logo
Controversy as notorious Jonestown cult site where 918 died becomes tourist attraction

Controversy as notorious Jonestown cult site where 918 died becomes tourist attraction

News.com.au14-07-2025
Warning: This story includes details and photos which may be distressing
Jonestown is seared into the American psyche as one the darkest tragedies of the modern era, where 918 people 'drank the Kool Aid' and ended their lives under the command of cult leader Jim Jones.
Located in the remote Guyanese jungle, the site where the army first discovered the mass of dead bodies of People's Temple members in 1978 is now opening as a somewhat morbid tourist attraction, the New York Post reports.
It is designed to pay sombre tribute in the manner of Auschwitz and the Killing Fields of Cambodia.
The curious can pay $US750 ($A1140) to visit the clearing where Jones' religious cult, mostly US citizens who had travelled with him to Guyana in South America, unravelled in the most gruesome way imaginable.
And there were survivors — although the overall story of Jones' followers poisoning themselves with cyanide-laced fruit punch (it was actually an off-brand version of Kool-Aid called Flavor-Aid) is notorious, lesser known are how around 80 of Jones' acolytes survived.
Some did it by getting lucky and being out of town when the poisonous drinks were served, including Jones' son Stephan Gandhi Jones, who was at a basketball tournament.
Others slipped out unseen, running into the jungle or hiding in the camp's cupboards.
About 18 of Jones' followers took Congressman Leo Ryan – whose visit to the camp sparked the mass suicide – up on his offer to leave the religious enclave with him.
Jordan Vilchez, now 67, who joined the People's Church at 12 and remained there until the end, was fortunate enough to be in Guyana's capital, Georgetown, when the mass suicides went down.
'I created a job for myself, talking about Jonestown to the Guyanese community. That task was acceptable to the leadership, and it allowed me to not spend so much time in Jonestown,' she told The Post.
Hearing over a CB radio the Jonestown suicides were happening, she was horrified but not entirely surprised.
'There had been discussions about a mass suicide,' said Ms Vilchez, who lost two sisters and two nephews to the forced killings.
'In some circles, there were practice drills. There was talk of 'Revolutionary Suicide'. There was a running narrative of us being persecuted.
'Unbeknown to us, the world was closing in on Jim. Because of his pathological narcissism, he was not going to go down alone. People were stuck and emotionally drained – I got caught up in it and was not going to escape. Over the years, we got more hooked in. We were told that America would become a police state and our safety was in being part of this group.'
Ms Vilchez is against the new tours to the site – where little remains, apart from a commemorative stone and the entrance archway.
'It seems silly. It's something that people will make money from. It seems like an abuse.'
The Guyanese tourism company behind the trips, Wanderlust Adventures GY, defend their position.
'We want to present things in a way that is responsible and educational,' Roselyn Sewcharran, founder of the company, told The Post.
During the overnight trip to Jonestown 'we talk about the social and political issues, the dangers of following with blind faith and the lessons learned from the Jonestown tragedy.'
The People's Temple was founded by Jim Jones, a Communist sympathiser, in Indianapolis, in 1955. He put on fake healings to generate income and promoted the idea that all races and ethnicities would be welcome.
In 1961, with the cold war top of mind for most Americans, Jones claimed to have a vision that Indianapolis would be decimated by nuclear attack. The People's Temple relocated to California, with its main headquarters in San Francisco.
Jones began proclaiming, 'I am come as God Socialist [sic].'
