Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Mardi Gras with a sinister edge as Scientolog­ists open new Dublin HQ

- Donal Lynch

THE question of how Scientolog­y would transplant its cultish craziness into a leafy Dublin street was answered on Saturday afternoon as a small crowd of about 200 gathered to watch the ribbon cutting on the group’s new national affairs office on Merrion Square.

It was like a mini Mardi Gras with a sinister edge. A line of people waved Irish flags and sang as a small band played As The Saints Go Marching In. A cheer went up as party streamers ignited and the doors swung open to “the public” — which excluded any passers by or members of the press, who were strictly barred from entering ( journalist­s are thought of as ‘merchants of chaos’ by the church).

This was in keeping with the atmosphere of secrecy that pervaded the event. None of the gathered Scientolog­ists would speak on the record about their new venture, which was attended by some bigwigs from the internatio­nal church.

Disappoint­ingly, Scientolog­y’s best known adherents, Tom Cruise and John Travolta, were absent. Zabrina Collins, a prominent Irish Scientolog­ist, and the daughter of wrongfully convicted Donegal publican, Frank Shortt, glowered at waiting press. Meanwhile, Pete Griffiths, a former church member against whom she took out an injunction, waited on the other side of the square. He later claimed that he had been followed and intimidate­d by members of the church.

In America, the church (which is not registered here as a charity) has public streets shut down for grand openings, but since that isn’t possible in central Dublin, they relied on heavy-handed security — one Scientolog­ist told me I would “get myself in serious trouble” for standing on Merrion Square. As the mob spilled out onto the street and gardai arrived on the scene, a third Scientolog­ist had a taxi hold up traffic on the square itself, causing a long, if brief, tailback. (I was later told she was merely “inquiring about a fare”).

There will be 12 fulltime staff members at the new Dublin office, but a spokesman for the church refused to answer questions about how the roughly €2m purchase price of such a prestigiou­s address — minutes from government buildings — was financed last year.

One of the attendees of the Dublin event, Janet Laveau, once told The Guardian that negative publicity about the church actually aids it in recruitmen­t drives.

The last few years must be considered enlistment gold as the church has continued to be mired in controvers­y. According to reports in America and Britain, Cathriona White — the recently deceased girlfriend of Jim Carrey — and her husband Mark Burton, were Scientolog­ists.

The church itself corroborat­ed the report about White, but denied any link with her suicide, releasing a statement: “Saying that somebody was studying Scientolog­y in the past and connecting that to a suicide is like saying a person who had previously studied the Bible committed suicide.”

Louis Theroux’s recent documentar­y, My Scientolog­y Movie, shone further light on the bizarre and sinister allegation­s about the religion that counts Tom Cruise as its second in command.

There are only a smattering of Scientolog­ists in Ireland, but the heavy presence of the church here is thought to be a response, in part, to relentless­ly critical press coverage. Company accounts for the church showed that donations rose by almost 76pc last year.

Scientolog­y founder, L Ron Hubbard, briefly set up an office on Merrion Square in the 1950s. The place has changed a lot since then. Oscar Wilde, whose monument looked down bemusedly on the whole scene, once said that religion was “like a blind man looking in a black room for a black cat that isn’t there, and finding it”.

Whether Hubbard’s adherents manage to find their footing in Dublin remains to be seen.

‘A third Scientolog­ist had a taxi hold up the traffic on the square itself’

 ??  ?? SECRECY: The official opening of the Church of Scientolog­y’s national affairs office on Merrion Square. Photo: Fergal Phillips
SECRECY: The official opening of the Church of Scientolog­y’s national affairs office on Merrion Square. Photo: Fergal Phillips

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