Heavens Gate
Description
Name: Heaven's Gate The group was known by various names over the
twenty-two years of its existence. In the early years, at least,
the group did not give itself a name. Hence, several of its names
were given to it by outsiders. Robert Balch, a sociologist who studied
the group during its early life, referred to them as the "Bo
and Peep UFO Cult." News reporters often referred to the group
as HIM ["human individual metamorphosis"], picking up
on a key teaching of the group. They referred to themselves simply
as "the group," and their leaders as "TheTwo."
In a newspaper advertisement taken out by the groupin 1994, they
referred to themselves as "Total Overcomers Anonymous."
"Heaven's Gate," the name of their Web Site, is apparently
the name they settled on near the end of the life of the group.
Founders: Do and Ti (aka Bo and Peep)
Birth/Death:
Do (1931-1997) was born Marshall Herff Applewhite in Spur, Texas;Ti
(1927- 1985) was born Bonnie Lu Nettles, birthplace unknown.
Applewhite earned a B.A. at Austin College in 1952 and studied
briefly at Union Theological Seminary in Richmond, Virginia beforedropping
out to pursue a career in music. He served as music director at
the First Presbyterian Church in Gastonia, N.C. before moving to
Houston. In Houston he pursued a career in the performing arts and
became a professor of music at St. Thomas University. Nettles was
a nurse when they met in Houston. Little is know abouther background
other than knowledge of her interest in metaphysical studies. She
was a member of the local Theosophical Society and participated
in channeling. She apparently introduced Applewhite to the world
of metaphysical studies.
Year Founded: 1975
Sacred or Revered Text:
How and When Heaven's Gate May Be Entered, plus numerous written
testimonials. It may even be argued that a screenplay the group
wrote to spread its message could be classified as a"sacred
text."
Cult or Sect:
Negative sentiments are typically implied when the concepts "cult"
and "sect" are employed in popular discourse. Since the
Religious Movements Homepage seeks to promote religious tolerance
and appreciation of the positive benefits of pluralism and religious
diversity in human cultures, we encourage the use of alternative
concepts that do not carry implicit negative stereotypes. For a
more detailed discussion of both scholarly and popular usage of
the concepts "cult" and "sect," please visit
our Conceptualizing "Cult" and "Sect" page,
where you will find additional links to related issues.
Size of Group: Thirty-nine (39)
Heaven's Gate came to public attention when they committed mass
suicide on March 27, 1997. As of this writing, all members are believed
to have perished. Group membership probably never exceeded two hundred
(200). Turnover was high in the early life of the group; perhaps
as many as one thousand (1,000) persons were affiliated. After the
early period of active recruitment of new members, the defining
feature of membership was gradual attrition. In 1994 two members
visited sociologist Robert Balch and reported that there were twenty-four
(24) members.
Brief History
Applewhite and Nettles met in Houston in 1972 after he had been
dismissed from St. Thomas University as the result of a scandal
involving a male student. The dismissal plunged Applewhite into
depression and bitterness. Balch reports that Applewhite had long"vacillated
between homosexual and heterosexual identities, never feeling comfortable
with either" (Balch, 1995:141).In Nettles, Applewhite found
a "platonic helper" who did not threaten his sexual identity.
The two gradually isolated themselves in the company of one another,cutting
off contact with others. During this period, reports Balch, they
became "absorbed in a private world of vision, dreams, and
paranormal experiences that included contacts with space beings
who urged them to abandon their worldly pursuits" (Balch,1995:142).
They left Houston in 1973 and traveled for some months, endingup
in a campground near the coast in southern Oregon. Here, Applewhite
claimed to have a revelation that brought together the pieces of
their metaphysical quest. He and Nettles were the two prophets of
the eleventh chapter of the Book of Revelations. After 1,260 days
of bearing witness to the truth, their enemies would kill them.
This event would be followed by their ascension to heavenin a cloud.
The cloud, he believed, was a spacecraft.
With a belief system that combined elements of Christian scripture,Theosophy
and other assorted metaphysical teachings, along witha healthy dose
of contemporary folk wisdom about UFOs, the two space-age shepherds
set out to preach their gospel. Briefly they called themselves Guinea
and Pig, a seemingly humorous commentary on the implausibility of
their message. Later they settled on Bo and Peep, identities that
continued to cause critics to questionthe sincerity of their mission.
Their first success came in Los Angeles where an invitation to
speak to a group of metaphysical students produced two dozen converts.
Followed by their newly acquired disciples, Bo and Peep headed back
up to the coast of Oregon. There the UFO cult began to take shape.
