1 / 46

Jonestown Massacre

Jonestown Massacre. Jonestown. Peoples Temple, formed in Indianapolis during 1950’s Jim Jones- Cult leader 140 followers moved with Jones to Redwood Valley in Mendocino County, California. Felt they would be safe from fallout in case of a nuclear attack on United States if they lived there

faith
Télécharger la présentation

Jonestown Massacre

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Jonestown Massacre

  2. Jonestown • Peoples Temple, formed in Indianapolis during 1950’s • Jim Jones- Cult leader • 140 followers moved with Jones to Redwood Valley in Mendocino County, California

  3. Felt they would be safe from fallout in case of a nuclear attack on United States if they lived there • Late 1960’s: congregation down to less than 100- on verge of collapse • Jones had Peoples Temple form an affiliation with Disciples of Christ

  4. Membership started to go up • Jones had larger influence in West Coast area • Moved group to San Francisco in 1971 • Opened another church in Los Angeles

  5. Jones: in San Francisco, was appointed to city commissions and made grants to local newspapers with goal of supporting First Amendment • Scandals and investigations started to go on in San Fran

  6. Jones decided to leave to create utopian community in Guyana • Would have absolute power over his members since they were far away from US authorities/intervention or relatives of members

  7. 1974- leased over 3000 acres of jungle land from the Guyanese government • Members of Peoples Temple began construction of Jonestown under supervision of senior members who were assigned by Jones

  8. 1977: membership was at 50, in 1978 it was at over 900 • Members thought Guyana was going to be a paradise- Jones had promised • All of the residents, including the children, raised food and animals for “Peoples Temple Agricultural Project”

  9. Work was 6 days a week, 7 in morning to 6 in evening • Temperatures reached over 100 degrees • Meals would consist of rice and beans while Jones ate meat and other refrigerated foods

  10. Cruel and unusual punishment used against members considered to be serious disciplinary problems • Imprisonment in a 6 by 4 by 3 foot plywood box and forcing children to spend a night at the bottom of a well

  11. Members who tried to run away were drugged to the point of incapacitation • Armed guards patrolled compound day and night to ensure Jones’s orders were followed

  12. Children were in communal care • Addressed Jones as “Dad” • Only allowed to see real parents briefly at night • Jones was called “Father” or “Dad” by adults as well

  13. Guyanese locals have told horror stories of punishments, and the “torture hole” where children were put in the middle of the night • He told children there was a monster living in the bottom of the well • Had people pull and tug children when they went into well

  14. “White Nights” –rehearsed mass suicides • In practice nights, people were told they would die, were forced to drink unsweetened Flavor Aid, told it contained poison • Only after everyone drank the concoction were they informed they was no poison

  15. This was a test of loyalty and faith in Jones • Phrase “Drinking the kool-aid” came from this

  16. November 1978 • Congressman Leo Ryan, Democrat from San Francisco, flew to Jonestown • Team of 18 people, officials, media representatives, members of group “Concerned Relatives of Peoples Temple Members”

  17. They intended to investigate allegations that human rights were being violated daily at the Peoples Temple, individuals being held against their free will, individuals had their money and passports confiscated, mass suicide rehearsals were being conducted

  18. Ryan and group came • Some Peoples Temple members moved to defect • Others left the colony, Jones was angry when he found out

  19. Ryan did not have a large enough plane to carry those who wanted to leave, they would have to schedule another flight • Member of Temple, on Jones’s orders, attacked Ryan with knife

  20. A loyalist demanded to join group leaving • People on plane did not like idea, but Ryan said that they would take anyone who wanted to leave • Loyalist opened fire right before take off

  21. A tractor appeared, circled plane and opened fire • Shooting was filmed, even though cameraman was killed • Congressman Ryan and some news team members were killed

  22. Mass murder/suicide • Jim Jones called a meeting of the community- Nov 18, 1978 • He told the people that Ryan was going to be killed and that that would cause an attack on Jonestown and everyone would be killed

  23. Mixed cyanide and Valium into a metal vat full of grape “Flavor Aid” a Kool-Aid knock-off • Caused death in about 5 minutes • No one who drank the poison that evening survived

  24. Babies and small children were first, over two hundred of them • Poured into mouths with syringes • Afterward were the adults with paper cups of poison • Told to lie down together along walkways

  25. Jones was dead as well from a gunshot wound. No one knows if he committed suicide or if someone else shot him

  26. Many thought this was just another rehearsal and did not see the people convulsing and dying • Some armed guards had to shoot people who were resisting • 909 Temple members died and 5 others (including Ryan)

  27. Why did this happen? • How could one man achieve such control? • Jim Jones had a paranoid belief that the American government was plotting to destroy anyone who was involved in the Peoples Temple

  28. Jones had always removed the “threats” to the safety of his followers • They learned to trust him and call him “Father” • Self-sufficient community • Everyone would be equal

  29. Visionary • Drew himself to the outcasts of society, as well as those who wanted to help the downtrodden, serve those in need • Preached the need for racial brotherhood and integration • Both black and white worshipped side by side

  30. Congregation worked to feed the poor, find employment for the jobless, and help ex-criminals and drug addicts put their lives back together • Started to put more and more demands on congregation

  31. Started promising miraculous healings where cancers would be removed and the blind made to see • Recruits would witness a community of brotherhood and fellowship where everyone, no matter their social standing or color, was treated as equals

  32. Severe initiation was required by new members, made entry that much more desirable • Created a much higher level of commitment from members • More that was sacrificed, more that was achieved

  33. By the time the members thought demands were oppressive, they were so heavily committed they just accepted it • Demands on member’s time, financial commitment would increase, amounts given recorded openly

  34. Highest level of commitment was when the individual or family lived at the Peoples Temple facilities- handing over all personal property, savings, and social security checks • Communal living • Capitalism was evil and destructive

  35. Achievement of higher spirituality would require a struggle against own weaknesses • Usually had isolated themselves from family and friends, couldn’t admit mistakes, would be alone without a support group

  36. If you left the complex, you had no passport, papers, or money to help you escape

More Related