1979 The Cult Phenomenon in The United States - DR John Gordon Clark
1979 The Cult Phenomenon in The United States - DR John Gordon Clark
1979 The Cult Phenomenon in The United States - DR John Gordon Clark
John Clark,
Assistant Clinical Professor, Harvard Medical School at Massachusetts General
Hospital.")
Joint-Congressional Proceedings,
statements by John G. Clark, M.D.
INFORMATION MEETING ON THE CULT PHENOMENON IN THE UNITED STATES, February 5, 1979,
318 Russell Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C. (Statement: P.38-45.,
Questions: P.147-158.) of Transcript of Proceedings.
STATEMENT
Senator Dole.
Dr. Clark?
STATEMENT OF DR. JOHN CLARK, ASSISTANT CLINICAL PROFESSOR, HARVARD MEDICAL SCHOOL
AT MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL.
Nearly 90 years ago, William James wrote, "In this age of tolerance, no scientists
will ever try actively to interfere with our religious faith, provided we enjoy it
quietly with our friends and do not make a public nuisance of it in the
marketplace."
Those of us who have seriously attempted to study the rapidly spreading phenomenon
of absolutist groups and effects of extreme pressures on their converts have
reason to declare that the level of public nuisance is now so high that both
scientists and public servants must react strongly before it is too late.
We have found in examining subjects in those family members who know them best
that the act of rapid conversion of a deceived subject results if the conversion
is maintained over a few days or perhaps a few weeks, in change of personality,
and capacity to think which are already beyond these changes, are almost beyond
our limits of understanding or belief.
It is not the religious definition that separates these groups from others. It is
their behavior. They may represent political, social, magical, neolith points of
view or none at all, but are sustained by their total commitment to some forms of
opposition to the accepted surrounding culture. Each selects a slice largely
dependent on the original inclination of the founding leader.
The responsibility of the acts of the members is clearly with the leaders.
Expulsion or even death are among the punishments for disobedience or defection.
But it is the sudden change in individuals whose conversions have been so rapidly
accomplished that is most alarming.
The Guyana affair, the behavior of members of Synanon, the Hanafi muslims, the
Symbionese Liberation Army, the Manson murderers, not to mention the savagery of
the Nazis, the classical cult, should have alerted us to the change in the
individual who does the bidding of a controlling group, committing the ultimate,
most unforgivable, most uncharacteristics crimes.
The convert is made capable fo these acts and was not general, from the general
run of the population. Having been rapidly converted by utterly determined people
whose efforts induce trance states and who have been separated from their
customary environments in these states, these individuals become dependent on
their surroundings for the validation of reality.
They cannot remember the past or the subtle values which would become conscience.
They are often deluded, hallucinating, and confused in a new highly manipulative
environment, in their altered states of consciousness.
They are, in effect, living in a second personality modeled on the needs of the
surrounding group. Existence is no more a matter of individual free choice,
because the individual has lost his past and the capacity to consider complex
ambiguous ideas.
Such persons are left without an appreciation of natural differences among human
beings and are utterly intolerant to the point of deadliness.
I must emphasize it is the change in individuals resulting from any sort of sudden
and maintaining conversion that is most crucial to understand.
The same changes can result from disease processes and are seen as evidence of
injury.
Their highly manipulated minds are effective only under total control and are less
able to manage the unexpected without resorting to psychosis, suicide, or
uncontrolled violence toward others.
The changes in the personality we have noted have stunned parents who sense that
their offspring have been maimed. They appear to have become rather dull and their
style and range of expression limited and stereotyped.
They are animated only when discussing their group and its beliefs.
They rapidly lose a knowledge of current events. When stressed even a little, they
become defensive and inflexible and retreat into mumbling cliches.
Their written or spoken expression loses metaphor, irony, and the broad use of
vocabulary.
They rely on rote memory and cannot play with abstraction. Their humor is without
mirth.
Because they have learned to live with greatly reduced sleep time in many cases,
they may display a loosening of association and commonly see visions, hear voices,
or experience odd delusions of smell.
Often they are physically sick, though they have tried to cure their difficulties
through prayer.
An acute case of pneumonia, a ruptured appendix, a broken leg, will not easily
respond to ministrations.
Even more frightening are the actual techniques of controlling the mind. Unwanted
memories or thoughts are forced out of the mind by careful training.
For instance, in many cults, the feeling of panic and the image of satan stops
stray thinking.
