CANADA
LIBRARY OF PARLIAMENT
Research Branch
Written and Compiled by Susan Alter....Law and Government
Division
15 September 1992
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES: DISFELLOWSHIPPING AND SHUNNING
INTRODUCTION
The shunning or harassment of former Jehovah's Witnesses (JWs) by active
members of the sect is behaviour that is mandated by the governing body of the
Jehovah's Witnesses' church (officially titled the Watch Tower Bible and Tract
Society). Shunning has been known to cause sever emotional distress to estranged
Witnesses, occasionally even leading to their suicides. Church-decreed ostracism
of ex-JWs will be the subject of this paper. In particular disfellowship and
shunning practices will be outlined and remedial actions which might be taken
to deal with them will be discussed. The discussion will conclude that legal
approaches to salving this problem, unfortunately, so far have been quite ineffectual.
Support groups which offer peer and professional counselling to ex-Witnesses
and provide public education on the dangers of Christian fundamentalist sects
would seem to constitute more immediate and effective relief for this social
ill.
THE JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES' COMMUNITY AND BELIEFS
The JW community is a closed one. Members are not encouraged to socialize
outside their religious circle and they are discouraged from developing interests
outside their community. For example, they are advised not to seek a higher
education.or to pursue private pastimes such as hobbies.(1) As a result, Witnesses,
like other sect members, derive their sense of community and self from their
shared theological beliefs:
"A sense of community emerges from shared theological beliefs
which provides a locus of interaction for people with similar value systems.
Common religious doctrine enables people to "define a situation" in
a similar manner thus reinforcing their camaraderie and friendship. From a sense
of community emerges an identification of self."(2)
The community is so insular that one former influential leader described it
as "hermetically sealed."(3) Numerous religious beliefs bind this
community together. Probably the most familiar ones are that Witnesses cannot
accept blood transfusions and cannot sing national anthems. These beliefs are
based on JWs interpretations of the scriptures. other beliefs which they hold
and which set them apart from other Christian religions include the following:
-Jehovah alone is God. The Trinity doctrine is Satanic.
-Only Jehovah's Witnesses are Christians.
_The Bible is only understandable to Jehovah's Witnesses.
-Only 144,0OO are elect for heaven.... The rest of mankind [i.e. JWs] will be
given eternal life on paradise earth.
-The end of the world system [the apocalypse] is to come during the generation
of those alive in 1914. [Until 1975 came and went, it was the year pinpointed
by the Watch Tower Society for the apocalypse.]
-Those of the 144,OOO who died previous to 1918 were taken to heaven that year,
while those who die subsequent to 1918 go toheaven at death. All others await
the resurrection, being in "soul sleep. "
-Hell is mankind's common grave. Eternal punishment is not true, since there
will be annihilation of the wicked.
-The soul is not immortal.(4)
LEAVING THE JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES: DISASSOCIATION AND DISELLOWSHIPPING
In the past there were two ways a Witness could leave the faith. one could leave
his or her congregation and the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society voluntarily.
Such an exit was described as "disassociation."(5) It meant a Witness
could bow out quietly and no sanctions were associated with such a departure.(6)
It is estimated that between 1969 and 1979, close to one million members quietly
dropped out of the JWs.(7)
The other way to exit was by expulsion or excommunication, a process the Witnesses
refer to as "disfellowshipping". Disfellowshipping is a formal process
for expelling dissenting or immoral members from both their congregations and
the Watch Tower Society. A formal hearing is held at the member's Kingdom Hall
by a committee of church elders called a "judicial committee." The
member is summoned to appear and the "judicial committee" acts as
judge, jury and prosecutor for the Witness.(8) originally, disfellowshipping
occurred in cases of basic immorality (adultery, drunkenness, etc.); but, over
the years, the acts demanding disfellowshipping increased significantly to include
less obviously immoral offenses, such as associating with disfellowshipped members
or in any way expressing doubt over the tenets of the faith.'(9)The quasijudicial
procedure employed by the church to cast out undesirables is considered to be
very unfair by many who have been exposed to it first hand. Due process or the
rules of natural justice are completely ignored, leading one prominent ex-JW
to characterise it as a "kangaroo court with the trappings of the Inquisition."(10)
Recently, the rules regarding how a person may leave the JWs appear to have
been modified. Prior to 1991, people could leave the organization voluntarily
and quietly by disassociating themselves. Since 1991, however, long-ago disassociated
members have been reporting that the Watch Tower Society is seeking them out
and presenting them with the "opportunity" (i.e., an ultimatum) to
rejoin the fold or be disfellowshipped. As ex-members, they are not up-to-date
with the latest doctrinal declarations from the Watch Tower Society, so they
are not aware of the rationale behind this membership revival campaign. Some
suspect the Watch Tower Society's size is seriously diminishing and it is desperate
now for recruits. others interpret the motive to be more sinister -- a concerted
effort to further harass and intimidate former members.(l1)Whatever the reasons,
it appears that people can no longer leave the JWs quietly; they will have to
face disfellowshipping, if they fall away from the faith.
