Roch Thériault (May 16, 1947 – February 26, 2011) was a Canadian cult leader and convicted murderer.
Roch Thériault was born on May 16, 1947 into a French-Canadian family, and raised in Thetford Mines.
As a child Thériault was considered to be very intelligent, but dropped out of school in the seventh grade and began to teach himself the Old Testament of the Bible.
Thériault believed that the end of the world was near and would be brought on by the war between good and evil.
1970
In the mid-1970s, Thériault convinced a group of people to leave their jobs and homes to join him in a religious movement.
1977
Thériault, a self-proclaimed prophet under the name Moïse, founded the Ant Hill Kids in 1977.
They were a doomsday cult whose beliefs were based on Seventh-day Adventist Church beliefs.
Thériault converted from Catholicism to the Seventh-day Adventist Church in January 1977, and began practising the denomination's regular holistic beliefs which encouraged a healthy lifestyle free of unhealthy foods and tobacco.
Thériault formed the cult in 1977 in Sainte-Marie, Quebec with the goal to form a commune where people could freely listen to his motivational speeches, live in unity and equality, and be free of sin.
He prohibited the group from remaining in contact with their families and with the Seventh-day Adventist Church, as this was against his cult's values of freedom.
1978
In April 1978, Thériault was removed from the Seventh-day Adventist Church.
Thériault maintained multiple wives and concubines, impregnating all female members as a religious requirement, and fathering 26 children.
Thériault's followers, including 12 adults and 22 children, lived under his totalitarian rule at the commune and were subject to severe physical and sexual abuse.
In 1978, in preparation, Thériault moved his commune by hiking to a mountainside he called "Eternal Mountain" in Hope, in the sparsely populated Gaspé Peninsula, where he claimed they could all be saved.
There, Thériault made the commune build their town while he relaxed, comparing them to ants working in an ant hill, naming the group the Ant Hill Kids.
1979
Thériault's fear of the end of the world grew, claiming that God had warned him that it would come in February 1979, and used the commune to prepare for it.
In February 1979, when the apocalypse did not occur, people started questioning Thériault's wisdom, but he defended himself saying that time on Earth and in God's world were not parallel, and that therefore it was a miscalculation.
1980
Thériault, along with Robert Pickton, Clifford Olson and Paul Bernardo, has been considered one of Canada's most notorious criminals since the 1980s.
To expand the community as well as keep the members devoted, Thériault married and impregnated all of the women, fathering over 20 children with 9 female members of the group, and by the 1980s there were nearly 40 members.
Followers were made to wear identical tunics to represent equality and their devotion to the commune.
1984
In 1984, the group relocated from Quebec to a new site near Burnt River, a hamlet in Central Ontario now part of the city of Kawartha Lakes.
Following the cult's formation, Thériault began to move away from being a motivational leader as his drinking problem worsened, becoming increasingly totalitarian over the lives of his followers and irrational in his beliefs.
Members were not allowed to speak to each other when he was not present, nor were they allowed to have sex with each other without his permission.
Thériault used his charisma to cover for his increasingly abusive and erratic behaviour, and none of the other members questioned his judgement or openly blamed him for any physical, mental or emotional damage.
Thériault began to inflict punishments on followers that he considered to be straying, by spying on them and claiming that God told him what they did.
If a person wished to leave the commune, Thériault would hit them with either a belt or hammer, suspend them from the ceiling, pluck each of their body hairs individually, or even defecate on them.
The Ant Hill Kids raised money for living by selling baked goods, and members who did not bring in enough money were also punished.
Over time, Thériault's punishments became increasingly extreme and violent, including making members break their own legs with sledgehammers, sit on lit stoves, shoot each other in the shoulders, and eat dead mice and feces.
A follower would sometimes be asked to cut off another follower's toes with wire cutters to prove loyalty.
The abuse extended to the cult's children, who were sexually abused, held over fires, or nailed to trees while other children threw stones at them.
One of Thériault's wives left a newborn child, Eleazar Lavallée, outside to die in freezing temperatures to keep him away from the abuse.
Thériault attempted to backtrack to the original religious mission of the commune, beginning to strongly believe in purifying his followers and ridding them of their sins through abusive purification sessions where the members would be completely nude as he whipped and beat them.
Thériault claimed to be a holy being, and started performing unnecessary amateur surgical operations on sick members to demonstrate his healing powers.
These "surgeries" included injecting a 94% ethanol solution into stomachs, or performing circumcisions on the children and adults of the group.
1987
In 1987, social workers removed 17 of the children from the commune.
However, Thériault faced no repercussions for his abusive acts.
1989
Thériault was arrested for assault in 1989, dissolving the cult, and in 1993 was convicted for the murder of follower Solange Boilard.
He had previously killed an infant named Samuel Giguère, while two of his disciples, Geraldine Gagné Auclair and Gabrielle Nadeau, died following homeopathic treatments administered to them by Thériault.
In 1989, when follower Solange Boilard complained of an upset stomach, Thériault performed another amateur surgery without anaesthesia.
2011
Thériault received a life sentence, which he was serving when he was murdered at Dorchester Penitentiary in 2011.