Misplaced Pages

Rehabilitation Project Force: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 12:37, 23 January 2006 view sourceMistress Selina Kyle (talk | contribs)5,617 edits rv vandalism by Terryeo← Previous edit Revision as of 12:37, 23 January 2006 view source Mistress Selina Kyle (talk | contribs)5,617 editsmNo edit summaryNext edit →
Line 1: Line 1:
{{ScientologySeries}}
The '''Rehabilitation Project Force''', or '''RPF''', is a system of work camps set up by the ] ], intended to "correct" members who had not lived up to expectations or had violated certain policies. There have been some reports of overwork and mistreatment at RPF facilities. In this program, members do physical labor tasks around Sea Org bases that do not involve skill. The '''Rehabilitation Project Force''', or '''RPF''', is a system of work camps set up by the ] ], intended to "correct" members who had not lived up to expectations or had violated certain policies. There have been some reports of overwork and mistreatment at RPF facilities. In this program, members do physical labor tasks around Sea Org bases that do not involve skill.



Revision as of 12:37, 23 January 2006

Template:ScientologySeries The Rehabilitation Project Force, or RPF, is a system of work camps set up by the Church of Scientology Sea Organization, intended to "correct" members who had not lived up to expectations or had violated certain policies. There have been some reports of overwork and mistreatment at RPF facilities. In this program, members do physical labor tasks around Sea Org bases that do not involve skill.

The RPF was originally intended to last no more than a couple of months, where the assignee would learn auditing, if he or she already was not an auditor by the "read it, drill it, do it" method. RPF members would then co-audit each other to better themselves and make each other more ethical and productive. If married, the assignee could visit with their spouse and children once a week.

However, after David Miscavige began rewriting the policies of L. Ron Hubbard on the RPF, the program now can take many years. Members now must be approved by Miscavige's Religious Technology Center before they can co-audit, which can be arbitrarily refused. Weekly visits with spouses and children are now forbidden and members cannot originate verbal communication or visual contact with Sea Org members who are not in the RPF. There are reports of Sea Org members actually being advised by Sea Org ethics personnel to divorce their RPF'd spouses.

In its goal of changing what the Church sees as incorrect thoughts and actions through work, the RPF now bears some resemblance to the system of reeducation through labor employed in China or the gulags of the Soviet Union.

See also

External links

Categories: