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The global operation.
At first glance, the handsome Georgian mansion in the heart of the
Sussex countryside could easily be mistaken for a National Trust
property. Indeed, at this time of year, Saint Hill Manor would not look out of place in a BBC costume drama; lawns are manicured and greenhouses stocked with abundant produce.
Only
the presence of stern-faced young men sporting pristine black naval
uniforms and white flat caps indicate Saint Hill's true calling. The
cadets are members of the Sea Org, the 6,000-strong unit within the Church of Scientology
that is run along quasi-military lines and which is treated with a
degree of respect that borders on fear by some of its followers.
Many
members are little more than children who have signed contracts
pledging to perform a billion years of service for the fledgling church
which was set up in 1954 by the former pulp fiction writer L Ron Hubbard, and is famed for its celebrity followers.
Banned
from having children while part of the group, Sea Org members are
considered the Scientology elite, shock troops to be dispatched to the
church's trouble spots. Hubbard declared that they had "unlimited ethics
powers".
One of the Sea Org's earliest recruits at Saint Hill, a
major Scientology training centre, was David Miscavige, a Roman Catholic
raised in New Jersey who joined at the age of 16, having spent several
years attending the church's courses which his father hoped would cure
his asthma. Miscavige was quickly selected as one of only a handful of
people allowed to work directly with Hubbard, who impressed upon his
apprentice the powerful role the media played in promoting religion. (Read entire post.)
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