Disfellowshipping carries with it harsh consequences for expelled members. The
Witnesses' governing body requires that these members be ostracized or "shunned"
by the JW community, including their families and close friends. Those who defy
this decree of the Watch Tower Society will face disfellowshipping themselves
and the eternal damnation which Witnesses believe comes with disfellowshipping.(12)
Shunning appears to be practised more rigorously and widely today than ever
before in the history of the Witnesses.
SHUNNING
Prior to September 1981, only disfellowshipped JWs had to be shunned and the
degree of ostracism to be imposed by an active member on an ex-member was left
to a member's personal judgment. But in September 1981, the governing body of
the JWs, that is the ruling committee of the organisation, issued stricter rules
for shunning, based on scriptural intePpretations, which required absolute shunning
of disfellowshipped members and which required JWs to treat disassociated members
in the same manner as disfellowshipped members.(l3) Certain historians attribute
this tightening of the reins to the general paranoia and authoritarianism that
gripped the church's corporate headquarters after the apocalypse failed to materialise
in 197S, a time when the general JW population began to question this and other
doctrines of the faith and even to defect.(14)
Suddenly, Witnesses were to stop greeting practically all disfellowshipped
persons, not even saying 'hello' to them, and for the first time family members
were to cut any and all unnecessary ties with relatives. Although husbands and
wives had to continue rendering marriage dues to disfellowshipped mates and
parents were to provide for minor children, except in cases of extreme illness
or emergency, disfellowshipped family members were to be shunned. As for disfellowshipped
relatives not living in Witness homes, they were to be treated in virtually
the same way that any other excommunicated ones would be. Witnesses were told:
'We should keep clearly in mind the Bible's inspired direction: "Quit mixing
in company with anvone called a brother that is a fornicator or a greedy person
..., not even eating with such a man."' Then, to make absolutely certain
that no dissenter might continue to have ongoing association with Jehovah's
Witnesses in good standing, The Watchtower proclaimed that the rules relating
to disfellowshipped persons were to be applied also to those who had resigned
from the organization voluntarily.(15)
Individuals' reactions to shunning have ranged from sadness and frustration
to chronic depression and suicide.(l6> "Since a great deal of the individual's
interaction can be located within the religious group, the sanctioning results
in feelings of discontent, remorse, and rejection(17> "Some people still
recoil in shame when they see loyal Jehovah's Witnesses on street corners or
knocking on doors ... [and] even worse, ... is the severe depression that hits
ex-witnesses when they emerge into a world they've been taught is doomed."(18)
The specific effects of shunning are detailed in the articles and books
listed in Appendix A to this paper: "Selected Materials on the Treatment
of Ex-Jehovah's Witnesses". Ex-lWs have been prevented from attending the
weddings and funerals of loved ones; they have been treated as if they were
invisible when they ran into old friends; family members whom they phone have
hung up on them; and they have been made the subjects of gossip and covert smear
campaigns by members of their former congregations. Some have reported more
tangible harassment -- finding spit on their cars and eggs smashed on their
houses -- but such concrete
.
expressions of disapproval are rare since most JWs consider themselves to be
"good Christians. "('9)
The deep emotional pain experienced by ex-JWs is often not understood by mainstream
society because the general population does not realize either that the penalty
exacted for disassociation or disfellowshipping is shunning, or how significant
the personal losses felt by the individuals thus affected are.(20) An extract
from the submission of a former JW to the Beaudoin-Dobbie Commission on a Renewed
Canada, made late last year, provides a glimpse into the personal devastation
these people feel:
What value can be assigned to the friendships and fellowship an individual
may cultivate, perhaps over a period of five, ten, twenty years or more? Some
value those cherished relationships no less than their own life. Those relationships
are an investment of countless hours of time and energy in many cases. Should
Corporate religious leaders ... be permitted to strip away all those values
from an individual ...? Should there be no accountability to anyone by those
who thus snatch away someone's religion, imposing ostracism on him or her, even
by his or her own family memhers?(21)
The emotional healing process which ex-JWs must go through is being assisted
somewhat by volunteer-based support groups and by more public exposure and criticism
of the Watch Tower Society, for example by dissident writers. Legal avenues
of redress have proven to be much less effective than the self-help remedies
which have emerged. The various remedial actions that are available to disfellowshipped
and shunned Witnesses are discussed in the remaining parts of this paper.
