From Deseret News archives:

Psychology group calms Utahns over film on LDS

Film claims church methods were like 'brainwashing'

Published: Monday, May 2, 2005 10:38 a.m. MDT
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It wasn't quite an apology, but Utah psychologists got some satisfaction this week during a visit from a national officer of the American Psychological Association.

The visit came Wednesday after members of the Utah Psychological Association complained that the national organization had characterized LDS Church methods of retaining members and motivating missionaries as "brainwashing," "mind control" and "powerful psychological techniques."

"It won't happen again," said Barry Anton, professor of psychology at the University of Puget Sound.

The descriptions were used last year during the APA's annual convention in Hawaii to garner attendance at the screening of an independent documentary film called "Get the Fire!" The film followed a pair of LDS missionaries in Europe and included interviews with former missionaries who had left the LDS Church after returning from their missions.

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In town Wednesday, Anton said the film's description was copied and reprinted from the film's own publicity materials, and — to his knowledge — had not been authored by anyone at the APA. Anton said he didn't believe the person responsible for putting the film's description in the APA program had an agenda but was probably in a hurry and was simply careless. A committee has now been put in place to vet any language accompanying films shown at the national convention, he said.

Film producer Nancy du Plessis told the Deseret Morning News in December 2003 that she got the LDS Church's permission to shoot 12,000 minutes of footage over 26 months, which included filming inside the Missionary Training Center in Provo and inside the home of a mission president in Germany. From that, she produced a 60-minute documentary.

The film aired on KUED in late 2003 to mixed reviews from local residents. At that time the church declined comment on the film.

St. George psychologist Gary Groom attended the film presentation last year at the APA convention "and recognized that it had a negative bias and (was) certainly not representative of the views and feelings of the vast majority of returned missionaries we have known over the years." He subsequently wrote to the president of the APA and talked with other psychologists who were surprised at the characterizations of the LDS Church in the APA's convention brochure and urged him to lodge a formal protest.

Groom approached another colleague from St. George, psychologist Chauncey Adams, who also sent a letter of disapproval to the APA. The two "felt that the bias shown in the film introduction (printed in the APA program) would likely cause outrage if it were similarly applied to any other religious or minority group," they said.

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Documentary filmmaker Nancy du Plessis

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