Pubdate: Wed,  9 Jun 2004
Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA)
Copyright: 2004 Hearst Communications Inc.
Contact:  http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388
Author: Nanette Asimov, Chronicle Staff Writer
Note: Chronicle researcher Kathleen Rhodes contributed to this report
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Narconon

SCIENTOLOGY LINK TO PUBLIC SCHOOLS

As Early As the Third Grade, Students in S.F. and Elsewhere Are Subtly 
Introduced to Church's Concepts Via Anti-Drug Teachings

A popular anti-drug program provided free to schools in San Francisco and 
elsewhere teaches concepts straight out of the Church of Scientology, 
including medical theories that some addiction experts described as 
"irresponsible" and "pseudoscience."

As a result, students are being introduced to somebeliefs and methods of 
Scientology without their knowledge.

Anyone listening to a classroom talk by Narconon Drug Prevention & 
Education is unlikely to recognize the connection with Scientology; the 
lessons sound nothing like theology. Instruction is delivered in language 
purged of most church parlance, but includes "all the Scientology and 
Dianetics Handbook basics," according to Scientology correspondence 
obtained by The Chronicle.

Narconon's anti-drug instruction rests on these key church concepts: that 
the body stores all kinds of toxins indefinitely in fat, where they wreak 
havoc on the mind until "sweated" out. Those ideas are rejected by the five 
medical experts contacted by The Chronicle, who say there is no evidence to 
support them.

Narconon was created by L. Ron Hubbard, the late science-fiction writer who 
founded Scientology, a religion that claims to improve the well-being of 
followers through courses aimed at self-improvement and global serenity. 
Narconon operates a global network of drug treatment centers, as well as 
education programs for elementary, middle and high school students.

Its lectures have reached 1.7 million children around the nation in the 
last decade, Narconon officials said, and more than 30,000 San Francisco 
students since 1991. Meanwhile, Narconon's anti-drug message and 
charismatic speakers earn rave reviews from students and teachers.

Narconon officials are adamant that Narconon is secular and that a firewall 
exists between it and the Church of Scientology, and San Francisco school 
health officials say they know of no church-state problem with Narconon or 
of any pseudoscience taught.

But a close look reveals a crossover of church language, materials, 
concepts, personnel and some finances, leading to accusations that 
Scientology has slipped into public classrooms.

"Narconon, to me, is Scientology," said Lee Saltz, a drug counselor with 
the Los Angeles school district, where Narconon has made classroom 
presentations for many years. "We don't use their curriculum because it's 
not grounded in science. But they bypass our office and go directly to the 
schools. They're very persistent."

Narconon speakers tell students that the body stores drugs indefinitely in 
fat, where they cause drug cravings and flashbacks. Students are told that 
sweating through exercise or sauna rids the body of these "poisons." And, 
some teachers said, the speakers tell students that the drug residues 
produce a colored ooze when exiting the body.

"It's pseudoscience, right up there with colonic irrigation," said Dr. 
Peter Banys, director of substance abuse programs at the VA Medical Center 
in San Francisco.

Dr. Igor Grant, professor of psychiatry and director of the Center for 
Medicinal Cannabis Research at UC San Diego, agreed: "I'm not aware of any 
data that show that going into a sauna detoxifies you from toxins of any 
kind. " Three other addiction experts contacted by The Chronicle echoed 
their skepticism.

But Narconon officials say their science is sound and their curriculum free 
of religion. And they say Narconon is legally and financially separate from 
the church.

"It's our job to keep them separate," said Clark Carr, president of 
Narconon International and a Scientologist. "We work full time to do this. 
If we went into the school district as Scientology, with the separation of 
church and state, it wasn't going to work. It would be as if someone said, 
'I have some things in the Bible I think would be very helpful.' No, thank 
you. It's corporately and financially separate, and that's appropriate.

"For us, the larger issue is that kids need help. We're not in this for any 
other agenda."

Federal law prohibits religious instruction in public schools -- but it 
also prevents school officials from ousting secular programs just because 
they are provided by religious groups.

