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  • Bounded Choice: True Believers and Charismatic Cults
    Bounded Choice: True Believers and Charismatic Cults
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  • Take Back Your Life, 2nd Edition: Recovering from Cults and Abusive Relationships
    Take Back Your Life, 2nd Edition: Recovering from Cults and Abusive Relationships
    by Janja Lalich
  • Crazy Therapies: What Are They Do They Work
    Crazy Therapies: What Are They Do They Work
    by Margaret Thaler Singer, Janja Lalich
  • Cults Too Good to be True
    Cults Too Good to be True
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  • Misunderstanding Cults: Searching for Objectivity in a Controversial Field
    Misunderstanding Cults: Searching for Objectivity in a Controversial Field
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  • Not Without My Sister: The True Story of Three Girls Violated and Betrayed
    Not Without My Sister: The True Story of Three Girls Violated and Betrayed
    by Celeste Jones, Kristina Jones, Juliana Buhring
  • Heaven's Harlots: My Fifteen Years As a Sacred Prostitute in the Children of God Cult
    Heaven's Harlots: My Fifteen Years As a Sacred Prostitute in the Children of God Cult
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  • Forced Into Faith
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    Murder in the Name of Honor: The True Story of One Woman's Heroic Fight Against and Unbelievable Crime
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  • Sectarian Song: Cult Escapist
    Sectarian Song: Cult Escapist
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  • Worship and Sin: An Exploration of Religion-Related Crime in the United States
    Worship and Sin: An Exploration of Religion-Related Crime in the United States
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  • When Prayer Fails: Faith Healing, Children, and the Law
    When Prayer Fails: Faith Healing, Children, and the Law
    by Shawn Francis Peters
  • Justice Denied: What America Must Do to Protect its Children
    Justice Denied: What America Must Do to Protect its Children
    by Marci A. Hamilton
  • God vs. the Gavel: Religion and the Rule of Law
    God vs. the Gavel: Religion and the Rule of Law
    by Marci A. Hamilton
  • Cartwheels in a Sari: A Memoir of Growing Up Cult
    Cartwheels in a Sari: A Memoir of Growing Up Cult
    by Jayanti Tamm
  • Out of the Cocoon: A Young Woman's Courageous Flight from the Grip of a Religious Cult
    Out of the Cocoon: A Young Woman's Courageous Flight from the Grip of a Religious Cult
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  • I'm Perfect, You're Doomed: Tales from a Jehovah's Witness Upbringing
    I'm Perfect, You're Doomed: Tales from a Jehovah's Witness Upbringing
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  • God's Brothel: The Extortion of Sex for Salvation in Contemporary Mormon and Christian Fundamentalist Polygamy and the Stories of 18
    God's Brothel: The Extortion of Sex for Salvation in Contemporary Mormon and Christian Fundamentalist Polygamy and the Stories of 18
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  • Stolen Innocence: My Story of Growing Up in a Polygamous Sect, Becoming a Teenage Bride, and Breaking Free of Warren Jeffs
    Stolen Innocence: My Story of Growing Up in a Polygamous Sect, Becoming a Teenage Bride, and Breaking Free of Warren Jeffs
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    Church of Lies
    by Flora Jessop, Paul T. Brown
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  • Triumph: Life After the Cult--A Survivor's Lessons
    Triumph: Life After the Cult--A Survivor's Lessons
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  • The Sixth of Seven Wives: Escape from Modern Day Polygamy
    The Sixth of Seven Wives: Escape from Modern Day Polygamy
    by Mary Mackert
  • Shattered Dreams: My Life as a Polygamist's Wife
    Shattered Dreams: My Life as a Polygamist's Wife
    by Irene Spencer
  • Cult Insanity: A Memoir of Polygamy, Prophets, and Blood Atonement
    Cult Insanity: A Memoir of Polygamy, Prophets, and Blood Atonement
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  • The Secret Lives of Saints: Child Brides and Lost Boys in Canada's Polygamous Mormon Sect
    The Secret Lives of Saints: Child Brides and Lost Boys in Canada's Polygamous Mormon Sect
    by Daphne Bramham
  • Keep Sweet: Children of Polygamy
    Keep Sweet: Children of Polygamy
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  • Under the Banner of Heaven: A Story of Violent Faith
    Under the Banner of Heaven: A Story of Violent Faith
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  • Sin Against the Innocents: Sexual Abuse by Priests and the Role of the Catholic Church
    Sin Against the Innocents: Sexual Abuse by Priests and the Role of the Catholic Church
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  • Breach of Faith, Breach of Trust: The Story of Lou Ann Soontiens, Father Charles Sylvestre, and Sexual Abuse Within the Catholic Church
    Breach of Faith, Breach of Trust: The Story of Lou Ann Soontiens, Father Charles Sylvestre, and Sexual Abuse Within the Catholic Church
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    Hell on the Way to Heaven
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  • Jesus Land: A Memoir
    Jesus Land: A Memoir
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  • This Little Light: Beyond a Baptist Preacher Predator and His Gang
    This Little Light: Beyond a Baptist Preacher Predator and His Gang
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    Pretend You Don't See the Elephant: The Family Secrets and Silence of Christian Science
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  • The Religion That Kills: Christian Science: Abuse, Neglect
    The Religion That Kills: Christian Science: Abuse, Neglect
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  • The Unseen Shore: Memories of a Christian Science Childhood
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    Religion as a Natural Phenomenon