Once in the heavily hippie-fied Frisco, Jones began dabbling in illicit drugs and his sense of paranoia is said to have ratcheted up.
Jones, who had a particularly magnetic personality, put up a convincing argument for belonging and in 1974, the People's Temple rented more than 3800 acres in Guyana, a tropical country which borders Venezuela.
Jones promised to create a 'socialist paradise,' and reminded followers how he'd read that in the event of a nuclear war, South America was the safest place to be.
He sent a cadre of followers to set things up, while he led the church in San Francisco.
Things went fairly smoothly at first.
'It was great,' said Thom Bogue, who moved to Guyana in 1976 at the age of 15 with his family. 'I'd work eight hours a day, helping to build cottages and overseeing my own crew in the plant nursery. Then I'd go in the jungle and play before having a nice meal.'
Mike Touchette, another Jonestown survivor, agrees. 'We built a community out of nothing in four years,' he told the Chicago Tribune. 'Being in Jonestown before Jim got there was the best thing in my life.'
However, in 1977 an article filled with accusations appeared in New West magazine – including that a member's teenage daughter was beaten so badly 'her butt looked like hamburger,' driving Jones to flee to Guyana.
Within a year, things on the commune got harder, and weirder.
Survivors say there was a feeling of victimhood, perpetrated by Jones. His rambling meetings went on for hours, workdays seemed endless and it became all about ideology rather than Utopia.
'It steadily got worse … Ninety-five per cent of the people had no idea what was going on. It was like being stuck on an island,' Mr Bogue said.
However, some did escape and word got back to California, prompting that state's congressman Leo Ryan and a group of journalists to arrive in November 1978, intending to investigate complaints from escapees.
Mr Bogue's father was already hatching an escape plan, but when Mr Ryan offered an opportunity to leave with him, the family said they'd join.
'It was a very high-risk opportunity,' Mr Bogue, now 63, said about his family proceeding with Mr Ryan and others to a landing strip where a plane waited to fly them out. 'But maybe it was the best opportunity.'
When the group assembled at an airstrip to leave, cult members, including one named Larry Layton, opened fire on them. Mr Ryan was shot dead as were three journalists and a temple member hoping to escape. Layton was later extradited, found guilty of wounding two people and served 18 years in a California prison.
Mr Bogue, then 17, was inside the plane when its tires were shot out. He got up from his seat just as one member was shot in the head. Bogue took a bullet to the leg. When the shooting seemed to have abated, he and his sister ran off into the bordering jungle.
Back at camp, knowing he'd be implicated in the death of a US senator, Jones gave the command to his faithful that it was time for Revolutionary Suicide. Syringes of cyanide were squirted into juice and sandwiches and consumed by the congregation – the children first. Jones shot himself in the head.
Despite his injury, Mr Bogue survived in the jungle for three days.
'I was saved by maggots. They ate the gangrene. And then, during the third morning, I became delirious. I lost all sense of direction. But I was with my sister and three others from [another] family.'
They were found and he was reunited with his father. They made their way back to the US shortly after. Nearly 47 years later Bogue works as an auto mechanic and serves as vice mayor of Dixon, California.
'I think it's great to turn it into a tourist attraction and a memorial,' he said, 'I've already been back there three times and the jungle is starting to reclaim the area. I would love to be a consultant on something like that.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