Narconon is an efficiently run program with a well-received anti-drug 
message for grades three to 12. Its popularity with kids and teachers cuts 
a wide swath -- from the posh suburbs of Malibu to the urban classrooms San 
Francisco. Speakers pepper their presentations with personal tales of drug 
abuse and redemption and emphasize the importance of knowing how drugs 
affect the body.

Currently, Narconon speakers lecture at schools in San Francisco, Orange 
County and Los Angeles County.

Carr, Narconon's president, said school lectures have been given in 10 
other counties -- including Santa Clara, San Mateo, Marin and Sonoma -- 23 
other states and 39 other countries. He said drug treatment centers operate 
in two dozen countries.

A Chronicle review of Narconon's curriculum found that, like the Church of 
Scientology, Narconon embraces Hubbard's belief that experiences are 
recorded in three-dimensional images in the mind, with sound and smell, 
called "mental image pictures" or "pictures in the mind." Taking any drug 
"scrambles" the pictures.

"Our take-home message is that drugs are essentially poison," Carr said. 
"This is how we basically explain it to them. Drugs scramble pictures. When 
people take drugs, they affect the mental pictures."

Scientologists believe that scrambled pictures interfere with one's ability 
to "go clear," a state of mental purity that is a goal of the religion.

In his 1979 Scientology text "Clear Body, Clear Mind," Hubbard writes that 
high doses of the vitamin niacin and hours of sauna flush out drugs, 
"freeing the person up for mental and spiritual gain." He calls it 
"Purification," and Scientology churches often are equipped with saunas, 
said ex-Scientologists and a tour guide at San Francisco's church.

Hubbard writes that drugs in fat "re-stimulate" the unwanted mental 
pictures created when the drugs were taken.

These beliefs grew out of Hubbard's writings about the mind in the 1940s 
and 1950s. He first characterized Scientology as a religious philosophy in 
1951, and three years later the first church opened in Los Angeles. More 
than 3,200 "churches, missions and groups" followed in 154 countries, 
Scientology's Web site says.

Hubbard created Narconon in 1966 with William Benitez, an Arizona inmate 
and addict turned anti-drug crusader. Treatment began as vitamins and 
exercise. In 1978, Hubbard added his "tissue-cleansing regimen" of niacin 
and sauna, which "greatly reduces or eliminates cravings for drugs that 
stem from hidden drug toxins," says Narconon's Web site.

Hubbard died in 1986 while Scientology was in a dispute with the Internal 
Revenue Service over its tax status. Shortly after, his followers legally 
grouped his many enterprises, including Narconon, into religious and 
secular divisions. (Scientology gained tax-exempt church status in 1993.)

In 1988, church members created the nonprofit Association for Better Living 
and Education, or ABLE, to oversee four secular programs: The Way to 
Happiness Foundation, promoting Hubbard's 21 "moral precepts"; Applied 
Scholastics, an education program; Criminon, a "life improvement" course 
for prison inmates; and Narconon.

ABLE's purpose was to deliver Hubbard's ideas to the public, said Bob 
Adams, its senior vice president and a Scientologist.

In 2001, ABLE reported assets of $20.6 million to the IRS, records show. 
Today, it occupies the elegant former Screen Actors Guild building in 
Hollywood, which it bought from the Church of Scientology for $2 million in 
2000.

Narconon's lecturers and top administrators readily acknowledge that they 
are Scientologists. A church spokeswoman said the link is strong but 
unofficial.

"Is there a connection between Scientologists and Narconon? Resoundingly 
yes," said Linda Simmons Hight of the Church of Scientology International. 
"Scientologists are thoroughly mixed with the activities and finances of 
Narconon. I'm not talking about the church. I'm talking about (individual) 
Scientologists."

For example, Scientologists pay for Narconon's school lectures and operate 
Narconon drug treatment centers across the country. At Narconon 
International in Watsonville, the treatment center nearest the Bay Area, 
eight of the nine members of the board of directors promote Scientology on 
the Web or are listed as having completed religious courses.

And of the 15 small businesses that pay for Narconon lectures in San 
Francisco schools, the owners or employees of at least 10 tout Scientology 
on the Web or have completed courses.

