Difference between revisions of "Philippines"

From XFamily - Children of God
[unchecked revision][quality revision]
m
m (make it clear that the text is an excerpt)
 
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
{{stub}}
 +
==Excerpt from ''Christian Research Journal: Inside the "Heavenly Elite"''==
 +
<div style="padding: 1em; margin: 10px; border: 2px dotted green;">
 
One of [[The Family]]'s most successful subversive operations is described in several [[Mo Letters]] known as "The [[Jumbo]] Series." Armed with [[:Category:Family Music and Audio|music and inspirational tapes]], well-dressed young women from the [[cult]] infiltrated military barracks and offices, presenting themselves to the secretaries and asking to speak with colonels and generals, often with propositions such as "Tell him that two pretty young girls want to talk to him about love." On many occasions they were welcomed, even into the most closed of offices. When the official in question was known to be moral (and the women would be careful to inquire about this beforehand), the approach was more circumspect.
 
One of [[The Family]]'s most successful subversive operations is described in several [[Mo Letters]] known as "The [[Jumbo]] Series." Armed with [[:Category:Family Music and Audio|music and inspirational tapes]], well-dressed young women from the [[cult]] infiltrated military barracks and offices, presenting themselves to the secretaries and asking to speak with colonels and generals, often with propositions such as "Tell him that two pretty young girls want to talk to him about love." On many occasions they were welcomed, even into the most closed of offices. When the official in question was known to be moral (and the women would be careful to inquire about this beforehand), the approach was more circumspect.
  
Line 9: Line 12:
 
In the early [[1990s|90s]], The Family was going strong with the full protection of Corazon Aquino's military. The layer of military protection was so great that a round-the-clock military armed guard was provided at the "Jumbo" &ndash; a large Family center in Manila.
 
In the early [[1990s|90s]], The Family was going strong with the full protection of Corazon Aquino's military. The layer of military protection was so great that a round-the-clock military armed guard was provided at the "Jumbo" &ndash; a large Family center in Manila.
  
==External links==
+
Source: [[Christian_Research_Journal:_Inside_the_"Heavenly_Elite"#The_Philippines|Christian Research Journal: Inside the "Heavenly Elite"]] &mdash; [[1990]]
* The Manila Military Ministry: [http://www.exfamily.org/art/exmem/manila_ministry_pt1.shtml Part 1], [http://www.exfamily.org/art/exmem/manila_ministry_pt2.shtml Part 2], [http://www.exfamily.org/art/exmem/manila_ministry_pt3.shtml Part 3] &mdash; By [[Edward Priebe]], 2001
+
 
 +
</div>
 +
 
 +
==References==
 +
* Manila Ministry: The Family's involvement in Filipino Politics: [http://www.exfamily.org/art/exmem/manila_ministry_pt1.shtml Part 1], [http://www.exfamily.org/art/exmem/manila_ministry_pt2.shtml Part 2], [http://www.exfamily.org/art/exmem/manila_ministry_pt3.shtml Part 3] &mdash; By [[Edward Priebe]], 2001
 +
* [[Christian Research Journal: Inside the "Heavenly Elite"]] &mdash; 1990
 +
 
  
  
{{stub}}
 
 
[[Category:Places]]
 
[[Category:Places]]
 +
[[Category:Spotlight]]

Latest revision as of 09:47, 5 December 2008

This article is a "stub". This means it is an incomplete article needing further elaboration.

You can help xFamily.org by contributing information or writing a more complete article. Please use the Forum to send us content whenever possible.

Excerpt from Christian Research Journal: Inside the "Heavenly Elite"

One of The Family's most successful subversive operations is described in several Mo Letters known as "The Jumbo Series." Armed with music and inspirational tapes, well-dressed young women from the cult infiltrated military barracks and offices, presenting themselves to the secretaries and asking to speak with colonels and generals, often with propositions such as "Tell him that two pretty young girls want to talk to him about love." On many occasions they were welcomed, even into the most closed of offices. When the official in question was known to be moral (and the women would be careful to inquire about this beforehand), the approach was more circumspect.

In just a few months, the Children of God had thoroughly infiltrated the military, using anti-Communist literature, their Flirty Fishing sexual practices, and music to win some of the highest officials in the nation. During the entire infiltration operation, David Berg and Karen Zerby directed the work and counseled their teams through letters and phone calls, and required that nothing be done without their express permission.

With the fall of the Ferdinand Marcos government these same officials rose to power, and with them, the Children of God's status. When Cardinal Jaime Sin stirred up public opinion against the cult and demanded its expulsion from the country, the military quietly came to its defense. After the cult sent its American and European members to Thailand (from which they were later expelled) and other countries, the Philippine armed forces enabled it to continue "underground."

David Berg wrote a pamphlet entitled "The Red Menace" which was distributed among all the military in the Philippines. This pamphlet was printed by the Corazon Aquino government's military leaders and distributed, not by the Children of God, but by the soldiers themselves on orders from military leadership. In this pamphlet, Berg sounds a "call to arms" for the soldiers to rise up against "the Red Beast." In internal, Disciples Only letters to his followers, Berg declared his intention to be awakening the military to the danger of the supposedly pro-Communist Aquino government.

In the early 90s, The Family was going strong with the full protection of Corazon Aquino's military. The layer of military protection was so great that a round-the-clock military armed guard was provided at the "Jumbo" – a large Family center in Manila.

Source: Christian Research Journal: Inside the "Heavenly Elite"1990

References