Children of Silence: The Anne Hamilton-Byrne Cult
At dawn on August 14, 1987, police cut through a gate at Lake Eildon and stepped into a nightmare disguised as serenity: thirteen blond, identically dressed children standing in a line, taught to call one woman "Mother."
That woman was Anne Hamilton-Byrne-yoga teacher, socialite, self-anointed messiah-and the architect of one of Australia's most audacious and secretive cults.
In this deeply reported, survivor-centered investigation, Linda Davidson traces how a charismatic leader seduced doctors, lawyers, and academics; forged adoptions; bleached identities; and used drugs, terror, and scripture to manufacture obedience. Moving from drawing-room sermons to hospital backrooms, from the quiet brutality inside the children's home to the years-long manhunt that ended Anne's exile, Children of Silence reveals how respectability became a mask-and how a handful of brave defectors and detectives tore it off.
Inside, you'll find:
The making of "Mother" from Evelyn Edwards to living "Christ."
The machinery of control-Aunties, forged papers, sedation, and staged "visions."
Operation Forest: the raid, the rescue, and the paper trail that cracked the case.
Flight, arrest, and a verdict that felt like a whisper against a roar.
The survivors' voices: identity reclaimed, faith rebuilt, and the long work of healing.
Both haunting and humane, this book asks why intelligent people follow-and what it costs children when adults surrender doubt. For readers of Going Clear, The Road to Jonestown, and investigative true crime that honors those who endured it, Children of Silence is a clear-eyed account of a cult built on quiet-and the voices that finally broke it.
Content note: depicts coercive control, child abuse, and psychological trauma.