"Scientologists are among the major supporters of Narconon drug rehab and 
drug education, financially and through volunteer actions, because we're so 
aware of the destructive effects of drugs on our society -- and because we 
have the solution to drugs," Hight said.

"In the secular setting, it's Narconon. In the church, it's the 
Purification handling."

But former Scientologists who have worked for the church and for Narconon 
say the connection goes far beyond shared values.

"Narconon's orders come from the Church of Scientology's senior 
management," said Tory Christman, a former church member who worked briefly 
at Narconon International. "Their programs, policies -- it's all church 
policy. There's no question about this to anyone involved."

A 30-year veteran of Scientology, Christman left in 2000. She said she 
suffered seizures after following a church recommendation to stop taking 
epilepsy medicine, and she decided to quit after that.

Joe Keldani, who ran Canada's Narconon from 1972 to 1978, agreed. "My 
orders were very exact: You are a separate organization. But every Thursday 
you have to make a report, and every detail goes uplines," he said. "On 
some issues, my reports went all the way up to Mary Sue Hubbard," wife of 
the founder.

Keldani ran the Canadian Narconon long before ABLE was established as 
Narconon's secular oversight agency. But Keldani left Scientology only in 
November, citing personal disagreements with church officials. "There's no 
doubt in my mind that international Scientology management is running 
Narconon, " he said.

Adams of ABLE vigorously denied that connection. "ABLE does not report its 
statistics to the church," he said.

In class, Narconon's curriculum identifies Hubbard as an "author and 
humanitarian" and does not mention Scientology. Yet the language of 
Scientology has crept into the classroom. For example, Narconon's syllabus 
for San Francisco schools calls for a "communication drill."

"Communication drills are one of the basic tools taught by Scientology," 
said Christman, the ex-church member. "It's the first course that anyone 
who enters Scientology gets -- or Narconon rehab. It's sitting across from 
someone and looking at them for as long as it takes to 'be there 
comfortably,' in Hubbard's words. No movement, no speaking, no facial tics 
- -- nothing."

Nathan Johnson, who has given Narconon lectures in San Francisco schools 
for 13 years, has students greet each other with a handshake or high-five, 
which he calls a communication drill.

"It's not really Scientology," Johnson said. "I know Scientology because 
I've been in it a long time. But that little communication drill, I've 
never had anyone say, 'What's that?' Kids like it."

Another church reference in the classroom is the "tone scale." That is 
Scientology's hierarchy of emotions, which runs from "serenity of 
beingness" to "total failure," according to the church's Web site.

Tony Bylsma, director of Narconon's education program, used a tone scale 
recently in his presentation to ninth-graders at Centennial High in Compton 
(Los Angeles County). Standing before the students in the school gym, he 
drew a vertical line on a white board and labeled the top "happy" and the 
bottom "sad." He said to the students: "Let's say someone says to someone, 
'Let's smoke (marijuana).' If he smokes, is he going up or down on the scale?"

"Up!" called the class.

"Right. But happy doesn't come for free. Soon, he goes back down. But 
that's OK -- he knows how to fix that now" by trying harder and harder 
drugs, Bylsma said. He drew an up-and-down line on the scale that 
ultimately sank toward "sad."

As his lecture ended, Bylsma turned to the students and said, "I want to 
say thank you to a man named William Benitez who started the program, and 
thank you to L. Ron Hubbard! Thanks to them, we have the program in 37 
countries! Let's give them a hand!" And the students clapped.

Afterward, several students told a reporter who observed the class that 
they had learned a lot.

Meanwhile, e-mails sent to a private Scientology group and forwarded to The 
Chronicle by a former Scientologist reveal other ways the church influences 
classroom instruction. The ex-Scientologist declined to be identified, 
citing fear of reprisal from the church.

But the e-mails, written by Scientologists, state frankly that Narconon's 
instruction is delivered in language cleansed of obvious church expressions 
and that its speakers rely on church texts called Ethics and 
"Organizational Executive Courses" to run it.

One of the e-mails was written by Bylsma. On Jan. 24, 2002, he appealed to 
fellow Scientologists for donated books and other items to help him set up 
a new Narconon office. In Scientology's dialect, such physical items are 
known as MEST, which stands for "matter, energy, space, time."

