Extra Ecclesiam Nulla Salus

Extra Ecclesiam Nulla Salus
St. Alphonsus Maria de Liguori, ora pro nobis!

Inside The 'Holy Mountain': Exploring The Unseen World Of Mount Athos

Mount Athos, in northern Greece, is a place steeped in a truly unique history. The tree-swathed slopes of the “Holy Mountain,” as it is commonly called, encompass 127 miles on the coast of the Aegean Sea. Mount Athos, which operates as an autonomous region within Greece itself, contains 20 separate active Greek Orthodox monasteries, and has functioned as a spiritual center of the Orthodox church since the 10th century.
About 1,400 monks currently reside on the mountain, which has been designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1988. Entry to this sacred place -- whose art and learning has influenced Orthodox Christianity for a thousand years -- is difficult to achieve. Since seclusion from the world is a central tenet of the spiritual practice of Mount Athos’ communities, admission is restricted to a finite number of pilgrims per day, who are limited to a four-day, three-night stay. Women are not permitted to visit the mountain.
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Greek photographer Stratos Kalafatis dedicated five years to exploration of the monasteries, caves and men of Mount Athos, bringing us profound insight into this cloistered world. Kalafatis’ journey started in January 2008 and consisted of 25 visits, totaling 200 days. The resulting exhibit, entitled “Athos, Colors of Faith,” was first shown last year in Thessaloniki.
Kalafatis, who spoke exclusively to HuffPost Greece, attempts to capture the history and richness of Mount Athos’ monastic life from a fresh perspective. He knows the people he photographs -- he's spoken to them, he has been a guest in their dorms, he has accepted their blessing and their gifts. He's not a tourist at Athos. He works more like a painter than a photographer, a hagiographer painting rough drafts of the stories of saints.
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HuffPost Greece spoke to Kalafatis about his project: 

I'd like to ask you about your relationship to Orthodox tradition. Was your decision to travel and photograph Mount Athos purely artistic?
I've been visiting the Holy Mountain since my teenage years, either as a pilgrim or as a professional photographer. However, in early 2008 I decided to “take it on” as a photographer-artist. I had to combine my two identities, that of a pilgrim and that of an image creator.
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How did the monks welcome you? Did you have difficulties with the monks, and if so, how did you get over them?
The way I photograph people takes time and active participation from the subject. That forces me to be direct and honest about my intentions. That directness is usually the best way to overcome any difficulties and hesitation.
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Do you remember any particular encounters with the monks?
We were walking for a long time in the desert of Athos, toward the “horrible Karoulia” [an isolated desert region on the southernmost shore of Mount Athos, occupied principally by ascetics]. A monk was sitting in his front yard. As we walked by, he lifted his head and said, “You're the greatest photographer of Athos, and you’ve come to take my picture.” It was the first time we had met. I wasn't holding anything to indicate that I was a photographer. I took photos of him until sundown.
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After a five-year process, how did Mount Athos change you and your view through the lens?
When I started this journey I was 40 years old. Today, almost 50, I have to say that it was the most important decade of my life. A lot has changed in these past 10 years, and a lot of it is due to the 200 nights I spent there.
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ANONYMOUS SAYS IT WILL TAKE DOWN ISRAEL ON APRIL 7TH WITH AN ‘ELECTRONIC HOLOCAUST’ (VIDEO)


anonymous-says-will-take-down-israel-cyber-holocaust-april-7-2015

ANONYMOUS SAYS IT WILL BE ATTACKING ISRAEL ON BEHALF OF AND IN SOLIDARITY WITH THE PALESTINIAN PEOPLE...

