A child victim of the notorious Australian cult The Family says he is relieved the cult’s “wicked witch” Anne Hamilton-Byrne has died.
Victim turned advocate Ben Shenton, who was given to the cult as an 18-month-old toddler and not freed until age 15, said he could now move on with his life after Hamilton-Byrne’s recent death at the age of 98.
He said Hamilton-Byrne would be judged for being “a tool and pawn of the devil”.
“I wouldn’t want to be her facing Jesus as her judge … [given] what she’s done,” Mr Shenton said.
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The cult leader was buried at St Paul’s Catholic Church in Monbulk, which is only 10km away from where she formed her cult group in the Dandenong Ranges.
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Anne #HamiltonByrne ‘s funeral and burial was on Wednesday. Little cemetery just out of Melbourne where several other cult members – and her third husband – are buried. Six feet under now. From a spy: “Just mud, disturbed. She didn’t amount to much in the end.”
— Chris Johnston (@mrcjohnston) June 21, 2019
Journalist Chris Johnston said The Family exploited basic human insecurities.
“It is human nature to fell the need of belonging in a family or a group or community,” said Johnston, who wrote a book on the cult.
Another writer exposing cults, Jo Thornely, advises people to beware of “anyone … telling you that you should no longer have contact with particular people you were close with before”.
“They (the friends) are the ones you should tell that you are in a cult.”
Self-styled cultbuster Raphael Aron defines a cult as a group which denies the opportunity to express free will and to be able to do things voluntarily.
He says they usually involve religions to a religious leader or a guru or a higher power.