Luc Jouret

Belgian cult leader (1947–1994)

Luc Georges Marc Jean Jouret (October 18, 1947October 5, 1994) was a Belgian cult leader, homeopath, and second in command of the Order of the Solar Temple (alongside Joseph Di Mambro) a new religious movement. He, alongside 52 other members of the group, died in a mass murder-suicide on October 5, 1994.

Quotes

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  • Quel avenir pour nos enfants ? Au fond, c'est une question qui nous intéresse tous. C'est vrai que partout, des voix s'élèvent dénonçant la pollution. Qui dénoncent la disparité des richesses, qui dénoncent la guerre. Des voix s'élèvent partout pour essayer de protéger ce qui est encore à protéger, mais pourtant. Les décisions qui sont prises pendant les rassemblements internationaux sont extrêmement lentes. Trop lentes, pour ce qui pourrait apparaitre comme potentiellement la survie de l'humanité. Donc nous sommes, nous les hommes d'aujourd'hui, confronté avec la nécessité de repenser notre existence. Il est urgent de le faire, car ce qui disparait ne disparait que physiquement mais engendre le début d'un nouveau cycle ; une nouvelle existence.
    • What future for our children? In the end, it is a question that interests us all. It is true that everywhere, voices rise that speak against pollution. Voices that rise against wealth disparity, against war. Voices rise to attempt to protect what is still worth protecting, and yet. Decisions which are taken during international conferences are extremely slow, too slow, for what can seem to potentially be humanity's survival. So we, the men of today, are confronted with the need to rethink our existence. It is urgent to do so, as all that disappears only disappears physically but is the beginning of a new cycle, a new existence.
    • La Fraternité, 2023, episode 1
  • In the interior of the physical body there blooms a vital force, a vital energy which was there before Man’s physical appearance on earth.
    • Quoted in Hall, John R.; Schuyler, Philip D. (2000). "The Mystical Apocalypse of the Solar Temple" (in en). Apocalypse Observed: Religious Movements and Violence in North America, Europe, and Japan. London; New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-203-97766-8. 
  • You are not sick because you have a disease; you have a disease because you are sick.
    • Quoted in Hall & Schyuler 2000
  • L’homme n'a aucune raison d’être. Que nous mourions tous maintenant, le soleil ne s'arrêtera pas de briller.
    • Man has no reason to exist. If we all die now, the sun won't stop shining.
    • Quoted in Bédat, Bouleau & Nicolas 1997 (Bédat, Arnaud; Bouleau, Gilles; Nicolas, Bernard (1997) (in fr). L'Ordre du Temple Solaire: Enquête et révélations sur les chevaliers de l'apocalypse. Montréal: Libre Expression. ISBN 978-2-89111-707-4. )
  • If you make the first steps, I’ll make sure that you make the other ones.
    • Talking to former member Hermann Delorme, quoted in Hall & Schyuler 2000

About Luc Jouret

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  • You start listening and by God, you know, you just all of a sudden feel so attracted to what he is saying. You talk about the universe, you talk about how man is made of four ingredients and how the stars are made of these same four ingredients. Then you go back to Egypt and Egyptology, and then somewhere along the line comes the possibility of extraterrestrials. And it goes on and it goes on like that. But the more you hear, the less you understand, and therefore, the more you want to know. You slowly get caught up in the web.
    • Hermann Delorme, quoted in Hall & Schyuler 2000
  • [...] the real problem was that Luc Jouret and Jo DiMambro were people who couldn't very easily tolerate any kind of criticism or opposition. I remember a small but significant personal experience with Luc Jouret in December 1987. [...] We spoke for about 3 hours and at some point I mentioned two lines about him that had been published in an anti-cult booklet in France. It was really nothing of consequence. It wasn't even associated with the group he belonged to at that time, but to another group to which he had belonged before. When I mentioned that book, he told me, "Oh yes, Mr. Mayer, really that's something which I didn't like at all." He explained to me that he had tried to call the author in order to get a correction, and the author refused to speak with him. He called the author a second time. The author refused again. He called the author a third time. The author turned him down, and he told me, "you know, Mr. Mayer, one week later he was dead."
    This kind of remark is quite enlightening about the real allergy to opposition which such a man could have developed. I took it, of course, as a hidden warning to me. It seems I was the only person investigating the group to any extent. I hasten to say that it is not very clever, because usually if people warn me this way it makes me only more curious.
    • Mayer 1998
  • Il disait que son père avait été inutilement sévère, qu’il ne lui avait laissé aucune liberté. Pour cette raison, il se montrait partisan d’une éducation très ouverte, sans contraintes, pour que les gamins s’épanouissent. C’est pour ça, me confiait-il, qu’il aimait par-dessus tout la liberté. Il pensait à la sienne, bien sûr.
    • He said that his father had been unnecessarily strict, that he hadn't allowed him any freedom. For this reason, he was in favor of a very open education, with no constraints, so that kids could blossom. That's why, he confided to me, he loved freedom above all else. He was thinking of his own, of course.
    • Gilbert Leblanc, a former patient of Jouret, quoted in Bédat, Bouleau & Nicolas 1997
  • For outsiders, Luc Jouret was definitely a charismatic, charming personality. He was a very, very impressive person, especially in his interaction with with an audience. I did some research on the group in 1987, and at that time I attended lectures given by Luc Jouret for hours in front of several hundred people.
  • I remember the very first lecture, already mentioned, which I attended with Luc Jouret. That was March of 1997 in Lausanne. Luc Jouret was lecturing on the topic "Love and Biology." On the advertisement it simply said: "Luc Jouret, Physician. Love and Biology." Nothing apocalyptic in the title. But after 10 or 20 minutes, he was already delivering a spiritual message with a strong apocalyptic content, telling the audience that volcanoes are about to erupt, forests are dying, this earth can no more endure these atrocities generated by mankind, and so on. This was a typical tone in his lectures.
  • Jouret’s act forces us to recognize the religious motifs that lurk beneath even the most materialist assessments of the unraveling environment, as if all the secular tools of activist science and politics cannot help us dodge the West’s great cataclysmic story. Just as some tribal societies ritually enact the birth of the cosmos, Jouret performed civilization’s end, magically expressing the ideology of those ecologists who get so deep they start lobbying for the voluntary extinction of the human race.
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