DEEP DIVE: Cults recruiting on campus and the 'walk up evangelism' controversy
DEEP DIVE: Cults recruiting on campus and the 'walk up evangelism' controversy

ABC News

time5 days ago

  • ABC News

DEEP DIVE: Cults recruiting on campus and the 'walk up evangelism' controversy

You expect to see a few clubs trying to recruit at uni O-week. Maybe it's a sport team, or an arts group. But what about a cult? Students across the country are experiencing "walk up evangelism", and it's not just mainstream religious groups using the tactic. In this deep dive, hack explores how South Korean church Shincheonji uses campuses to recruit, and why cult-like groups prey on uni students in the first place. Guest: Sarah Steel, podcast host, Let's Talk About Sects Get the whole story from Hack:

Notorious drug lord extradited to US after prison escape and months-long manhunt
Notorious drug lord extradited to US after prison escape and months-long manhunt

News.com.au

time21-07-2025

  • News.com.au

Notorious drug lord extradited to US after prison escape and months-long manhunt

Ecuador's biggest drug lord has been extradited to the US one month after he was recaptured following a mysterious 2024 prison escape, which triggered a wave of violence across the country. Jose Adolfo Macias, also known as 'Fito', the head of the powerful 'Los Choneros' gang, was removed from custody at a maximum-security prison and handed over to US officials in the Ecuadorean port city of Guayaquil on Sunday. The US Attorney's Office had filed charges in April against the 44-year-old on suspicion of cocaine distribution, conspiracy and firearms violations, including weapons smuggling. A letter filed by the US Department of Justice on Sunday said Macias was due to appear in a federal court this week 'for an arraignment on the Superseding Indictment in this case'. Macias, a former taxi driver turned crime boss, agreed in an Ecuadorean court last week to be extradited to the US to face the charges. He is the first Ecuadorean extradited by his country since a new measure was written into law last year, after a referendum in which President Daniel Noboa sought the approval of moves to boost his war on criminal gangs. Los Choneros has ties to Mexico's Sinaloa cartel, Colombia's Gulf Clan – the world's largest cocaine exporter – and Balkan mafias, according to the Ecuadorean Organized Crime Observatory. Escape from maximum security prison Macias was serving a 34-year sentence for organised crime, drug trafficking and murder when he mysteriously escaped from the maximum security La Regional prison in Guayaquil in January 2024. But he was no longer in his cell after a military contingent arrived to transfer him to another maximum security prison. Authorities are yet to reveal exactly how the 44-year-old escaped. But its believed Macias, who is said to have instilled terror in his fellow inmates, broke out just hours before police arrived, according to presidency spokesman Roberto Izurieta. Hours after the escape, riots broke out in the prison and four police officers were taken hostage, with one forced to read a threatening message to Mr Noboa. Outside prison, Macias' escape sparked a surge of gang-related violence across the country, which lasted days and left about 20 people dead. Shortly after the escape, Mr Noboa declared a nationwide 60-day state of emergency and ordered the military into the streets to 'neutralise' gangs. 'We will not negotiate with terrorists nor rest until we return peace,' the President said at the time. A day after the order, armed men wearing balaclavas took over a television station during a live broadcast, forcing the terrified crew to the ground and firing shots. 'Please, they came in to kill us. God don't let this happen. The criminals are on air,' a TC employee told AFP in a WhatsApp message at the time. Drug lord recaptured Macias was eventually found by authorities last month, bringing to end an almost 18-month manhunt. The 44-year-old was discovered hiding in a bunker concealed under floor tiles in a luxury home in the fishing port of Manta, the centre of operations for Los Choneros, on June 25. Authorities, who had obtained intelligence alerting them to the luxurious home, said Macias was captured during a 10-hour joint operation with police and the military. During the operation, excavators were brought in after an irregular crop field was identified behind the house. 'They started to excavate. As soon as this happened, Fito panicked because if we continued, the roof of his bunker would collapse,' Ecuador's Interior Minister John Reimberg said, according to CNN. 'At that moment, he opened the hatch, where the military was already located, and climbed out of the hole where he was hiding. That's how we detained him.' Mr Noboa later declared the crime boss would be extradited to the US 'the sooner the better.' 'We will gladly send him and let him answer to the North American law,' Mr Noboa told CNN. At the time, the US Embassy also congratulated Ecuador on the arrest, writing in Spanish on its X account that Washington 'supports Ecuador in its efforts to combat transnational crime for the security of the region'. Ecuador, once a peaceful haven between the world's two top cocaine exporters – Colombia and Peru – has seen violence erupt in recent years as enemy gangs with ties to Mexican and Colombian cartels vie for control. More than 70 per cent of all cocaine produced in the world now passes through Ecuador's ports, according to government data. In 2024, the country seized a record 294 tons of drugs, mainly cocaine.

Brazilian police raid former president's home during trial over alleged coup attempt
Brazilian police raid former president's home during trial over alleged coup attempt

ABC News

time19-07-2025

  • ABC News

Brazilian police raid former president's home during trial over alleged coup attempt

