Scientology says Sydney school 'independent' after principal, students feature in church advertisement

The Church of Scientology has defended the use of a Sydney primary school principal and some of her pupils in a video promoting the church.

The children, who attend Newtown's Athena School, appeared in the promotional video released in July by the church featuring principal Fiona Milne.

A number of children are in the ad, but Fairfax reports Ms Milne declined to comment on whether their parents had given consent.

In the video Ms Milne explains how she became a Scientologist while studying as she suffered in the classroom.


In the promotional video Ms Milne talks about sharing her religious world view and teachings in her profession.

"I was very distressed about my nursing exams," she says, going on to say how she met a Scientologist who indoctrinated her in the teachings of the church.

"I met a young man who was a Scientologist and he introduced me to the Study Technology and I was empowered as a student.

Study Technology is a philosophy developed by church founder L Ron Hubbard after he discovered "three barriers to study" and the "precise methods to overcome these barriers".

Head of the Church of Scientology Ron Miscavige.
Head of the Church of Scientology Ron Miscavige.

"From that point on," Ms Milne continues, "I decided I wasn't going to let children suffer how I'd suffered in the classroom. I went back to university and then studied my post graduate degree in education."

Scientology's Australian president Vicki Dunstan said to "suggest that the school's independence is undermined in anyway [by the ad] is preposterous".

The church has maintained that it is a separate organisation to the school in Newtown, Fairfax reports.

The church headquarters in Los Angeles.
The church headquarters in Los Angeles.

However, the school teaches church founder L Ron Hubbard's "Way to Happiness" philosophy while not disclosing its church links in promotional material. The website does include a "Who was L Ron Hubbard" page.

The NSW Greens referred the school to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission for failing to disclose its links to the church but the watchdog is yet to comment on the referral.

The advertisement is part of a larger marketing campaign to promote the church's new Asia-Pacific headquarters that opened in Chatswood in September.

The campaign is also designed to counter waves of revelations and bad press about the church in recent years.

The church will host "the largest gathering of Operating Thetans ever assembled in Australia" in November.