Exclusive
FLEEING HELL

I escaped Jonestown cult when I was 8 – but I lost 27 family members in the Jim Jones’ ‘Kool-Aid’ massacre

A MAN who lost 27 family members in the Jonestown massacre has recounted how he narrowly escaped the same fate after his mother ousted him from the People's Temple before the 'Kool-Aid' mass suicide.

Ed Norwood, 51, the author of 'Be A Giant Killer', was around five years old when his grandmother first took him to a service at 1859 Geary Street, in San Francisco, to hear Reverend Jim Jones speak.

Advertisement
Ed Norwood (pictured with his wife) lost 27 family members in JonestownCredit: Courtesy
He was taken to the People's Temple to hear Jim Jones speak when he was just five
His grandmother, seven of his closest cousins, and a number of other family members died in what's known today as the Jonestown massacreCredit: Getty - Contributor

Speaking exclusively to The Sun, Ed said he grew up an only child in the Bay Area but was incredibly close with his seven youngest cousins - Karen, Lisa, Berry, Freddie, Adrian, Cassandra, and Alicia - whom he deemed to be siblings.

With his father out of the picture and his mother, Jynona Norwood, a traveling evangelist, Ed frequently found himself under the care of his grandmother, Fairy Norwood, a member of the People's Temple.

At the time, during the early 1970s, the People's Temple was an immensely popular religious group that had a membership estimated in the thousands and was even endorsed by a number of local left-wing politicians.

Originally founded in Indianapolis in 1954, the church was led by Rev. Jim Jones, a white minister who preached socialist and progressive ideas to a predominantly African-American congregation.

Advertisement

Jones mixed biblical teachings with Marxist theory, something he described as "apostolic socialism", and said he planned to create a "utopia" on earth for his devout followers.

On reflection, Ed said it's "easy" for him to see how his grandmother and other members of his family were swept into Jones' orbit.

"I can't remember when there wasn't free toys or food available," he said. "Jones came in really strategically and fed unmet needs.

"He came into the African-American community during a time of intense poverty and racial inequality.

Advertisement

"But there were also red flags that were ignored," he continued.

Ed said his first-hand memories of the People's Temple and Jim Jones are limited, but he remembered other children his age being "everywhere."

Whenever his mother was out of town, Ed said he would visit the Temple with his grandmother, his aunt Doris Lewis, his seven youngest cousins, and other family members.

"Every time we showed up there were kids," he remembered. "Kids were everywhere, toys were everywhere, food was everywhere.

Advertisement

"I remembered feeling there was a real sense of community at the Temple, but I had no idea at the time that its leader was a cult leader. I had no idea he was a murderous giant that had an intention to take his members and murder them in a jungle.

"To me, he was simply just the pastor."

RED FLAGS

Ed's opinion of the church, and Jones, would change one Sunday morning in either 1977 or 1978 when he was just seven years old.

The typically vibrant and joyous atmosphere inside the church that day had been displaced by one of noticeable eeriness and darkness, he said.

Advertisement

Ed disturbingly recalled how Jones had instructed some of his followers to set up a make-shift boxing ring on the stage to reprimand a five-year-old boy who had reportedly broken a little girl's leg while playing.

His punishment? Three rounds in the ring with an eight-year-old boy who soon "pounded him into unconsciousness", according to Ed.

"Some of the members cheered," he said, "but many, like my cousins, watched on in horror.

"The message to every family's child that day was fear: 'Whatever happened to this five-year-old boy will happen to you if you act out - you cannot hide. I will find you.'"

Advertisement

The fear-mongering, manipulation, and abuse would gradually intensify before eventually permeating the atmosphere of the Temple.

Similar tales of bullying, physical assault, and even accusations of rampant fraud eventually leaked in the press, sharpening scrutiny on Jones and his congregation.

Jones mixed biblical teachings with Marxist theory in what he called 'apostolic socialism'Credit: Corbis - Getty
Ed lost seven of his cousins - whom he regarded to be siblings - in the massacre. Pictured above is Adrienne LewisCredit: Courtesy
Advertisement
Victim: Alicia LewisCredit: Courtesy
Victim: Barry LewisCredit: Courtesy
Victim: Cassandra LewisCredit: Courtesy

'PROPHETIC VISIONS'

Ed's mother, Jynona Norwood, had long objected to her mother taking her young son to the Temple.

Advertisement

For months, she had reportedly been haunted by a recurring nightmare that Jones was going to kill Ed, her family, and the rest of the church somewhere in a jungle.

She had attempted to warn Fairy of the dreams, which she believed to be a prophetic vision sent from God, though her concerns were routinely dismissed.

