News
There had been discussions about a mass suicide. In some circles, there were practice drills,” one survivor recounted to The ...
A travel company in Guyana is now offering tours of the infamous Jonestown massacre site. Dark tourism or historical duty?
1d
Irish Star on MSNHarrowing site where 900 people died to become dark tourism hotspotThe site of a chilling cult massacre, which resulted in the deaths of over 900 people nearly half a century ago, has been ...
The site of a horrific cult massacre, which saw the deaths of over 900 people, has been controversially opened to tourists.
The site of the Jonestown cult massacre, where more than 900 people died, has opened to tourists in the latest dark tourism ...
8d
Newser on MSNTourists Find Little Left at JonestownNearly 50 years after the Jonestown massacre shocked the world, the site of one of history's deadliest cult tragedies is now ...
Private tourism group offering (controversial) guided tours of site of Jim Jones' Peoples Temple in Guyana after decades of ...
Both American survivors of the mass suicide and murder and Guyanese have criticized the tour. But defenders say the site ...
Inspiring to imagine but nightmarish to live in, these failed communes have become cautionary tales in hubris and ego.
Congressman Leo Ryan went to Guyana in 1978 to investigate an American cult leader. He didn't make it out of Jonestown alive.
The Jonestown massacre remains ‘a stain’ on Guyana nearly 50 years later, but tourism plans are meeting backlash.
When Vilchez returned to Guyana in 2018 for the first time since the mass suicide-murder, she made an offering to the land when she arrived in Jonestown.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results