Daily News Alert
Enter your email below.





Hot Stories
Recent Stories

Touching True Story of 'Satanic Pastor' Who Killed Over 900 Members of His Church by Giving Them Poison to Drink (Photos)

Posted by Thandiubani on Thu 26th Jan, 2017 - tori.ng

The influence of religion on the people has been on for centuries, the story of a Reverend with a large congregation who ordered his members to drink poison will shock you.

Rev. Jim Jones
 
The Rev. Jim Jones started his Peoples Temple in the 1950s in Indianapolis. In 1965, he relocated the group to northern California, where he was able to attract more followers, establish temples as far south as Los Angeles, and earn the respect of liberal political leaders in the San Francisco area.
 
Jones preached the values of communism in the context of Christianity, calling for a tight-knit community of equals who were willing to sacrifice for the greater good. He attracted members through the promise of miracles, such as curing cancers and blindness, which he staged in elaborate services. He established a psychological hold over many members through isolation, intimidation, humiliation, spying and brainwashing. 
 
In 1974, as word of Jones’ abusive practices began to leak out, he began to prepare to move his congregation to an agricultural commune in Guyana, a socialist country in South America. In August 1977, a damaging article written by former members of the Peoples Temple appeared in New West magazine, prompting Jones to make the move.
 
More than 1,100 temple members traveled to the commune, known as “Jonestown,” where Jones’ behavior became more erratic and cruel. He split up families, ordered members to perform manual labor for long hours, and continued to brutally interrogate and sexually abuse members. He cut off members from the outside world, and told them that there was widespread violence and chaos in America. 
 
There were several “White Nights,” where Jones claimed that the commune was under attack. Temple members would arm themselves in preparation for an attack, and Jones would present the possibility of a mass “revolutionary suicide.” He would order his people to consume what he claimed to be a poisoned drink in order to prove their loyalty.
 
Families of temple members began to petition the government to investigate. In November 1977, San Francisco-area Congressman Leo J. Ryan traveled to Guyana accompanied by journalists and several relatives of temple members. Three days later, the group spoke with Jones and his followers at Jonestown.
 
The scene of the incident where over 900 died
 
A number of Jonestown members indicated that they wanted to leave the commune. Ryan arranged for 16 members to return to the U.S. with his group. On Nov. 18, as the group prepared to leave the country from an airstrip in Georgetown, armed Jonestown guards attacked and killed Ryan, three journalists and one defector.
 
Soon after, Jones delivered his final address to his congregation. He told them that Ryan’s plane was going to crash, which would attract government attention and threaten their way of life. He said that it was time to commit suicide. Temple member Christine Miller pleaded with Jones not to do it, but she was shouted down by other members.
 
“So my opinion is that you be kind to children and be kind to seniors and take the potion like they used to take in ancient Greece and step over quietly because we are not committing suicide; it's a revolutionary act,” Jones said. “We can't go back; they won't leave us alone.”

At about 5 p.m., Jones distributed a flavored drink poisoned with cyanide. More than 200 babies and young children were forced to drink poisonous cyanide first, and then the rest of the population followed. Armed guards threatened those who were reluctant to drink.
 
Nine hundred and nine people died, all but two from the poisoned drink. Jones was killed by a gunshot, though it is unclear whether he committed suicide or was killed by somebody else. Just four people in the camp at the time survived: two elderly residents who slept through the suicide and two who hid.
 
 
Watch video below:
 


Top Stories


Stories from this Category
Recent Stories