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Ho-Ho-Kus woman writes about the dangerous power of cult recruiting

The World Mission Society Church of God in Ridgewood, New Jersey

BY JOHN PETRICK
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

STAGE

WHAT: “So Amazing,” a one-woman show by Ho-Ho-Kus resident Diana Brown, based on her experiences being recruited into a local church she says was a cult that brainwashed her before she was eventually able to break free.

WHERE: Kraine Theater, 85 E. Fourth St., Manhattan.

WHEN: Tuesday at 7:10 p.m., Feb. 20 at 8:20 p.m., Feb. 24 at 5:30 p.m., Feb. 27 at 3:20 p.m., March 5 at 1:40 p.m.

TICKETS: $17; students/military, $12; Dramatists Guild members, $12.

Actress, playwright and cult survivor Diana Brown has a message for her audience: Watch who your friends are.

The 26-year-old Ho-Ho-Kus resident says her one-woman show, “So Amazing,” is based on her yearlong experience being lured into a cult at age 23, brainwashed and eventually escaping to reclaim her life and reconnect with her family.

For some of us, it might seem impossible to imagine how anyone could take psychological and physical control over our lives against our will. But, she argues, that’s the point. This isn’t something that just happens to runaways or people estranged from their families, neither of which she says she was. This could happen to anybody. Everybody is vulnerable, to greater or lesser extents, she insists. And a cult’s recruiting tactics tend to be pretty universal.

“The first thing that is most prevalent is ‘love bombing’ – when someone wants to be your friend really bad, and everything they say is along the lines of, ‘You’re so nice, you’re so beautiful, you remind me of someone.’ They make you their best friend as fast as they possible can and they make you think they love you more than the people who really love you the most – your friends and your family,” Brown says.

A graduate of Rutgers University (2011), Brown has performed earlier versions of “So Amazing” at TheaterLab in New York City and the International Cultic Studies Association conference at La Fonda on the Plaza in Santa Fe, N.M. She has performed stand-up comedy at Gotham Comedy Club and Eastville Comedy Club.

Brown is careful to straddle the line when talking about fact and fiction. For example, she insists the main character in her self-produced show is not her, but a fictitious character based on her. And the character’s name? The same as hers – Diana.

“It’s not an exact portrayal of my experiences. I don’t mention the name of any cult in this play. What this play says could be said of many cults out there. I don’t want to be pointing a finger at any particular cult. But I think the characters are all relatable in that the way someone gets recruited into a cult is pretty cookie-cutter and repeated throughout the world. I have met many cult survivors who have told me the exact same things. Who knew that me, a regular girl living in New Jersey, could have so much in common with a girl in California? This is how cults recruit. This is how people get brainwashed.”

As heavy as some of the material may sound, Brown, who plays various other characters besides the one who is based on herself, says the piece is a comedy. She said her purpose here is to entertain — not just report. It is not a portrayal of the particular church of which she was a member, the World Mission Society Church of God in Ridgewood. The church is an offshoot of the South Korean World Mission Society Church of God, with more than 2 million followers worldwide.

Over the past seven years, the church has quietly gone about its business as its local membership expanded tenfold, and it opened what it called numerous affiliated churches along the East Coast. It was praised by political leaders for public service that included cleanup efforts after Superstorm Sandy.

But some former members have said publicly that the church has a largely hidden dangerous side, recruiting young people at malls and on college campuses and showering them with affection before eventually encouraging them to cut ties to family members who are critical of their new beliefs.

Two former members have alleged in lawsuits — one was dismissed and one is pending — that they gave substantial amounts of their money to the church after it drew them in without initially revealing its true theology. They alleged that they were pressured to spend most of their free time at the church and were kept so busy they did not get enough sleep, which made them more susceptible to the teachings.

https://www.northjersey.com/arts-and-entertainment/theater/ho-ho-kus-woman-s-show-spotlights-the-cult-experience-1.1511432

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Controversy engulfs Ridgewood church; officials praise deeds; ex-members call it a cult

The World Mission Society Church of God in Ridgewood, New Jersey

JANUARY 16, 2016, 11:55 PM    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, JANUARY 17, 2016, 10:13 AM
BY ABBOTT KOLOFF AND CHRIS HARRIS
STAFF WRITERS |
THE RECORD

Two years ago, 1,200 young people wearing bright yellow shirts from churches connected to the World Mission Society Church of God in Ridgewood filled an auditorium to receive emergency response training, prompting Bergen County officials to praise their unbridled enthusiasm, which included a rendition of the wave.

“We love you,” they chanted in return.

Former church members say they, too, were overflowing with love when they joined the church, but at some point saw another side to a rapidly growing religion rooted in a belief that a South Korean woman in her 70s is the physical manifestation of God. These ex-members — from New Jersey as well as other parts of the country — offered similar, independent accounts of being lured into the church, slowly at first, without being told all of its beliefs, then frightened into devotion and donating large portions of their savings by talk of the impending end of the world — in 2012.

Some of them, as well as several experts, have gone so far as to call the church a cult.

Leaders of the Ridgewood church, an offshoot of the South Korean World Mission Society Church of God, which boasts more than 2 million followers worldwide, responded to its critics by saying in statements to The Record that the label “cult” is a form of “religious intolerance” used to denigrate groups with “certain views that are contrary to the norm.” They denied preaching that the world would end four years ago.

