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The Scientology Story: Defectors Recount Lives of Hard Work, Punishment
This is just a sample of the content found on this website. Please visit the website to read the entire page.
"Publications
The Scientology Story
1. The Making of L. Ron Hubbard
2. The Selling of a Church
< 3. Inside the Church
4. Reaching into Society
5. The Making of a Best-Selling Author
6. Attack the Attacker
The Scientology Story
Defectors Recount Lives of Hard Work, Punishment
Los Angeles Times ,
June 24-29, 1990 (six-part series)
Joel Sappell and Robert W. Welkos
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Part 3: Inside the Church
Defectors Recount Lives of Hard Work, Punishment
Tuesday, 26 June 1990, page A1:1
Doris Braine says the transformation of her Patty Jo was heartbreaking.
"It was," she said, "like my darling daughter had died."
Before Patty Jo went to work for the Church of Scientology at the age of
20, she had been "fun and pretty and a joy to be with," recalled her
72-year-old mother. "Suddenly, she became a totally different person,
shooting fire from her eyes."
There were those hateful looks, and the dozens of letters that Patty Jo
returned unopened. For two years, she would not even speak to her mother,
who had criticized Scientology and refused to hand over
$ 2,000 for church courses.
And Patty Jo had taken to calling Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard her
father.
"I would cry all the time," recalled Braine, a retired college dean. "I had
to psych myself up to go to work, be charming and do a good job. But all
day long I thought about her. I prayed my head off that someday she would
be able to get out of it.
"It took 15 years, but I think it was worth every prayer I said."
In 1982, Patricia Braine left Scientology, disillusioned with the church
and disappointed with herself for succumbing to an environment that, she
said, twisted her thinking and isolated her from a world she had hoped to
make better.
Scientology, she said, "promises you euphori"
....
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