Slavery Of Faith...the quietly kept story of a young woman's escape
through the jungles of Jonestown, Guyana the morning of the
massacre November 18, 1978 and her struggles to live in the
aftermath.
November 18, 2008 marks 30 years since the Jonestown, Guyana
Massacre/Suicides and the death of its founder, the Reverend Jim
Jones.
Escaping Jonestown, Guyana the morning of November 18,1978 with
nine others, Leslie Wagner-Wilson then twenty one years old,
trekked thirty seven miles through the jungle with a 40-pound care
package strapped to her back with a sheet, her son, later to be
known as the youngest survivor of Jonestown. That evening, she
would be told that Jonestown was gone along with her plan to escape
and return with her father, Richard Wagner who was a part of the
Concerned Relatives to free the rest of her family. Amongst the
carnage would be her husband, mother, brother, sister, niece,
nephew, sister in law, brother in law and the friends she had grown
up and loved since 13.
Slavery of Faith reveals the life of a thirteen year old coming
of age in the heart of People's Temple Disciples of Christ Church
where the pastor Jim Jones, exhorted his followers to consider him
divine and to call him "Father" while he touted his extra-marital
affairs from the pulpit. The world of Jim Jones was one of inverted
ideals, isolation and alienation. However, what began as a church
that appealed to peoples inner spirit to help others, was turned
into a living hell. Yet it was a place she would go, half a
continent away, to be with her 2 year old son, who'd been taken to
Jonestown by Jim Jones as he made his exodus to Guyana. It shares
the horrors of Jonestown - the labor punishment squads, suicide
drills, sleep deprivation, drugging, and humiliations. It also
takes the reader through the escape that she says was revealed to
her in the spirit.
Thirty years since Jonestown, Slavery of Faith also chronicles
her return to the U.S. under a veil of secrecy in fear of the
"death squads," her fight to maintain her faith in her most darkest
hours; suffering survivors guilt, drug addiction, a family suicide,
and finally redemption. It shares her journey through psychological
and spiritual jungles to reach a place of remembrance-- to "live
their love and not their deaths." Faith has allowed her the
resiliency to as she states "tuck and roll" and discover that
through pain, tragedy and joy, her life has found divine order.
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