REMEDIAL ACTIONS TO ADDRESS DISiELLOWSHIPPING AND SHUNNING
A. Legal Avenues
Shunned JWs who have been disfellowshipped have launched a variety of claims
in the courts to challenge the legality of the disfellowshipping or shunning
processes. Their claims which are discussed in this part, have met with little
success. The Jehovah's Witnesses have earned a reputation as champions of freedom
of religion and expression in Canada and have developed a great deal of legal
expertise in the process:
"The Jehovah's Witnesses are singular in Canadian religious history
because of the number of important court decisions they have received. They
have been persistent in their efforts to be fully free in the exercise of their
religion. The Jehovah's Witnesses have mastered the legal system and used it
repeatedly for the affirmation of their rights and the rights of other minority
groups as well."(22)
In fact, the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Canada, under its letters
patent, identifies litigation as one of its corporate objects: "XI. To
commence or defend legal proceedings to preserve freedom of religion, expression,
assembly and press; to uphold the basic rule of law and the liberties provided
in the Constitution of Canada; to protect any other interest of the corporation.
Be (23)
Ironically, this legal expertise -- developed to protect the religious interests
of Jehovah's Witnesses -- is turned against ex-Witnesses who attempt to sue
the Watch Tower Society. In the United States, if an ex-Witness files a lawsuit
for defamation against the corporate organization, legal counsel for the Society
apparently will send a long list of legal precedents to the plaintiff enumerating
previously unsuccessful actions to encourage the party to discontinue the proceedings.(24)
In addition, the Society in Canada reported assets in excess of $35 million
last year, so it is the type of corporate legal opponent for whom money is probably
no barrier to the appeal process.(U) Finally, adding to the generally disadvantaged
position of those who decide to sue the Watch Tower Society, are two other circumstances:
first, in most cases the jurisprudence is not on their side and second, the
courts are often reluctant to intervene in these types of cases, even if some
legal precedents can be found to support the plaintiff's case.
Owing to the variety of cases and issues that can be raised to challenge the
legality of disfellowshipping and shunning, the following discussion is intended
to illustrate the types of actions and issues that could be, and sometimes already
have been, raised. It is in no way a definitive examination of all the case
law or legal questions that exist.
1. The Application of the Charter
Given that the Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees freedom of conscience
and religion, persons who are not familiar with the case law which has delineated
the precise limits of the Charter's application might assume that the Charter
would protect the religious fiVeedom of ex-JWs from infnngement by the governing
body of the Watch Tower Society or other active members. However, the courts
have found that the Charter applies only to legislation and the actions of government
-- not to the actions of private tribunals or private individuals (with one
slight exception). Furthermore, the fact that a private, church body has been
incorporated pursuant to government legislation has not been found to constitute
a sufficient enough link to government to render that body's actions subject
to the Charter.
The leading case on this point is Dolphin Delivezy.(26) In this case the Supreme
Court of Canada ruled that an individual may not found a lawsuit or a defence
against anotr individual on the basis of a breach of a Charter right. In other
words, the Charter cannot be the basis for private litigation:
The Charter, like most written constitutions,
was set up to regulate the relationship between the individual and the Government.
It was intended to restrain government action and to protect the [rights of
the] individual [from infringement by the state]. It was not intended in the
absence of some governmental action to be applied in private litigation.(27)
In the McKinney case, the Supreme Court of Canada, following Dolphin Delivery,
ruled that the Charter did not apply to the actions of universities just because
universities are funded and regulated by governments. It found that universities
are private corporate bodies, created by statute but not subject to the Charter:
The Charter was not intended to cover
activities by nongovernmental entities created by government [through legislation]
for legally facilitating private individuals to do things of their own choosing
without engaging governmental responsibility.(28)
Based on the McKinney case one can surmise that the Charter would not apply
to the actions of a church, even one incorporated pursuant to legislation, such
as the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Canada. The decision of the Ontario
Court (General Division) in United Church of Canada v. Andersona9) supports
this conclusion. Here the Court ruled that the property ownership rules of a
church incorporated by statute were not subject to the Charter. Also, in the
Reed case, the Federal Court ruled that the internal disciplinary hearings of
the Jehovah's Witnesses were not activities to which the Charter's freedom of
religion guarantees could be applied.(30' Reed was appealed unsuccessfully to
th'e Federal Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court of Canada refused to hear
a further appeal of the case.
