From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Believe What You Like
Cover
Author C. H. Rolph
CountryGreat Britain
LanguageEnglish
Subject Mental health, Scientology
Genre Non-fiction
Publisher Andre Deutsch Limited
Publication date
1973
Media typePrint
ISBN 0-233-96375-8
OCLC 815558
131/.35
LC ClassBP605.S2 H47

Believe What You Like: What happened between the Scientologists and the National Association for Mental Health (Andre Deutsch Limited, 1973, ISBN  0-233-96375-8), written by the New Statesman director C. R. Hewitt under the pen name C. H. Rolph, details a public dispute between the Church of Scientology and the National Association for Mental Health (now known as Mind) in Britain.

Main points

The book covers the controversy of how, starting in 1969, members of the Church joined the NAMH in large numbers with the intent to change the organization from the inside. The Scientologists attempted to ratify as official policy a number of points concerning the treatment of psychiatric patients, and in so doing, secretly promoted Scientology's anti-psychiatry agenda. When their identity was realized, the Scientologists were expelled from the organization en masse, but later sued the NAMH over the matter in the High Court in 1971 and lost. The case was important in UK charity law.

The book also covers the origins and activities of the Church of Scientology in the UK and some of their other legal actions in the UK around that time, including:

See also

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Believe What You Like
Cover
Author C. H. Rolph
CountryGreat Britain
LanguageEnglish
Subject Mental health, Scientology
Genre Non-fiction
Publisher Andre Deutsch Limited
Publication date
1973
Media typePrint
ISBN 0-233-96375-8
OCLC 815558
131/.35
LC ClassBP605.S2 H47

Believe What You Like: What happened between the Scientologists and the National Association for Mental Health (Andre Deutsch Limited, 1973, ISBN  0-233-96375-8), written by the New Statesman director C. R. Hewitt under the pen name C. H. Rolph, details a public dispute between the Church of Scientology and the National Association for Mental Health (now known as Mind) in Britain.

Main points

The book covers the controversy of how, starting in 1969, members of the Church joined the NAMH in large numbers with the intent to change the organization from the inside. The Scientologists attempted to ratify as official policy a number of points concerning the treatment of psychiatric patients, and in so doing, secretly promoted Scientology's anti-psychiatry agenda. When their identity was realized, the Scientologists were expelled from the organization en masse, but later sued the NAMH over the matter in the High Court in 1971 and lost. The case was important in UK charity law.

The book also covers the origins and activities of the Church of Scientology in the UK and some of their other legal actions in the UK around that time, including:

See also

External links


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