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Tom Cruise indoctrinated in Scientology at secret desert compound:
report
From Peter David
LOS
ANGELES—Tom Cruise’s faith in Scientology was nurtured at a secretive
southern California desert compound that catered to his needs around the
clock, it was reported Saturday. Long before Cruise sprang onto Oprah’s
couch or blasted Brooke Shields for taking antidepressants, the
Hollywood superstar participated in intensive study and counselling at
the compound in the late 1980s and early 1990s, current and former
Scientologists told the Los Angeles Times newspaper.
Cruise also trained at the church’s better-known facilities, including
those in Hollywood, Calif., and Clearwater, Fla. But much of his time
was spent at the compound 145 kilometres east of Los Angeles, the Times
reported on its website. Behind the guarded gates of the 200-hectare
compound near Hemet, Cruise had a personal supervisor to oversee his
studies in a private course room, ex-members said.
“I was there for eight years and nobody stayed long at all, except for
Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman during that period,” said Bruce Hines, who
left Scientology in 2001 after three decades in the church. Cruise
stayed at the resort for weeks at a time, arriving by car or helicopter,
the Times said, citing ex-Scientologists who claimed they saw him there.
Ex-church members contend while staying in a bungalow near a golf
course, Cruise had a special staff to prepare his meals, do his laundry
and handle other tasks around the clock. Fifteen years ago, two-dozen
members worked through dawn to plant a meadow of wildflowers in which
Cruise and Kidman could romp, alleged Maureen Bolstad, a former
Scientologist who said she was at the base for 17 years. Cruise declined
a request for an interview, the newspaper said.
Mike Rinder, head of Scientology International’s Office of Special
Affairs, said such accounts were fabricated by “apostates.” The
wildflower planting might be a confused version of repairs done after a
1990 mudslide, he said. Cruise has made no extended visits to the
complex since the early 1990s and has performed virtually all of his
religious training elsewhere, Rinder said.
Public records show since 1998, Scientology has poured at least $45
million into expanding the facility, which is on the site of a
dilapidated Gilman Hot Springs resort the church purchased nearly 30
years ago. It has quietly grown to include video and recording studios,
elaborate offices and an empty, multimillion-dollar mansion former
members contend was built for the eventual return of Scientology founder
L. Ron Hubbard, who died in 1986.
However, Rinder said it is simply a museum containing Hubbard’s
belongings. The property is largely concealed from outsiders by tall
hedges and high walls. Security includes, a barbed-wired perimeter,
video cameras and motion sensors, ex-members said.
Founded in 1954, Scientology teaches “spiritual release and freedom”
from life’s problems can be achieved through one-on-one counselling
called auditing, during which members’ responses are monitored on an
“e-meter,” similar to a polygraph. International Scientology News, a
church magazine, reported last year the actor had embarked on one of the
church’s highest levels of training, OT VII for Operating Thetan VII.
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