Pablo Rodriguez

Pablo Rodriguez: Mandated Shunning Hurts People

Stories

My story starts in Mexico City, where I grew up in extreme poverty. At age 18, I emigrated to the USA in the hope of a better life, but that’s not exactly how it worked out. After a few weeks in this new country, I was without a job, without money, hungry, and I didn’t speak the language. Worst of all, I was lonely without my family and very depressed.  

During that time, two kind, true-believing members of a high-control faith-based community found me and promised me God would take care of me and my family if I joined their group. Part of the attraction—the hook—was that they were the one and only true religion chosen by God. Thinking back, it was gullible on my part. But it was a difficult moment in my life, so I was vulnerable. 

I quickly immersed myself in church activities and became very active in propagating the ideology I had recently accepted. Eventually, I found a full-time job. But the majority of my time outside of work was spent in church activities. By now I’d become thoroughly indoctrinated and believed that the only way to please God was by supporting this specific group. This was the only thing that really mattered in life—everything else was secondary. 

Within a year, I influenced 5 members of my family to join the church — my mother, and 4 younger siblings.  Unfortunately, after several years, two of my siblings were expelled. Official policy—mandated shunning— was very clear to me by now, so I knew what I was required to do. I must completely cut off and shun my siblings and treat them as if they were dead. I was told, and truly believed, this was the only way to get them to return to the religion and be saved. 

Since I fully believed what the church leadership taught me about the imminent destruction of all non-believers,  I was desperate to get my siblings to return. Also, I wanted a relationship with them, and I knew I could only have that if they became approved Jehovah’s Witnesses again. Several times while visiting my mother in Mexico,  I saw that my mother was not strict about shunning my siblings. She did limit her association, but she would make excuses and exceptions to speak to her excommunicated children. Several times I scolded her, using reasoning from the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society’s publications and the scriptures they interpret as justification for mandated shunning. I also went to the extreme of threatening my mother that I would have to shun her if she did not comply with what the church required. 

Today, I deeply regret my actions, and writing about them is very painful for me. My mother died in 2018, in a conflicted state of mind. She still deeply loved her excommunicated children, but she believed they needed to be shunned, due to a church mandate. She would limit her association with those children when reminded to do so by the church, by me, or by other Jehovah’s Witnesses in her congregation. But then she would “relapse” 

and have some contact with them again. She would try to hide this from me and others in her congregation because she feared being negatively judged and counselled. 

When my mom became very ill, I saw how hypocritical it was on my part to try to keep my siblings away from my mother when she was healthy. Now that she was sick, we needed their help to care for her! That’s when I  started to question the religion’s rules and decided to re-establish normal communication with my disfellowshipped brother and sister. This was awkward and painful, but after many open conversations and sincere apologies, I’m happy to say that I have a close relationship with the siblings I once ostracized. 

In 2019, I spoke with my two sisters who are still active Jehovah’s Witnesses. I explained my disagreement with the official shunning policy and that I could not personally support an organization that treats people this way.  In response, they shunned me for over a year. At that time, I also lost every friendship I’d worked so hard to develop for the previous twenty years of my life. All the people I’d become close with while in the USA were  Jehovah’s Witnesses, and they all began to shun me. 

I’m currently trying to reestablish a relationship with my two JW sisters, but it’s difficult. I have to worry about everything I say. I know that they may cut me off again at any moment. Mandated shunning harms people. It is a severe form of social bullying and it must be stopped! I also hope you will read my wife’s story about mandated shunning. Her story about this social death sentence takes it up another notch. 

Mandated shunning must be stopped!