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Tuesday
Jan192010

Twelve Tribes cult members exploited by reclusive leader living lavish lifestyle, corporal punishment controls kids

The San Diego Union-Tribune - January 18, 2010

North County group disputes ‘cult’ depiction

By Tanya Mannes | UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER

 

Vista residents have watched curiously as newcomers, dressed in what some describe as “prairie clothes,” spent the past year building a deli in downtown Vista.

The men with their beards, sometimes accompanied by women in shapeless dresses, arrived each day to hammer nails and install fixtures in the two-story building that resembles a funky treehouse, with its hand-carved wood detailing and a 1970s-style logo for their Yellow Deli.

The workers are part of the local community of a worldwide group called the Twelve Tribes, whose members attempt to live like the early Christians as described in the Book of Acts.

Twelve Tribes members share their income and eschew self-interest in favor of a communal lifestyle, and the group is guided by a reclusive leader known as Yoneq.

Some have called the group a cult, although its members cringe at that word. In Massachusetts, New York, Tennessee and Vermont, critics have drawn attention to the group’s recruitment practices, its strict rules and the lack of wages paid to members.

Others dismiss those concerns, saying members are adults who made the choice to become part of an alternative world.

The Twelve Tribes has a 66-acre farm with avocado groves in Valley Center and a house in Vista. It plans to open the deli on East Broadway in Vista on Feb. 14.

The deli will be staffed by unpaid group members who will brew coffee and its signature yerba mate tea. They will fix salads with chard and avocados from their farm — and they hope people will want to chat about God or learn about the Twelve Tribes.

“We endeavor to make a place where any person feels totally comfortable regardless of where they come from. We’re not here to proselytize people or force our beliefs on people,” said Wade Skinner, a community elder. “For us, it’s more a way to meet people and interact.”

On the wall of the deli is the slogan: “We serve the fruit of the spirit — Why not ask?”

Matthew Woodruff, 41, a San Diego community member, was in his late teens when he dropped out of what was then Point Loma Nazarene College to join the group after seeing the “love and unity” at a community in Vermont. Now married with six children, Woodruff is an elder who helps make decisions at the farm.

“It seemed like a real, sustainable life like I read about in the Bible,” Woodruff said.

