St. Petersburg Times
Special report
Video report
Multimedia report
Print Email this storyEmail story Comment Letter to the editor
Fill out this form to email this article to a friend
Your name Your email
Friend's name Friend's email
Your message
 

 


Protesters poke at Scientology turf

It started on the Web, but wound up on the streets in Clearwater and worldwide. The church says it will try to identify protesters.

By Jonathan Abel and Mike Donila, Times Staff Writers
Published February 11, 2008


A Scientologist, left, takes a picture of a protester Sunday on Fort Harrison Avenue. Protesters gathered in Coachman Park at 11 a.m. and then broke into three groups to picket Scientology buildings in downtown Clearwater.
photo
[Douglas R. Clifford | Times]
ADVERTISEMENT
photo
[Douglas R. Clifford | Times]
Members of the anti-Scientology organization Anonymous gather at Coachman Park on Sunday in Clearwater. The protest was one of several rallies in cities around the world.

photo
[Douglas R. Clifford | Times]
Protesters walk south Sunday on Fort Harrison Avenue in downtown Clearwater in front of the Church of Scientology's new Super Power Building.

CLEARWATER

Anonymous, the new foe of Scientology, stepped out from the shadows of the Internet on Sunday with protests in Clearwater and around the world.

Some 200 marchers, mostly young people wearing sunglasses, hats and sometimes masks, met in downtown Clearwater to shout down Scientology at the church's spiritual headquarters.

The protesters met at 11 a.m. and split into three groups, winding their way around Scientology buildings.

Their signs were direct: "Scientology kills." "Religion is free, Scientology is not." "Don't tase me L. Ron."

Disguised with fake beards, face paint, scarves and bandanas, protesters said they hid their identity for fear they would be tracked down and harassed by Scientology.

Organizers - who also held rallies in London, Paris, New York and other cities around the world - chose Sunday's date because it would have been Lisa McPherson's 49th birthday. A 36-year-old Scientologist, McPherson died in 1995 while in the care of church staffers in Clearwater.

Anonymous members brought a cake and sang Happy Birthday in her memory. They tried to lay plastic flowers outside the Fort Harrison Hotel where she died but police asked them not to, saying they would be trespassing.

Despite Anonymous's online promises to "expel" Scientology from the Internet and "systematically dismantle the Church of Scientology in its present form," the march was peaceful, with police reporting no arrests or injuries.

Still, church spokeswoman Pat Harney compared Anonymous to the Nazis and the Ku Klux Klan.

"It's similar to burning a cross on somebody's lawn," she said. "It's a bunch of yahoos. They get on the Internet and they don't use real communication."

Anonymous's opposition to Scientology has coalesced in the last month after a video of Scientologist Tom Cruise was leaked to YouTube and then promptly removed because of threats from Scientology attorneys.

Members of Anonymous claimed this was an affront to the freedom of the Internet. A video message from Anonymous taunting the leaders of Scientology had received 2.2-million views on YouTube as of Sunday.

In Clearwater, the church has received harassing phone calls and even a threatening package from Anonymous, Harney said. Some church properties in California received fake anthrax mailings.

Anonymous members, however, say the group does not condone illegal acts.

Over the years in Clearwater, there have been a number of intense protests. One of the staunchest Scientology opponents, the Lisa McPherson Trust, raised such ire with its demonstrations that a judge issued an injunction specifying on which parts of the street the protests could be held.

The bitterness from the legal wrangling remains today.

In the past, the church has held its own protests, in 1997 mustering some 3,000 people to march through downtown Clearwater past the Police Department and the St. Petersburg Times office, protesting what it said was discrimination against the church.

And some church followers were out Sunday. As protesters made a circuit of downtown Clearwater, they were followed by a beefed-up police detachment and about a dozen photographers working for the church.

Harney said the church would use the pictures to identify the protesters because any of them could be a security risk. Protesters scoffed at that.

"We are here to protest the actions of the Church of Scientology," said Joshua Nussbaum, 19, a student in Hillsborough County and one of the organizers. "It is not about their beliefs. It's about their actions."

The protesters were an amalgamation of opponents to Scientology - some angry at its supposed intrusions on the Internet, others claiming the church is overly controlling, overly secretive or overly rich.

"Everybody came here for a different reason," said Michael Scherer, 17, of St. Petersburg. "But we all have the same goal."

Another protest is planned for March 15, two days after the birthday of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard, who died in 1986.

