Tags
Children of Jonestown, Choices, Cyanide-laced Flavor Aid, Jonestown, Mass-murder-suicide, Peoples Temple Church, Reverend Jim Jones, Revolutionary Suicide
Teacher with Children Singing in Jonestown, Guyana
Source: http://cdn.calisphere.org
Our choices and decisions go hand-in-hand. As adolescents, our parents, friends, teachers, coaches, favorite TV or film personality, and the individuals we connect most with all play important roles in the choices we make. When we become adults, our goals and priorities can supersede all other considerations when making our choices.
In my article, “Teaching in a Remote Forest Region in Guyana” (posted on November 13), I shared my experience of my decision to teach in Mabaruma, a remote administrative township in Guyana’s northwestern rainforest region. That year, while the jungle closed in around me and news of my words and actions travelled by word-of-mouth along the arteries and veins of its river system, over one thousand American settlers faced their own entrapment just fifteen miles away, as the bird flies, across the jungle canopy.
The Peoples Temple Agricultural Project – Jonestown – was the haven of the American Church’s founder and leader, the Reverend Jim Jones. Pressures from defectors of the Church and concerned relatives in California forced Jim Jones to make desperate choices. He prepared his followers for “revolutionary suicide.”
The adults and families that made the choice to become members of the Peoples Temple Church, then headquartered in California, did so with the sincere desire to make a positive change in their lives and to make a difference in their communities. Unknowingly, they had put their trust in a charismatic and megalomaniac who promoted himself as a Messiah.
Among the 916 victims of the Jonestown mass-murder-suicide were 276 children. The youngest children were the first to receive the cyanide-laced, grape-flavored Flavor Aid. Reverend Jim Jones knew that, once the children were dead, their parents would follow them to “the other side.”
As parents, we have the responsibility of making choices for the well-being and development of our young children. When parents make bad choices, their children also suffer the consequences. My sons, then two and four years old, had no say in the decision their father and I made to migrate to Brazil. When my marriage disintegrated in Brazil, four years later, my sons also shared the pain and loss resulting from their father’s choice to return to our homeland, Guyana.
We all make choices that set us on particular paths in our lives. We do not always make the right choices. When we err, we have three choices: go back to the last crossroad and choose another direction; continue on the same roadway; or turn at the crossroad ahead. Inaction is not a choice. It is denial, defeat, death of the soul.
The 276 American children that died in Jonestown had none of these choices.
This is priceless – real touching!
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What is still puzzling me to this day is why was this man Jim Jones was so powerful? What exactly was his grip on these people ? Were they so weak of mind and soul that they could not rebel? Maybe they thought this was just an enactment – they did not know that they were being poisoned.
How ever their parents made a choice to be with Jones – the kids did not!
For me in reality I would make a turn at the next crossroad ahead!
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He had almost a supernatural power over people. He could somehow entrance people into doing what they would never do normally. The day of the suicide, though, they didn’t have much choice. They were surrounded by armed guards who shot anyone who tried to flee.
Nice blog, by the way. I’ve always been interested in Jim Jones.
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Thanks for dropping by, Ruby.
Yes, when the moment came to choose life or death, the followers of Jim Jones had no choice. It’s so tragic when we misuse our gift of persuasion to manipulate and destroy others.
Jim Jones portrays the dark side of our human character.
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I believe people were looking for something to believe in or in this case someone to believe in….he offered hope and love at a critical time when so much kaos was happening…they were easy to manipulate because of the what was happening in the world around them….People this evil are good at manipulation….
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Carol, thanks for dropping by and sharing your insights. Sad to say, we-humans continue to hold onto “false prophets” like Jim Jones to save us from the chaos in our lives–chaos that will only grow worse with climate change disruption underway.
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Perhaps repeating myself, but from a different angle: what exactly is the difference between the Jonestown massacre and any call to arms to fight wars for profiteering elites when the “government” calls up the fools to “die for their country”? People are sheep who refuse, and I mean refuse, to think for themselves hence always end up victims of the system. Look at the idiots in the US military stomping around in places they have no business being, except they are policing corporate preserves. And look how said idiots are treated upon returning by the very same forces who propagandized them to go and slaughter innocent people in their own lands… for absolutely no reason except they can’t reason it. These so-called “soldiers” are at best mercenaries, at worst, contract killers. Yet they want to be seen, for the most part, as heroes and special when they return from their killing efforts. In the case of Jonestown, that represents the ultimate result of “patriotism”. Don’t think, don’t reason, just trust and all will be well… ours is not to reason why, Ours is but to do or die… and all the rest of the propagandist BS throughout the ages. These things would never happen, and wars could not be fought if the sheeple quit braying at their flags and learned to reason it for themselves. “What fools these mortals be…”
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Thanks, Deokie. The people of Jonestown continue to haunt me.
Jim Jones was gifted in manipulating people. He also used a variety of techniques and punishment to control his followers. Their isolation in the jungle, without the protection of the law, made the people even more vulnerable.
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Rosaliene, I can remember it vividly when the incident was happening – I had no TV then – just a radio – and I was keeping count of the deaths and following the story in such horror! It still sends shiver down my spine when I talk about it!
From what our Captain Gouveia said there seemed to be something amiss about the activities of Jones Town! To me it seems a story without closure!
I prefer to call it “mass murder” instead of “revolutionary sucide”. However, apart from its creativity, your article just identifies with reality so well that it touches to the very core of my being!
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I agree, Deokie, the fate of the people of Jonestown is a story without closure. There are many unanswered questions. Both the Guyana and US representatives failed to provide the protection that the American settlers needed.
Money buys silence and complicity.
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Yes, Rose, money can buy almost anything – the “almost” is what keeps a lot of us going.
