Religious studies expert: social networks are a tool of recruitment of children to sects
"Now most of the recruitment – to ISIS and different sects – is done through social networks. And recruitment via the Internet, as practice shows, is much more effective than street recruitment. Street recruiters are specially trained to identify people who are experiencing stress, need a company or support and consolation. But in the street it is still very difficult to identify a person who will be more prone to psychological pressure. In social networks, it's much easier because everything is out in the open. Any personal information you post presents a danger to you first of all. There is a high probability that bad people will take advantage of it in bad purposes," said the professor.
"Sometimes parents notice that their child is like a robot, he does not act on his own, but as if driven by someone. Of course, parents should try to be aware of what sites and public social networks young people visit, what information about themselves they post, who they report to. Because it is always much easier to prevent than to cure the problem," continued the professor.
Alexander Dvorkin noted that sects use various means of consciousness manipulation and choose a specific methodology for recruitment in accordance with personal characteristics of an individual. "Some people are more suggestible, others are less suggestible. It depends on the situation in which a person finds themselves. If he/she has any problems, the harder the problem is, the more suggestible he/she will be," concluded the professor.
Read also
DESS: The number of communities joining OCU in 2024 is half of last year’s
Over a year, 232 communities of the UOC changed their jurisdiction.
Scale of internal damage to UOC cathedral in Zaporizhzhia shown online
The video allows viewers to assess the damage endured by the main Orthodox church of the UOC in Zaporizhzhia.
Ex-MP UOC protodeacon Novinsky declared suspicion of high treason
The former MP is accused of "ensuring that a significant part of Ukrainian society, who are believers of the UOC, remain under the direct influence of the leader of the ROC".
St Andrew’s icon survives under the rubble of UOC cathedral in Zaporizhzhia
The icon was painted by nuns of the St Nicholas Monastery in Patras (Greece) and consecrated on the relics of St Andrew the Apostle.
RF missile strike destroys St Andrew's Cathedral of UOC in Zaporizhzhia
The fragments damaged the roof of the building, dome, ceilings, cut windows and disfigured classrooms.
Media shows conditions in which persecuted communities of Volyn have to pray
After their churches were seized, UOC faithful are compelled to pray in poorly equipped facilities.