Bonnie Nettles
Bonnie Nettles | |
---|---|
Born | Bonnie Lu Trousdale August 29, 1927 Houston, Texas, U.S. |
Died | June 19, 1985 Dallas, Texas, U.S. | (aged 57)
Other names | Ti, Peep, Pig, Shelly West |
Occupation | Registered nurse |
Known for | Co-leader of Heaven's Gate |
Spouse |
Joseph Segal Nettles
(m. 1949; div. 1973) |
Children | 4 |
Bonnie Lu Nettles (née Trousdale; August 29, 1927 – June 19, 1985), later known as Ti, was co-founder and co-leader with Marshall Applewhite of the Heaven's Gate new religious movement. Nettles died of melanoma metastatic to the liver in 1985 in Dallas, Texas, twelve years before the group's mass suicide in March 1997.[1]
Early life
Bonnie Nettles was born on August 29, 1927, and raised in Houston, Texas, into a Baptist family.[2] As an adult, she moved away from the religion. After becoming a registered nurse, she married businessman Joseph Segal Nettles in December 1949, with whom she had four children. Their marriage remained mostly stable until 1972, at which time, according to The New York Times, she began attempting to contact deceased spirits by conducting regular seances and came to believe that a 19th-century monk named Brother Francis frequently spoke with her and gave her instructions. She also visited multiple fortunetellers who told her that she was soon to meet a mysterious man who was tall with light hair and a fair complexion, descriptions which were fairly close to Marshall Applewhite's appearance.[2] Nettles also studied astrology, Theosophy, and the occult.
Introduction to Applewhite
Nettles met Marshall Applewhite in March 1972, though where they met is uncertain. In his writings, Applewhite claimed to have been "visiting a hospitalized friend when Mrs. Nettles entered the room and their eyes locked in a shared recognition of esoteric secrets." However, Applewhite's writings were prone to hyperbole or relaying everything as some occurrence of fate. Terrie Nettles, Bonnie's daughter, worked at a theater where Applewhite produced weekend children's shows and taught in an in-house drama school. She has stated that "someone got hurt at the drama school in the theater that Herff [Applewhite] worked at. Herff accompanied the injured person to the hospital where he met Bonnie."[2] Joe Nettles, one of Bonnie's sons, was not entirely sure how they met or whether their first meeting was at the theater.[3]
Nettles agreed to perform an astrological reading for Applewhite. They had an almost instantaneous "spiritual" connection; Applewhite decided that Nettles was "to be the sage, he the speaker." They left together on New Year's Day of 1973. Nettles' three youngest children were left to remain with their father, while her oldest daughter, Terrie, then aged 20 and skeptical of her mother's ideas, fended for herself.[4] Nettles and Applewhite established Heaven's Gate together as equals, with Nettles running the group and Applewhite speaking for her. Nettles claimed to have communicated with aliens about the Next Level and told Applewhite to tell their followers. In 1976, Applewhite recognized Nettles as higher up on the level of command than he was.
Death
Many events passed in creation of the Heaven's Gate group and the formation of its core members, with Nettles continuing to act as the interpreter of signs and the mystic of the group. In 1983, she had to have an eye removed due to cancer, and her doctor informed her that the disease was already spreading through the rest of her body. Nettles stated that the doctor was ignorant and believed, along with Applewhite, that she could not die, as they had to ascend together. The cancer continued to worsen, moving to her liver. Nettles died on June 19, 1985, at Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas, Texas. While there as a patient, she used the pseudonym Shelly West.[2][5]
Applewhite convinced the rest of the group that Nettles' "broken-down vehicle was left behind". He had her body cremated and her ashes were then spread upon a lake somewhere in Texas.[2] Applewhite explained to the group that Nettles had left because her work was done on this level but that he himself still had more that he had to do. Applewhite also said that Nettles would continue to help them from the Next Level.
Scholars have viewed the death of Nettles as a key turning point in the history of Heaven's Gate, as it caused the theology to shift from a belief that they would physically ascend to heaven while alive aboard a UFO to viewing the body as merely a "vehicle" for the soul which would be discarded upon entering heaven, which would culminate in the group's mass suicide in 1997.[6]
Nicknames
Applewhite and Nettles went by the collective of "The Two", as well as the singular names "Bo" and "Peep" respectively[7] and later "Do" and "Ti",[1] along with "Guinea" and "Pig" at some points in time.[2]
References
- ^ a b "On This Day: Bodies of Heaven's Gate Cult Members Discovered After Mass Suicide". findingdulcinea.com. March 26, 2011.
- ^ a b c d e f Bearak, Barry (April 28, 1997). "Eyes on Glory: Pied Pipers of Heaven's Gate". The New York Times. p. 2.
- ^ Dalton, Red (March 29, 1977). "Tragedy Painful, Familiar to Man Who Lost Mom to Applewhite Cult". San Diego Union-Tribune. San Diego, California. p. A11.
- ^ Bearak, Barry (April 28, 1997). "Eyes on Glory: Pied Pipers of Heaven's Gate". The New York Times. p. 4.
- ^ Zeller, Benjamin Heaven's Gate, America's UFO Religion, 2014, p. 113
- ^ Zeller, Benjamin Ethan (November 1, 2006). "Scaling Heaven's Gate: Individualism and Salvation in a New Religious Movement". Nova Religio. 10 (2): 75–102. doi:10.1525/nr.2006.10.2.75. ISSN 1092-6690.
- ^ Phillips, Jim (March 29, 1997). "Central Texas was cult's early recruiting ground". Austin American-Statesman. Austin, Texas. p. A10.
- 1927 births
- 1985 deaths
- American women nurses
- Deaths from cancer in Texas
- Deaths from liver cancer in the United States
- Founders of new religious movements
- Former Baptists
- Converts to new religious movements from Christianity
- Heaven's Gate (religious group)
- People from Dallas
- People from Houston
- 20th-century American women
- 20th-century American people
- 20th-century mystics
- Women mystics
- Female religious leaders
- New religious movement mystics