News

The site of a horrific cult massacre, which saw the deaths of over 900 people, has been controversially opened to tourists.
The site of the Jonestown massacre, where over 900 people either died by mass suicide or murder in the Jim Jones-led cult, has opened for tourism.
The site of a chilling cult massacre, which resulted in the deaths of over 900 people nearly half a century ago, has been ...
By Michael Talibard, DOES religion drive a rift between generations? Not quite, but the fact that the elderly are generally more religious than younger adults can feel uncomfortable for both and is ...
That’s why taking a stand — activism — matters so much. If we want the good in people to win out, we have to give it voice ...
Looking back at Russia's past and present history and reality, Patriarch Kirill condemns those who ‘call for the purity of Islam or Orthodoxy,’ because ‘we may have different cul ...
Nearly 50 years after the Jonestown massacre shocked the world, the site of one of history's deadliest cult tragedies is now open to tourists, sparking debate over whether confronting the past is ...
Jonestown, the site in Guyana where more than 900 followers of cult leader Jim Jones died in a mass murder-suicide in 1978, ...
Pharaoh didn’t have the best launch – and frankly, the game itself is more to blame for that. It came out at an extremely ...
Related: This Picturesque River Town in Ohio is One of the Best-Kept Secrets in the Midwest The museum itself occupies a ...
There had been discussions about a mass suicide. In some circles, there were practice drills,” one survivor recounted to The ...
Jonestown is seared into the American psyche as one the darkest tragedies of the modern era, where 918 people “drank the Kool Aid” and ended their lives under the command of cult leader Jim Jones.