Loading descriptions...
Monday, March 30, 9-10:30 pm ET
AMERICAN EXPERIENCE goes beyond the salacious headlines to provide a revealing portrait of Jim Jones, his followers and the largest mass murder-suicide in history.
On November 17, 1978, Congressman Leo Ryan traveled to an isolated
rain forest in Guyana to investigate the concerns of his San
Francisco-area constituents. Their alarming stories focused on a
jungle compound known as Jonestown, a group called the Peoples
Temple and its leader, Jim Jones. According to news filtering back
to America, U.S. citizens were being held against their will in
prison camp conditions. There were allegations of physical and
sexual abuse and even rumors of a planned mass suicide. Congressman
Ryan, an impassioned human rights advocate, decided to get the
facts for himself. Within 48 hours, Ryan, Jones and more than 900
Jonestown settlers were dead - casualties of the largest mass
murder-suicide in history. In the next few days, grisly details of
cyanide-laced fruit punch and disturbing images of children
poisoned by their parents emerged from the jungle. AMERICAN
EXPERIENCE goes beyond the salacious headlines to provide a
revealing portrait of Jones, his followers and the times that
produced the calamity in the Guyanese jungle, told by the people
who know the story firsthand: Jonestown survivors, Temple
defectors, relatives of the dead and journalists.