The Twelve Tribes originated in the early 1970s in Tennessee, where Gene Spriggs — now known as Yoneq — and his wife ran a ministry through a coffee shop out of their home. Eventually, the group began living communally and opened a deli, the first of several restaurants and coffee shops. The group’s other ventures include farms and BOJ Construction in Massachusetts.

The group has developed traditions, such as Israeli folk dancing during the Friday night Sabbath ceremony. Members avoid TV and politics, spending their free time praying and singing.

In 2001, the group set up a community in the Los Angeles area. With crews traveling to San Diego for construction work, the group decided to buy the house in Vista.

In 2003, it established the Valley Center farm. Surrounded by hills, wooden buildings house several dozen members who work in the fields and groves.

The farm, known as the Morning Star Ranch, appeared in news accounts in June 2009 when the community unknowingly sheltered a fugitive couple and a 4-year-old girl involved in a custody dispute. A community member alerted authorities after seeing an Amber Alert.

Keturah Carlin, 25, was born into one of the group’s New England communities and lives at the farm with her husband and two children. Carlin’s days are spent cooking, sewing and teaching at the communal preschool. She also helps make the “green drink” — made with grapefruit and greens from the farm — that members sell at farmers’ markets.

As a child, she longed for makeup and designer clothes, but Carlin said she grew to accept the faith.

“My parents were able to communicate why they chose that simpler life,” she said.

Rebecca Moore, professor and chairwoman of the religious studies department at San Diego State University, classifies the group as “millenarian” because of its emphasis on the “endtimes,” referring to the return of Jesus and God’s judgment on the world.

Moore doesn’t consider the Twelve Tribes a cult.

“They have deliberately established an alternative world and way of life and expectation of Jesus’ return,” she said.

David Pike, 53, who was a member for seven years, said he believes the group is deeply flawed. Pike, who joined soon after leaving a drug-and-alcohol rehabilitation program, said the structured life prevented him from drinking, but he became concerned over the use of a rod to discipline children and the “slave labor” lifestyle.

“A major factor was finding out there were similar groups that claimed to be the only ones and the only way,” Pike said. “I was seeing the possibility of it being a cult.”

Some complaints have attracted authorities, especially in the 1980s, when several members were taken by cult deprogrammers. In 1984, authorities in Vermont raided a community on child-abuse allegations, but a judge found the search and seizure unlawful, so the children weren’t examined.

Since then, communities have been accused of racism, sexism and homophobia. Members also have been embroiled in child-custody battles that sometimes involve abuse allegations.

In 2001, the New York attorney general cracked down on the group for child-labor violations, fining two businesses $2,000.

Rick Ross, who runs a religious watchdog institute in New Jersey, said the group exploits its members.

“People are basically working for room and board. … If you can staff a cafe, a restaurant or a business and have virtually no payroll cost and no benefits, you have basically no overhead, and it is very easy to make a profit,” Ross said.

He and others believe that Spriggs is building an empire. The Boston Herald reported in 2001 that Spriggs leads a lavish lifestyle, “bedding down in palatial homes in southern France, Brazil and Cape Cod while his followers lead humble lives of hard work in his many businesses.”

Cult awareness activist Steven Hassan of Somerville, Mass., said the group used to set up first-aid tents at Grateful Dead concerts to lure drugged-out youths.

“I think any group that says its leader is the sole prophet of God on Earth and he understands the Bible better than anyone else … is a problem,” Hassan said.

“They want total commitment. They want you to turn over your money and your property and your free will.”

Twelve Tribes spokeswoman Jean Wiseman said allegations that the group is a cult are “untrue and pure gossip.”

“We own what we own and share it with our friends voluntarily,” Wiseman said. “Yoneq makes no salary either. Our needs are met according to the most pressing need, as commanded by Scripture.”

Union-Tribune researchers Merrie Monteagudo and Michelle Gilchrist contributed to this report.

This article was found at:

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2010/jan/18/north-county-group-disputes-cult-depiction/

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