Fear them not: for the Lord your God will fight for you. DRB –Deuteronomy  3:22
The clip is edited in the style of a television news report and features a masked and suited individual sitting behind a desk and reading from a prepared script as he declares plans for a massive cyber attack on April 7 – one week before Holocaust Remembrance Day.
Declaring Palestinians youths a ‘symbol of freedom’, Anonymous says it will take down ‘servers, government websites, Israeli military websites, and Israeli institutions’ in a move that will ‘erase Israel from cyberspace in our electronic Holocaust‘.
‘Our message to the foolish Benjamin Netanyahu and all leaders in the Zionist entities, we will continue to electronically attack until the people of Palestine are free,‘ it adds.
The video threatens Israel with an ‘electronic Holocaust’ on April 7 – just one week before Holocaust Remembrance Day, known in Israel as Yom HaShoah.
The clip is edited in the style of a television news report and features a masked and suited individual sitting behind a desk and reading from a prepared script as he declares plans for a massive cyber attack on April 7 – one week before Holocaust Remembrance Day.
The event is observed as Israel’s day of commemoration for the approximately six million Jews who perished in the Holocaust as a result of the actions carried out by Nazi Germany.
News of Anonymous threat comes as a Jerusalem district court indicted a Palestinian from east Jerusalem on charges of traveling to Syria to join the Islamic State terrorist group.

Heartbreaking moment: a four-year-old Syrian girl 'surrendered' when a photographer pointed his camera at her... and she assumed it was a gun!!

Harrowing: Taken at the Atmen refugee camp on Syria's border with Turkey, the image shows four-year-old Adi Hudea frozen in fear with her arms raised and her lips tightly pursed



  • . Young refugee girl mistook Osman Sagirli's camera for a deadly weapon

  • . Four-year-old froze in obvious terror and then raised her hands in the    air 


  • . Child has been identified as Adi Hudea, whose father was killed in 2012


  • . Image has since gone viral, being shared on Twitter thousands of times 



This is the heartbreaking moment a four-year-old Syrian girl 'surrendered' to a photographer when she mistook the man's camera for a gun.

Taken at the Atmen refugee camp on Syria's border with Turkey last December, the image shows the young girl frozen in fear with her arms raised and her lips tightly pursed.

The child has been identified as Adi Hudea, whose father died in the 2012 Hama massacre and who has been living with her traumatized mother and three siblings at Camp Atmen ever since.

                                



Shocking: Palestine-based photojournalist Nadia Abu Shaban tweeted the image along with the caption: 'Thought he has a weapon not a camera so she gave up'

The image was taken by Turkish photojournalist Osman Sagirli but went viral earlier this week when it was shared on social media.

Palestine-based photojournalist Nadia Abu Shaban tweeted the image along with the caption: 'Thought he has a weapon not a camera so she gave up'.

Turkish media researching the origins of the photograph later suggested Adi Hudea was a four-year-old boy, not a girl, and revealed he was a resident of the Atmen refugee in Syria.
But BBC Trending have subsequently spoken to Sagirli himself who confirmed the image shows a little girl.  

Ms Shaban's tweet has since been reposted more than 14,000 times and prompted emotional responses from social media users.

One wrote: 'I'm actually weeping seeing this. We've made this planet a horrible place, haven't we?', as another said: 'We are failing the younger generations and those still to come. SHAME ON US.' 




Harrowing: Taken at the Atmen refugee camp on Syria's border with Turkey, the image shows four-year-old Adi Hudea frozen in fear with her arms raised and her lips tightly pursed


Harrowing: Taken at the Atmen refugee camp on Syria's border with Turkey, the image shows four-year-old Adi Hudea frozen in fear with her arms raised and her lips tightly pursed



Horrified: The image has  prompted emotional responses from social media users, especially on Twitter


Horrified: The image has prompted emotional responses from social media users, especially on Twitter

One Twitter user wrote: 'I'm actually weeping seeing this. We've made this planet a horrible place, haven't we?', while another said: 'We are failing the younger generations and those still to come. SHAME ON US.'

One Twitter user wrote: 'I'm actually weeping seeing this. We've made this planet a horrible place, haven't we?', while another said: 'We are failing the younger generations and those still to come. SHAME ON US.'

