Paul Schäfer

Founder

Birthday December 4, 1921

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Bonn, Weimar Republic

DEATH DATE 2010-4-24, Santiago, Chile (88 years old)

Nationality Chile

#18649 Most Popular

1921

Paul Schäfer Schneider (4 December 1921 – 24 April 2010) was a German-Chilean Christian minister, and the founder and leader of a sect and agricultural commune of 300 German immigrants called Colonia Dignidad (Dignity Colony) (later renamed Villa Baviera) located in Parral in southern Chile, about 340 km south of Santiago from 1961 to 2005.

Schäfer led his followers in the teachings of William Branham.

1945

Following World War II in 1945, Schäfer served as a young people's leader in the Evangelical Free Church.

He was removed from his position there after rumors arose that he was molesting young boys.

He then set out as an itinerant preacher and singer, traveling around Germany and preaching.

1950

During the 1950s, Schäfer became a follower and promoter of the teachings of American preacher, William M. Branham, one of the founders of the post-World War II healing revival who was also an influence on Jim Jones.

Branham held multiple revival campaigns across Europe and Germany during the early 1950s.

Schäfer became a friend of Branham who promoted a return to "a more Pristine time" of religious and racial purity.

"Strong ties were forged" between Schäfer, William Branham, and Ewald Frank during Branham's time in Germany.

Schäfer "was completely fascinated" by Branham, "not only because of his supposed healings, but because behind the latter rain doctrine, the axis of what Branham preached, there was a totalitarian, misogynistic and apocalyptic message, perfect to brainwash all those who were willing to follow him."

William Branham's second sermon during his visit to Karlsruhe, Germany, left a deep impression on Schäfer.

The sermon was about the Pool of Bethesda, and in it Branham strongly taught that all illness and all sin are actually demons entrenched in the people's bodies.

Schäfer claimed to experience a healing in the meeting, and thereafter began to preach very strongly that all sin and illness was the result of demonic possession.

1952

By 1952 Schäfer had gathered a number of followers and in 1953 set up a children's home and orphanage.

Schäfer's early followers were predominantly made up of war widows and their children who were refugees from Soviet occupied East Prussia.

1955

Schäfer had been following the ministry of Branham from Germany, and was very excited when Branham made a personal visit to Germany in 1955.

Schäfer and other members of his church served as William Branham's personal security detail on his 1955 European tour.

Branham advocated "a strict adherence to the Bible, a woman's duty to obey her husband and apocalyptic visions, such as Los Angeles sinking beneath the ocean."

Following the 1955 meetings with Branham, Schäfer began to put more of William Branham's doctrines into practice in his group, and began to insist to his followers that they were the "only faithful ones" to William Branham's teachings.

1959

In 1959, he created the Private Sociale Mission, purportedly a charitable organization.

That same year, Schäfer was charged with sexually abusing two young boys.

Schäfer was charged and a warrant issued for his arrest by local authorities in Germany.

Schäfer fled the children's home in Siegburg, West Germany with some of his followers to the Middle East to relocate his congregation.

He came into contact with the Chilean ambassador to Germany, who invited him to Chile.

1961

In January 1961 Schäfer surfaced in Chile, where the government at the time, led by conservative President Jorge Alessandri, had granted him permission to create the "Dignidad Beneficent Society" on a farm outside of Parral.

Schäfer purchased a 4400 acre ranch which he and 10 of his followers began to prepare for his congregation.

1963

In 1963, 230 members of his congregation traveled to Chile in the first wave of immigrants.

1966

Another 15 families immigrated in two more waves in 1966 and 1973.

Schäfer may have been influenced to move to South America by prophecies of William Branham who repeatedly predicted an imminent nuclear war that would devastate the western nations.

Schäfer founded his new community on principles espoused by William Branham, including anti-communism, and the society gradually evolved into the Colonia Dignidad cult community.

Schäfer kept children away from their parents in a children's house.

1973

Aside from human rights abuses against members of Colonia Dignidad, including rape and sexual and physical abuse (including torture) of young children, Schäfer maintained a relationship with Pinochet's military dictatorship (1973–1990) and was involved in weapons smuggling and the torture and extrajudicial killings of political dissidents.

After the end of Pinochet's government, increased public awareness of the activities of Colonia Dignidad following testimony by former victims led to the issuing of a warrant for Schäfer's arrest.

Living underground for eight years, he spent the last five years of his life in prison in Chile.

Schäfer was born the town of Troisdorf, near Bonn, Germany, to Anna (née Schneider) and Jakob Schäfer.

He was described as a poor and clumsy student.

Schäfer's family was Lutheran.

In an accident with a fork, he lost his right eye.

He joined a German YMCA-„Eichenkreuz“-Group.

During World War II he served by carrying stretchers of the wounded in a German field hospital in occupied France, later in life claiming that his glass eye was the result of a war wound.