Tom Cruise’s Olympics Debacle: Why Anti-Cult Groups Are Calling It a ‘Disgrace!’

French activists have accused Scientologists of proselytizing outside Olympic venues. They say the rumored participation of the famous Scientologist actor would be ‘an insult to victims.’

CEO of Warner Bros. Discovery David Zaslav and actor Tom Cruise in the stands during the women's artistic gymnastics, in Paris, France, July 28, 2024.

CEO of Warner Bros. Discovery David Zaslav and actor Tom Cruise in the stands during the women’s artistic gymnastics, in Paris, France, July 28, 2024.

Anti-cult activists have condemned the likely appearance of Hollywood actor and well-known Scientologist Tom Cruise at the Paris Olympics closing ceremony on Sunday, August 11. While his attendance has not been confirmed, the Mission Impossible star is widely expected to be part of the Games’ final show, angering a French umbrella group for cult victims.

“The simple fact that we are talking about his presence is an insult to victims,” said Catherine Katz, a former French judge who heads UNADFI, a group dedicated to defending victims of cults. “It really is a bad message.” Charline Delporte, the president of victims’ association Caffes, called it “a disgrace.”

Anti-cult activists like Katz and Delporte accused Scientologists of recruiting outside Olympic venues, including the Stade de France north of Paris, which will host the closing ceremony. “They are very present at the big sporting events, they will no doubt reach many young people, I am very worried,” Delporte said.

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The movement describes itself as a religion but is considered a cult in France. Miviludes, a French government agency tasked with dealing with cult movements, said it had received reports of Scientology-linked “No to drugs” brochures being handed out across Paris.

While the 30-page leaflets do not explicitly mention the Church of Scientology, the campaign is connected to it via a Scientology-sponsored organization, Foundation For a Drug-Free World, Katz said. “They are sock puppets,” Katz told AFP. “If you don’t know who they are, you can fall for their grand values. They say they’re here to help drug addicts, but in fact it enables indoctrination.”

Miviludes said the flyers even turned up in some Parisian pharmacies. “We worry that this could be a proselytizing approach that has nothing to do with prevention,” its chief Donatien Le Vaillant told AFP. The agency warned against the “risks of psychological destabilization, exorbitant financial expectations” and people being split from their families and friends associated with Scientology, whose members have previously been convicted of fraud in France.

The movement opened a center in Saint-Denis, where the Stade de France is located, in April.

The facade of the new headquarters of the Church of Scientology in France, near Stade de France, in Saint-Denis, on April 6, 2024.
The facade of the new headquarters of the Church of Scientology in France, near Stade de France, in Saint-Denis, on April 6, 2024.

The Church of Scientology, which was founded by American writer L. Ron Hubbard in the early 1950s and counts Cruise and John Travolta among its members, is well-established in Hollywood and Los Angeles, where it owns multiple sprawling properties. It claims between 40,000 and 45,000 members in France, but one expert estimated the figure was more likely to be in the hundreds. Hubbard was sentenced in his absence to four years in prison for fraud in France in 1978, according to Miviludes.

Two of the movement’s main structures in France were also convicted of fraud, extortion and racketeering in 2013.

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