Heaven's Gate: The Definitive Story is an American documentary about the religious cult Heaven's Gate, whose 39 disciples committed suicide in San Diego in 1997.
The documentary originally aired in the USA on The Learning Channel on 18 March, 2007. It is an hour long.
Heaven's Gate: The Definitive Story aired in South Africa on DStv's Crime and Investigation Network channel on Thursday 20 March 2008, at 20h40.
Repeats
Friday 21 March: 02h40, 14h40
Sunday 23 March: 22h20
Monday 24 March: 04h20, 16h20
Synopsis
Heaven's Gate was the name of an American religious group led by Marshall Applewhite and Bonnie Nettles. Applewhite convinced 39 followers to commit suicide.
He told them that the appearance of Hale-Bopp, an unusually bright comet, was the sign for them to shed their earthly bodies and join a spacecraft travelling behind the comet which would take them to a higher plane of existence.
We revisit the final hours of the California cult members and find out what happened to the relatives and remaining members left behind.
The Crime
On 26th March 1997, 39 members (21 women and 18 men) of the Heaven's Gate group committed suicide in a rented mansion in California.
The mass suicide, which took place across three days, was scheduled in shifts with all members first drinking citrus juices to cleanse their bodies of impurities. A lethal concoction of Phenobarbitol mixed with vodka was then consumed before plastic bags were secured over their heads to induce asphyxiation.
All of the members were dressed identically in black shirts and tracksuit bottoms with brand new training shoes and arm bands which read 'Heaven's Gate Away Team'. The group's leader, Marshall Applewhite also took his own life.
Two months later, two additional members - Wayne Cooke and Charlie Humphreys - attempted a copycat suicide in a hotel room. Cooke died but Humphreys survived, only to finally succeed in February 1998 when he killed himself in the Arizona desert.
Applewhite
The Heaven's Gate cult was formed by Marshall Applewhite and Bonnie Nettles in the mid 1970s. Commonly referred to as 'Bo and Peep', the pair came to believe that they were extraterrestrials from Heaven (the 'next level'), who offered humans yet another chance to move to a higher evolutionary level.
Applewhite's background reveals a life which was dominated from his early years by the fact he was gay but totally disgusted by his own feelings. He was discharged from the U.S. Army in his twenties on supposed charges of homosexual activity with a recruit.
To maintain a 'cover', he married in 1962 and had two children but was then later released from his position as a university music professor amid rumours he had seduced a male student.
Applewhite's sexual inclinations played a vital part in the formation of his subsequent groups and he met Nettles, while she was working as a nurse some years later in the hope she may 'cure' him of this 'disease'.
The GroupThe Heaven's Gate group was in fact the latest of three 'creations' founded by the duo. First came the Human Individual Metamorphosis (HIM) in which they travelled to the Colorado desert to wait for a UFO.
Then when Nettles died of cancer in 1985, Applewhite formed the Total Overcomers Anonymous (TOA) group in 1993 and placed an advertisement in the USA Today newspaper announcing that the Earth's present civilization was about to be 'recycled'.
The group works on the philosophy that a person has several paths to leave Earth and that the human body is only a vehicle that made to help them on their journey. The structure of Heaven's Gate resembles a medieval monastic order.
Group members give up their material possessions and live a life devoid of indulgences such as sex. The group is tightly knit and everything is shared communally.
Some male members of the group voluntarily underwent castration before the suicide in 1997 as an extreme means of maintaining the supposed 'ideal' ascetic lifestyle.
In common with many similar groups, they believe that UFOs are inter-stellar space ships operated by extra-terrestrial beings attempting to bring humanity to a higher level of knowledge.
However a belief that Heaven's Gate adhere to - but is not shared by other UFO groups - is that by committing suicide together at the correct time, they will leave their containers (bodies) behind and the soul goes to sleep until it is 'replanted' in another container.
Eventually, the soul will be grafted onto a representative of the 'level above human'. The latter will be on-board a UFO space ship such as the group believes is currently hidden behind the Hale-Bopp comet.
The timing of the mass suicide in 1997 was apparently triggered by the arrival of Easter, and by the closest approach to earth of the Hale-Bopp comet, which they regarded as a celestial marker.
The InvestigationIt seems that despite the worldwide media furore that followed the events on 26th March, no lessons were learned by the survivors of the Heaven's Gate cult or people intrigued by the group's ethos.
In fact, since the mass suicide, the media coverage only served to draw attention to the group's cause with new members joining and the cult attempting a revival.
A website boldly proclaimed their return titled Heaven's Gate Lives: Apocalypse Now, which clearly shows that the delusion is still strong and, by default, just as dangerous.
A couple of the surviving members of the 1997 group who did not 'leave' in the mass suicide in have been maintaining the 'official' Heaven's Gate web site and distributing materials and information that the group left behind.
During the 1980's Heaven's Gate made over 500 audio tapes of their secluded classroom teachings and 11 videos. The survivors today have digitized over 200 hours of those audio tapes, and about 20 hours of Video material to store the entire archive on three CD-ROMs for the PC.
They are also making the CDs available at no charge, only requesting that the shipping charges be covered by the recipient.
Ultimately the cult lives on...