Margaret Singer / Margaret Thaler Singer, Ph.D.

Psychologist Margaret Singer, an expert on brainwashing and cults, died Sunday 23rd November 2003 after a long illness at Alta Bates Medical Center in Berkeley. She was 82.
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 International Cultic Studies Association (ICSA), P.O. Box 2265, Bonita Springs, FL 34133.
The
"Samurai
Grandmother" Margaret Singer has passed away…
I have known Margaret Singer for 23 years. First as a victim of
Scientology where Margaret personally counseled me back to sanity.
Second as my mentor where I studied everything she would give me to
read on cults and mind control and thirdly as a co-creator of
FACTNet where Margaret was always on our advisory board assisting
and guiding us to wise, rational decisions and actions.
I can truthfully say I have not met another person so gifted in
intelligence and strength and so guided by integrity and courage.
Though her courageous educational work Margaret reflected the
justice of the Divine at archetypal levels. She truly was her
nickname in the movement of the Samurai Grandmother.
I could not have gotten my life back if was not for Margaret's
wisdom. FACTNet would not exist now nor, would the good FACTNet has
done have ever happened --- had it not been for
Margaret.
I as an individual and FACTNet as an organization will honor her
memory by doing the best we can to spread her wisdom and balance
and, by continuing to help the victims of cults and mind control
all over the world.
I was privileged to have had many meetings on her kitchen table and
many meals with her. I fell in love with who Margaret was as a
person. I will miss those conversations and meetings
dearly.
Lawrence Wollersheim as an individual and as a Director for
FACTNet
Born
in Denver,
where her father was the chief engineer at the U.S. Mint, Singer
received her degrees from the University of Denver.
She began studying brainwashing in the 1950s at Walter Reed
Institute of Research in Washington, D. C., where she interviewed
U.S. soldiers taken prisoner during the Korean War.
Singer testified in the 1976 bank robbery trial of newspaper
heiress Patricia Hearst, who was kidnapped by the Symbionese
Liberation Army. She interviewed more than 3,000 cult members,
assisted in more than 200 court cases and was a leading authority
on schizophrenia and family therapy.
"My mom spent her whole life assisting other people - victims,
parents or lawyers - and often for free," said Sam Singer, a San
Francisco public relations consultant.
Occasionally threatened, Singer refused to back down. In a 2002
interview with the San Francisco Chronicle, she told how, at 80,
she had frightened off someone who'd been leaving menacing notes in
her mailbox.
"I've got a 12-gauge shotgun up here with a spray pattern that'll
put a three-foot hole in you, sonny, and you'd better get off my
porch, or you'll be sorry!" she shouted out the window.
Singer was the author of "Cults in Our Midst," a 1995 study on
cults that she revised earlier this year with analysis of the
connection between cults and terrorism.
She won the Hofheimer Prize and the Dean Award from the American
College of Psychiatrists, among other honors.
Dr. Margaret Singer was a professor of psychiatry at the University
of California in San Francisco and in the school of psychology at
the University of California in Berkeley. She often appeared as an
expert on issues of sects. She was generally concerned with the
problems which are caused by "coercive persuasion" and collected
experiences of American soldiers who returned home after being held
as POWs in North Korea, and recently, of the survivors of the
Peoples Temple sect in Guyana in November 1978.
She held a National Institute of Mental Health Research Scientist
Award and numerous other scientific awards. She also served as
president of the American Psychosomatic Society, as a senior
psychologist at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, and as
an advisory editor for professional journals.
"She
was a
remarkable person — the only genius I ever met in our
business," said Daniel Goldstine, chief psychologist of the
Berkeley Therapy Institute. "There are simply very few people
anywhere who had the clinical skills that she had — period.
In addition, she was a world-class researcher.
"She was twice nominated for a Nobel Prize for her work in
schizophrenia. That work revealed that the best indicator of the
disordered mind was the schizophrenic's odd and peculiar use of
language."
She is survived by her husband of 48 years, Jerome, and by her
children, Sam and Martha, all of Berkeley.
-
How does mind control work?: A technical overview of mind control tactics
-
How the United States Marine Corps Differs from Cults
Intruding into the Workplace -
Thought Reform Programs and the Production of Psychiatric Casualties
-
Undue Influence and Written Documents: Psychological Aspects
Cults
in Our
Midst
by Margaret Thaler Singer
Click to Purchase or see further
Reviews
"The strength of Cults in Our Midst is its
clear explanation of the nature of cults, how they operate, the
threat they pose to individuals, families, and society, and how
others can help cult survivors escape and recover. Many types of
cultic relationships are considered, from tiny religious or occult
groups to the "large group awareness training" programs that have
infiltrated workplaces."
Crazy
Therapies :
What Are They? Do They Work?
by Margaret Thaler Singer,
Janja Lalich
Click to Purchase or see further
Reviews
"An expose of alternative psychotherapeutic
philosophies and practices, revealing the sometimes harmful effects
of methods such as past-life therapy, alien-abduction therapy,
rebirthing, and skull adjustment. Outlines guidelines for
distinguishing legitimate therapeutic approaches from those that
are irrational or unethical, and offers advice on avoiding the
risks of entanglement. Reports on a broad spectrum of alternative
therapies--such as alien-abduction, channeling, inner-child work,
flower essence therapy, and karmic astrology--all of which the
authors contend are doing more harm than good to those who are
hoping for help."
CSJ Contribution:
-
Cultic Studies Journal, Vol. 3, No.1.,
-
Cultic Studies Journal, Vol. 7, No. 2
-
Cultic Studies Journal, Vol. 9, No. 2
-
Cultic Studies Journal, Vol.10, No.1
-
Ronald M. Enroth. Zondervan, Grand Rapids, MI, 1992, 227 pages.
-
Volume 10, No. 1, 1993
-
Reviewer
Other Contribution:
-
-
Cults, Psychological Manipulation:
1992, Arlington, Virginia Video Available
-
National Institute of Health, January 17, 1997, Bethesda, MD Video Available
-
National Institute of Health, January 17, 1997, Bethesda, MD Video Available
- Treatment Issues; Cults: Theory and Treatment IssuesVideo Available
-
Conference May 30, 1997, Philadelphia
-
Psychological Manipulation: The Abuse of Women Conference, May 30, 1997, Philadelphia Video Available
-
- Keynote Address- Psychological Manipulation: How it Works and Why Women are Vulnerable; "Crazy" Therapies: What Are They? Do They Work?
-
Symposium -Treatment and Cults: What Works with Whom; Psychological Manipulation: The Abuse of Women Conference, May 30 and May 31, 1997, Philadelphia
- AFF Annual Conference: Children and Cults
-
May 29 - May 31, 1998, Philadelphia, PA
- AFF Annual Conference: Jonestown Memorial
-
November 13-15, 1998, Chicago, IL
1999 Conference: Cults, Psychological Manipulation & Society, Minneapolis, MN, May 14-19, 1999


