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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=89TT2260>
<title>
Aug. 28, 1989: Paradise Under Siege
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Aug. 28, 1989 World War II:50th Anniversary
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
RELIGION, Page 61
Paradise Under Siege
</hdr><body>
<p>A new-age guru prepares for war in Montana
</p>
<p> Back in Malibu it seemed like just another chanting,
channeling new-age religion. But under the big skies of Montana,
where Elizabeth Clare Prophet moved her Church Universal and
Triumphant in 1986, the newcomers struck the locals as ominous.
Starting out on a 12,000-acre ranch purchased five years earlier
from publisher Malcolm Forbes for $7.7 million, the church
rapidly expanded its holdings to 33,500 acres, attracted some
1,000 followers to the region, and launched extensive
construction projects. Neighbors feared that the mushrooming
community might damage the delicate ecological balance of
Yellowstone National Park, which the ranch abuts.
</p>
<p> Environmental concerns were overshadowed last month when
Vernon Hamilton, a leader of C.U.T.'s Cosmic Honor Guard
security force, was arrested in Spokane while driving a pickup
truck carrying illegally obtained weapons. The find that day
included seven large-caliber semiautomatic rifles, five assault
rifles, $26,000 in cash and gold coins, and plans for the arming
of 200 people.
</p>
<p> Last week Prophet, 50, who is also known as Guru Ma, and
her husband Ed Francis, 39, appeared before a grand jury
investigating alleged church involvement in illegal arms
gathering. Prophet denies any wrongdoing, but if evidence
implicates the two, they will face possible jail sentences and
the crumbling of their empire. Says Park County commissioner
Larry Lovely: "I think their credibility is slipping, and it's
time to get this out in the open."
</p>
<p> Meanwhile back at the ranch, the usual operations have been
neglected while Prophet and her followers gear up for surviving
the Armageddon she predicted in 1987, when she received a
message from what she calls her "ascended masters." This exalted
band includes Jesus, Buddha and Guru Ma's former husband the
late Mark L. Prophet, who three decades ago founded the religion
on an amalgam of Christianity and Eastern faiths.
</p>
<p> Guru Ma claims to be the channel through which these
spirits speak to earthbound mortals. Despite their warning that
the U.S. will suffer a nuclear attack in October this year,
"America the Vulnerable," she grumbles, has not even "seen fit
to have an ABM system in place."
</p>
<p> Prophet took matters into her own hands by inviting all her
faithful, who may number some 30,000 worldwide, to move to
Montana and escape the coming doom. Followers have begun to
converge on the region and lease homes in a church-owned
subdivision. At the main headquarters, dubbed the "inner
retreat," the group is constructing a system of tubular
underground shelters for 756 people. The guns, according to
former members, are meant to defend the 600 staffers against a
Communist invasion. Former bodyguard Ken Paolini charges that
members are being told, "If we come under attack, we'll all go
into the etheric together."
</p>
<p> But even as she seeks to gather the flock around her, Guru
Ma is having trouble keeping her own family intact. Daughter
Moira Lewis, 21, has joined a growing phalanx of outspoken
defectors and accuses her mother of pursuing an opulent
life-style, dining on lobster and prime rib, while keeping her
followers in a constant state of austerity as they prepare for
World War III.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>