Netherlands – February 18, 2025 – The Netherlands Committee for Human Rights Foundation (NCRM), in collaboration with the Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR), successfully hosted the traveling exhibition “Psychiatry: An Industry of Death” at the Zuiderkerk in Amsterdam. This powerful event, held from February 15 to 17, shed light on historical and contemporary human rights violations within psychiatry. The exhibition, driven by the dedicated efforts of Scientologists and human rights activists, provided an eye-opening experience to hundreds of visitors.
The three-day exhibition took place in the heart of Amsterdam, a striking contrast to a concurrent European Congress of Neurology and Neuropsychiatry, which was held in a secluded industrial area outside the city. This strategic placement of the exhibit ensured maximum public visibility and accessibility, reflecting the transparency and public engagement that CCHR stands for.
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An Eye-Opening Journey Through Psychiatry’s History
Visitors to the exhibit were guided through interactive displays, multimedia presentations, and historical accounts that detailed psychiatry’s troubled past, from early psychiatric institutions and eugenics programs to modern-day concerns like over-medication and involuntary commitment. The powerful visuals and testimonies resonated with the hundreds of visitors who attended, ensuring that critical discussions on psychiatric practices remained in the public domain.
The Zuiderkerk, a historic site that once served as a cemetery, added a symbolic weight to the event. The entrance porch, marked by a skull and crossbones, served as a stark reminder of the suffering endured by victims of psychiatric abuse. Volunteers ensured that CCHR’s message was visible throughout—from a balloon arch in CCHR colors to informational boards and flyers distributed on-site.
Exposing Psychiatric Practices and Their Consequences
The exhibition coincided with the psychiatric congress, whose program included sessions on brain stimulation techniques, including electroshock, electromagnetic induction, and deep brain stimulation via implanted electrodes. NCRM volunteers emphasized that while some neurotechnological treatments may help patients with nerve damage, psychiatry’s historical focus on biochemical imbalances and brain interventions has led to an alarming rise in psychiatric drug prescriptions, now affecting nearly 3 million people in the Netherlands.
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A key issue highlighted was the sharp increase in ADHD diagnoses and the use of Ritalin, which quadrupled after a 2005 treatment guideline heavily influenced by psychiatrists with pharmaceutical industry ties. Today, nearly 4% of Dutch youth are medicated for ADHD, despite experts pointing to social and environmental factors—such as school pressure, poverty, and screen exposure—as major contributors to behavioral difficulties.
Stories of Strength and Survival
A particularly moving moment came when a survivor of psychiatric institutionalization, bravely shared her experience. She recounted how she was forcibly taken from her home, denied access to her children, and placed under psychiatric incarceration, where every attempt to assert her rights was met with further drugging and control. She revealed that the only way to escape was to pretend to comply—a sentiment echoed by another visitor who had faced similar struggles.
The official opening of the exhibition featured another powerful testimony from an expert by experience, who described her forced admission and the emotional toll it took on her. Her account deeply moved the audience, many of whom admitted they were previously unaware of the extent of such abuses in psychiatry.
Electroshock Therapy and the Call for Reform
A crucial topic in the exhibition was electroshock therapy (ECT), which is still performed on 1,000 patients annually in the Netherlands. Despite mounting evidence of its permanent memory loss risks and lack of proven efficacy, psychiatric institutions continue its use. A controversial study on ECT in 2020 led to the following conclusion: “Given the high risk of permanent memory loss and the small mortality risk, this longstanding failure to determine whether or not ECT works means that its use should be immediately suspended until a series of well-designed, randomized, placebo-controlled studies have investigated whether there really are any significant benefits against which the proven significant risks can be weighed“. Apparently, “criticism is not or hardly getting through to the psychiatric caste” says Ivan Arjona from Scientology Europe, who has been involved since years at the UN denouncing the heavy violations of human rights. The UN Special Rapporteur on Torture even stated that forced psychiatric interventions could amount to torture when imposed without true informed consent.
NCRM volunteers pressed the Dutch Association for Psychiatry for a response, but the association defended its adherence to existing laws and regulations rather than reconsidering its stance. This highlights the persistent institutional resistance to reform, despite growing global advocacy from the WHO and UN for a shift away from the biomedical model of mental health.
The Role of Media in Amplifying the Message
The exhibition’s impact was further strengthened by media coverage, which played a key role in bringing awareness to the broader public. Reports appeared in “De Andere Krant”, an alternative Dutch newspaper with 12,000 prints, as well as in Amsterdam Daily, ensuring that the issues raised reached a wider audience. Additionally, the open letter addressed to the psychiatry congress organizers had tangible effects. In response to CCHR’s advocacy, the congress removed two key sessions on brain stimulation techniques and pharmacological treatments—a significant victory in the fight against coercive psychiatric interventions.
CCHR volunteer Ogé further emphasized the importance of implementing WHO and UN guidelines that promote ethical mental health practices, highlighting CCHR’s ongoing role in shaping policies that safeguard human rights.
A Continuing Fight for Mental Health Rights
Since its founding in 1969 by members of the Church of Scientology, inspired by the work of L. Ron Hubbard, and psychiatrist Dr. Thomas Szasz, CCHR has remained a leading voice in exposing psychiatric abuses and advocating for reforms. Through public exhibitions, legal actions, and lobbying efforts, CCHR continues to challenge the pharmaceutical industry’s influence, prevent coercive treatments, and defend the rights of individuals affected by psychiatry.
The success of the Amsterdam exhibit is a testament to the unwavering dedication of Scientologists and CCHR activists in bringing truth and accountability to the field of mental health. As the battle for human rights in psychiatry continues, CCHR’s work stands as a beacon of hope and justice for individuals and families affected by psychiatric abuses.