An exception to the rule that the Charter does not apply to private litigants
exists. It involves cases of private litigation. Although Dolphin Delivery made
it clear that the Charter cannot be the basis for a lawsuit or a defence to
a lawsuit between private litigants, it also indicated that the question of
the application of the Charter to private litigants was separate from the question
of whether the courts are bound to apply the common law, in matters of private
litigation, in a manner consistent with the fundamental values enshrined in
the Charter. It noted that "the Charter is far from irrelevant to private
litigants whose disputes fall to be decided at common law. n(31)
The relevance of this obiter dictum in Dolphin Delivery became apparent recently
in another ruling of the Supreme Court of Canada. In the Salituro case it ruled
that since the rules of common law (judge-rnade law) are not static, and since
judges can and should adapt the common law to reflect the changing social, moral
and economic fabric of the country, the courts are bound to modify the common
law, in appropriate circumstances, to be in step with the Charter:
Where the principles underlying a common law rule are out of step with
the values enshrined in the Charter, the courts should scrutinize the rule closely.
If it is possible to change the common law rule so as to make it consistent
with Charter values, without upsetting the proper balance between judicial and
legislative action ..., then the rule ought to be changed.(32)
In Salituro the Supreme Court ruled that the common law rule of evidence which
prevents one spouse from appearing as a witness in court against, the other
spouse was a violation of the dignity of the individual (protected under section
7 of the Charter) in cases where the two spouses are irreconcilably separated.
Thus, the court modified the common law rule, to be in step with the Charter,
and allowed the separated spouse to testify against her husband. The types of
changes that the courts can make to the common law to ensure its compliance
with the Charter, however, are only incremental changes, not sweeping changes,
according to the Salituro decision. Therefore, the courts are not likely to
make wholesale changes to the common law pursuant to the Charter -- this function
is preserved for governments in their role as legislators.
Another question which may arise in the context of the Charter, and the final
issue related to the Charter for the purposes of this discussion, is whether
a judge who acts contrary to the Charter in making a decision in a relation
to a private dispute is liable as an agent of the government. The answer would
appear to be no.
This conclusion is supported by the decision of the Quebec Court of Appeal in
the case of Royer v. Mignault for which the Supreme Court of Canada later refused
an application to appeal. In this case the plaintiffs (lawyers) brought an action
for damages against a trial judge-for allegedly sullying their reputation with
remarks made in court criticising their professional competency. They argued
the judge's actions were those of an agent of the government and violated their
rights to liberty and security of the person under section 7 of the Charter;
therefore, they argued, the common law rule of judicial immunity which normally
would protect a judge from liability for alleged defamation in his or her court
should not be applied in this case. The Court ruled, following Dolphin Delivery,
that the government actions to which the Charter applies cannot be interpreted
to subject judges, acting in their judicial capacities, to liability for failing
to respect the values enshrined in the Charter. To the extent that a judge fails
to properly apply the provisions of the Charter in his or her ruling, the ruling
should be appealed; but the judge cannot be sued directly for his or her mistake.(33)
2. The Application of Judicial Review Powers
Under the common law the courts have the power to review the actions of administrative
tribunals, if the tribunals fail to observe the rules of natural justice (due
process) and fairness. Consequently, people have applied to the courts on a
number of occasions to ask
them to review the actions of ecclesiastical tribunals, such as decisions to
excommunicate members of the church, when they felt the decisions were not made
fairly. The general rule which has evolved as a result of these cases is that
the secular courts will not interfere with any decisions of ecclesiastical courts
involving religious matters, unless the matter being considered also clearly
involved secular issues, such as violations of property or civil rights. Matters
of fellowship or church membership are considered by the courts to be religious
matters, not civil rights -- that is "civil rights" in the Canadian
constitutional sense of proprietary, contractual r tortious rights, not civil
rights in the American constitutional sense as a term synonymous with
civil liberties.(34)
The civil courts' rule of non-interference in purely religious decisions is
probably nowhere more fully and emphatically explained in Canadian jurisprudence
than in the case of Reed v. The Queen. In Reed, the Court explained that because
of this rule it would not interfere with the processes of Jehovah's Witnesses
"judicial committees" by declaring their internal
disciplinary proceedings to be in violation of the Charter -- even if the Charter
applied to these tribunals, which the Court found it did not. The words of Justice
Muldoon are noteworthy, in their unabridged form:
An apt description of Canada in political-legal terms is: a secular, federal,
parliamentary democracy, with further definitional refinements being provided
in the Constitution of Canada, including the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedorns, among several other texts both legislative and learned. Here, the
principal concern is with the aspect of secularity. Canada is a secular state,
with freedom of religion.
A secular state must be distinguished from a theocratic state. In a theocratic
state, the (usually the one and only permissible) church, temple or mosque is
the state, such that one can be punished upon the judgment of judicial clergy
who are certifiably expert in state theology for disbelief or expression of
opinion contrary to official dogma. The sentence is damnation and the execution
of the sentence not infrequently despatches the hapless convict irrevocably
and purportedly thither, whether. truly so, or not, no one ever knows for sure.
