“THE
BIG ISSUE”
A UK based weekly magazine.
Issue of JULY 17-23 2000
THE
END OF THE WORLD ISN’T NIGH
When
people leave the closed world of the Jehovah’s Witnesses, they are ‘disfellowshipped’
and rejected by their closest friends.
Sam
Hart reports on life after faith
I have got to come to terms
with the fact that I’ve abused my own children,” says Bill, matter of
factly. Bill Blackmore is a 56-year-old businessman. He has spent the
most of his time on Earth waiting for it to be annihilated. Bill is a
former Jehovah’s Witness. He and his wife Julia have lost their faith.
“I’d been having doubts for around 13 years but I was so indoctrinated
I didn’t leave,” says Julia.
They are currently embroiled
in a bizarre battle to disentangle themselves from the religion they say
has controlled their lives for the last 38 years. The Blackmores have
forgone birthdays and Christmases, avoided non-Witness friends, frowned
on academic and career success and shut out independent thought. Their
23-year-old son Abel has attempted suicide. They say their former faith
must take some of the blame. “It’s an abusive system. You don’t allow
your children to have a normal life. They think the end of the world is
coming,” says Bill. “They are discouraged from having non-Witness friends
and told they are different. If you don’t fit the mould it can be hard.
Abel didn’t fit the mould so easily.”
Bill and Julia aren’t bitter
- they just want out. But walking away is not that easy. The Blackmores
are in the process of being expelled from the church and face a lifetime
of rejection from the people they looked upon as their closest friends.
The Watchtower Bible And Tract
Society that heads the church was formed in 1884. It promises a place
in heaven for 144,000 elite, and paradise on earth for run-of-the-mill
Witnesses, or ‘The Other Sheep’, as they are known. The end of the world
has been well-and-truly nigh for more than 100 years. Key dates - like
1975, which was largely touted for the end of the world - have come and
gone without so much as a sniff of Armageddon. The Watchtower claims it
has never given a definite date for the world’s demise. But people around
in 1975 tell a different story. “We sold our house and Bill gave up his
job because we were told we wouldn’t need them,” storms Julia. “How dare
they claim they didn’t say it.”
Disobeying the rules results
in expulsion - or ‘disfellowshipping’ as it is known. Wayward Witnesses,
such as the Blackmores, are tried in kangaroo court hearings held by church
elders. These can be used for any number of transgressions, from smoking
to losing your faith. But the rules can change. The latest example being
confusion over the permissibility of blood transfusions. Recent press
reports claim that the Watchtower has done a U-turn over its ban on the
procedure, angering many people whose loved ones have died through adherence
to the religion’s rules. But the Watchtower insists its stance remains
consistent. A spokesman says: “You wouldn’t be disfellowshipped if you
had a transfusion, but you would be disassociating yourself by putting
yourself outside god’s law.” The disfellowshipped have their names read
out in Kingdom Halls (places of worship) and are shunned by other Witnesses,
a practice that can have devastating effects. Those brought up in the
faith often have no other friends or family to turn to.
“It is actually a very cruel
process,” says Doug Harris from Reach Out Trust, a Christian-based charity
which has been monitoring Witness activity for the last 18 years. “Not
only has your whole belief system crumbled, but you have no one to talk
to about it. It turns husband against wife and stops grandparents from
ever seeing their grandchildren.” Shunning can be so serious that one
woman took the Watchtower to court in America when none of her friends
would speak to her. She lost the case when the court said intervention
would be an infringement of religious freedom.
Although the Blackmores have
not yet been formally disfellowshipped, they are feeling the effects already.
“People who we looked on as our closest friends now have nothing to do
with us. It’s like the McCarthy trials in America. People thought they
would be contaminated by even talking to communists. People believe they
are giving up their chance of eternal life by talking to us.” “My mates
started calling me the Antichrist,” says Bill’s son Adam, 28, who was
disfellowshipped last year for questioning the faith. “People who I thought
were my friends wouldn’t even look me in the eye. I came to the conclusion
that maybe they weren’t my real mates after all.”
The family business has also
collapsed as former friends now refuse to trade with them.
The Blackmores are unusual
in that they are challenging the decision to start disfellowship procedures
against them. “We have done nothing wrong. We have the right to believe
what we believe without being shunned.” But for many the strain is too
much. One woman who was disfellowshipped for forming a relationship with
a non-Witness told The Big Issue: “It was terrible. My own mother would
not speak to me. When I got pregnant, I couldn’t stand it anymore. I couldn’t
stand the thought of giving birth without her being there. I had to repent
and go back.”
Bill tells of another couple
who were disfellowshipped for alleged immorality. “They came to Kingdom
Hall three times a week for eight years. Everyone ignored them. No one
would make eye contact but they just kept coming until the elders decided
they were allowed back in again.”
The Watchtower refutes any
claims of cruelty. “We see ourselves as a family,” says a spokesman. “We
love one another. If a Witness was truly repentant it would give us great
joy.” They claim that disfellowshipping is a loving act and that religion
needs discipline. They use the Bible to back up their claims: “Quit mixing
in company with anyone called a brother that is a fornicator or a greedy
person or an idolater or a reviler or a drunkard.” 1 Corinthians 5:11.
“It’s very clever. They tell
you you’re elite and special and that’s why other people don’t like you,”
says one former Witness. “You’re kept very busy with meetings and spreading
the word so there’s no time to think. Questioning the faith is a big taboo.
In the end I decided I wanted a life with questions I couldn’t answer
rather than a life with questions I wasn’t allowed to ask.”
The Blackmores are still trying
to fill the hole left by their religion. “When I look back,” says Julia.
“I just think, ‘Where were our brains?’”
For support and information,
see:
www.welcome. to/wintnesscd,
or http://members.xoom.com/WitnessAidUK/index.html.
Call The Reach Out Trust on
0208-332 7785, or see www.reachouttrust.org.
The official Jehovah’s Witness
site is www.watchtower.org
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