Carnage: Damaged buildings and vehicles are seen after Syrian army forces attacked the Hilal Hospital belonging to the Syrian Red Crescent in the city of Idlib earlier this week
Carnage: Damaged buildings and vehicles are seen after Syrian army forces attacked the Hilal Hospital belonging to the Syrian Red Crescent in the city of Idlib earlier this week

Terror: A man walks with his children past the site of a Syrian government barrel bomb attack in Aleppo's Dahret Awwad neighbourhood

Terror: A man walks with his children past the site of a Syrian government barrel bomb attack in Aleppo's Dahret Awwad neighbourhood

The five-year-old Syrian Civil War has so far claimed more than 220,000 lives, including an estimated 10,000 children. 

Millions of people have been displaced by the conflict, with more than 12 million people - including five million children - still in desperate need of humanitarian assistance.  

The image emerged as the Syrian government announced plans to import 150,000 tonnes of wheat for its starving population - just weeks after saying it had no need to do so.

Despite millions of Syrians fleeing the fighting to neighbouring countries, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's government is grappling with ensuring there is enough grain for all.

Trade sources say Damascus faced challenges importing sufficient stocks as payment problems and fighting have deterred many international firms from trading.


Terrorists: Militants from the Islamic State (pictured) have seized control of vast swathes of northern Syria, subjecting millions of people to their brutal oppression 


Terrorists: Militants from the Islamic State (pictured) have seized control of vast swathes of northern Syria, subjecting millions of people to their brutal oppression 


Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has also been accused of numerous atrocities as he desperately tries to cling to his 
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has also been accused of numerous atrocities as he desperately tries to cling to his 


Ruined: An apartment block in the city of Aleppo is seen destroyed following five years of conflict in Syria. The Civil War has so far claimed more than 220,000 lives, including an estimated 10,000 children

Ruined: An apartment block in the city of Aleppo is seen destroyed following five years of conflict in Syria. The Civil War has so far claimed more than 220,000 lives, including an estimated 10,000 children

Before the war, Syria kept annual strategic stocks of around 3 million tonnes of wheat. 
The state-run General Establishment for Cereal Processing and Trade (Hoboob) has declined to give a figure for how much is left but said it is seeking 150,000 tonnes of wheat in an import tender that will close on April 13.

The announcement came three weeks after the minister of internal trade and consumer protection Hassan Safiya said an improved wheat harvest in 2015 would translate into self-sufficiency.
'We need to import to bolster our strategic stocks and have started with this tender to test the market,' a Hoboob source told Reuters.

Hoboob said the government was currently relying on its 2014 local harvest and drawing on its strategic reserves to keep its bread subsidy programme going.



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Inside the town Scientology built - where Tom Cruise, John Travolta and Kirstie Alley rule with vast estates while Sea Org members live six-to-a-room and pay $100k to learn super powers


Inside the town Scientology built - Clearwater, Florida, where Tom Cruise, John Travolta and Kirstie Alley rule with palatial estates, Sea Org members live six to a room and pay $100,000 to learn super human powers


  • The beautiful resort town of Clearwater has millions of tourists every single year - but few ever set foot in the downtown area



  • Exclusive photos show the extent of Scientology's grip on the city 



  • The church owns 67 buildings over ten square miles, including motels, training centers, offices for 'Special Affairs' and 'religious retreats' worth more than half a billion dollars



  • Sea Org members earn $50 a week and work seven days starting at 7am and ending at midnight



  • They pay for the right to run around a pole in circles for hours until they realize the error of their ways, says one former member ??



  • 'You never get to see your family. That's how it was for me. I was there from 1973 to 2007,' former executive director tells Daily Mail Online



The anti-Scientology documentary Going Clear is shocking the world with its devastating insight into the inner workings of this most secret of religions.

The lives of Scientologists, especially hardcore Sea Org members - the top of the Scientology food chain - seems like another strange universe.

But for one area of Florida, Scientology's impact has been devastating. It's where it has built its headquarters and rules the place with an iron fist. The beautiful resort of Clearwater has millions of tourists every single year - but few ever set foot in the downtown area.

Even residents steer clear and avoid annoying the city's real power brokers. Welcome to Scientologyville. It's taken over the city in the last forty years and now owns dozens of buildings worth well in excess of half a billion dollars.