A secular state with freedom of religion accords scope to the people, or more
correctly, the people assert their right, to establish and adhere to their own
beliefs, which when organized by many individuals, usually evince private systematic
theocracy. In law no one is compelled to be a membr or believer, and equally
no one is compelled to remain a member or believer. In such religious communities,
a disciplinary tribunal might well condemn some contending member or believer
to damnation, but the secular state does not lend its servants to the execution
of the sentence, nor does such state condemn anyone to damnation or to any lesser
perdition.]
On fact, in any collision between religious practice and secular law, the secular
state will jealously enforce its criminal law and other public law despite religious
claims or objections. Indeed, when, as sometimes happens, congregations fall
to quarrelling less ethereally and more materialistically over property, the
legal title or possession of which is a matter of law, the courts of these secular
states, wherein are included the provinces of Canada, will undertake to resolve
the dispute over matters within their secular jurisdiction. However, the courts
of secular states, with freedom of religion, are not concerned with, nor entitled
to intervene in, matters of individual souls, sanctity, fellowship, baptism,
circumcision, confirmation or ultimate hope of eternal presence in the beatific
vision. It is true that such matters can become contentious and inflame the
passions, but so long as those passions and their physical expressions do not
cause, create or commit criminal offences or civil delicts, which are entirely
within the state's power of legislation, the secular state will not, and ought
not to intervene in religious affairs, for which the people assert their freedom,
guaranteed in and by the Charter. Nor will it intervene, even when the religious
tribunals manifestly exhibit bad or poor judgment, for with freedom of religion,
it is not for the secular state to exact of religious bodies the creation of
appellate tribunals in imitation of the secular judicature.(35)
In spite of this clear rule, on occasion lower courts h, ave blurred the line
between
purely religious decrees and religious decrees with property. or civil rights
implications. Therefore, some have assumed the jurisdiction to review disfellowshipping
decisions; however, at the end of the day, the plaintiffs still did not succeed
-- in spite of the courts questionableinterpretation of their jurisdictions.(36)
Finally, in terms of a possible exception to the general rule of non-interference
in ecclesiastical court matters, the very old case of Er Parrie Curne offers
an interesting twist.<37) In that case, since the rules of discipline of
the Methodist Church were incorporated right in the statute which incorporated
it, the tribunals appointed under the statute to try charges against church
ministers were found to be constituted as inferior courts and, as a result,
to fall under the control and supervision of the New Brunswick Court of Appeal.
Given the date and level of this decision, however, it might not be very persuasive
if similar circumstances arose today.
3. Civil Suits -- Actions, for Damages in Tort and Contract Law
For reasons outlined in the introduction to this part, civil actions taken against
the Watch Tower Society are difficult to succeed in. Nevertheless, plaintiffs
have tried to sue the organization in tort law and in contract law for the damages
which disfellowshipping and shunning have caused them.
The Zebroskis, in Alberta, sued the Jehovah's witnesses, among other things
for breach of contract (arguing their spiritual contract with Jehovah had been
broken when the church unilaterally disfellowshipped them) and for social ostracism
and defamation (injuries which they claimed resulted from their disfellowshipping).
The breach of contract claim was struck out by the Alberta Queen's Bench because
it was a purely religious contract and a clear example of the type of circumstance
where a secular court would never intervene.(38) The claim for social ostracism
was dismissed by the Alberta Court of Appeal because the Zebroskis had not attended
their disfellowshipping hearing before the church's judicial committee and they
had not appealed the committee's decision according to church procedures. As
a result, the Court of Appeal found they had not properly exhausted the remedies
available to them to avoid the penalty of ostracism in the ecclesiastical sphere.
Consequently, it ruled that they were not entitled to seek redress in the secular
law courts, having not properly exhausted the ecclesiastical avenues of appeal
first.(39) Finally, their claim for defamation was dismissed because it was
out of time -- that is, the time period in which such a claim must be brought
by law had expired by the date that they filed their defamation action.(40)
The only reported case of a Witness succeeding in a defamation suit against
the Watch Tower Society, was the case of Olin Moyle, an ex-Witness and lawyer
who sued the American corporate body in the 194Os.(4') Since that time the Witnesses
have learned to be much more cautious in making potentially damaging remarks
about ex-members, for example, they now only communicate the news of a person's
disfellowshipping verbally, never in writing, and they no longer announce the
grounds for the expulsion, making it more difficult for a potential plaintiff
to prove that defamation occurred.(42)
James Penton brought an action for defamation against the Jehovah's Witnesses
in 1981, after he was thrown out of the organization for his dissenting views.
