GLAMOUR:I know you said in the book that you would go to your Bible study and you’d start noticing all of these inconsistencies and all of these things that didn’t make sense, and you’d want to ask all these questions, but you weren’t in a place that you felt that you could. One of the things that struck me was when we started to picket small children’s funerals. I didn’t want to have anything to do with it anymore. We would unquestionably picket people and judge them right away. I even question some of the things we were starting to picket.
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And you see throughout my stay there, I see some inconsistencies and hypocrisies. You see in the beginning of the book, when I’m describing that I wanted to do right, I saw some good things-characteristics and intentions of the church, and I wanted to do those things. I didn’t really think that I had that right to do that at the time. I didn’t realize at the time that I was hurting people or that I was accusing people of things and condemning people. I thought I was being a good Christian and reaching out and showing people something. I wanted to know I was helping people see that they didn’t see. LAUREN DRAIN:In the beginning, I wanted to know I was doing a good thing. GLAMOUR:What were you actually thinking as you were picketing? Walk us through a stream of thought that was going through your mind during an event. I know there’s an inordinate amount of control on the members and sometimes their rules can change, so maybe that’s part of it. All the time’re trying to prevent people from contacting each other, prevent people from having outside influences and such. I know there’s a lot of control over members, and everything is dictated and controlled in terms of what members can do. They have disappeared off Twitter, except for a main account. GLAMOUR:I see now that they have taken themselves off certain social media outlets. They started to broaden their scopes in terms of using social media towards the end or after I had already been gone. LAUREN DRAIN:I think I joined before social media became a big thing. GLAMOUR:How did the rise of social media shape your indoctrination into the church? Social media is a huge tool for the WBC to spread their message now, but it was just coming into prominence when you were entering the church. It’s a different type of attention than before. As you’re doing press for your book, are you used to the attention? GLAMOUR:Since being in the eye of the media was the goal of the Westboro Baptist Church, you’re used to speaking out and speaking up. She spoke to Glamour about her indoctrination, her eventual expulsion, and how she’s rebuilding her life–including repairing her faith, her foundation, and saying sorry to those she’s hurt.
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Now 27, Drain tells her side of the story about life as a member of the infamous hate group in Banished: Surviving My Years in the Westboro Baptist Church (Grand Central), out March 5.
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Her father and sister had just driven her to a local motel and dropped her off, told her she was never to speak to them again, and that she’d been banished from the Westboro Baptist Church–the group known for picketing funerals of fallen soldiers, homosexuals, and AIDS victims, and most recently attempting to picket those of the Sandy Hook Elementary victims–for exchanging online communication with a boy who’d been interested in learning about the church. The first thing Lauren Drain did after her family disowned her was walk to a local drugstore, buy poster board and markers, and list out her sins. Lauren has a nursing degree but also works now as a fitness model doing work that I’m sure her family wouldn’t agree with. She moved from Kansas to Connecticut and married a man named David Kagan in 2013. Since leaving in 2008, Lauren’s father, mother, two sisters and brother have cut all ties to her. Since the death of Pastor Fred Phelps, Steve Drain has become the de-facto leader of the Westboro Baptist Church. Shockingly, he became a convert and brought his family to live among the members, including the infamous Phelps family. It was Lauren’s father, Steve Drain, who first brought the family to the church when he was making a documentary about their followers. The “church,” made their name in protesting the funerals of victims of tragedies - somehow relating the deaths to acceptance of homosexuality in society - has proven time and again that no tragedy is safe from the group’s vile opinions. Having spent seven of her teenage years in the controversial organization from 2001-08, she was banished by its members for questioning the hateful message. Lauren Drain is easily the most famous ex-member of the Westboro Baptist Church.