                             Scroll down for video 


Key to the Kingdom: The Church of Scientology has completely taken over the city of Clearwater, owning half a billion's worth of real estate. It is the biggest concentration of Scientologists in the world

1. The Oak Cove Scientology Center. Lower level services including 'auditing' and 'case cracking'. Real estate value: $4,483,100
2The Fort Harrison Housing for visiting Scientology members  with 220 rooms and suites, the Crystal Ballroom, Flag Auditorium and            Convention Center. Real estate value: $13,137,700
3The Sandcastle Home of the Flag Advanced Org. Real estate value: $5,896,600
4The Osceola Inn Accommodation for visiting Scientologists with 76 rooms and suites. Real estate value: $6,000,000
5. The Coachman Five stories of Standard Tech course rooms and the largest Scientology library in the world. Real estate value: $3,700,000
6. Super Powers Building Scientology HQ and the home of advanced Church courses. Real estate value: Over $30,000,000
7. Former Clearwater Bank Building New Church administration offices and staff dining. Real estate value: $2,038,400
8. Station Square Exclusive 146-unit condominium with pool. Real estate value: $20,000,000
9. Parking area Three-level parking and bus garage for Scientology coaches. Real estate value: $3,500,000
10. Clearwater Academy Exclusive school for Sea Org members' children. Real estate value: $5,000,000
11. Further Church Real Estate One of more than 50 buildings own by the Scientology Church in Clearwater. Real estate value: $50,000,000 plus
Tom Cruise, Kelly Preston, John Travolta and Kirstie Alley listen to actress Jenna Elfman speak at a Church of Scientology opening

Tom Cruise, Kelly Preston, John Travolta and Kirstie Alley listen to actress Jenna Elfman speak at a Church of Scientology opening


Kirstie Alley's waterfront mansion in Clearwater. Alley's company bought it in 2000 from fellow Scientologist Lisa Marie Presley for $1.5 million


Kirstie Alley's waterfront mansion in Clearwater. Alley's company bought it in 2000 from fellow Scientologist Lisa Marie Presley for $1.5 million


John Travolta's family home in Ocala, just outside Clearwater. The home has a private airstrip
John Travolta's family home in Ocala, just outside Clearwater. The home has a private airstrip

Travolta,  daughter Ella Bleu at left and wife Kelly Preston applaud speakers at the opening of a Scientology Mission in Ocala

Travolta,  daughter Ella Bleu at left and wife Kelly Preston applaud speakers at the opening of a Scientology Mission in Ocala

This is Hacienda Gardens, a fortified compound which houses Sea Org members

This is Hacienda Gardens, a fortified compound which houses Sea Org members


Aerial shot of Hacienda Gardens, which houses Sea Org members and leader David Miscavige, when he comes to visit

City officials and the Church have their clashes, the most recent one over the town's desire to build an aquarium in the town center. 

City Commissioner Karen Seel told the Tampa Bay Times 'I kept asking: "Why are you so against the aquarium?" I never got what I considered to be a good answer. After the meeting I thought and thought, and it's because they want the rest of downtown for expansion. I think that's their purpose.'

Founder L. Ron Hubbard arrived in the town in 1975 to begin 'Project Normandy', the code name for a top secret Church of Scientology operation to take over the city. 

Local politicians, police and residents have long given up fighting Scientology.

Now the central city is mostly deserted apart from thousands of uniformed Sea Org members - the ultra devoted members of Scientology who have signed one-billion year contracts that bind themselves to to the Church.

Daily Mail Online's  extraordinary on-the-ground and aerial images show the influence Scientology has in the town.
According to local newspaper the St Petersburg Times, the Church owns 67 buildings over ten square miles, which includes motels, training centers, offices for 'Special Affairs' and 'religious retreats' for visiting Scientologists, who often pay upwards of $100,000 each for its services.

The church has denied that there are fixed fees, adding that 'Donations requested for 'courses' at Church of Scientology begin at $50 and could never possibly reach the amount suggested.'
The Scientologists even own a working mill, which makes all the furniture and equipment used in their offices.
But the grandest of all the buildings is the multi-million dollar Super Powers building - or Flag as its known to followers - which opened in 2013 withTom Cruise, John Travolta and Kelly Preston front and center at the dedication ceremony. 

