'Hypocrite' Jehovah's Witnesses abandon
secret link with UN
Stephen Bates, religious affairs correspondent
Monday October 15, 2001
The Guardian
The Jehovah's Witnesses have hurriedly disaffiliated from the United
Nations within days of a Guardian story in which members accused
the sect of hypocrisy for supporting an organisation it has repeatedly
denounced privately.
After the article last Monday, the organisation's New York based
hierarchy pre-empted a UN inquiry by agreeing to dissociate the
Witnesses from an organisation which it holds to be the scarlet
beast named in the Book of Revelation.
The Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York, as the sect
is formally known, has 6m members worldwide and 130,000 in Britain.
It had been secretly affiliated to the UN as a non-governmental
organisation for 10 years.
Recognised organisations are supposed to demonstrate that they
share the UN's objectives, but Witnesses are instead told by elders
to regard it as "a disgusting thing in the sight of God and
his people" for allegedly aspiring to world domination like
Babylon the Great, the beast in Revelation.
The sect does not believe in participating in government and initially
strove to play down or deny the evidence of the UN's website, which
lists it as one of 1,500 affiliated NGOs.
Those bringing the evidence to light were accused of apostacy.
Disaffiliated members become known informally, like the rest of
humanity, as "bird seed" in line with biblical prophesy
of the fate of non-believers, whose corpses will be pecked bare
by crows.
Within hours of the article's appearance on the Guardian website
on Monday and its posting on a Jehovah's Witnesses bulletin board,
more than 14,000 people across the world had read it.
By yesterday there were 353 official posts and 325 message boards
discussing the article and its revelations, with Witnesses in the
US demanding to see copies of the paper.
(This article appeared on The
Guardian)

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