Brazilian police have raided the home of former president Jair Bolsonaro, while a judge imposed further restrictions on the far-right politician during his trial over coup charges against him that have vexed US president and ally Donald Trump. The former Brazilian leader's son, Eduardo Bolsonaro, who recently moved to the United States to lobby for his father, wrote on X that federal police carried out a "raid on my father's home this morning". He lashed out at Supreme Court Judge Alexandre de Moraes, a Bolsonaro adversary, who on Friday, local time, ordered the ex-president to wear an electronic ankle bracelet, not leave his home at night, or use social media. Judge de Moraes — one of the judges in Bolsonaro's trial for allegedly seeking to nullify leftist President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva's 2022 election victory — said the measures were necessary given the "hostile acts" against Brazil by the accused and his son. This came after Mr Trump announced a 50 per cent tariff on the South American powerhouse for what he said was a "witch hunt" against his ally. On Thursday, Mr Trump wrote to Jair Bolsonaro, describing his ally's treatment by the Brazilian legal system as terrible and unjust. "This trial should end immediately!" the US president said, adding that he "strongly voiced" his disapproval through his tariff policy. Eduardo Bolsonaro said that the judge "has long abandoned any semblance of impartiality and now operates as a political gangster in robes, using the Supreme Court as his personal weapon". The judge was "trying to criminalize President Trump and the US government. Powerless against them, he chose to take my father hostage," he added in a letter he signed as a "Brazilian congressman in exile". The Supreme Court's restrictions on Jair Bolsonaro are part of a second investigation against Eduardo Bolsonaro for allegedly working with US authorities to impose sanctions against Brazilian officials. Live aerial footage from local broadcasters showed federal police vehicles outside Jair Bolsonaro's residence in Brasília. Congressman Sóstenes Cavalcante, the leader of Bolsonaro's party in the lower house, told The Associated Press that officers also searched Jair Bolsonaro's office at the party's headquarters. He described the operation as "another chapter in the persecution of conservatives and right-wing figures" in Brazil. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced on Friday that the Trump administration was revoking a US visa for Judge de Moraes for his "political witch hunt against Jair Bolsonaro". Accusing him of creating a "persecution and censorship complex," Mr Rubio also announced visa restrictions on other judges who side with Judge de Moraes, as well as their immediate family members. Jair Bolsonaro, 70, described the judge's electronic monitoring order on Friday as a "supreme humiliation" and said the prohibitions were "suffocating". It also prohibited him from approaching foreign embassies and confined him to his home on weekdays between 7pm and 6am, and all day on weekends or public holidays. "I never thought about leaving Brazil, I never thought about going to an embassy," Jair Bolsonaro said after emerging from the Justice Secretariat offices in Brasilia. He had been taken there after the raid, during which police seized cash. His defence team in a statement expressed "surprise and indignation" at the new measures. The former army captain denies he was involved in an attempt to wrest power back from Mr Lula as part of an alleged coup plot that prosecutors say failed only for a lack of military backing. After the plot fizzled, rioting supporters known as "Bolsonaristas" raided government buildings in early 2023 as they urged the military to oust Mr Lula. Jair Bolsonaro was abroad at the time. The case against the former president echoes that of Mr Trump's failed prosecution over the January 6, 2021, attacks by his supporters on the US Capitol to try and reverse his election loss to Joe Biden. Both men have claimed to be victims of political persecution, and Mr Trump has stepped in in defence of his ally, to the anger of Mr Lula, who has labelled the tariff threat "unacceptable blackmail". The Trump administration also announced an investigation into "unfair trading practices" by Brazil, a move that could provide a legal basis for imposing tariffs on South America's largest economy. On Tuesday, prosecutors asked the trial judges of the Supreme Court to find Jair Bolsonaro guilty of "armed criminal association" and planning to "violently overthrow the democratic order". The defence must still present its closing arguments, after which a five-member panel of judges, including Judge de Moraes, will decide the ex-president's fate. Jair Bolsonaro and seven co-accused risk up to 40 years in prison. He has repeatedly stated his desire to be a candidate in presidential elections next year, but has been ruled ineligible to hold office by a court that found him guilty of spreading misinformation about Brazil's electoral system. Mr Lula, for his part, said on Friday that he intends to seek another term. "You can be sure that I will be a candidate again … I will not hand this country over to that bunch of lunatics who almost destroyed it," the 79-year-old said at a public event in the state of Ceara. Judge de Moraes has repeatedly clashed with Jair Bolsonaro and other right-wing figures he has accused of spreading fake news. Last year, the judge suspended tech titan Elon Musk's X network in Brazil for 40 days for failing to tackle the spread of disinformation shared mainly by Jair Bolsonaro backers. AP/AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store