A distasteful twist on historically relevant issues.

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Marshall Applewho?



                “Gods going to be there, Jesus Christ is going to be there, all the angels and everything. And you know, whatever’s on the the beyond. I think it’s going to be more like Star Trek. Beaming me up into a space vehicle man then I’ll move on, recolonize to another planet or whatever but whatever’s on the beyond, I know it’s going to be good…”
-Aileen Wuornos, quoted the day before her execution on October 9th, 2002
               


Five years prior to this quote being aired 39 seemingly gender-less corpses were found lying peacefully in bunk-beds, wearing matching sweat suits and Nike’s in a mass suicide in Rancho Santa Fe, CA. The bodies belonged to Marshall Applewhite and his followers, members of the Heaven’s Gate cult. Heaven’s Gate was an eschatologically based religious cult that believed their bodies were just “vehicles”, a thought similar to that of Wuornos near the time of her passing. These vehicles needed to be discarded in order to take their souls to “another level of existence above human” according to members. Chances are wherever Aileen Wuornos wound up she would at least be right about the Star Trek part. Thomas Nichols, brother of Nichelle Nichols (Uhura from the original Star Trek series) was one of the unfortunate victims found that day. I’m sure he saved a seat for you, girl.
Heaven’s Gate was founded by Marshall Applewhite and Bonnie Nettles, also known and “Bo” and “Peep” or “Do” and “Ti”. They prophesized that they were “the two” that were spoken of in the Book of Revelation 11:3 and it was their responsibility to show the world that it was so. Both devoutly believed they were ‘walk-in’s’, meaning that they were extraterrestrial beings who had taken over adult human bodies, discarding the souls previously occupying them. The concept was certainly new but accepted by many in the 1970’s with the growing presence of the New Age movement. The group fluctuated in its amount of followers with their frequent tests of faith, at one point having roughly 200 men and women hanging on their every word. After the death of Nettles in 1985 the group dwindled down to only the most committed and Applewhite was forced to build his group anew.  
                In order to prove their devotion and trust in their walk-in status, that their human bodies were mere vehicles for their eternal souls, followers gave up many of the things that made them feel human; families, jobs, individuality, many men including Applewhite were even castrated to ensure a lack of sexuality entirely. They were tracking the comet hale-bopp because they believed it was being trailed by a UFO. This UFO was the supposed vessel in which their souls were to board. In order to make this possible, they had to commit suicide within the appropriate time period while it was closest to planet earth…obviously. March 19-20 all but a couple remaining members of the Heaven’s Gate cult drank their phenobarbital cocktail and passed away to be found one week later.
 It is a curious thought what happened to all 39 souls of those passengers of the “Heaven’s Gate Away Team” that had been replaced so long ago. Honey Boo Boo? Or should I say Honey Bo Bo?

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