And in a court filing, they said their “unfamiliar beliefs,” which include devotion to Zahng Gil-Jah, or the Heavenly Mother, left them “vulnerable to persecution as any new religion throughout history.” They called accusations made against them “fabrications.”

https://www.northjersey.com/news/controversy-engulfs-ridgewood-church-officials-praise-deeds-ex-members-call-it-a-cult-1.1493693

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Planning Board retroactively approves Ridgewood church’s improvements

Paul_Aronsohn_theridgewood blog

file photo by Boyd Loving

MAY 26, 2015    LAST UPDATED: TUESDAY, MAY 26, 2015, 9:56 AM
BY MARK KRULISH
STAFF WRITER |
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

The Ridgewood Planning Board approved the site plan application of the World Mission Society Church of God on Godwin Avenue on May 19.

The plans were approved by an 8-1 vote, with Mayor Paul Aronsohn dissenting. Alternate board member Isabella Altano cast a vote in the absence of board member Kevin Reilly.

Over the course of several meetings, changes requested by the Planning Board and members of the public were included in the site plan, which now includes three 150-watt high pressure sodium lights to be installed on 18 foot poles in place of the current solar lights, car bumpers for parking spaces along the rear of the property and a buffer of trees to protect neighboring properties from excessive lighting.

Engineer Robert Costa said the new lights would be pointed downward, but if they are causing a nuisance to the church’s neighbors, the applicant would work with village professionals to install additional shielding.

The site plan calls for 75 parking spaces on the property, but at the request of the board, perpendicular spaces were scrapped in favor of angled spots. The applicants were concerned that a few more spaces would be lost – the original plan called for 98 – but since the drive aisle would no longer need to be 24 feet, those lost spots could be regained.

The church also agreed to remove planters at the southeastern portion of the building at the request of the Ridgewood Fire Department.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/ridgewood-approves-church-s-application-1.1342441

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Ridgewood church upgrades get retroactive OK

world_mission_theridgewoodblog

MAY 23, 2015    LAST UPDATED: SATURDAY, MAY 23, 2015, 1:21 AM
BY CHRIS HARRIS
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

RIDGEWOOD — The Planning Board has retroactively approved work that had been performed four years ago on the Godwin Avenue grounds of the World Mission Society Church of God.

The religious group submitted an application to Ridgewood’s Planning Board last year, not long after village officials discovered the unauthorized work while inspecting the World Mission Society Church of God’s property.

The board’s approval during a meeting Tuesday night grants the religious institution required permits for the repainting of the stripes in the parking lot, the installation of solar-powered light fixtures and the addition of pavement and retaining walls.

The church also plans to plant shrubs along its property’s borders, providing a buffer for neighbors, who have complained about noise generated by congregants whose car headlights also shine into their homes. Work will also be done to improve drainage at the site.

https://www.northjersey.com/towns/ridgewood-church-upgrades-get-retroactive-ok-1.1341376

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Ridgewood church presents revised site plan to Planning Board

We-Love-You-428x270

APRIL 29, 2015    LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29, 2015, 10:15 AM
BY MARK KRULISH
STAFF WRITER |
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

Representatives from the World Mission Society Church of God returned to the Planning Board on April 21 with a revised site plan for work that has already been completed, as well as proposed seepage pits.

Attorney Marc Leibman and Engineer Robert Costa previously appeared before the board on March 3 and discussion revolved around a revision of spaces in the parking lot as well as lighting and the seepage pits to aid drainage on the Godwin Avenue property.

At the end of that meeting, the board asked Costa and Leibman to touch base with the village’s professional staff to work out a safer parking setup and less impactful lighting scheme.

Parking spaces deemed unsafe by the village staff were removed and Costa said the entire parking lot will be restriped to better conform to the necessary aisle width to allow safe travel for vehicles.

Spaces compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act, including one that was adjacent to a refuse area, were moved to the eastern side of the building at the request of village professionals.

Costa said that side of the building also provides handicap access to the church. The plans show a striped or painted crosswalk that forms a path into the building for those with special needs.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/ridgewood-church-revises-site-plan-application-1.1321286

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Church in Ridgewood seeking permits for repair work it did in 2011.

We-Love-You-428x270

We-Love-You-428x270

Church in Ridgewood seeking permits for repair work it did in 2011.

MARCH 5, 2015    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015, 1:21 AM
BY CHRIS HARRIS
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

RIDGEWOOD — Congregants from the World Mission Society Church of God are seeking retroactive approval from the Planning Board for work performed on the grounds of its church four years ago.

A lawyer and engineer representing the religious group appeared before Ridgewood’s Planning Board on Tuesday night requesting the permits the Godwin Avenue religious institution needs for work that was done in 2011.

The unauthorized work was detected by village officials during an inspection of the Church of God site, and included re-striping of parking spots, installation of solar-powered light fixtures, and the addition of pavement and retaining walls.

Complaints from neighbors about traffic to the church and allegations regarding after-hours operations prompted the inspection, officials said.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/church-seeking-permits-for-past-work-1.1283034