Tom
Cruise’s
Religion in the Spotlight Over Forced Abortion Allegations

The Church of Scientology, popularly known as the church to which
Hollywood superstar Tom Cruise belongs, is facing increased scrutiny in
Australia and elsewhere over allegations that the organization has
abused members and even coerced women psychologically into having
abortions.
Australia’s Senate plans to vote soon on whether to conduct an inquiry
into the allegations of the church’s abuse of Australians, and
especially of members of the Sea Organization, Scientology’s elite
religious group, whose members sign a billion-year contract to serve
Scientology for millions of lifetimes.
Senator Nick Xenophon fired the first salvo in this latest battle with
Scientology in November 2009, after receiving a letter from former
church members relating their experiences of the church sanctioning
forced abortions, assault, imprisonment, concealing sexual abuse,
embezzling funds and performing blackmail.
Xenophon pressed the issue relentlessly, invoking parliamentary
privilege to demand the Senate investigate. Xenophon quoted former
Scientologist Aaron Saxton, who stated he had participated in bullying
Sea Org members into having abortions.
“If they refused, they faced demotion and hard labour. Aaron says one
staff member used a coat hanger and self-aborted her child for fear of
punishment," said Xenophon in a speech to parliament.
The Australian senator’s battle has fueled debate on whether
Scientology should be allowed to keep its tax-exempt status. At the
same time more witnesses and ex-members of Scientology have stepped
forward with similar allegations against the church, putting more
pressure on Australia’s government to investigate and take action.
The Australian Broadcasting Company reported on its “Four Corners”
program that an ex-member of the Sea Orgs revealed she and other women
had been pressured into having abortions in order to remain in the
elite organization.
The unidentified Sea Org member said of her abortion: “I will always
have that emotional scar and wounds. It's a horrifying form of abuse
that goes on very prevalently.”
The complaint about coerced abortion is not new; but ever since
Xenophon entered the fray, the issue has been getting much more
attention and developed its own momentum. The Sea Org requires members
not to have children, demanding they devote all their energies to
whatever goals Scientology leaders have in mind for the church.
Scientology spokesman Tommy Davis told ABC that it was “absolutely not
true” that the church asked pregnant women in Sea Org to have abortions
if they wanted to stay. But he said that Sea Org members do not have
children, and would have to leave the Sea Org until the child was old
enough for them to rejoin.
However, Marc Headley, a former Scientology member, said that women
members of the Sea Org feel enormous pressure to abort their children,
because Scientology is the only world they know, and leaving the Sea
Org leads to shunning from the rest of Scientology, including
Scientologist friends and family. In addition to the loss of support,
he said they would have to leave the Sea Org absolutely penniless.
At a September 2008 conference in Hamburg, Germany, Headley explained,
“If a female staff member for some reason was married, and got
pregnant, then she's basically forced or convinced to have an abortion.
If she refuses to have an abortion, then she will be offloaded from the
Sea Organization and in most cases, declared; and she will not be able
to speak to any of her family or friends that are Scientologists.”
Headley joined five other ex-Scientologists for a highly publicized
press conference back in February that also drew attention to
allegations of forced abortion.
Headley, who belonged to the Sea Org for 16 years, told the New York
Times in a March 5, 2010 article, that he and his wife were suing
Scientology over lost wages and the two abortions, which he said his
wife was coerced into having in order to stay in the Sea Org.
Contact: Peter J. Smith
Source:
LifeSiteNews.com
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Date:
March 10, 2010
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