High school teachers allegedly indoctrinated students into a cult

 Wikimedia

A Connecticut couple filed a lawsuit Monday alleging that their daughters were indoctrinated into a religious cult by their high school instructors, and the brainwashing continued when the girls entered college.

The couple, identified in court documents only as John and Jane Doe, stated that Avon High School Spanish teachers Tanya Mastoloni, Rebecca Kessler, and Christopher Esposito, as well as guidance counselor Laura Sullivan, targeted their daughters with the purpose of religious conversion. Avon School District and Wellesley College are also named in the suit.

The lawsuit described in detail the type of organization that their 22- and 19-year old daughters were indoctrinated into.

"The two older Doe sisters were indoctrinated into a religious cult that promotes martyrdom, and celebrates death," the suit read. "This has caused the elder Doe sisters to experience fantasies of suicidal ideation and martyrdom."

The parents also stated that they noticed personality changes in their daughters.

"They became flat and distant, reclusive, secretive, and non-communicative," the parents claimed.

"They lost their humor and their empathy. They began speaking in a bizarre new language. They became unable to think critically or independently."

Allegedly, Ms. Mastoloni taught the girls about magic, astrology, numerology, and other mystical subjects.

"All of those topics are religious in nature, and none of those topics are included in the Avon School District curriculum," the suit stated.

The parents also said that when the two oldest girls graduated high school, they began spending personal time with Mastoloni, and were encouraged to attend Wellesley College together in Massachusetts. The Does allege that the girls secured housing at the school by claiming their parents abused them.

The youngest daughter, age 16, was targeted by the instructors, but broke free from them. That, the Does say, is when they discovered that their older girls had been converted.

Avon and Wellesley representatives told the Associated Press that they are investigating the claims.

News
The secret to true and lasting change
The secret to true and lasting change

True and lasting change is possible - though perhaps not in the way we’ve been taught to pursue it.

Churches urged to support alcohol-free January as millions sign up nationwide
Churches urged to support alcohol-free January as millions sign up nationwide

Churches across the UK are being encouraged to actively support Dry January this New Year, as millions of people commit to a month without alcohol.

42 Christian and Muslim men executed by bandits in Nigeria, women and children abducted
42 Christian and Muslim men executed by bandits in Nigeria, women and children abducted

Nigeria greeted the New Year with yet more violence by militants, with 50 people killed in a number of attacks that took place between 28 December and 3 January in the Middle Belt region.

Pre-Nicene Christian art found in Turkey
Pre-Nicene Christian art found in Turkey

The mural predates the Council of Nicaea in 325 AD.