He feels he had a 50 % chance of winning the case but it took such a toll on
him financially and on his wife emotionally that he dropped the suit, not to
mention that the one remaining defendant to the suitwould have had no money
to pay damages if Dr. Penton had won. In retrospect Dr. Penton now is of the
view that courts of law may not be the proper venues in which to seek redress
for injuries arising from disfellowshipping and shunning activities, although
he notes that the one legal area where people are succeeding today is in cases
of alienation of affection, brought in relation to custody matters. He points
out that the courts' reluctance to deal with these matters may be a good thing,
"because sometimes the cure can be worse than the disease". His concern,
in other words, is that religious freedoms might be eroded if the courts started
to exercise jurisdiction and make substantive rulings in these cases.(43) In
hls view, the support networks established to lend moral and spiritual support
to ex-JWs and the body of literature exposing the
hypocrisy of the JWs may be more effective means of dealing with the problems
of disfellowship and shunning.
In summary, limited legal avenues are available to ex-JWs to pursue actions
for injuries resulting from disfellowshipping or shunning activities. A number
of barriers exist. For example, secular courts generally will not hear complaints
related to ecclesiastical matters, such as church membership, unless a civil
right matter (such as a property or tortious issue) is also involved. The Watch
Tower Society is a well-practised litigant and can be expected to tenaciously
fight all claims brought against it. Also, representatives of the Watch Tower
Society are usually quite careful not to put themselves in actionable positions,
or at least are well-versed in minimizing their vulnerability to lawsuits.
Finally, lest one be left with the impression that the secular courts are heartless
in their firm refusal to interfere with harsh ecclesiastical decrees, the words
of Justice Hall in the Hoper decision indicate that this is not the case. He
was obviously disturbed by the Court's inability to grant relief to the appellants,
who were thrown out of their church and left penniless. He called on the legislators
to take action to soften the blows churches can sometimes deal to those who
leave them:
While agreeing that this appeal fails, I must, however, express my abhorrence
at the treatment accorded the appellants by their erstwhile co-religionists.
The insults and gross indignities inflicted on these men and their families
as disclosed in the evidence is foreign to the whole concept of life in Canada,
whether lived in community or not. The rigidity of the law as declared ... which
deprives a dissident group, whether small or large, of all rights in the property
and assets of a religious community should, I think, be softened by appropriate
legislation....(44)
B. Self-Help Avenues for Ex-JWs
Education does not need much elaboration as a method of self-help. By reading
literature which critically analyzes the practices and beliefs of theJehovah's
Witnesses, estranged Witnesses can help themselves come to terms with their
experiences. Public libraries in large urban centres and university libraries
tend to house such literature in their collections, for example, James Penton's
Apocalypse Delayed. A list of some of the Canadian sources which discuss the
treatment of ex-JWs and related issues is included in Appendix A of this paper.
With respect to support networks, a cautionary note should be voiced. Many support
groups appear to exist but an ex-Witness approaching such groups should be careful
to check them out to make sure that they are not fundamentalist-based groups,
preying on the vulnerability of estranged Witnesses and eager to replace Witness
doctrine with their own brand of Christian fundamentalism.
Such groups run on a volunteer basis and do not appear to be regulated or controlled
in any way. So the onus is on the person seeking help to approach with caution.
In this vein, it is hoped that the list of support groups provided in Appendix
D to this paper consists of sources who are not fundamentalist in orientation
and who are not likely to reintroduce the support-seeker to alternative but
equally oppressive religious experiences.
Fundamentalists Anonymous (FA) appears to offer the most clearly non-doctrinal
support. Spokespeople for the organisation are difficult to reach directly,
which is not the case for the other groups listed in Appendix D. But, at least
one reason for the apparent inaccessibility of FA members is that they have
had their lives and the lives of their children threatened . (45)
CONCLUSION
This paper has attempted to describe the disfellowshipping and shunning practices
of JWs and to present possible remedial actions which might be taken by an individual
to address the injury he or she is caused by these practices. It concludes that
a self-help approach may be more effective. at the end of the dale, than pursing
legal avenues.
References
(1)"Susan Delacou", "outcast Witnesses Unite in Network: Devastated
by Shunning Former Members
Say," Globe and Mail, 2S July 1987.
(2)Merlin B. Brinkerhoff and Kathryn L. Burke, "Disaffiliation: Some Notes
on 'Falling from the
Faith'," Sociological Analysis, Vol. 41, No. 1,1980,p.42.
(3)Richard N. ostling and Anne Constable, "ostracized: A Sect Leader Falls,"
Time, 22 February
1982,p. 40.
(4)James A. Beverley, Crisis of Allegiance, Welch Publishing Company Inc., Burlington
(Ontario),
1986, p. lO9-llO.
(5)Heather and Gary Botting, The Orwellian World of Jehovah 's Witnesses, University
of Toronto Press,
Toronto, 1984, p. 188.
(6)Paul v. Watchtower Pible & Tract Society of New York Inc., 819 F. 2d.