Church followers are charged thousands of dollars for special courses, held in the Super Powers building, which will give them super human powers, they are told.
Cruise has spent months at a time at Clearwater - and was spotted twice there last year. Scientology celebrities have even had homes built close to HQ, including Kirsty Alley and John Travolta.

In an exclusive Daily Mail Online interview, ex-Scientologist Mike Rinder details what really goes on in town. He served on its Board of Directors and was executive director of  its office of special affairs, overseeing the corporate, legal and public relations matters of the Church at the international level.

Rinder defected in 2007 and is now considered a 'Suppressive Person'. He left his mother, father, wife and two kids to flee from the Church and is an outspoken critic.

'Clearwater is extremely important,' he says. 'It has always been Scientology-ville since Hubbard first descended on it. It's the spiritual HQ of Scientology and the biggest money-making source internationally for them. 

'It represents Scientology to the rest of the world.

'Clearwater should have a prosperous, flourishing downtown, but instead it's the dead zone. People steer clear of it because it's Zombie Land. The generally impression of Scientology to them is sinister and secretive and they don't want to go anywhere near it. 

'So they just stay away. Most of them are too afraid to say anything critical as they fear repercussions. So Scientology can do what it wants in Clearwater.

'Hundreds of millions of dollars go through Clearwater each year,' claims Rinder, 'at least $2 million a week. Every Scientologist around the world has to go to Clearwater to do courses. Some of the members come here for years and pay up to $1.5 million each.

Hotels and religious training centers owned by the church

Hotels and religious training centers owned by the church



The Super Powers Building, right main building, which is linked to the Fort Harrison Hotel at left. It’s the Super Powers building that holds the most fascination to outsiders due to the activities that go on there. It’s one of the reasons why famous Scientology celebrities have built homes there, according to Rinder.


The Super Powers Building, right main building, which is linked to the Fort Harrison Hotel at left. It's the Super Powers building that holds the most fascination to outsiders due to the activities that go on there. It's one of the reasons why famous Scientology celebrities have built homes there, according to Rinder.


The imposing Flag Building, also known as the Super Powers Building

The imposing Flag Building, also known as the Super Powers Building

This room is not  a scene from a futurist space movie, it is a room in the Super Powers Building, where training includes 'enlightened heightened perception' courses. The anti-gravity simulator is a gyroscope that spins trainees around while blindfolded to improve their perception of compass direction

This room is not  a scene from a futurist space movie, it is a room in the Super Powers Building, where training includes 'enlightened heightened perception' courses. The anti-gravity simulator is a gyroscope that spins trainees around while blindfolded to improve their perception of compass direction

This is one of the auditing rooms. These rooms, predominantly on the fourth and fifth floors, are critical to Scientology and removes the obstacles in life, so that a person can progress and gain 'heightened perception'. A person can spend months being audited in these rooms - Tom Cruise has spent weeks at a time in the Super Powers building being audited and moving up to the 'Operating Thetan' courses. Scientologists at any time pay over $100,000 a course.


This is one of the auditing rooms. These rooms, predominantly on the fourth and fifth floors, are critical to Scientology and removes the obstacles in life, so that a person can progress and gain 'heightened perception'. A person can spend months being audited in these rooms - Tom Cruise has spent weeks at a time in the Super Powers building being audited and moving up to the 'Operating Thetan' courses. Scientologists at any time pay over $100,000 a course.