Harney said she was disappointed that there was no public outrage to protesters. In fact, the protesters received honk after honk from passing cars sympathetic to the cause. Passengers gave the "thumb's up" sign and chanted "Cult! Cult! Cult!"

"It's anti-America - discriminatory," Harney said, "trying to tell me how to believe."

One of the Scientology photographers, 20-year-old David Pendery, who stood for hours at Cleveland Street and Fort Harrison Avenue, said he was snapping shots to make sure no protesters "were doing anything unlawful."

When asked about the rally, Pendery, a church member since he was 4, sighed and said, "Hopefully, they'll just leave and we can all go back to work."

Typically, protests are done to draw attention, particularly from the media, but this came off as much more with a strong showing of public support, organizers said.

Still, while Scientology can be a polarizing topic, not everyone on the street had a strong opinion.

Bruce and Robin Wade, a Maryland couple on vacation, encountered the protest as they were waiting for the Stein Mart department store to open.

"We're just trying to ignore it. We don't even know what the issue is," said Bruce Wade, 53, adding they were "taking it in stride."

A few blocks east, though, Kimberli Guyette, 18, a student at the Central Florida Institute and a Clearwater resident, called the whole thing "ridiculous."

"Why do these people even care? What did the Scientologists do to them?" Guyette asked. "They're wasting time."

But for veterans of earlier skirmishes, like Randy Enerson, who showed up just to observe, the day was momentous.

"I got tears in my eyes," said Enerson, 53. "All the times we were out here it felt like we were all alone, but to see the way this has gelled with all these young people, it's astonishing."

He also said he was encouraged that a younger generation was stepping up to combat the church.

"They're walking into the belly of the beast here," Enerson said. "Man, what courage."

Jonathan Abel can be reached at jabel@sptimes.com or 727 445-4157. Mike Donila can be reached at mdonila@sptimes.com or (727) 445-4160.

[Last modified February 11, 2008, 05:54:33]


