| "An Aural Journey with the Peoples Temple" by Brad Elliott |
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Brad Elliott is a video editor who was born and raised in Minneapolis. He owns a home there with his girlfriend of six years. His hobbies include collecting music and photography. His email address is brad.elliott@medialoft.com. Anyone who attempts to tell the Jonestown story – or any part of it, for that matter – appreciates how difficult it is to present it openly, honestly, and completely. The same holds true even for someone who tries to limit the story to that told through audiotapes, and to create a CD that captures the nuances of Peoples Temple and the man who led it. I was initially drawn to the Jonestown audi tape project because
I found it fascinating to be able to listen to untainted recordings
of Jim Jones and the Peoples Temple. I started picking tapes to listen
to based upon the FBI descriptions that were on the Jonestown Institute
website. Some of the tapes had transcripts available, while others
did not. The length of the Temple’s recording sessions and the
quality of the recordings, as I discovered, varied from tape to tape. I picked parts that I found interesting, shocking, and in a few cases
humorous. I did this by going through transcripts and highlighting
potential areas of interest. I would then go through the tape with
the transcript and try and locate the section in question. When there
was no transcript available, I listened to the entire cassette and
sampled as I listened. In some cases there were only a few areas of potential interest on a 120-minute cassette. It could take fifteen to twenty minutes to locate a section on a tape that had twenty-six pages of transcript. When I started requesting cassettes, it was merely part of my own
personal odyssey to learn more about Jim Jones and the Peoples Temple.
As I listen to the CD now, I feel it offers a well-rounded glimpse
into the lucid, odd, and disturbing moments of what it was like to
be a member of the Temple and to live in Jonestown. "Through clever and constant application of propaganda people can be made to see paradise as hell, and also the other way around, to consider the most wretched sort of life as paradise." Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf, 1923. There are a number of references to the evils of fascism, the Nazis,
and Hitler in the tapes I listened to. It seems ironic to me that
someone who claimed to have waved the flag of socialism ultimately
used a tool of early fascism to achieve his goals. This CD may be purchased for $10. This price includes postage to
anywhere in North America. The CD includes some rare images within
the color artwork. Sections of this CD do contain strong language
and mature subject matter that may not be for everyone. For more information
please email psnm@email.com. |
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