Travolta, Preston and Cruise, in the first row,  help dedicate new Flag Building in Clearwater  2013. They applaud Scientology leader David Miscavige during the dedication of their massive building in downtown Clearwater. The seven-story, $45 million neo-Mediterranean building  is also known as the 'Super Power' building because it reportedly will be the only place where a highly classified Super Power program, first advanced by church founder L. Ron Hubbard in the 1970s, will be conducted


Travolta, Preston and Cruise, in the first row,  help dedicate new Flag Building in Clearwater  2013. They applaud Scientology leader David Miscavige during the dedication of their massive building in downtown Clearwater. The seven-story, $45 million neo-Mediterranean building is also known as the 'Super Power' building because it reportedly will be the only place where a highly classified Super Power program, first advanced by church founder L. Ron Hubbard in the 1970s, will be conducted


Crowds attend the dedication of the Super Power building, reportedly the only place where a highly classified Super Power program, first advanced by church founder L. Ron Hubbard in the 1970s, will be conducted

Crowds attend the dedication of the Super Power building, reportedly the only place where a highly classified Super Power program, first advanced by church founder L. Ron Hubbard in the 1970s, will be conducted


'The Church collectively has cash and assets well in excess of $2 billion. People would be astonished what real estate they own. It's become more like a real estate investment organization.'

Sea Org members, who number in the thousands, are housed in special compounds, which are surrounded by high trees and massive security gates. They are ferried in and out of their compounds in 'Flag Buses'.

They often work over a hundred hours a week for less than $50 a month. The Church has even set up a school for Sea Org children called Clearwater Academy, which uses educational beliefs set up by founder Hubbard.

'The Sea Org in Clearwater live in a controlled environment. They live for the Church full-time. Many live in a compound called Hacienda Gardens,' says Rinder.

'It looks okay from the outside, but then you see it's a fortress. There may be a basketball court and swimming pool on campus but it'll be the most underused in Florida, as everyone is working. If you are allowed a car, you'll only be allowed to travel from the campus to another Scientology building. If you get stuck in traffic, they'll be on the lookout for you.

'The roles of Sea Org members vary in Clearwater such as auditors, supervisors, executives, cooks, trainers, housemaids, drivers, gardeners, and lots of money collectors,' explains Rinder.
If you're married, then you'll be sharing a two-bedroom apartment with two other couples, one will be in the living room. If you're single, then there's six people in each room in bunk beds, including the living room.

'They're earning $50 a week, seven days a week where the day starts at seven in the morning and ends at midnight. You never get to see your family. That's how it was for me. I was there from 1973 to 2007, on and off in Clearwater. 

'I very rarely saw my kids and wife for many, many years out of that time. My wife and I were often in separate locations.

'It's an exclusive and elite group of people who rise above that level. Even David Miscavige, the Church's leader, stays at the Hacienda, but there is a section of those apartments devoted to him. 
'He has two whole two-bedroom apartments just for his bedroom. Below that he has his staff quarters and workout room.'

It's the Super Powers building that holds the most fascination to outsiders due to the activities that go on there. It's one of the reasons why famous Scientology celebrities have built homes there, according to Rinder.

'The celebrities have to come here, that's why some of them have houses. Lisa Marie Presley had one, Kirsty Alley has one and John Travolta isn't too far away.'


This is Tradewinds Motel, which exclusively houses visiting Scientologists

This is Tradewinds Motel, which exclusively houses visiting Scientologists


The Clearwater Academy is a school exclusively for children of Sea Org members

The Clearwater Academy is a school exclusively for children of Sea Org members


One of the Church's hotels called The Mariner, which is being renovated

One of the Church's hotels called The Mariner, which is being renovated


This is a working mill for Scientology, which makes all of its furniture and equipment used in the offices around town

This is a working mill for Scientology, which makes all of its furniture and equipment used in the offices around town


Emmy-award winning film director Mark Bunker, a Scientology critic for the last fifteen years, explains more about Scientology and Super Powers building.

He says: 'The Super Powers building is this center for people who do the Super Power Rundowns, these are a series of routines which are meant to give you super human powers. 

'There are things like the wall of smells, which has 47 different smells, where you can open up a scent jar and perceive one scent from another. (???)

'There's a thing called the oiliness table.

'They also have some sort of gyroscope device that you get spun around everywhere and still be able to orientate yourself. They have an entire floor made up of a running track with a pole in the middle of it, where you pay for the right to run in a circle for hours until you have a certain cognition or realization of what you've done wrong. 

'It's astonishing the things they do, which people have to pay for.'