But convinced of an impending massacre, one day, Jynona stormed into the People's Temple in the middle of a service, grabbed her then-eight-year-old son by the arm and attempted to march him outside.

Some of the members of the church intervened resulting in a "human tug of war", according to Ed.

Advertisement

"She was on one side and my family and Temple members were on the other," he said.

"They were trying to pull me back into the building while she was trying to get me out of it.

"I didn't understand why I couldn't be there. I didn't understand why I couldn't stay with my cousins. You know, I was the only child so I absolutely love being around my cousins," he added.

"My cousins were there. My grandma and my great-grandmother were there. The community was there - and I wanted to be with them.

Advertisement

"But I'm so thankful now that she took me away."

Ed said his mother's actions resulted in a hit being put out on her life by the Temple.

She stopped traveling as an evangelist and moved with Ed to an apartment in Daly City, just outside of San Francisco, to "hide" him from the church as she was fearful Jones would attempt to kidnap him.

Ed, 51, is an ordained minister and founded a non-profit which fights for human rightsCredit: Courtesy
Advertisement
His memories of Jones are fragmented but today he believes the cult leader to be one of the most prolific mass murderers in historyCredit: BBC
Freddie Lewis Jr. also died at JonestownCredit: Courtesy
As did Karen LewisCredit: Courtesy
Lisa Lewis was also killedCredit: Courtesy
Advertisement

It was during this time that Jones, increasingly paranoid by mounting media criticism, announced to the Temple that they would be moving to a compound in Guyana, in South America, to build a socialist utopia that he promised would be Heaven on Earth.

A short while later, Ed saw his grandmother for what would prove to be the final time. He vividly recalled watching his mother pleading with his grandmother not to go to Guyana, but she refused to listen.

"Her departure for Guyana came on the heels of a bad argument with my late aunt. My grandma had given candy to my cousin, which caused them to get sick and a milk carton was thrown. Harsh words ensued as did a physical altercation that really shouldn't have happened," Ed said.

"I remember her walking painfully to her room after the altercation and I was right behind her, kind of latching onto her waist as she pulled a suitcase out.

Advertisement

"She then began to pack to leave to a place she thought was better than America. She left the following day."

A FAMILY TRAGEDY

Ed's seven closest cousins also followed his grandmother to Guyana in what he said was part of a "kidnapping plot", orchestrated by his aunt without the knowledge of his uncle Freddie Lewis, the children's father.

"My uncle came home and the house had been ransacked. All of his kids were gone," Ed said. "My heart breaks every time I tell that story because I can't fathom what I would've felt like walking into my home from a day's work to find everything is gone."

The next memory Ed says he has of Jonestown is watching television inside his home in Daly City on November 18, 1978, and seeing the names of more than 900 people scrolling across the screen who had died in an apparent mass suicide.

Advertisement

He said he sat stunned as he watched horrific images showing mounds of dead men, women, and children stacked on top of one another deep in the jungle of Jonestown, just as his mother had earlier envisioned.

Among them were 27 of his relatives, including his grandmother, his aunt, and at least 17 children - the youngest of whom was just three months old.

Their deaths came shortly after U.S. Congressman Leo Ryan was shot dead along with four others people by Temple gunman at an airstrip near the Jonestown compound. Ryan had been visiting Guyana to investigate alleged abuses and claims Jones' followers were being held against their will.

On November 18, 1978, Jones instructed the 900 inhabitants of Jonestown to consume cyanide-laced punchCredit: AP:Associated Press
Advertisement
Some members drank it willingly. Others were forcibly injected or shot deadCredit: Getty - Contributor
Congressman Leo Ryan was shot to death along with five others at an airstrip near to the TempleCredit: AP:Associated Press

In the wake of Ryan's murder, Jones commanded his congregation to drink cyanide-laced punch.

The Temple's 305 children were poisoned first, with syringes used to squirt the poison into the mouths of babies and other young kids.

Advertisement

Then it was the adults' turn, some of whom drank willingly. Others who protested were forced to drink the punch at gunpoint while some were forcibly injected with the drug or shot dead.

Jones, meanwhile, was found with a single gunshot wound to his head. It's been speculated that he may have taken his own life or that his nurse, Annie Moore, fatally shot him at his direction before taking her own life in the same manner.

Prior to 9/11, what became known as the Jonestown massacre was the largest single incident of intentional civilian death in American history.

While the deadly culmination to Jonestown is often referred to as a mass suicide, Ed, and many others closely associated with the tragedy, call it a mass murder and an act of terror.

Advertisement