In the e-mail's subject line, Bylsma wrote: "MEST Donations Needed for 
Narconon Drug Ed." He requested "4 current Ethics Books, 1 current Vol. 0, 
any current OECs, 1 or 2 good computers" and office space for four.

"Ethics books" contain church rules and sell for $40 on the Scientology Web 
site. Volume Zero is part of Hubbard's "Organizational Executive Courses," 
or OECs, which are 14 books on running an organization on Scientology 
principles. They sell for $155 each.

Asked about the e-mail and why Narconon uses religious texts, Bylsma said 
the books are helpful.

"Those are not secular books, and there's a certain amount that is unusable 
for Narconon," he said. "But there are certain things that do apply. I know 
a lot of organizations that are not religious that use Mr. Hubbard's 
organization technology -- doctors, lawyers, whole groups."

In another e-mail, Jackie Flowers-Catarineau, who until recently was listed 
on the Web as a spokeswoman for the Scientology club Renaissance Speakers, 
tried to attract new Narconon instructors. On Feb. 16, 2002, she wrote 
Scientologists that Bylsma would give a talk at Celebrity Centre 
International, the church's ornate Hollywood convention hall.

"Bear in mind," she wrote, "as a Narconon speaker in the schools, you don't 
mix the religious stuff -- but the talks are needed everywhere!"

On March 15, 2002, Flowers-Catarineau sent out a reminder about Bylsma's 
talk. She promised that he would explain how to convey church concepts to 
students in plain English. She wrote:

"Tony will go over how to do seminars but the information is SO basic that 
it'll show you how to handle kids, parents, teachers as groups OR ONE-ON- 
ONE on what drugs do to both the mind and body. ... He gives examples of 
how drugs scramble the pictures in the mind, how it stores in the body and 
how it takes one down the tone scale lower and lower -- ALL IN 
NON-SCIENTOLOGY TERMS. ... All the Scientology and Dianetics Handbook 
basics but in simple descriptions!"

Flowers-Catarineau did not return three phone calls seeking comment.

Rena Weinberg, ABLE's president, said Flowers-Catarineau wrote "in terms 
that were personal to her," so it is not known what she had in mind. But 
Weinberg denied that the e-mail meant Narconon and its methods were 
religious. "They are not. They are secular, and everything you see in the 
Narconon program and lectures are, likewise."

Adams of ABLE said questions about church ties distract from Narconon's 
purpose of giving students a solid anti-drug education.

"We feel we're on a mission, and it's for the good of all of us," he said. 
"It's part of the overall plan to collaborate with other groups and bring 
about a shift in the culture with regard to drug education, prevention and 
rehabilitation."

Astra Woodcraft, a former Scientologist, said Narconon's interest in 
changing the culture coincides with Scientology's, which is to lay the 
groundwork for a spiritually pure world. Born into the church, Woodcraft 
quit in 1998 at age 20 to pursue school and career.

"The purpose of Scientology is to 'clear the planet,' " she said. "To make 
every single person clear means free of their 'reactive mind,' which is 
like your subconscious that makes you feel bad things."

Scientologists view Narconon's anti-drug mission as a step in that 
direction because drugs are believed to prevent a person from going clear, 
she said.

Christman and other ex-Scientologists familiar with Narconon said that 
Narconon also serves to present Hubbard and his vision in a positive light.

"At Narconon (they're) handling drugs in society. But in truth, it's to 
'safe point the environment' -- a goodwill gesture so they can recruit 
people," Christman said.

Narconon does not appear to overtly recruit new members in the public 
schools. But in some schools, teachers said Narconon speakers post hot line 
numbers and hand out brochures, making it possible for students and 
families to find their way to a Narconon treatment center.

Johnson acknowledged telling students that Narconon has a center in 
Watsonville and that counseling is available there. "But I didn't give them 
any specific information because it's not realistic for a San Francisco 
teen to go all the way there," he said.

Narconon's drug education program has never undergone a rigorous review by 
independent scientists and is therefore not eligible to appear on the 
federal government's lists of "effective," "model" or "promising" programs.