Share your thoughts on this story

Comments on this article
by Jamie 03/12/08 12:38 PM
Want to find out our motives, see our maps and time-lines? Our plans nor goals are hidden. If you want to protect Free Speech, if you want to stand up against a cult of greed and abuse, see you on 3/15. www.clearclearwater.com www.enturbulation.org
by Joshua 03/12/08 12:32 PM
www.clearclearwater.com Learn about us.
by TDL 03/02/08 05:09 PM
What did Scientology ever do to us? They suppress free and freedom of press (ask John Sweeney or Mark Bunker, journalists). We believe in the right to life, as Scientology has denied many, like Lisa McPherson. Why do we hide? For our own protection
by Anonymous 03/02/08 03:13 PM
CoS, What are your crimes? What are you hiding? Why do you insist on secrecy? What are you hiding? What are your crimes?
by AnonMomAnon 03/01/08 09:51 AM
in ALL of the 2/10 protests by Anonymous there was only ONE arrest. the person arrested was a SCIENTOLOGIST. you call us out for disguising who WE are when you THREATEN to find out who we are & WE were the peaceful ones? typical. see you 3/15!
by Pat 02/27/08 11:53 AM
There are two types of people when it comes to this issue, those who are sympathetic toward the organization of Scientology, and those who know about it.
by Michael 02/25/08 12:16 PM
Anonymous=NAZIS=fascist=KKK=Coward=Hacker=criminal. Always criminals cover their identity and not aloud communication. And accuse others of their own crimes. What are your crimes Anonymus?
by Indeed 02/13/08 08:28 PM
It would seem many people mistake "protesting" with "force". Anon is not a hate group, they are exercising their freedom of speech that they believe the CoS is not a valid religion and have intruded on the internet. Anon forces them to do nothing.
by Marist 02/12/08 11:21 PM
Anonymous members. Embarrassing. Get a job or join the Army. Ya know, something important.
by tom 02/12/08 12:06 PM
Anonymity and courage are required to face church members? To discuss Lisa's torture and that of several others? They seek to intimidate?
by SZQ 02/12/08 10:51 AM
People how could you all be filled with so much hatred.
by Peter 02/12/08 09:23 AM
For those who wonder why many protesters were masked: "Harney said the church would use the pictures to identify the protesters because any of them could be a security risk." It was great, and worldwide! This is making it to the history books!
by Bill 02/12/08 01:55 AM
It was their lack of care that caused Mcphersons death. They should have been thrown in jail. It is not just the cult property, it is all the cult followers who work in all sorts of occupations in Clw.you must watch,they are devious and paranoid!
by Sunshine 02/11/08 11:43 PM
Those that condone Scientology are uninformed and ignorant. They weren't here when Scientologists stood in front of the Ft Harrison Hotel with guns. They have not experiencced their harassment or abuse. This cult is draining Clearwater in many ways.
by Shawn 02/11/08 10:21 PM
NOTICE THIS: Above it says "The church says it will try to identify protesters." If they are not a Cult that harasses and threatens people why then would they care who each person IS that DARE speak out against them. ANTI Freedom? you judge. CULT
by sandy 02/11/08 09:36 PM
Read Andrew Morton's best Seller unauthorized biography on TOM CRUISE. You will see the whole picture. Those of you who say" Why pick on Scientology?" will be very embarrassed.
by Mike 02/11/08 09:25 PM
The idea of Scientology being a religion is a joke... unless you believe money is a deity.
by Anonymous 02/11/08 07:42 PM
Thank you, SPTimes. People are encouraged to believe and worship in whatever manner they see fit. We hold nothing against any religion's beliefs. We object to the CoS' treatment of it's own members through "disconnection" and other methods. xenu.net
by Ann 02/11/08 06:00 PM
What does it tell you when Sctly leader Miscaviges brother's family leaves the cult and spills the disfunction to the media,then receives threats for it.In the Cruise video,all that was missing was a little more click to the shoe & a straitened elbow
by Andrea 02/11/08 05:30 PM
Doug, you are right about the Jehovah's Witnesses and the Mormons but not the Jews and Muslims. Cults and religions are very different. Cults control lives through fear and destroying families. They need to be stopped!! Educate yourself about cults!
by Mistegirl 02/11/08 05:09 PM
Religions don't have prisons. Google "scientology RPF" It's the ACTIONS of the CoS these protests are about not beliefs. The worldwide 100% peaceful pickets yesterday proved we're not terrorists, we're normal people telling people about their crimes.
by Anon 02/11/08 04:37 PM
This cult (or "religion" if you so wish) have openly stated that they intend to infiltrate and destroy Psychiatry globally. It is there for all to see, they have a doctrine to harass, sue and destroy any person who merely questions. CULT!
by Jamie 02/11/08 04:18 PM
I only wish we had more choices of religions based off of comic books.
by jack 02/11/08 04:16 PM
All religious organizations are cults, some just more so than others. This one is disgusting in it`s beliefs and practices more than the other cults.
by Dave 02/11/08 02:45 PM
Yeah, Rose, it's the St. Pete Times' fault its readers hate Scientology... Scientologists fail at everything.
by marc 02/11/08 02:42 PM
@ Rose Thorn. What people specifically were "thrown out" on the streets??
by Tom 02/11/08 02:24 PM
Tax breaks. Using the members of the cult to make money. That is what it is all about. They get famous backers that get tax breaks, and make money off of the business of others. It is a scam. All the money lost to the city of Clearwater.
by Steveo 02/11/08 02:14 PM
Anonymous members, congratulations! What a pleasure it is, to see young people openly confronting this science fiction based cult.
by John 02/11/08 02:07 PM
I'm a Vietnam combat veteran. I was in Scientology with the Tampa Org for five years. (Auditing up to Level 5; completed Comm Course, Student Hat & ProTR's) ... these services have been critically helpful to me ... I left the Org in 1990.
by denise 02/11/08 01:04 PM
wow. Religion? How did a religion come out of a science fiction novel? That is what L Ron Hubbard published, and the crazies took it literally. hence a pseudo religion. and tax exempt at that. It was a NOVEL people. a FICTION!
by rr 02/11/08 12:46 PM
The church is a dangerous cult. As a landlord, I was harrassed by scientologist tenants. They made my life miserable after they moved out; using public records. They are VINDICTIVE!! I trust the Times keeps my e-mail address anonymous.
by Doug 02/11/08 12:26 PM
Thank You Anonymous. Next though, should be the Mormans, then the Jews and then the J. Witnesses and finally the Muslums.
by Rose Thorn 02/11/08 12:19 PM
Are YOU serious Rose?? How BIASED are the Tax Laws for this non-church?? They're supposedly fanatics for human rights too, yet, have no problem buying out property and throwing people in to the streets either.
by Bashful99 02/11/08 12:11 PM
Check out the "church" bulletin... Google - Project Normandy
by Rose 02/11/08 11:23 AM
The SP Times has always been anti Scientology which yields this very BIASED "readers comments" propaganda.
Subscribe to the Times
Click here for daily delivery
of the St. Petersburg Times.

Email Newsletters

ADVERTISEMENT