Steven Alan Hassan is an anti-cult activist and director of the Center for Freedom of Mind. He served as an expert witness to the 1977-1978 congressional inquiry that produced the United States Congressional Report on the Unification Church, and has appeared on 60 Minutes, Nightline, Dateline, Larry King Live, and The O'Reilly Factor.
He holds a master's degree in psychology from Cambridge College, Cambridge, Massachusetts and is a licensed mental health counselor (LMHC) in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, as well as a nationally certified counselor (NCC).
After his leg was broken in a van accident, his parents contacted former members of the Unification Church who engaged in a deprogramming session with Hassan, and convinced him to leave the organization.
Following the Jonestown tragedy in 1979, Hassan founded a non-profit organization called "Ex-Moon Inc.," whose membership consisted of over 400, of the perhaps 90,000, former members of the Unification Church.
Around 1980, Hassan began investigating many methods of persuasion, mind control and indoctrination. At this time he attended a seminar with Richard Bandler and John Grinder (the co-founders of Neuro-Linguistic Programming) on hypnosis. Later Steven Hassan moved to Santa Cruz, California to start an apprenticeship with transformational grammarian, John Grinder (p.32, Hassan, 1990).
His first book, Combatting Cult Mind Control (1990), comparing his cult experiences with Robert Jay Lifton's description of brainwashing methods from Korea, has been widely praised by counselors and psychologists involved in the field of cult research, as well as former cult members and friends and relatives of active cult members.
Some have apparently claimed that Hassan has also turned in some of the more extreme members of the anti-cult movement to the authorities for their illegal acts, including kidnapping. There is no evidence of this from either of his books or his web site
Ten years later, in Releasing the Bonds: Empowering People to Think for Themselves, he developed his own mind-control model, "BITE", which stands for Behavior, Information, Thoughts, and Emotions. Hassan contends that cults recruit members through a three-step process which he refers to as "unfreezing," "changing," and "refreezing," respectively. This involves the use of an extensive array of various techniques, including systematic deception, behavior modification, withholding of information, and emotionally intense persuasion techniques (such as the creation of phobias), which he collectively terms mind control. He calls such groups "destructive cults," a term that he defines by the methods used to recruit and retain members, and the effect that such methods have on members, rather than by the theological/sociological/moral views the group espouses. He is opposed to the so-called non-consensual deprogramming of cult members, and supports instead counseling them in order that they withdraw voluntarily from the organization. He writes:
My mind control model outlines many key elements that need to be controlled: Behavior, Information, Thoughts and Emotions (BITE). If these four components can be controlled, then an individual's identity can be systematically manipulated and changed. Destructive mind control takes the 'locus of control' away from an individual. The person is systematically deceived about the beliefs and practices of the person (or group) and manipulated throughout the recruitment process — unable to make informed choices and exert independent judgment. The person's identity is profoundly influenced through a set of social influence techniques and a "new identity" is created — programmed to be dependent on the leader or group ideology. The person can't think for him or herself, but believes otherwise. *
Hassan says he spent one year assisting with deprogrammings before turning to less controversial methods. (See exit counseling.) However, lawyer Andy Bacus of the Unification Church, against whom Hassan spoke to Congress as an expert witness, told the Illinois Senate Committee on Education on December 7, 1993 that:
Steve Hassan ... is an ex-member of the Unification Church who was involuntarily deprogrammed. He has spent the last 15 years deprogramming other persons. Mr. Hassan has been most active recently in providing "exit counseling" to members of the Boston Church of Christ. In fact Hassan, who charges $1,000 per day for his services, has received tens of thousands of dollars from the parents of members of the Boston Church of Christ and other groups to provide "exit counseling" services. Like other "exit counselors", Hassan relies on the mind control theories of Margaret Singer to justify his actions. *
Human Rights Activist Rev. John B. Brown,II has also pointed out that page 114 of Hassan's book, Combating Cult Mind Control says, "Forcible intervention can be kept as a last resort if all other attempts fail," indicating that Hassan might resort to a forcible intervention if all other attempts fail.
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