Wednesday, January 2, 2019

A Paradise on Earth: Part 7 - The Reckoning


The sight which greeted the first people to enter Jonestown on the morning of November 19, 1978, beggared description.  The TV news images that went out later that day were horrifying and were unlike anything else the American public had ever seen up until that point.  The emotional impact for those seeing it first and in person must have been beyond overwhelming.

Encountering the Jonestown horrors was the culmination of two days’ turmoil in Guyana, in the jungle and in Georgetown.   Congressman Leo Ryan lay dead at the Port Kaituma airstrip, cut down by Peoples Temple gunmen.  Several others, including NBC News cameraman Bob Brown, were also dead.  The survivors, including Ryan aide Jackie Speier, were badly wounded. 

After Jim Jones had declared that it was time to commit “revolutionary suicide,” a handful of Jonestown residents managed to evade security and go into the surrounding forest while a small party excused themselves earlier in the day to go on a picnic.  Others, including Tim Carter and Mike Prokes, were sent away on Temple business.  Lawyers Charles Garry and Mark Lane, bitter rivals, managed to set aside their differences as they too waited out Jonestown’s demise huddled in the undergrowth on its fringes.  Hyacinth Thrash, some stories go, slept through the whole thing.

In Georgetown, Stephan Jones, convinced his father had had a mental breakdown, ignored his mother’s pleas to return to Jonestown opting to stay on with the Temple basketball team.  Sharon Amos, a devoted follower to the end, took her own life and those of her children at the Temple’s capital residence.

The first priority was evacuating the injured survivors.  For Guyanese and U.S. authorities, this was the easy part.  By contrast. processing the remains of the deceased was a near-insurmountable task.  Decency dictates that individual human remains be treated respectfully.  When people die one at a time, this is practicable.  In a mass casualty scenario with almost a thousand dead in a remote location in a tropical climate, this is impossible.

Even as the authorities arrived in Jonestown scant hours after the deaths the stink of decomposition permeated the atmosphere.  The aggregate weight of the bodies was probably between 70 and 75 tons.  Guyanese law mandated autopsies in the event of unnatural death; this was logistically overwhelming even in a developed country.  The Guyanese chief pathologist, Leslie Mootoo, got this requirement waived so that the remains could be expeditiously repatriated.  However, causes of death had to be determined.  U.S. officials ultimately chose seven individuals for examination.

The body of Jim Jones was of course one of the seven.  The autopsy of so few victims naturally upset loved ones back home who wanted answers.  Rebecca Moore, professor of religious studies at San Diego State University and expert on Peoples Temple, has written of their emotional trauma.  Dr. Moore’s interest is personal; her sisters Carolyn Moore Layton and Annie Moore died at Jonestown, as did her nephew Kimo Prokes.  The sisters’ remains were among the seven. 

The medical examiners’ conclusions were ambiguous.  The bodies, already in poor condition when found, had been embalmed in Georgetown before being sent to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware.  This hindered complete findings of cause.  A few things were known.  All but Jones had taken cyanide.  Jones had died of a gunshot to the head, as had Annie Moore even though she also had a lethal concentration of cyanide in her system.  Who administered the gunshots to whom was unclear.  Extrapolating the autopsies along with the evidence at the scene led to a conclusion of mass poisoning.

Back in San Francisco, the early reports from South America were ominous and confusing.  The city’s remaining Temple contingent got word by shortwave radio of Leo Ryan’s murder and the tumble of events afterwards.  Associate pastor Hue Fortson, whom Jones had sent back to California shorty before Ryan’s visit, has remarked upon the devastating impact of the first reports in interviews.  As information filtered to the local and national news media, even the wildest rumors surrounding Jonestown paled in comparison to the revelations coming out of Guyana in the ensuing days and weeks.

The resulting story was one-sided.  It is difficult to defend a mass murder / suicide, but there were few voices from active Temple members in California in the media discourse in the closing weeks of 1978.  By contrast, the Concerned Relatives were taking a victory lap.   The deaths of a congressman and a few bystanders and those of 909 settlers were bad, but we told you so.  It was inevitable.  They drank the Kool Aid.

Attorneys Garry and Lane made their media appearances where they praised the efforts of attorneys Garry and Lane on behalf of Peoples Temple, and wasn’t it a tragedy so many died?  Few of the Temple leadership survived the tragedy and so there really wasn’t any effective rebuttal to the narrative that the people in Jonestown were mere sheep.

The Jonestown disaster was punctuated a few months later in a budget motel room in Modesto, California.  Mike Prokes had been a local television reporter in the sleepy San Joaquin Valley town before meeting a charismatic preacher named Jim Jones.  The public relations man and Planning Commission member was sent out of Jonestown with the settlement’s monetary assets on November 18th, with instructions to hand them over to the Soviet embassy in Georgetown.  As recriminations hung in the air in the early months of 1979, Prokes called a press conference.

The invitation had eight takers.  Mike Prokes read them a prepared statement urging further examination of the so-called “death tape” in addition to the hundreds of other recordings of Jim Jones as a partial explanation for what happened.  He accused the State Department of setting the events leading to the mass suicide into motion by not objecting to Leo Ryan’s visit because Jones sought to move his people to the Soviet Union.  He emphasized the ideals of Peoples Temple and asked that the dead be remembered favorably for them.

After reading the statement, Prokes excused himself to the bathroom.  He then shot himself in the head.  He was found with a note emphasizing that he took his life not out of despair but in an effort to refocus the discussion away from the thought terminating clichĂ© of Peoples Temple as a death cult.  Charles Garry got a note of his own from Prokes, as did Herb Caen at the San Francisco Chronicle.

Mike Prokes’ end in a shabby little room was anticlimactic, a tree falling in the forest with no aural witnesses.  The narrative was established early and for the long term.  The world had made up its mind about Peoples Temple.


© 2019 The Unassuming Scholar

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