|
International Cultic Studies Association
Article News Summaries
|
|
|
Vol. 1, No. 1, 2002 |
|
| _______________________________________________ |
| News Summaries |
|
| |
News Summaries: December 15, 2001 to January 15, 2002
|
| |
Group: Caritas |
|
|
Founder: Terry Colafrancesco |
Caritas
Caritas Called "Cult" in Ex-member Suit
Five former members of Caritas, a multimillion-dollar organization that promotes visions of the Virgin Mary, have sued the organization in Alabama state court claiming that leader Terry Colafrancesco lures people into Caritas with promises of spiritual enrichment and then drains them of money, forces families to live in nasty trailers at the
group's compound, and controls their lives almost totally.
Plaintiffs include a one-time Colafrancesco lieutenant and five parents suing on behalf of their children, who still live among some 50 mostly Roman Catholics at the Caritas mission, 50 miles south of Birmingham. Since the visit to Alabama in 1988 of Marija Pavlovic Lunetti, one of six young people who claim to have seen the Virgin in the town of Medjugorje in the
former Yugoslavia, Caritas has become one of the largest organizations dedicated to spreading the messages of Medjugorje. (AP, Birmingham, AL Ledger -Inquirer, 12/13/01, Internet)
|
| |
| _____________________________________________ ^ |
|
|
___________________________________________^ |
| |
|
International Cultic Studies Association
Article News Summaries
|
|
|
Vol. 1, No. 1, 2002 |
|
| _______________________________________________ |
| News Summaries |
|
| |
News Summaries: December 15, 2001 to January 15, 2002
|
| |
Group: Caritas |
|
|
Founder: Terry Colafrancesco |
Caritas
Caritas Called "Cult" in Ex-member Suit
Five former members of Caritas, a multimillion-dollar organization that promotes visions of the Virgin Mary, have sued the organization in Alabama state court claiming that leader Terry Colafrancesco lures people into Caritas with promises of spiritual enrichment and then drains them of money, forces families to live in nasty trailers at the
group's compound, and controls their lives almost totally.
Plaintiffs include a one-time Colafrancesco lieutenant and five parents suing on behalf of their children, who still live among some 50 mostly Roman Catholics at the Caritas mission, 50 miles south of Birmingham. Since the visit to Alabama in 1988 of Marija Pavlovic Lunetti, one of six young people who claim to have seen the Virgin in the town of Medjugorje in the
former Yugoslavia, Caritas has become one of the largest organizations dedicated to spreading the messages of Medjugorje. (AP, Birmingham, AL Ledger -Inquirer, 12/13/01, Internet)
|
| |
| _____________________________________________ ^ |
|
|
___________________________________________^ |
|