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O A R M H P
OHIO ASSOCIATION
OF RESPONSIBLE MENTAL HEALTH PRACTICES
December 2003
HAPPY HOLIDAYS EVERYONE!
I am sure glad I
did a profile of Margaret Singer recently, because it with much sadness we
report her death on November 23. She was a dear lady and helped not only us
personally. but the entire FMSF group in many ways. We will miss her.
Our old friend, Carol Tavris,
has written another great article. Check out her intelligent, thoughtful,
and worthwhile thoughts.
Carole
Margaret Singer -- expert on
brainwashing
Steve Rubenstein
Margaret Singer, the soft-spoken but hard-edged Berkeley psychologist and
expert on brainwashing who studied and helped authorities and victims better
understand the Peoples Temple, Branch Davidian, Unification Church and
Symbionese Liberation Army cults, has died.
Professor Singer, 82,
died Sunday after a long illness at Alta Bates Medical Center in Berkeley.
"She's one of a kind, the foremost authority on brainwashing in the
entire world," said lawyer Paul Morantz in an interview last year.
Morantz led the effort against the Synanon cult in the 1970s. "She is a
national treasure."
She testified in the 1976 bank robbery trial of newspaper heiress Patricia
Hearst, who was kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army, and at the 1977
hearing for five young members of the Rev. Sun Myung Moon's Unification
Church whose parents sought to have them "deprogrammed."
On the witness stand
or in the kitchen of her Berkeley hills home, where Professor Singer did
much of her work, she was calm, authoritative, smart, unshakable, funny and
unfailingly polite.
She interviewed more
than 3,000 cult members, assisted in more than 200 court cases and also was
a leading authority on schizophrenia and family therapy. "I might look
like a little old grandma, but I'm no pushover," she told a reporter
last year, just before tossing back another shot of Bushmills Irish whiskey,
her libation of choice.
"My mom spent
her whole life assisting other people -- victims, parents or lawyers -- and
often for free," said Sam Singer, a San Francisco publicist.
"Nothing gave her greater joy than helping to get someone unscrewed
up."
She was occasionally
threatened by cult leaders and their followers, and she never backed down.
Professor Singer liked to tell how, at the age of 80, she frightened off a
stalker who had been leaving menacing notes in her mailbox. "I've got a
12-gauge shotgun up here, sonny, and you'd better get off my porch, or
you'll be sorry!" she hollered out the window. "And tell your
handlers not to send you back!"
She was born in
Denver, where her father was the chief engineer at the U.S. Mint. She
received her bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees from the University
of Denver. She began to study brainwashing in the 1950s at Walter Reed
Institute of Research in Washington, D. C., where she interviewed U.S.
soldiers who had been taken prisoner during the Korean War. She came to
Berkeley in 1958 and found herself in a prime spot to study the cult scene
of the 1960s and 1970s.
"I started
hearing from families who had missing members, many of them young kids on
our campus, and they all would describe the same sorts of things," she
said. "A sudden change of personality, a new way of talking . . . and
then they would disappear. And bingo, it was the same sort of thing as with
the Korean War prisoners, the same sort of thought-reform and social
controls." "You find it again and again, any time people feel
vulnerable," she said. "There are always sharpies around who want
to hornswoggle people."
She dispensed much of
her advice over the phone, which always seemed to be ringing with anxious
parents, victims or lawyers from around the world, all seeking advice. For
decades, she also held court at a large table near the front door of
Brennan's bar and restaurant in West Berkeley, where she and her husband,
Jerome, were Tuesday night regulars and where she would treat friends and
admirers to corned beef, cabbage and multiple rounds of Irish coffee.
She was the author of
"Cults in Our Midst," the authoritative 1995 study on cults that
she revised earlier this year with analysis of the connection between cults
and terrorism. She was the winner of the Hofheimer Prize and the Dean Award
from the American College of Psychiatrists and of achievement awards from
the Mental Health Association of the United States and the American Family
Therapy Association. She was a past president of the American Psychosomatic
Society and a board member of the Kaiser Foundation Research Institute
Review Board and the American Family Foundation.
She is survived by her husband of 48 years, Jerome, and by two children, Sam
and Martha, all of Berkeley. A funeral will be held at 1 p.m. on
Monday at the McNary-Morgan, Engle and Jackson funeral home, 3630 Telegraph
Ave, Oakland. Memorial donations may be sent to the American Family
Foundation, P.O. Box 413005, Suite 313, Naples FL 34101-3005.
The San Francisco Chronicle NOVEMBER
25, 2003
O A R M H P
OHIO ASSOCIATION
OF RESPONSIBLE MENTAL HEALTH PRACTICES
440-356-4544
WWW.LTECH.NET/OHIOARMHP
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