"We certainly know we need to do it," Carr said of such a review. "The 
problem has been having enough time."

Still, Narconon's Web site says the program is highly effective, based on 
responses to questionnaires given to students and teachers after each 
presentation.

"To date, we have received an overall 95 percent positive response to the 
program," says the site. "Forty percent reported an increased perception of 
risk. Forty-five percent said their decision not to use drugs had been 
reinforced after hearing the talk. Over 90 percent felt they knew more 
about drugs after the talk."

Narconon gave The Chronicle a sampling of questionnaires from anonymous 
students and teachers.

"I think Nathan is very funny and very cool," wrote a ninth-grader from San 
Francisco's Lincoln High.

"I can use (what I learned) to save my life from lung cancer and the drugs 
in your fat," wrote a fourth-grader from Commodore Sloat Elementary.

"It was very effective," wrote a fifth-grade teacher from San Francisco's 
Peabody Elementary. "I now realize that (drugs are) more dangerous than I 
thought. I did not know that (they) stay in the fat in your body."

Several medical experts question the validity of what students are being 
told about drugs.

"Where's the evidence that supports what they're saying?" asked Dr. Timmen 
Cermak of the Henry Ohlhoff treatment program in San Francisco and author 
of "Marijuana: What's a Parent to Believe?"

"They're certainly spouting this as though it's proven, but it's not 
considered important enough to be talked about within the addiction 
medicine field," he said. "It's irresponsible."

The doctors contacted by The Chronicle agreed that drug residue can remain 
in fat for a short time, but not indefinitely.

"The longest we know that THC (the active substance in marijuana) stays in 
the fat is about a month. For ecstasy and LSD, we're talking about a day or 
two," said Dr. Neal Benowitz , head of clinical pharmacology at UCSF.

Nor is there evidence that drugs in fat cause cravings or flashbacks, said 
Banys, of San Francisco's VA Medical Center. "You could also say that 
craving is caused by evil spirits, which cause you to do bad things and 
therefore it's demonic possession. You couldn't prove it wasn't, and it 
seemed to make sense. But that's the use of metaphor, not science."

Banys said research shows that cravings are associated with dopamine, a 
neurotransmitter. And Cermak said flashbacks are thought to be prompted by 
"re- exposure to the drug-taking situation, or a reasonable facsimile 
(that) causes the brain to begin experiencing some of the same chemical 
changes that administering the drug itself produces."

Drs. Benowitz, Banys and Cermak dismissed the idea that niacin and sauna 
can rid the body of drugs, as did Dr. David Smith of the Haight-Ashbury 
Free Clinic and Dr. Igor Grant at UC San Diego.

Recently, a San Francisco teacher complained to the district that Narconon 
was a Scientology front group. The teacher declined to be identified or 
quoted, citing Scientology's history of confronting critics. The teacher 
has teamed with David Touretzky, a computer science research professor at 
Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh and a free-speech advocate who 
runs an anti-Narconon Web site that includes some controversial material.

Together, they have pushed school officials to oust Narconon through a 
section on Touretzky's Web site called "Narconon/Scientology Infiltration 
of the San Francisco Unified School District."

Kim Coates, a district health administrator who looked into the teacher's 
complaint, asked Sigal Adini, Narconon's program director, if the 
curriculum was religious.

"Narconon is a secular (nonreligious) program, and neither our staff nor 
speakers promote religious doctrines of any kind," Adini wrote the district.

Coates told The Chronicle that "there has been no indication of 
proselytizing or recruiting or anything inappropriate. It's up to the 
school and individual classroom to decide what will best serve students."

San Francisco schools Superintendent Arlene Ackerman said she had been 
unfamiliar with Narconon, which arranges visits with individual schools. 
But she said her staff is looking into the program and all others that come 
into the schools.

"We want to make sure (they are) aligned with what we want our students to 
know and be able to do," Ackerman said.

The Rev. Barry Lynn, executive director of Americans United for the 
Separation of Church and State in Washington, D.C., has defended 
Scientology as a legitimate religious movement. But he called the 
connections between Narconon and the church "very disturbing."

"Any time you have a religion which preaches something that shows up in 
nearly parallel form in public schools, it sounds to me like you have a 
church- state problem that is real and should be examined by school officials."

He cited the case of a New Jersey family that sued their child's teacher 
for preventing the child from reading the story of Jacob and Esau to the 
class, even though the child promised not to mention the Bible or God.

The court sided with the teacher.

"We treat schools rightly as a very special place where we need to protect 
impressionable children because their parents have the right to decide 
what, if any, religious education they receive," Lynn said. "That is not 
the job of even well-intentioned teachers or others invited into the public 
school. " Student reaction

After each anti-drug lecture, Narconon's classroom speakers hand a 
questionnaire to students and teachers who list their school and grade, but 
not their name. Like many students, this fifth-grader from San Francisco's 
George Peabody Elementary liked the talk and promised never to smoke. He 
also learned that drugs get "stuck on your fat," an idea embraced by 
Narconon -- and Scientology.

[sidebar]

WHAT IS ...

Scientology

Definition: "The study and handling of the spirit in relationship to 
itself, universes and other life. ... Knowing about knowing."

Benefits: "A Scientologist gains an understanding of himself spiritually, 
discovers his true potentials and recovers the certainty of his own 
immortality as a spiritual being."

The mind: Perceived as a collection of pictures, the mind is divided into 
two parts: the conscious "analytical mind" and the "reactive mind," which 
records life's painful and disturbing events. Disturbing mental pictures in 
the reactive mind are called "engrams" and must be removed. Once achieved, 
a person is considered "clear."

Thetan: Each human is a thetan, "an immortal spiritual being."

ABLE: An acronym for Association for Better Living and Education.

Heaven and hell: Scientologists believe in multiple lives through 
reincarnation rather than eternity in heaven or hell.

Proselytizing: "Yes. Scientologists make Scientology technology broadly 
available to others because they want others to receive the same gains they 
have experienced." The church hopes to rid the world of crime, mental 
illness, drug addiction, etc.

View on drugs: "Scientologists do not take street drugs or mind-altering 
psychiatric drugs. (They) do use prescribed drugs as part of medical 
programs from competent physicians." For more information about drugs, the 
Scientology text "Clear Body, Clear Mind: The Effective Purification 
Program" is recommended..

Narconon

Spokeswoman: Actress Kirstie Alley

Definition: "Meaning no drugs. ... Narconon utilizes a completely drug- 
free rehabilitation program ... consists of a series of exercises, drills 
and study steps done in precise sequence."

Narconon's 9 steps:

"Drug-free withdrawal: Using 'nutrition, vitamins and care' from staff ...

"Therapeutic TR Course: A series of communication drills (called training 
routings or TRs) is used to extrovert the person and raise his ability to 
confront his life ...

"New Life Detoxification Procedure: Cleanses the body of drug residues and 
other toxic substances through a regimen of exercise, sauna and nutritional 
supplements as described in the book 'Clear Body, Clear Mind' ...

"Learning Improvement Course: Gains the ability to study and retain 
knowledge, along with the ability to recognize and overcome barriers to 
study . ..

"Communication and Perception Course: Repeats the TRs, plus additional 
exercises which get him into full communication with others and his 
environment ...

"Ups and Downs in Life Course: Gains the knowledge to spot and handle those 
influences in the environment that would cause him to lose any gains he has 
made ...

"Personal Values and Integrity Course: Gains the data (needed) to improve 
his survival potential. The course teaches him about the eight dynamics, 
ethics, honesty and integrity, showing him how to correct antisocial 
behavior by ridding himself of the effects of past harmful deeds ...

"Changing Conditions in Life Course: Covers the ethics technology of L. Ron 
Hubbard and shows the individual exactly how to apply it to improve 
conditions in his life ...

"Way to Happiness Course: Based on a nonsectarian moral code called 'The 
Way to Happiness,' this course gives the individual a guide to living a 
life where real happiness is attainable."

Bottom line: "Individual Scientologists and churches of Scientology have 
enthusiastically supported the Narconon program by providing millions of 
dollars worth of funding and material support."

Source - "What Is Scientology?" 1,058-page volume compiled by the Church of 
Scientology International.
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