> from http://www.msn.com
>
> Georgia sect alarms neighbors
>
> ‘Nuwaubians’ live on a 476-acre compound, with
> pyramids
>
> ASSOCIATED PRESS
>
> EATONTON, Ga., July 27 — A sect founded by an
> ex-convict has built two
> 40-foot pyramids and a giant sphinx amid the
> pines and red clay of middle
> Georgia, alarming some with its armed guards
> and prophecies of deliverance
> by spaceships from another galaxy.
>
> A gold pyramid serves as a mini-mall, with a
> bookstore and clothing store.
>
> The sheriff and the sect had an armed
> confrontation in April when he tried
> to escort a building inspector onto the
> property, and tensions are running
> so high that mediators from the U.S. Justice
> Department were called in
> earlier this summer.
>
> The members call themselves the Yamassee Native
> American Nuwaubians and
> claim to have created a utopian society on
> their 476-acre compound of
> Egyptian-style architecture.
>
> Many people in and around Eatonton — a rural
> community that was the
> birthplace of Alice Walker, author of “The
> Color Purple,” and Joel Chandler
> Harris, creator of the Uncle Remus tales — fear
> the Nuwaubians are similar
> to Heaven’s Gate, the cult whose 39 members
> committed mass suicide in 1997
> in Rancho Santa Fe, Calif., and the People’s
> Temple followers of Jim Jones.
>
> “This group here has a combination of all those
> schools of thought,” Sheriff
> Howard Sills said.
>
> About 100 Nuwaubians live in trailers on the
> compound. An additional 300 to
> 400 reside elsewhere in Putnam County. The
> Nuwaubians, most of whom are
> black, claim to be descended from the Egyptians
> and the Yamassees, a tribe
> of Indians indigenous to this part of Georgia.
>
> Past the armed guards at the compound’s
> entryway, Nile River Road stretches
> between two rows of statues of Egyptian
> royalty. A gold pyramid serves as a
> mini-mall, with a bookstore and clothing store.
> A labyrinth leads to the
> black pyramid, which serves as a church.
> Inside, an Egyptian-like chant hums
> over speakers 24 hours a day.
>
> The group’s lodge houses busts of King Tut and
> Queen Nefertiti and a glass
> tomb holding an alien-like creature with a huge
> head and bulging eyes.
>
> Members say they pay no dues and are free to
> come and go. And they insist
> that suicide is not in their plans.
>
> The group’s founder, Dwight York, who calls
> himself Malachi Z. York, served
> time in New York in the 1960s for assault,
> resisting arrest and possession
> of a dangerous weapon.
>
> A GALAXY CALLED ILLYUWN
>
> York has claimed to be from a galaxy called
> Illyuwn and has said that in
> 2003 spaceships are going to descend from the
> sky and pick up a chosen
> 144,000 people for a rebirth. Most recently,
> York has referred to himself as
> Chief Black Eagle, a reincarnated leader of the
> Yamassee Indians.
>
> “It’s a constantly opportunistic evolving
> ideology,” the sheriff said.
> “We’ve gone from an extraterrestrial to a
> Christian pastor to an Indian
> leader with willful and wanton resistance to
> legal authority time and time
> again.”
>
> The group’s spokeswoman, Renee McDade, and
> Marshall Chance, who is referred
> to as the Nuwaubians’ leader, distance
> themselves from the space prophecies
> of York, who lives on the compound and refuses
> to give interviews.
>
> “We’re all awaiting the coming of the real
> Messiah,” Chance said. “We are a
> biblical people. If it’s not in the Bible, then
> we’re not concerned about
> it.”
>
> ZONING DISPUTE
>
> The group moved to Georgia in 1993 from New
> York, where it had operated
> under other names, including the Ansaru Allah
> Community. A 1993 FBI report
> linked that group to a myriad of crimes,
> including arson and extortion.
>
> Until recently, the Nuwaubians pretty much kept
> to themselves. Then last
> year, the county rejected a request to have the
> property rezoned from
> agricultural to commercial. Since then, the
> Nuwaubians have been at odds
> with county officials.
>
> Shortly after the building inspector was denied
> access, the sheriff and his
> deputies tried to enter.
>
> “The armed guards literally stood in front of
> my car,” Sills said. “It was
> obvious to me that this was provocative and
> they wanted to provoke some sort
> of armed confrontation, so I decided to leave.”
>
> When the sheriff returned two months later, “we
> were served with this
> cockamamie lawsuit that said we’d be fined $5
> million if we went onto the
> property,” Sills said.
>
> The Nuwaubians said they have met all the
> permit requirements. “We feel
> they’re trying to impede us from our progress
> here. It feels like they’re
> trying to put us out of our land,” Chance said.
>
> Mediators from the Justice Department’s
> Community Dispute Resolution unit
> were asked to get involved after the Nuwaubians
> leveled charges of racism
> against officials in Putnam County, which has
> about 17,000 people, more than
> one-third of them black.
>
> “The Nuwaubians felt they were being harassed,
> the county officials said
> they were being harassed,” mediator Ernie
> Stallworth said. “Everyone was
> pointing a finger and that has lessened, but I
> still believe we have work to
> do.”
>
> © 1999 Associated Press. All rights reserved.
> This material may not be
> published, broadcast, rewritten or
> redistributed.

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