Suri's faith is at heart of Cruise divorce

Star wanted Scientology school to educate daughter, says Guy Adams

Tuesday 03 July 2012 04:55 EDT
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Katie Holmes filed for divorce from Tom Cruise in an attempt to prevent her six-year-old daughter being educated at schools with links to the Church of Scientology, multiple sources have claimed, adding to evidence that the controversial faith lies at the centre of the couple's split.

The legal battle, which became public on Friday, has highlighted disagreements between Holmes and Cruise over their child Suri's relationship with the New Village Leadership Academy in Calabasas, California. The school educates children using "study technology," a technique created by Scientology's founder, L Ron Hubbard.

Holmes, 33, was raised a Catholic and is said to have concerns about Suri's religious upbringing. The Academy – which Suri was seen at in 2009, and again late last year – is officially secular, and employs 'study technology' as just one of a range of educational methods, but several members of its teaching staff are Scientologists. The school is also considered a feeder to the Delphian School in Oregon, a $42,000-a-year boarding school which counts Tom Cruise and his ex-wife Nicole Kidman's adopted children Connor and Isabella, 17 and 19, among alumni. Between a third and a half of its pupils are members of the Church.

"[Suri] is coming to an age where she gets educated enough to get locked into the faith" Marty Rathbun, a former senior executive in Scientology told i. "That's why there's almost certainly truth in the consideration that schools have started coming into play."

Since news of the divorce broke, Holmes is said to have enrolled her daughter at a Catholic elementary school in Manhattan.

Cruise is Scientology's most celebrated member. He and Holmes married in 2006, at a ceremony presided over by the Church's leader, David Miscavige. But the couple are said to have had growing disagreements over how the faith should be applied to rearing their child. "Scientologists believe in re-incarnation, that infants are essentially ancient adults being in children's bodies," said a source familiar with the dispute. "Tom treats Suri as a little adult. Katie takes the opposite view: that she deserves a childhood."

Importantly, Suri has reached the age at which Church members begin being "audited," a form of counselling at the centre of Scientology. A "security check" devised by Hubbard for use on 6-12 year-olds requires subjects to be asked highly personal questions while attached to an "e-meter," measuring electrical charges carried by their body. The questions, seen by i, includes "Have you ever gotten yourself dirty on purpose?" and "Have you ever told bad stories about someone?"

Holmes is apparently anxious to prevent her child from being subjected to any such "check". She is therefore reported to be seeking sole custody of Suri, a move which would give her the right to determine both her religious upbringing and where she is educated.

The actress filed for divorce in New York, while Cruise, 49, has counter-filed in Los Angeles. Both jurisdictions will take a similar view regarding the distribution of the couple's $275m fortune, but New York courts tend to grant sole custody, while joint custody arrangements are more common in California.

Ms Holmes is perhaps also anxious to prevent history repeating itself. When Mr Cruise divorced Nicole Kidman, he secured a joint custody agreement. The couple's children grew up as members of the Church and allegedly have a relatively distant relationship with their mother, who is not a Scientologist. Mr Rathbun says he "audited" Mr Cruise at Scientology's headquarters in Los Angeles between 2001 and 2003 when the actor was divorcing Ms Kidman and claims to have witnessed this process first hand. He said he saw Connor and Isabella, who were six and eight years old at the time, being introduced to auditing. "I remember one day when I was at the Celebrity Centre advising Tom on his divorce from Nicole Kidman, everyone was thrilled to see Connor playing on an e-meter," he said.

The Church did not respond to questions yesterday. In the past, it has attacked Mr Rathbun's credibility, describing him as a "liar", a "criminal" and an "apostate".

The Church has yet to comment on its role in the divorce, except to deny reports it had hired private investigators to follow Holmes around New York.

Behind the scenes, a damage-limitation exercise is taking place. But it is hampered, however, by the absence of Jessica Davis, a Church employee who has been its leading point of contact with Holmes.

The wife of Tommy Davis, Scientology's longstanding spokesman, she has been ill for some time. As a result, said a Church source, "David Miscavige lost his lines of communication with Holmes some time ago."

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