Saturday, November 24, 2018

A Paradise on Earth: Part 1 - Tragedy


They all seemed happy.

They all seemed happy in the photos and film footage.  The images give the impression that Jonestown was the earthly paradise Peoples Temple propaganda made it out to be. 

The reality, as we know, was different.  The murder-suicide of 909 people at Jonestown in November 1978 led to the unmasking of what Peoples Temple had become in its final years and the true character of its charismatic pastor, Jim Jones.  The congregation had fled from its base in San Francisco to Guyana the previous year as media revelations surfaced of Jones’ erratic behavior and abuse within the church. 

The day of the massacre Temple gunmen had killed Congressman Leo Ryan, several members of his party, as well as a few Temple defectors attempting to leave Jonestown at a nearby airstrip.  Ryan had been on an official visit to investigate allegations made by relatives of Temple members.  The prospect of losing even a handful of members and possible legal action against him back home pushed Jones over the edge.  After Ryan’s murder Jones told his followers that they faced attack from the Guyanese and U.S. militaries and that there was only one way out.  Those who did not willingly drink the cyanide-laced grape punch were forcibly given the poison.

Followed days later by the assassinations of George Moscone and Harvey Milk, an uneasy pall fell upon those of us living in Northern California.  I was twelve and just becoming aware of the wider world.  I did not fully understand what had happened, only that I felt troubled whenever the story came up on the TV news or in conversation among the adults. 

It certainly was an odd time.  David Talbot captures the zeitgeist in The Season of the Witch, parts of which cover Peoples Temple’s time in the Bay Area and the Moscone mayoralty.  Reading Talbot brings back the same feelings of forty years ago.  Like most people outside San Francisco, I’d never heard of Peoples Temple until after the suicides.  Thinking back on it, though, I’m a little surprised I hadn’t.

Certain aspects of my childhood were a trifle unconventional.  My parents were still together then and even though we lived in a small town with conservative values they experimented with religion.  We kids were not reared in any particular faith outside a nominal adherence to Protestant Christianity.  Nevertheless, our mom and dad searched fruitlessly for a spiritual home.  Perhaps they were grasping for something to save their failing marriage; I don’t know and it really doesn’t matter at this remove. 

For a while we sampled a variety of churches, most outside the mainstream.  My sisters and I were subjected to an evangelical Baptist Sunday School for a few weeks.  We looked into the Seventh Day Adventists and Christian Science.  Mom renewed ties with some of her Mormon relatives with a mind toward conversion.  Dad pursued an interest in faith healing for a spell.  Mom dragged him to seances and “channelings.”  She eventually settled on a cherrypicked mishmash of New Age ideas as her professed belief.  I’m not sure where Dad ended up.  I sleep in Sunday mornings.

Histories of Peoples Temple in the 1970s list several satellite congregations in addition to its homebases in San Francisco and Los Angeles.  One purportedly was in the city nearest our home.  Jim Jones’ charisma and the Temple’s emphasis on such woo as miracle cures through laying on of hands should have made it a natural choice for my parents.  Nevertheless, we never attended and it was never mentioned by my folks until the Temple became headline news.

The only reference to this satellite church near my childhood home was a passing reference by Jones in a radio interview.  A search of city directories yields no clues.  Jones was given to hyperbole; perhaps the congregation was just in his mind.

The real tragedy of Peoples Temple, aside from the obvious, is that it was a truly positive force in the lives of its members.  The prevailing discourse surrounding the Temple emphasizes Jones’ mental unraveling and his abusive behavior.  Something clearly had gone awry in those last years.  But if we look at the Temple’s pursuit of racial harmony and social justice and its devotion to its congregants’ material welfare in sickness and old age, it compares very favorably not only to other New Religious Movements but to established churches as well.

I once made this claim in a paper I presented at an academic conference.  The panel discussant’s comments were generally favorable and she offered up the customary suggestions for improvement.  The subsequent audience Q&A was not as friendly.  “How can you say anything good about a man who killed his followers?” and so forth.  You can’t win ‘em all.  I’ve had worse presentations.  I still think I’m right.

Peoples Temple’s legacy is enshrined in offhanded cultural references like “drinking the Kool Aid.”  I’m uncomfortably amused by the name of San Francisco rock band The Brian Jonestown Massacre.  Serious depictions fixate on the mass suicide in the jungle to the exclusion of a deeper look at the events and forces leading up to it.  The reason we don’t discuss the implications of the Temple’s fate is that it hits too close to home.

As a society we are seized by bouts of irrationality.  Remember the evil clown sightings around public schools and playgrounds a couple of years ago?  The news media covered the story without a smidgen of skepticism, fueling the hysteria.  How about the fears over Satanists during the 1980s and 90s?  People went to prison because prosecutors and juries bought into fantastical stories.  Drivers looking at rather than through their windshields in the early 1960s were convinced that the tiny pitting in the glass was caused by atomic fallout instead of normal wear and tear.  Women in Mattoon, Illinois, during the Second World War suffered fainting spells said to have been caused by an unknown man spraying a mysterious gas through their open windows at night.

We’re unnerved by the ways cults hook and hold on to their adherents because deep down we recognize our own credulity.  Peoples Temple is commonly remembered as a cult, even though it was formally part of the mainstream Disciples of Christ.  In its time, the Temple must have been an unsettling presence in the midst of changing mores.

The trajectory of Peoples Temple from a small midwestern church to a West Coast political force to a utopian agricultural settlement in the wilds of South America was an unlikely one, even with the weird vicissitudes of American life.  The ensuing tragedy bears an occasional retelling that goes beyond the customary shrugs and clichés. 


© 2018 The Unassuming Scholar



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