Archived Site: Jonestown Survivor

Information Concerning this Archived Site

Source: https://jonestownsurvivor.com (Inactive)

This is the archive of a large website of articles and blogs published in conjunction with the book, Jonestown Survivor: An Insider’s Look. The book and all the material in this archive were written by Laura Johnston Kohl, a member of Peoples Temple who survived the tragedy in Jonestown by being in Guyana’s capital city of Georgetown on 18 November 1978.

Following the twentieth anniversary of the Jonestown tragedy, Ms. Johnston Kohl became a prolific writer and active public speaker, work she continued to do until shortly before her death on 19 November 2019. She also made herself available to family members of those who perished in Guyana and scholars who try to understand the calamity of the ending. Finally, she was a generous contributor of articles and remembrances for the Alternative Considerations site, all of which may be found here.

In the interest of preserving the information from her site for future generations of Jonestown scholars and researchers, the managers of this site obtained permission from Laura’s husband Ron Kohl to archive her work in its entirety. Both the archive and the book itself are published with his permission.

Jonestown Survivor – 2nd book in the Works!

JONESTOWN SURVIVOR – Book 2 is in the Works!

I am excited to say that I am resuming my work on my second book. I am setting the deadline for my first draft mid-June 2019.

This book will have four parts:

  1. Updates on all things Peoples Temple/Jonestown that I have learned since I wrote my first book Jonestown Survivor: An Insider’s Look in 2009 and published it in 2010.

  2. Putting Peoples Temple and the rise of Jim Jones in Historical Perspective.

  3. Jonestown and Guyana – last March, seven of us returned to Guyana and Jonestown. My husband Ron, and son Raul, Jordan Vilchez (a fellow survivor) and three close friends took the trip (Richmond Arquette, Rikke Wettendorff and Kevin Kunishi).

  4. Unintended victims of the Jonestown tragedy. There are many stories that are overlooked when we reflect on the 918 people died in Jonestown. Those 918 deaths have affected thousands more family members and friends. I will include some of the stories.

 

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