Mind emptying trances or forced chanting can accomplish the same result; there are
many, many other techniques.
These people are the worst off in the continuum of casualties now struggling to
make their lives work.
These are not necessarily people who have been deprogrammed. I would like to
emphasize that.
These cults or groups are armies of willing, superbly controlled soldiers who
would not only kill their parents or themselves, but are ready to act against
anyone.
A society in rapid cultural transition not only offers fertile grounds for these
groups to flourish, but it is too preoccupied to notice how dangerous they may
have become.
The culminating horror of Guyana which some of us had seen should have alerted a
nation and its leaders to the persistent threat.
Senator Dole. Dr. Clark, do you have copies of your statement available?
Senator Dole. Fine. If you would be able to stay with us. The next witnesses are
Flo Conway and Jim Siegelman.
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QUESTIONS
[Question session with Dr. Clark, by Senators and Congressmen, P.147-158.]
Senator Dole. Dr. Clark, do other people in your field have a different view than
you have insofar as "so-called cults" are concerned?
Dr. Clark. In my field, there's almost no clear agreement about anything, except,
to some degree, that under certain circumstances, people do lose their capacity to
think clearly and to care for themselves. This has to do with the contents of
their minds.
Senator Dole. Well, as I said, I viewed last night, with a great deal of interest,
a tape from the David Susskind show. You were indicating then there was more
acceptance now than, say, two or three years ago.
Dr. Clark. Yes. Two or three years ago, the notion that by outside manipulation
the will of an individual would be lessened, weakened or gone too far off to judge
reality, could be changed, this idea was not accepted broadly. There were always a
few psychiatrists and people who had studied these matters for a long time.
There has always been a notion that the mind is, rather, a phenomenon that keeps
on going, is acting the same way, has no shifts sideways, no narrowing, and
controls itself.
Dr. Clark, you are associate clinical professor at the Harvard Medical School at
Massachusetts General. In your brief biography we have about you before us, it
says that you have been working with ex-cult members for the past five and a half
years. I wonder if you could tell us, is there any literature in this field based
on the experience of yourself or others over these years?
Dr. Clark. Yes. Let me just add that I have not only seen ex-cult members. I have
seen people involved in these organizations from the moment that they became
interested, through their involvement, when they came either voluntarily or on
court orders because of sickness, through their leaving the cult either by
deprogramming -- which I had nothing to do with -- or by some other accident, such
as becoming suddenly crazy.
There is more literature. The standards of the '60s would be Schein's book on
coercive persuasion and, of course, Lifton's book on -- I am sorry; I have just
put the name away. It's a wonderful book.
There has been a small amount of recent writing, including one by Mark Gallanter
in the latest Journal of the American Psychiatric Association and an article in
Psychology Today by Margaret Singer; a few little bits and pieces over the last
few years that have dealt with these matters.
Mr. Fish. Pardon me, Doctor. I don't want to take up too much time here.
From your five and a half years in this work, has a profile emerged of the
individual who you work with?
The profile is not clear. Everybody has a different profile, which always says
that our attempts to characterize the victims are simply working. There is, from
my experience, a majority of people who have significant psychological, physical
problems before they went in and were rather uncomfortable -- very uncomfortable
people who more or less sought conversion.
About 40 percent of them -- that's a small number compared to some other people's
figures -- are perfectly normal people by any test that I could apply through
gathering information about their past. They were normal people.
Mr. Giaimo. What do you mean by a controlled mind, and does it in any way involve
will?
Dr. Clark. An individual who has been brought through a process sequence of
conversion, which is very similar and, I think, ultimately the same as, the
sequence of hypnosis, narrows his attention gradually -- as anybody dealing with a
crisis will do -- to the point where the attention is entirely on the surrounding
environment. If this is maintained to a certain point, over a certain period of
time, there seems to be a kind of a rupturing of the ordinary fabric of the mind,
at least temporarily.
These are some of those moments that are called mystical experiences. These are
moments of great opportunity for grasping new information very, very rapidly, of
making change, or of producing something ingenious.
There are other times when, if the pressure from the outside is very intense, only
that pressure will be listened to. There will be no structuring of something
brand-new, only an acceptance of the surrounding environment.
Dr. Clark. To that degree he is a captive if he is not let loose within the next
two or three sleep periods. After that, there seems to be very clear evidence that
the individual is technically a multiple personality living in the second
personality.
