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1994-03-25
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<text id=90TT0741>
<title>
Mar. 26, 1990: Heading For The Hills
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Mar. 26, 1990 The Germans
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 20
Heading for the Hills
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A New Age guru goes underground
</p>
<p> With Moscow and Washington more likely these days to
exchange kisses than atomic missiles, it may not seem the most
opportune time to declare that nuclear annihilation is just
around the corner. But followers of the Church Universal and
Triumphant, a motley New Age amalgam of Christianity and
Eastern religion, are convinced that the end is near--so near
that they were heading by the thousands last week for a warren
of bomb shelters deep in the hills of Montana.
</p>
<p> Throughout the week, cars loaded with baggage, children and
guns clogged the roads around Paradise Valley, just north of
Yellowstone National Park, where the church has amassed 33,000
acres since relocating its headquarters four years ago from
Malibu, Calif. Responding to the warnings of CUT leader
Elizabeth Clare Prophet, at least 2,000 of the faithful have
arrived from Europe, South America and across the U.S. With
stores in nearby Livingston reporting a run on dried food,
aspirin and flashlights, hundreds of trucks were hauling
supplies to 46 steel-and-concrete shelters dug deep into the
mountain soil. The bunkers range in size from two-person
containers to a vast subterranean hall designed for 756 people.
</p>
<p> "We have been invaded," says state Representative Bob Raney.
"We're occupied by an armed force of people with an intense
allegiance to one person." That person is Prophet, also known
as Guru Ma, who claims as many as 30,000 followers around the
world. Lately she has been telling them that the apparent
warming of U.S.-Soviet relations is a Kremlin ruse designed to
get Americans to lower their guard. She warns that the world
is entering a "dangerous period" in March and April. Or, as her
astrologer and spokesman Murray Steinman puts it, "We're at a
general trend of accelerated negative karma."
</p>
<p> Prophet claims to serve as the voice (or channel, as New
Agers say) for the Ascended Masters, a group of heavenly
notables who include Jesus and Buddha, as well as CUT founder
Mark L. Prophet, her husband, who died in 1973. Many of the
faithful have sold all their possessions, quit their jobs and
emptied their savings accounts to pay fees of up to $10,000 for
space in the shelters. But this is not the first time that
Prophet has prophesied Armageddon; in 1987 she predicted that
California would fall into the sea. That may be one reason why
church officials have been denying that the faithful will be
diving for cover anytime soon, insisting that the sudden influx
of followers to Montana is merely a response to Prophet's call
for a prayer vigil to deflect the danger of a nuclear
catastrophe.
</p>
<p> With local CUT members pulling their children from schools
and leaving their jobs, it would seem that something more is
up. That feeling was heightened recently when Prophet sold the
local building that houses the church's printing operation, a
prime source of revenue. At least one internal church memo set
last Friday as the day that members should be ready to go
underground. Another memo quotes a representative of Guru Ma
telling a shelter-group meeting, "You must do nothing but eat,
sleep...and work at least twelve hours a day until the
shelters are completed."
</p>
<p> Many of the 12,000 local inhabitants of Park County, the
stretch of mountain country where Paradise Valley is located,
have been watching the CUT community with mounting anxiety.
Even in an area where guns are a familiar sight, it cannot have
been reassuring to hear that Prophet's current husband Ed
Francis was convicted last fall of illegally purchasing
$100,000 worth of semiautomatic weapons, ammunition and
handguns. There are rumors that the church has hired skinheads
to guard its property after the faithful have scurried down
below. Several teenagers, the children of church members, have
run away in recent weeks, fearing they will be forced into the
shelters. "We are seeing the results of mind control," says
Talita Paolini, who with her husband left the church last year.
"The woman is crazy."
</p>
<p> But before they can descend into the bowels of the earth,
the faithful will have to satisfy some mundane sanitation
regulations. County officials plan to forbid occupancy until
the shelters are equipped with proper waste facilities. Police
have also been busy handing out traffic citations to church
members speeding along the highway, rushing to ready their
shelters before the arrival of the missiles they fear are
coming any day. "If you set a court date," says Sheriff Charley
Johnson, "they just smile at you."
</p>
<p>By Richard Lacayo. Reported by Patrick Dawson/Livingston.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>