News and commentary on Religion, especially Southern religion.

Friday, March 12, 2010

Scientology fights back toward decline [Addendum]

Guy Fawkes mask (anonymous)

Hiring veteran journalists to counter-investigate the St. Petersburg Times was a strategy with something of a reverse twist. Scientology is under scrutiny in Australia [1,2,3], headed for the silver screen in Germany and still on the pages of U.S. news publications [1,2,3].

Just for example, you understand.

All of the well-known Scientology strategies keep applying, as makers of the film "Bis Nichts Mehr Bleibt" (Until Nothing Remains) illustrated when they reported via the Guardian:

The film team said it had been "bombarded" with phone calls and emails from the organisation during production. The head of the Southwest German broadcasting organisation, Carl Bergengruen who was involved in the project, said Scientology had "tried via various means to discover details about the film" and that the film crew was even tailed by a Scientology representative.

"We are fearful that the organisation will try to use all legal means to try to stop the film being shown," he said.

The film itself sounds like a classical Scientology exit story with an especially tragic conclusion:

According to the makers of Until Nothing Remains, the €2.5m (£2.3 m) drama, which is due to air in a prime-time slot at the end of March, is based on the true story of Heiner von Rönns, who left Scientology and suffered the subsequent break-up of his family.

Scientology calls the film false and intolerant, and distributed flyers at a Hamburg preview, accusing the filmmakers of aiming to "create a mood of intolerance and discrimination against a religious community."

All of that effort to defeat critics while building attractive homes for the church. Yet as PZ Meyers pointed out from his reading of the NY Times investigation, they're apparently shrinking:

The church is vague about its membership numbers. In 11 hours with a reporter over two days, Mr. Davis, the church's spokesman, gave the numbers of Sea Org members (8,000), of Scientologists in the Tampa-Clearwater area (12,000) and of L. Ron Hubbard's books printed in the last two and a half years (67 million). But asked about the church's membership, Mr. Davis said, "I couldn't tell you an exact figure, but it's certainly, it's most definitely in the millions in the U.S. and millions abroad."

He said he did not know how to account for the findings in the American Religious Identification Survey that the number of Scientologists in the United States fell from 55,000 in 2001 to 25,000 in 2008.

If you make projections from those numbers, as Meyers did, they appear to have done some magnificent architectural restoration without building a future.

Addendum: Preview of the movie

The opening lines of the preview refer to Scientologist Tom Cruise’s role in the movie "Valkyrie." There was considerable tension while Valkyrie was being filmed. At one point, according to the London Daily Mail, Thomas Gandow, Sect Commissioner for the German Evangelical Church, "said the film is propaganda for Scientology" and described Cruise was the 'Goebbels of Scientology.'"

The movie still scheduled to air on ARD on March 31

3 comments:

  1. Wait,Scientology officials haven't seen the film yet, but they're already upset? Or is the truth that they're upset because their harrassment during filming didn't work?

    Scientologists crying foul about propaganda is like the mafia crying foul about injustice.

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  2. The term "magnificent architectural restoration" is funny, considering the sorry state of most of their "Ideal Orgs". As for the Fort Harrison hotel, you'd think they'd finally removed all of the evidence. After all, it's been a little over 14 years since Lisa McPherson died as a result of their "care".

    I suspect they're upset about the film because they're already familiar with the subject matter, and they don't like the truth getting out. Quoting above, "Scientologists crying foul about propaganda is like the mafia crying foul about injustice." Or like Tiger Woods ranting about infidelity.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Re "magnificent architectural restoration:" Good catch. Irony intended.

    ReplyDelete

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