This was a good summary on Jonestown and I look to more from you on this devastating event. I would also comment that inaction is, indeed, a choice and many make it out of terror or a kind of paralysis or as you note, a “death of the soul.”
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Thanks for visiting, Angela.
Just as we should not forget what happened during the Holocaust, we should not forget what happened at Jonestown. As social beings, we are constantly subject to manipulation by ‘Jim Joneses’ who attempt to control our lives. At times, we are unaware of this until everything falls apart around us.
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Yes – that is why the “almost” is so critical: that money, for all it is, cannot buy ideas or hopes, respect or finally, love.
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Hi Rosaliene,
Your article is very thought provoking as it deals with the subject of choices and those who have the power to influence those choices. It is true that the manipulators can come in different forms, different shapes, different voices and different forms of beauty and ugliness or some shade in between. Or the manipulators can come in the form of multinational banks that convince us that more credit is better and that a line-of-credit can be taken out against a mortgage as you have accumulated “equity” in your home and that the minimum payment is appropriate and with the power of mass media, those manipulators can even sway our minds that this is great mathematical logic. And those same manipulators can not only sway a small group of people but can extend their power to towns, villages, cities, nations and the whole world and even cause the collapse of entire economic systems like in the European nations . And even more high- powered manipulators can convince us that war is needed to create peace, and weapons of mass destruction are essential to maintain stability amongst the nations, and some races are superior to other races and class systems are perfectly normal and that skin colour is a deciding factor in our destiny. The biggest fear is that sometimes the manipulators are so pretty and beautiful and convincing that the manipulation becomes a way of life and people accept it and after a while do not even see it as manipulation and it becomes part of the lifestyle and culture and carried on for generations. And in those cases there really isn’t a finality like Jonestown because the manipulation is even grater and powerful and it becomes transparent and invisible. It becomes an inherent part of our life.
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Ron, thanks for sharing your observations about the myriad forms of manipulation we face in our daily lives.
Many people have told me that they would never have been deceived by the Reverend Jim Jones. Yet, as you rightly conclude, worse men than Jim Jones exist in our world today: “… (Their) manipulation is even greater and powerful and…becomes an inherent part of our life.”
The choices made by the members of the Peoples’ Temple in Jonestown, Guyana, continue to hold valuable lessons for each one of us. Too many of us are also unknowingly on the path to self-destruction.
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The Jonestown massacre is a story without closure because it is a parable pointing to a dystopian future; the micro of the macro. Jonestown is precursor to a much larger dystopia that is now closing in on all the people of Jonestown earth. We know this; we can feel it with the exponential rise of “security” and the endless wars on (fill in the blanks here) erupting everywhere; the nuclear sabre-rattling by nuclear powers, the legalized drugs crime syndicates called Big Pharma; the colossal poisoning of the air and land by that other crime syndicate: the chemical corporations; the crushing tentacles of the fossil-fuel fire-breathing dragons; the privatizing of global militaries to do the bidding of money Mafias, turning “soldiers” into nothing more than murderous mercenaries for various cartels of death.
Jonestown was a warning. Jim Jones was a ponerologist with absolute power. As are today’s leaders in almost every country; and where they are not, those countries are under attack, their leaders overthrown or deposed and capitalistic fascists or neo-Nazi rulers installed by the cartels.
It’s probably too late to actually reverse this cycle; this final destructive act against mankind and the planet. As at Jonestown on that last day, there is no refuge; no hiding place; nowhere to run to. Mankind is surrounded by a force he cannot understand, or worse, that he still trusts.
Earthians have never understood their real predicament when it comes to power, and when it comes to opposing that power; why revolutions don’t work.
Here’s an amazingly accurate quote from the Christian New Testament, written some 2000 years ago and completely ignored or deliberately misunderstood: “For our struggle is not against flesh and blood but against the powers, against the authorities of this dark world, and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.”
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And, according to that same 2000 year-old book, such dark forces can only be overcome with love and compassion. Not by the sword or drones or nuclear weapons or great armies!
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and… to beat my old drum that’s literally falling apart, that “love and compassion” obviously can only work from an individual level. In a world sustaining itself by complex webs of collective enterprises, that seems so… hopeless, the one-on-one thing. Yet my Teachers insisted I should learn from history and my own negative experiences with collective efforts and stick to working alone; without attachments; without expectations. “Do what you do, do well…” as the song went, and let the rest take care of itself. That doesn’t mean I don’t engage/join up with groups when a project happens and I can plug into it, but it means I engage it while remaining “independent” of whatever the agenda is behind the group. If they’re building a house and can use my skills, that’s where I go, but once it’s done, I’m back to doing my “Lone Ranger” stuff. In short, I don’t work for the collective, but for those in need being helped by the project. Perhaps I’m trying to have my cake and eat it too… Nothing’s black or white on this world. Can’t wait (literally can’t!) to return “home” from this crazy-assed tour of duty. Remembering back from the early Fifties to today… some ride that’s been!
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As individuals, we do what we can with the gifts we’ve been given or developed. Who can ask more?
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As much as we’d like to, there is no more – we’re up against the cryptonite.
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Reblogged this on ~Burning Woman~ and commented:
In keeping with my last post, “Children are the Future” I’m reblogging this article from Rosaliene Bacchus about the Jonestown massacre in which almost a thousand people died and 276 of those were children. My claim is that Jonestown is unfinished business; that it is a bloody parable to demonstrate what could happen, and in fact, what is happening now throughout the entire world which from this viewpoint I call Jonestown Earth.
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Thanks for the re-blog, Sha’Tara.
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It’s my pleasure to post something so right up my alley of philosophy, and it was time for a reminder.
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