875 (U.S. App. 1987) [hereinafter Paul v. Watchtower].
(7)Tom Harpur, "Jehovah's Witnesses Split over Transfusions: Prominent
Member Expelled for Saying
Transfusion Ban Based on Misreading," Toronto Star, 2O January 1982.
(8)Conversation with James Penton, NO September 1992. See also M. James Penton,
Apocalypse Delayed: The Story of Jehovah's Witnesses, University of Toronto
Press, Toronto, 1985, p. 89-
(9)Ibid.
(10)Bart Testa, "Bearing Witness to a Mass Exodus," Maclean's, 16
March,1981, p. 47.Also, James
Penton (1985), p. 248:
"Although judicial committees are supposed to operate on the basis
of certain minimal established procedures, these are frequently ignored by committee
members, circuit overseers, and the society itself. In addition, when the society
decides that someone is troublesome, it will actually conspire to have such
a person cast out in flagrant violation of its own rules. When Walter Salter,
former Canadian branch overseer, was disfellowshipped in 1937, his witnesses
were shouted down and denied the right to speak at a congregational trial, even
according to the Watchtower's own account...Numerous others have experienced
even more severe treatment. An Ottawa, Ontario woman, Mrs. Elana Bartlett, was
verbally harassed so severely by a judicial committee several years ago that
she was rendered unconscious and had to be taken by ambulance to a local hospital
and given oxygen."
11)Conversations with ex-JWS, 1O and 11 September 1992.
(12)Penton (1985), p. 89 and Paul v. Watchtower.
(13)Paul v. Watchtower. See also Botting (1984), p. 163.
(14)Conversation with James Penton, 1O September 1992.See also, generally, Penton
(1985). (15) Penton (1985), p. 3OO.
(16)Delacourt (1987)
(17)In Brinkerhoff (198O), p. 49.
(l8)Delacourt (1987)
(19) Conversations with ex-JWs, 1O and 11 September l992.
(20) Beverley (1986), p. 13.
(21) Ross W.A. Campbell, Subnussion to the Special Joint Committee on a Renewed
Canada, 29 December 1991.
22) Denise J. Doyle, "Religious Freedom in Canada," Journal of Church
and State, Vol. 26, Autumn
1984 D. 413 at 420.
(23)For a complete copy of the organization's letters patent, see Appendix B:
"Letters Patent for the
Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Canada."
(24)Conversation with James Penton, 1O September 1992. Dr. Penton was not sure
whether the same tactics are employed in Canada.
(25)For further financial details of the Society, see Appendix C: "Revenue
Canada, Registered Charities Return and Public Information for the Watch Tower
Bible and Tract Society of Canada."
(26)Retail, Wholesale and Deparnnent Store Union, Local 580 v. Dolphin Delivery
lad. (1986), 25 C.R.R. 321 (S.C.C.) [hereinafter Dolphin Delivery].
(27)Dolphin Delivery, at 336.
(2S)McKinney v. University of Guelph (1990), 76 D.L.R. (4th) 545 at 637 (S.C.C.).
(29)(1991), 2 o.R. (3d) 304 at 313 (o.C.G.D.).
(30)Reed v. The Queen (1989), 41 C.R.R. 371 at 376 (F.C.T.D.), affirmed (1990),
2 C.R.R. (2d) 192
(F.C.A.), leave to appeal to S.C.C. refused (13 December l99O) Doc. 22013 (S.C.C.).
(31) Dolphin Delivery at 343.
(32)Salituro v. The Queen (l99l), 8 C.R.R. (2d) 173 at 189 (s.c.c.).
(33)(1988), 32 C.R.R. 1 at 15 (Que.C.A.).
34)See, for example, Ukranian Greek Orthodox Church v. Trustees of Ukranian
Greek Orthodox
Cathedral of St. Mary the Protectress (194O), [194O] 3 D.L.R. 67O at 692 (S.C.C.):
the Court would
not grant an injunction to stop an excommunicated priest from officiating at
his church because the
civil courts of Canada will not allow their processes to be used to enforce
"purely ecclesiastical"
decrees or orders
(35)Reed v. the Queen, at 374-3S.
(36)See Christensen v. Bodner [No. 1] (1975), 65 D.L.R. (3d) 549 (Man.Q.B.)
and Christensen v.
Bodner [No. 2] (1977), 2 A.C.W.S. 1077 (Man.Q.B.); see also Zebrosh v. Jehovah's
Witnesses
(1988), 87 A.R. 229 at 235 (Alta.C.A.), leave to appeal to the Supreme Court
of Canada refuse
(37)(1886),26 N.B.R. 403 at 411-12 (N.B.C.A.).