There are great differences in the memories of the past, especially the subtle
memories of old relationships and love, which are very complicated. I have pointed
in my testimony to the loss of the memory of all of those standards of the past.
They are unable to think as well, precisely because they have lost contact with a
great many subtle memories of the past.
Mr. Giaimo. Is it your opinion that the law does or can or should take congnizance
of this psychological state?
Dr. Clark. Times have changed since the colonial days. The techniques that are
being used for this are now partly based upon available knowledge and available
tools -- tape recordings that go on all day, all night; loudspeakers all through
the camps; music that can be invented and put into electronic form extremely
rapidly; repetition of things; printing of things; propagandizing; things that did
not happen a long time ago.
These are different times. There is much more known about the position of the mind
in the body, what it does with and for the body. I think there is still plenty of
room for religious feeling, responses, positions, and other ways of joining
together around certain very high ideals. But it would be naive of modern
Americans to try to deal with a problem like this as though were were still in the
18th century.
I think it would also be naive to forget that Hitler was a cult leader in many
ways. Many of his acts were based upon beliefs which came from other sources.
Mr. Giaimo. Do you believe that this subject of mind control that you are talking
about is a legitimate area of congressional inquiry?
Mr. Giaimo. Do you think that it violates any amendment of the Constitution or the
Constitution itself?
Mr. Giaimo. Nonlawyers can interpret the Constitution as well as can lawyers.
Dr. Clark. I do agree with the idea that the First Amendment should protect us
from religion as well as protect religion from us.
Mr. Giaimo. So do I.
Mr. Giaimo. You do believe that this new phenomenon -- if it is new -- but at
least modern medicine seems to be able to look into it -- this phenomenon of mind
control is a legitimate subject of congressional inquiry?
Dr. Clark. Yes. Under certain conditions of, I think, rapid cultural change, these
kinds of phenomena have come up before, but not with the technical backing that
the individuals practicing --
Mr. Giaimo. Haven't they come up in recent history in matters having nothing to do
with religion? For example, in the Korean War?
Dr. Clark. Korean War, the Meinhof gang. It hasn't been mentioned explicitly, but
those of us who have watched this also recognize the similarity of the techniques
of managing people in religious and nonreligious organizations; terrorist gangs,
political organizations are very potent, very absolutist. They require some of the
same sort of states of mind, and they recruit in much the same way.
Senator Exon. Dr. Clark, in yoru testimony you said among other things "have
reason to declar the reason of public nuisance it not so high that public servants
must eact strongly before it is too late."
You also said those of us who seriously attempted to study the rapidly spreading
phenomenon of absolutist groups and the effects on their converts.
Dr. Clark. To be as responsive as I can, I would have to say I don't know; and
then give you an answer that will give you some notion of where I am.
One of the first jobs that has to be done is find out these numbers much more
accurately; but I find now that almost anybody I talk to has within the first or
second degree an experience with one of these kinds of conversions in somebody
nearby.
It is almost impossible now to talk to somebody and say what do you know about
groups or cults; well, my cousin just called me up. She is in a terrible state
because something has happened.
It is getting closer, so that there must be many more involved than there used to
be. I think it is growing.
The point is that this is a very easy thing to do, start a religion, to set up all
the processes, including all the doctrines. There's no problem with money at all.
I have to make a speech downtown which started 20 minutes ago. One of the better
ones I have made.
I think some of us, frankly, question both sides. We are concerned about whether
you call it kidnapping in the first place or kidnapping in the second place.
Neither one appeals to me; and I think we have heard directly from witnesses who
are in debriefing or deprogramming, whether it is Mr. Alexander or Mr. Patrick. I
read the Playboy interview. I am somewhat disturbed by it, whether -- and I don't
-- maybe I shouldn't put you on the spot, since they are both here.
I does concern me if someone makes a profit, if they are qualified -- and I don't
know what qualified is. I mean I am confused.
Dr. Clark. I will give you a medical answer if I can. Very hard.
I personally am uneasy about either kind of process. I am less uneasy about the
deprogramming because I think that it does tend to return somebody back to his or
her own original memories, original self; but I do think that the medical point of
view is if someone is injured, that if necessary, first of all, one must define
the injury as carefully as possible.
That's been very difficult because of the lack of access overall to even the
examination of these individuals.
Define the injury. Then apply what is necessary to return the person to optimal
operations -- as much returning him back to what he was as is possible.
It is integral -- the change is integral, not laid on like the drug experiences of
the last 10 or 15 years.