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Perfect Children - Growing Up on the Religious Fringe (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,555
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Perfect Children - Growing Up on the Religious Fringe (Hardcover)
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Children born and raised on the religious fringe are a distinctive
yet largely unstudied social phenomenon -they are irreversibly
shaped by the experience having been thrust into a radical
religious culture by birth. The religious group is all
encompassing. It accounts for their family, their school, social
networks, and everything that prepares them for their adult life.
The inclusion of a second generation of participants raises new
concerns and legal issues. Perfect Children examines the ways new
religious movements adapt to a second generation, how children are
socialized, what happens to these children as they mature, and how
their childhoods have affected them. Amanda van Twist conducted
over 50 in-depth interviews with individuals born into new
religious groups, some of whom have stayed in the group, some of
whom have left. She also visited the groups, their schools and
homes, and analyzed support websites maintained by those who left
the religious groups that raised them. She also attended
conferences held by NGOs concerned with the welfare of children in
"cults." The main groups she studies include the Bruderhof,
Scientology, the Family International, the Unification Church, and
the International Society for Krishna Consciousness. Children born
into new religions often start life as "special children" believed
to be endowed with heightened spiritual capabilities. But as they
mature into society at large they acquire other labels. Those who
stay in the group are usually labeled as "goodies" and
"innovators". Those who leave tend to be labeled as "baddies" or
seen as "troubled." Whether they stay or leave, children raised on
the religious fringe experience a unique form of segregation in
adulthood. Van Twist analyzes group behavior on an
organizational/institutional level as well as individual behavior
within groups, and how these affect one another. Her study also
raises larger questions about religious freedom in the light of the
State's responsibility towards children, and children's rights
against the rights of parents to raise their children within their
religion.
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