(38)Zebrosh v. Jehovah's Witnesses (1986),71 A.L.R.2S9 at 268 (Alta.Q.B.).
(39)Zebroski (Alta.C.A.) at 237.
(40)Zebroski (Alta.C.A.) at 228.
(41)The case is described in Penton (198S) at p. 8O-83.
(42)Conversation with James Penton, lO September 1992.
(43)Ibid.
(44) Hofer v. Hofer [1970]S.C.R. 958 at 975
(45)Conversations with ex-JWs, 1O and 1 1 September 1992.
APPENDIX A
SELECTED MATERIALS. ON THE TREATMENT OF EX-JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES.
Books
Beverly, James A. Crisis of Allegiance: A Study of Dissent Among Jehovah's Witnesses.
Welch Publishing Company Inc., Burlington (Ontario), 1986, 108 pages plus appendix.
Beverly documents one of the most well-known expulsions in the history of Jehovah's
Witnesses in Canada: the excommunication of Dr. James Penton, a devoted church
elder and fourth generation member. Also, he generally explores and criticizes
the beliefs of this religion.
Botting, Heather and Gary. The Orwellian World of Jehovah's Witnesses. University
of Toronto Press, Toronto, 1984, 213 pages including glossary, bibliography,
and illustrations.
The Bottings, who are former Jehovah's Witnesses, outline and critically analyze
the historical development of the religion, its beliefs, indoctrination processes
and power structure.
Callwood, June. Jim: A Life With AIDS. Lester & orphen Dennys Publishers,
Toronto, 1988, 310 pages.
of
This book chronicles Jim St. James' four-year battle with AIDS as a disfellowshipped
Jehovah's Witness, including his struggle to reconcile his homosexuality, his
dedication to Jehovah, and his fractured family relations.
Penton, M. James. Apocalypse Delayed: The Story of Jehovah's Witnesses. University
of Toronto Press, Toronto, 198S, 4OO pages including bibliography and illustrations.
Penton provides a comprehensive and critical historical analysis of doctrinal
and organizational developments in the Jehovah's Witnesses movement.
Articles (listed in chronological order)
"Jehovah's Witnesses Eyeing Reform Group." The Edmonton Journal, 26
December 1980.
"A Heresy Trial in Lethbridge: Witness Hatred of Him, Says the Accused,
is 'Pathological'." Alberta Report, 27 February 1981, p. 24.
Testa, Bart. "Bearing Witness to a Mass Exodus." Maclean's, 16 March
1981, p. 47.
"Witnesses Pro and Con: The Sect Talks 'Loyalty' as its Dissidents Confer."
Alberta Report, SO July 1981, p. 31.
Harpur, Tom. "Jehovah's Witnesses Split over Transfusions: Prominent Member
Expelled for
Saying Transfusion Ban Based on Misreading." Toronto Star, 2O January 1982.
Sheppard, John. "Lethbridge's Leader of Dissent: Professor Penton Spearheads
a Jehovah's Witness Revolt.' Alberta Report, 8 February 1982.
ostling, Richard N. and Anne Constable. "ostracised: A Sect Leader Falls."
Time, 22 February 1982, p. 4O.
Bergman, Brian. "Jehovah's Dissidents: Brooklyn JWs Face Alberta-Led Protesters."
Alberta Report, 8 October 1984, p. 46.
Henker, Barbara. "Witness for the Persecution: An Anti-Cult Centre opens
Fire on 'Pseudo'Christians." Alberta Report, 6 May 198S, p. 3O.
Penton, M. James. "Heather and Gary Botting, The Orwellian World of Jehovah's
Witnesses and Raymond Frantz [sic], Crisis of Conscience [book reviews]."
The Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology / La Revue canadienne de Sociologie
et d Anthropologies Vol. 24 No. 1, February 1987, p. 138.
Weagerbe, Steve. "A 'Heretic' Defended: Crisis of Allegiance by James A.
Beverly." Western Report, 16 February 1987, p. 44.
Delacourt, Susan. "outcast Witnesses Unite in Network: Devastated by Shunning
Former Members Say." Globe and Mail, 25 July 1987.
Cayouette, Pierre. "La loi des Temoins de Jehovah: divine ou ... inhumaine?
-- Des temoinages troublants." Le. Devoir, 8 March 1988.
Burns, David. "A Watchtower Win: 'Disfellowshipped' Witnesses Lose Again
in a 12-Year base." Alberta Report, 25 July 1988, p. 32.
Howes, Carol. "Church Delivers a Spiritual Sentence: Ejected Witnesses
Ask for 'Fair' Hearing." Calgary Herald, 10 March 1991.
Clemente, Peter. "Seeking Political Salvation: A Shunned Jehovah's Witness
Complains to MPs." British Columbia Report, 11 May 1992, p. 32.
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