Chicago Sun-Times

Leah Remini resumes her fight to shine a harsh light on Scientolog­y

Controvers­ial church hits back, accusing A& E of ‘ religious intoleranc­e,’ hatred

- Erin Jensen

Round two of the battle between Leah Remini and the Church of Scientolog­y begins Tuesday ( A& E, 9 p. m. ET/ PT) with the return of Leah Remini: Scientolog­y and the Aftermath.

Despite pushback from the Church of Scientolog­y, Remini forges ahead with 10 new episodes and an Emmy nomination for Outstandin­g Informatio­nal Series or Special.

“These people’s stories are important to be told, and exposing the abuses of Scientolog­y is something I feel is the right thing to do, having been in it most of my life and having promoted it and supported it,” says Remini, a church member until 2013 and author of Troublemak­er: Surviving Hollywood and Sci

entology. “There’s a lot of people out there who have lost a lot because of Scientolog­y, and they deserve to be heard.”

During Season 1, former Scientolog­ists shared stories alleging harassment, physical abuse and statutory rape. In response, the church has called into question the truthfulne­ss of the accusers.

“Nothing about A& E’s Leah Remini ‘ docuseries’ is honest. The singular goal of the program is to make money and boost ratings by spreading salacious lies to promote A& E’s ugly brand of religious intoleranc­e, bigotry and hatred,” the church said in a letter to USA TODAY from spokeswoma­n Karin Pouw.

The show’s November premiere drew 2.1 million same- day viewers, making it the network’s largest launch of an original series in more than two years at the time.

Remini has found others to share their stories for Season 2 of her hour-

“There’s a lot of people out there who have lost a lot because of Scientolog­y, and they deserve to be heard.” Leah Remini

long series, in spite of, she says, being made a pariah among celebrity Scientolog­ists.

“Their job is to avoid me at all costs,” she says. “They just make sure ... if I’m on one side of the room that they’re on another side of the room. Or they don’t show up to an event that they’re scheduled to be at if they know I’m gonna be there.”

Remini delves into how Scientolog­y policies affect members in the show’s second season.

“I think people would be shocked to know that when people go through a traumatic experience — like being raped or molested — that Scientolog­y punishes the victim and makes them responsibl­e for what had happened to them,” says Remini. In a statement from the church, the organizati­on says the accusation that it condones sexual abuse is “false and defamatory.”

The first episode features women who claim to have been molested while employees of the church, Remini says.

“They don’t believe in therapies other than Scientolog­y, so people dealing with real mental issues don’t often get the

help that they need,” Remini claims. The church says: “We do not treat those who are mentally ill; we encourage such individual­s to be examined by a competent doctor.”

The church says it has been targeted because of Remini’s Aftermath. “To date, the Church has been subjected to more than 500 threats — including death threats, acts of vandalism and bullying everyday parishione­rs — inspired by Leah Remini and her A& E show,” Pouw’s letter reads. “The violence provoked falls directly at the feet of A& E CEO Nancy Dubuc, President Paul Buccieri and ( executive VP) Rob Sharenow, who should be ashamed for spreading bigotry and religious intoleranc­e.” A& E couldn’t be reached for comment.

“Sadly, as everyone knows from a number of recent tragic events, including those over the weekend in Virginia, we live in a volatile time of accelerate­d hate, bigotry and intoleranc­e,” the letter continues. “A& E’s airing of salacious, unvetted falsehoods about the Church is reckless and irresponsi­ble. The incendiary hate and bigotry they are fostering has no place in a tolerant America.”

 ?? A& E ??
A& E
 ?? PAUL WHITE, AP ?? In the first season of Leah Remini: Scientolog­y and the Aftermath, church leader David Miscavige, right, with Tom Cruise in 2004, was accused of physical abuse.
PAUL WHITE, AP In the first season of Leah Remini: Scientolog­y and the Aftermath, church leader David Miscavige, right, with Tom Cruise in 2004, was accused of physical abuse.
 ?? RICHARD VOGEL, AP ?? The Church of Scientolog­y says it has been the target of threats.
RICHARD VOGEL, AP The Church of Scientolog­y says it has been the target of threats.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? L. Ronald Hubbard founded the Church of Scientolog­y.
GETTY IMAGES L. Ronald Hubbard founded the Church of Scientolog­y.

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