In a series of haphazardly organized meetings along the way, they
soon claimed one hundred and fifty (150) followers.
The group that would one day be known as Heaven's Gate first gainednational
visibility as the result of the mysterious disappearanceof approximately
thirty (30) people following a public lecture about flying saucers
in the small beach community of Walport, Oregon in the fall of 1975.
For several weeks, the group was the focus of national media attention.
Although little was known about the group, it was during this time
period that the metaphor of"brainwashing" entered popular
culture to explain the involvement of youth in cults and sectarian
movements.
The group next headed to Denver where more joined. Then, abruptly,
Bo and Peep split their followers into small groups with only vague
instructions and announced that they were "withdrawing into
the wilderness" in preparation for "the demonstration"
(the resurrection and ascension to heaven that would follow their
assassination).
Over the next six months the small groups wandered across the country
waiting for word from their leaders. The teachings of Bo and Peep
were not extensive and in their absence most groups became confused
and divided. Some groups continued to try to recruit new followers,
but typically they lost more members than they gained. More than
half of the two hundred or so members drifted away from their small
group during the absence of Bo and Peep.
Finally came word that The Two could be reached at a post office
box number in Gulfport, Mississippi. In the months ahead, writes
Balch, somewhere on the order of ninety to one hundred of the members
reassembled to follow a much better organized and demanding leadership.
Apparently in their exile, Bo and Peer concluded that among the
four billion or so souls on this Earth, only the tiny number of
loyal recruits that returned to follow them were eligible to move
on to the next evolutionary level. After a few recruiting efforts
in the midwest, they took their followers to a remote site in Wyoming
where they began a period of intense indoctrination.
They announced that the Heavens had canceled the prophesied "demonstration"
because the followers were not ready. Those who wanted to be aboard
the heavenly space ship would need to devote more time to disciplined
training. Learning to serve was the path to ridding oneself of the
ways of this world and one's earthly body (which came to be known
as a "container."
Withdrawn from the broader culture, Bo and Peep proceeded to introduce
sweeping teachings that encompassed both worldly behavior and preparation
for the next kingdom. Life became very regimented. Emphasis on group
activity was designed to de-emphasize the individual. A vocabulary
that played on space-age metaphors came into currency within the
increasingly isolated group.
From Wyoming, the group moved to a campsite near Salt Lake City
where some members took jobs to meet the financial needs of the
group. An apparent inheritance solved the financial crisis ofthe
group and they moved first to Denver and later to the Dallas- Fort
Worth area, renting houses in both locations. This nomadic existence,
coupled with a rejection of materialism and other things worldly,
became major elements of the group's lifestyle. Details of their
migratory path are still being pieced together at this writing.
Prior to moving to the mansion of a financially-troubled businessman
in the upscale suburb of Rancho Sante Fe near San Diego, California
in 1996, the group spent some time on a forty acre compound inthe
mountains near Albuquerque, New Mexico. While they worked on the
construction of this sprawling but spartan compound, which they
called The Earthship (and it was modeled on the group's beliefs
about the interior layout of a UFO), they rented office space in
a nearby community for their computer business.
When they became interested in computers is uncertain, but apparently
dated back some years, probably stimulated by their interest inthe
relationship between emerging communication technologies and space
travel. Their computer business in Southern California, Higher Source
, specialized in the construction of Web sites. The business has
been characterized as state of the art, but it was not a cutting-edge
company. Their Web development work was technically up-to-date,
but not stunningly dynamic. Media accounts indicate that the success
of the group's Web efforts provided them with the income needed
to rent their large group home in Rancho Santa Fe.
Beliefs:
Herff Applewhite was raised in a traditional Christian family.
Applewhite's father was a Presbyterian minister, and he briefly
studied for the ministry before electing a career in music. Bonnie
Lu Nettles had been into metaphysical studies before the two met.
She was a member of the Theosophical Society and participated in
channeling. The belief system they invented effectively used traditional
Christian teaching as a metaphor or template upon which ideas taken
from metaphysical and UFO subcultures were superimposed.
According to the teachings of The Two, some two thousand years
ago extraterrestrials from the Kingdom of Heaven passed this way
to survey their garden Earth and concluded that perhaps it had evolved
to a point where it would be useful to send down one being from
the "level above." Earthlings, it turned out, were not
ready to enter the "Kingdom Level Above Human."The one
they sent was killed and Luciferian influences continued to dominate
the Earth.
Bo and Peep were, they came to believe, extraterrestrials who came
offering yet another chance for humans to move to a higher evolutionary
level. The Christian message of sin and salvation is here intermingled
with elements of Eastern religious tradition in which seekers attempt
to break out of a cycle of death and reincarnation.
