing how he'd saved his ugly mug and then ran into the Guyanese jungles before it was his turn to die--only to emerge days later in a town bristling with press from all over the world.
But the connect-the-dot process started when McNulty and I interviewed two brothers named Carter from Boise, Idaho.
To the best of my recollection, the Carter brothers said they had been told by their leader, a fanatic named the Rev. Jim Jones, to take his money to the Soviet Embassy in Georgetown, Guyana's capital.
The two had claimed they had lost/jettisoned (or buried?) the money while on their jungle run. (At the time, there was no road to Jonestown. You could get there by boat or by landing at a nearby airstrip at Point Kituma, where Jones had ordered the murder of U.S.
Rep. Leo Ryan and his entourage, who came to investigate the cult.)
You see, what was mind-boggling to me was that the men had watched their wives and babies being led to the poison vats and had done nothing to stop it. The most famous picture of the Guyana massacre was of the tiny legs of a child jutting out from underneath its mother's dead body. The child belonged to one of the Carter brothers. The two stated they were under orders to do what Jones wanted and would never have thought to do otherwise.
Walker's mother has stated: "If he got involved in the Taliban, he must have been brainwashed. He was isolated. When you are young and impressionable, it's easy to be led by charismatic people."
Jones had done the same thing. He took his flock to the middle of a jungle, where they couldn't escape unless they hiked through dangerous terrain. He removed their contact with not only the outside world, but their families. The die was cast. The vats were filled for the inevitable.
When McNulty and I visited the Carter brothers shortly after their return to Boise, we asked them again about watching their families die. I recall their description of watching a wife drink the poison Kool-Aid and watching her put it into her baby's mouth before their cyanide-induced convulsions began.
They regretted what happened, but there seemed to be an absence of grief. I remember feeling unclean when I left the hotel room where we conducted the interview.
It is true we have free will, and Walker made choices that led to his arrest.
But at what point do "choices" become something else? Choices forged by the tyrannic thrum of a brainwashing mechanism that have sent so many of our youth into cults that sever children from their families.
The Taliban were fed by young boys educated at militant mosques in Pakistan after being separated from their families.
I suspect Walker will be tried as a traitor.
I hope America remembers the tragedy of Jonestown. And I wonder just how the Carters feel now about what they did . . . and didn't do.
From: Tilman Hausherr <tilman@berlin.snafu.de>
Subject: fwd: Saving the 'American Taliban'
Date: Wed, 19 Dec 2001 22:39:09 +0100
Organization: Xenu's Ranch
Message-ID: <57222uo8ddmsrknthfhf6cgbabfeii24b0@4ax.com>
Saving the 'American Taliban'
The Boston Globe
19.12.2001
By Steven Hassan
WHAT COULD have driven an educated young American from a loving and
prosperous family to embrace the Taliban cause?
His parents have said that he was brainwashed. I have not met John Walker Lindh, who was recently captured in Afghanistan, but I believe his parents are probably right. In fact, I had a similar experience as a student at Queens College in New York City when I was 19 - Lindh's age.
I never participated in actual combat, but I was engaged in a holy war on the streets of New York.
In the fall of 1974, I was invited to join a group of fellow students who said they were interested in making the world a better place. Within weeks, I dropped out of school, cut my long hair, and put on a three-piece suit (worn by the group in public, like a uniform). I was told to cut off contact with friends and family, apparently just like Lindh.
I didn't know it then, but I had been recruited into a front group within a worldwide cult that wants to rule the world with a so-called automatic theocracy led by the group's supposed messiah. I was programmed to believe that Armageddon would take place in 1977, that Satan loved democracy, and that we were going to be the future rulers of the new kingdom of heaven on earth.
As I was indoctrinated by the cult, I underwent a radical personality change. I was programmed to kill off the old Steve who knew and loved my friends and family. A new cult identity was created. I was trained to shut out any doubts that entered my mind, thinking they were from Satan.
Raised in a conservative Jewish home, I hadn't believed in Satan at all, but once in the cult, Satan was omnipresent, and everyone outside the group was viewed as a child of Satan. To my horror now, I was so programmed that I believe I would have died or killed on command.
Then circumstances changed my life once again. While driving a van, I fell asleep, crashed, and was seriously injured. While recuperating in a hospital, I telephoned my sister, and for the first time in many months my family knew my whereabouts. They and former cult members then tried to get me out of my cult trance. To my surprise, I wasn't beaten and tortured by the deprogrammers. They were very nice to me and taught me about brainwashing tactics. After five days, I realized I had been under cult mind control. I was saved by those who could offer me love and concern - my family and the ex-members who cared about me.
Many are now calling for Lindh's execution as a traitor to his country.
There is no doubt that CIA operative Johnny Spann is a hero of the highest level and deserves our praise and thanks. However, I doubt that Lindh is an evil person who deserves to die. I think he is a victim, as I was 27 years ago, and I think it important that his fate be decided in a public trial in US federal court. I believe that with proper counseling, Lindh would be horrified at what brainwashing has made him do. Indeed, it appears that mind control techniques similar to those used by my cult leader have been used by Osama bin Laden and his cronies to recruit, train, and exploit talented people to do their bidding.
Now that Lindh is in American hands, I sincerely hope that mind control experts assist his interrogators, supervising the sessions. Otherwise, we risk losing a valuable opportunity in the war against terrorism. I remember as a cult member how I was taught to block out criticism and doubt with simple chants such as ''Crush Satan, Crush Satan.'' I expect that Lindh will do the same.
How can we reach Lindh if he is indeed a victim of mind control? Since coming out of my group, I have worked with thousands of people impacted by destructive mind control. I have assisted former cult members in reclaiming their minds and their lives. It is important that family members and friends be coached on how best to connect with their loved one's pre-cult identity with love, respect, understanding, and compassion. When counseling people, I talk about my own cult experiences and tell them about other people who have been deceptively recruited into destructive groups. It helps them to know others have had experiences similar to their own.
I believe that Lindh will eventually realize that he was duped into accepting terrorism and murder, which is condemned by the faith he adopted at age 16. For now, he must accept responsibility for his actions. It is my hope that he will provide valuable information about the activities of the Taliban and Al Qaeda. (He already has, according to reports.) Perhaps more important, he might provide a valuable example for future generations about the workings of mind control techniques.
Nothing is more powerful than a personal story, especially one that tells of the journey from slavery to freedom. Such a story - the promise of redemption in the afterlife - is said to fuel the actions of suicide terrorists. The stories of Taliban and Al Qaeda members who reject terrorism and leave their cell groups need to be heard and examined within our culture and within the Arab and Muslim worlds.
The war against the Taliban is nearly over, but the much harder war against terrorism continues. There is an important story behind John Lindh. It may be a key to learning how to help win the war on terrorism.
Steven Hassan, author of ''Releasing the Bonds: Empowering People to Think for Themselves,'' is director of the Freedom of Mind Resource Center.