Bunker knows more than most the levels Scientology will go to defend itself. 

He purposely based himself in Clearwater to protest against the Church. He first came into town in 1999 with multi-millionaire business Bob Minton to set up the Lisa McPherson Trust, which was to help Scientologists in danger, after she died while in the care of Scientology for 17 days.
Mark adds: 'I had read about how Scientology had come to town. They had all these plans to take over.

'I was still quite surprised how afraid people were to speak about Scientology. They came to me in hushed tones and said: 'I'm glad you're here', but were too afraid to protest themselves.'
Hubbard's plot to takeover the town in 'Operation Normandy' began in the early 70s. The mayor at the time, Gabe Cazares, called it 'the occupation of Clearwater.'


The Church of Scientology has completely taken over the city of Clearwater, owning half a billion's worth of real estate, and it's the biggest concentration of Scientologists in the world. Outspoken critic and film director Mark Bunker. \n\nPICTURE CREDIT MUST READ: www.thisischriswhite.com
The flyer sent to Mark Bunker's neighbors warning them about the 'religious bigot'


Outspoken critic and film director Mark Bunker and the flyer sent to his neighbors warning them about the 'religious bigot'

The organization used a front group called the United Churches of Florida to purchase the Fort Harrison Hotel, which it made it then made its headquarters. Two years later, an FBI raid found documents which stated the group's aim  'to penetrate and handle in order to establish area control.' 

The document goes on to say its 'Major Target' is 'To fully investigate the Clearwater city and county area so we can distinguish our friends from our enemies and handle as needed.'
Bunker explains:: 'They came into town and paid cash for two buildings - the old Clearwater Bank Building and Fort Harrison Hotel. At first people were excited that some religious order was coming in and sprucing up the area and hotel. 

'Then there was something suspicious about it, as suddenly there were armed men with machine guns on top of the Fort Harrison Hotel. People were asking: 'What sort of Church is this?' When the FBI raided their offices, they found plans to take over the city.

'Scientologists were meant to get themselves in every job and function in the city - from the police to newspapers to council - and leverage power. It eventually led to the arrest and conviction of the top ten people in Scientology including Hubbard's wife Mary. Hubbard himself escaped arrest and went into hiding for the last ten years of his life in the desert.

Bunker and the Church have been clashing for years and it even got an injunction against him in 1999, which stated that he and any Scientologist had to be more than ten feet away from each other. Mark claims that he's been followed by Scientology for years and they even distributed flyers around his neighborhood.


The bus station for the Church's 'Flag Buses', which ferry Sea Org members around town

The bus station for the Church's 'Flag Buses', which ferry Sea Org members around town

The entrance to the Scientology retreat called Sandcastle
The entrance to the Scientology retreat called Sandcastle

'The people of Clearwater don't want to come downtown, it's the furthest thing from warm and welcoming. If you walk down there and have a camera, they will follow you everywhere. If they're suspicious of you, then they're going to follow you home to find out why you dared to take a picture of their building,' says 

'On my cell phone, I have the camera ready in case Scientology are following me, I've heard from people that they have private investigators parked down my street. I try not to worry about them. All the fear I had stopped the moment I spoke up the first time. Having a camera is the most important part of my protection.

'Back in 1999, they came to picket my house, then gave flyers to my neighbors. I had a call from one asking if I was Mark Bunker and she said: 'I'm supposed to fear you.' I just started laughing. She had got this flyer with my phone number on it, saying neighbors beware Mark Bunker is not who you think he is. 

'It says I'm a religious bigot, but thankfully it said at the end of the note that it came from the Church of Scientology. They don't usually do that. Instead of instilling fear, we had a good laugh about it.

Now Bunker's is determined that Scientology's power in the town is challenged and says he will even run for Council to make sure that they don't always get what they want.
He adds: 'I feel it's important for somebody to speak out. I feel this is a good time to stick my nose in and stand up at city council meetings to say how Scientology is affecting people around the world and all the actions are being directed from Clearwater. 

People should be outraged by it and not make it easier for them to do this. Potentially down the road, I'll run for political office myself.'