The Heavenly Kingdom that Bo and Peep came to tell of was not simply
spiritual, but literal. The method of transportation to this Kingdom
was a spacecraft. The price one paid for a "boarding pass"
to this higher level was a disciplined life which would bring about
a bodily metamorphosis they likened to the transformation from a
caterpillar to a beautiful butterfly. This process which they called
"Human Individual Metamorphosis" (HIM) would literally
transform human physiology. They developed a detailed folk wisdom
that confirmed to them that the process was occurring. For example,
headaches were interpreted as evidence of "consciousness explosion,"
and menstrual pains as a sign that the process of androgyny was
at work.
The list of behavioral rules appear to have changed during the
life of the group, but from the onset celibacy, abstinence from
drugs and alcohol, limited and controlled contact with the outside
world, and reduction of "human-level" interpersonal attachments
within the group were key behavioral requirements. The changing
of one's name, cutting of one's hair, and disposal of one's human
possessions were acts symbolic of the abandonment of worldly connections.
Initially, Bo and Peep taught that they would be assassinated.
After three-and-a-half days their bodies would "ascend up to
heaven in a cloud." This prophecy was in fulfillment ofthe
New Testament Book of Revelations (Rev. 11:12); the instrument of
their ascension would be a flying saucer. This event would be known
as "the demonstration."
Early in the life of the group, this teaching was abandoned as
an imminent event and the group went "into the wilderness"
to better prepare themselves. This preparation evolved into highly
disciplined behavioral regimentation. Balch characterizes this as
a "totalistic" and "encapsulated environment,"but
also notes that those who did not believe were encouraged to leave
the group. How the group's beliefs evolved from this point forward
is not presently well known, but the abundant writtenrecord left
behind will surely illumine our understanding.
The group apparently developed into a highly cohesive unit. For
the larger part of its existence there were few dropouts and few
new recruits. Their behavior seems more appropriately characterized
as one of internalized self-discipline rather than external regimentation.
It is clear that the group's beliefs changed over the years, but
precisely when and how is still being pieced together from the materials
they left behind. It is clear that popular-cultural science fiction,
especially visions of extraterrestrial life rendered by movies and
television, profoundly influenced the group's worldview. Members
were tremendous fans of the "Star Trek" TV series,as well
as of a current network television program, "The X-Files,"
in which alien beings figure prominently.
The methodic manner in which the group prepared for death is not
consistent with the theory that they were leaving this life in desperation,
as in the case of the followers of Jim Jones (who committed mass
suicide at his command in 1978). Rather, they were students who
believed in a higher human evolutionary level. Their departure was
triggered by the belief that the coming of Comet Hale-Bopp signaled
their student days were over. Also, Bo's contention that he would
soon die of cancer (a claim which autopsy results proved was spurious)
may have primed the group to concerted action lest their teacher
and guide leave without them. A Heavenly space craft was positioned
behind the comet waiting to take them to the next level. In a very
real sense, they did not even believe themselves to be committing
suicide; they merely saw themselves as abandoning the physical "vehicles"
which were no longer necessary. In the end, the deaths of the Heaven's
Gate group were an act of faith; they were graduating to the higher
level from which Bo and Peep had descended in search of a harvest
of Earthlings. They were the harvest.
Current Controversies
The Heaven's Gate suicides triggered a renewal of warnings of the
dangers of cults. The anti-cultists and their messages were abundantly
present as the mass media struggled to make sense of this seemingly
bizarre happening.
There is a great deal to be learned by studying the life and death
of this group. The anti-cultists are correct when they note that
some cults can be dangerous. That the members of this group were
lured into the group by some mysterious methods of mind control
seems highly questionable. So also is it difficult to conclude that
they were helpless to leave the influence of the group. The stories
told by those who had been members do not fit the classic notion
of atrocity tales. And while there are families distraught over
the loss of loved ones, their stories do not seem to fit well into
the victimization model.
The extensive records left by the group, plus the good fortune
of an able sociological scholar pursuing research on this groupfrom
near the beginning of its life, combine to provide an extraordinary
research archive. There is no other group from which we have somuch
information that spans the full life from founding, through growth,
and finally extinction. Join us and see what lessons these archives
have to teach us.
This web site has already pulled together a significant amount
of research material including a mirror of the Heaven's Gate website,
extensive links to press coverage and commentary following the discovery
of the mass suicide, and a comprehensive bibliography of Robert
Balch's writings. We will continue to monitor media follow-up of
this event and where possible, create links that will provide a
gateway to other resources available on the Internet.
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