WUNRN
National Geographic - February 2010
The
Polygamists
USA
sect that split from the Mormons allows multiple wives, expels
By Scott Anderson
Photograph by
Stephanie Sinclair
The first church members arrive at the Leroy S. Johnson
Meeting House in Colorado City, Arizona, at about 6 p.m. Within a half hour the
line extends out the front doors, down the side of the building, and out into
the parking lot. By seven, it stretches hundreds of yards and has grown to
several thousand people—the men and boys dressed in suits, the women and girls
in Easter egg–hued prairie dresses.
The mourners have come for a viewing of 68-year-old Foneta
Jessop, who died of a heart attack a few days ago. In the cavernous hall Foneta's
sons form a receiving line at the foot of her open casket, while her husband,
Merril, stands directly alongside. To the other side stand Merril's numerous
other wives, all wearing matching white dresses.
Foneta was the first wife.
Colorado City is a town with special
significance for those of Foneta's faith. Together with its sister community of
Hildale, Utah, it is the birthplace of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints (FLDS), a polygamous offshoot of the Mormon Church,
or LDS. Here in the 1920s and '30s, a handful of polygamous families settled
astride the Utah-Arizona border after the leadership of the Mormon Church
became increasingly determined to shed its polygamous past and be accepted by
the American mainstream. In 1935 the church gave settlement residents an
ultimatum: renounce plural marriage or be excommunicated. Practically everyone
refused and was cast out of the LDS.
At the memorial service for Foneta, her
husband and three sons give testimonials praising her commitment to the
covenant of plural marriage, but there is an undertone of family disharmony,
with vague references by Merril Jessop to his troubled relationship with
Foneta. No one need mention that one of Merril's wives is missing. Carolyn
Jessop, his fourth wife, left the household in 2003 with her eight children and
went on to write a best-selling book on her life as an FLDS member. She
describes a cloistered environment and tells of a deeply unhappy Foneta, an
overweight recluse who fell out of favor with her husband and slept her days
away, coming out of her room only at night to eat, do laundry, and watch old
Shirley Temple movies on television.
At the conclusion of the service, most of the
congregation walk over to the Isaac Carling cemetery for a graveside
observance. I assume the enormous turnout—mourners have come in from FLDS
communities in Texas, Colorado, and British Columbia—stems from the prominent
position Foneta's husband holds: Merril Jessop is an FLDS leader and the bishop
of the large chapter in West Texas. But Sam Steed, a soft-spoken, 37-year-old
accountant acting as my guide, explains that elaborate funerals are a regular
occurrence. "Probably between 15 and 20 times a year," he says.
"This one is maybe a little bigger than most, but even when a young child
dies, you can expect three or four thousand people to attend. It's part of what
keeps us together. It reminds us we're members of this larger community. We
draw strength from each other."
FEW AMERICANS had heard of the FLDS before
April 2008, when law enforcement officials conducted a raid on a remote
compound in West Texas known as the Yearning for Zion Ranch. For days after,
television viewers witnessed the bizarre spectacle of hundreds of children and
women—all dressed in old-fashioned prairie dresses, with elaborately coiffed
hair—being herded onto school buses by social workers and police officers.
That raid had been spurred by phone calls to
a domestic violence shelter, purportedly from a 16-year-old girl who claimed
she was being sexually and physically abused on the ranch by her middle-aged
husband. What lent credibility to the calls was that the residents of YFZ Ranch
were disciples of the FLDS and its "prophet," Warren Jeffs, who had
been convicted in a Utah court in 2007 for officiating at the marriage of a
14-year-old girl to a church member.
The raid made for gripping television, but it
soon became clear that the phone calls were a hoax. And although authorities
had evidently anticipated a violent confrontation like the 1993 shoot-out at
the Branch Davidian compound in Waco—SWAT teams were brought in, along with an
armored personnel carrier—the arsenal at the YFZ Ranch consisted of only 33
legal firearms. A Texas appeals court later found that authorities had not met
the burden of proof for the removal of the more than 400 children, and most
were returned to their families within two months.
Yet after interviewing teenagers who were
pregnant or had children, Texas authorities began investigating how many
underage girls might have been "sealed" to older men. (Plural
marriages are performed within the church and are not legal.) The result:
Twelve church members, including Warren Jeffs, were indicted on charges ranging
from bigamy to having sex with a minor. The first defendant to stand trial,
Raymond Jessop, was convicted of one charge last November. Trials of the other
defendants are scheduled to take place over the coming year.
FROM THE BLUFF behind his Hildale home, Joe
Jessop has a commanding view of the Arizona Strip, an undulating expanse of
sagebrush and piñon-juniper woodland that stretches south of the Utah border
all the way to the northern rim of the Grand Canyon, some 50 miles away. Below
are the farm fields and walled compounds of Hildale and Colorado City, which
Joe refers to collectively by their old name, Short Creek. "When I first
came to Short Creek as a boy, there were just seven homes down there,"
says Joe, 88. "It was like the frontier."
Today, Short Creek is home to an estimated
6,000 FLDS members—the largest FLDS community. Joe Jessop, a brother of Merril,
has contributed to that explosive growth in two very different ways. With the
weathered features and spindly gait of a man who has spent his life outdoors
and worked his body hard, he is the community's undisputed "water
guy," a self-taught engineer who helped with the piping of water out of
Maxwell Canyon back in the 1940s. He's had a hand in building the intricate
network of waterlines, canals, and reservoirs that has irrigated the arid
plateau in the decades since.
A highly respected member of the FLDS, Joe is
also the patriarch of a family of 46 children and—at last count—239
grandchildren. "My family came to Short Creek for the same reason as
everyone else," he says, "to obey the law of plural marriage, to
build up the Kingdom of God. Despite everything that's been thrown our way, I'd
say we've done a pretty good job."
Members of the faith describe the life that
the Jessops and other founding families have built as idyllic, one in which
old-fashioned devotion and neighborly cooperation are emphasized and children
are raised in a wholesome environment free of television and junk food and
social pressures. Critics, on the other hand, see the FLDS as an isolated cult
whose members, worn down by rigid social control, display a disturbing fealty
to one man, the prophet Warren Jeffs—who has claimed to be God's mouthpiece on
Earth.
To spend time in Hildale and Colorado City is
to come away with a more nuanced view. That view is revealed gradually,
however, due to the insular nature of the community. Many of the oversize homes
are tucked behind high walls, both to give children a safe place to play and to
shield families from gawking Gentiles, as non-Mormons are known. Most residents
avoid contact with strangers. National Geographic was given access to
the community only on the approval of the church leadership, in consultation
with the imprisoned Warren Jeffs.
In keeping with original Mormon teachings,
much of the property in Hildale and Colorado City is held in trust for the
church. Striving to be as self-sufficient as possible, the community grows a
wide variety of fruits and vegetables, and everyone, including children, is
expected to help bring in the yield. Church members also own and operate a
number of large businesses, from hotels to tool and machine manufacturers. Each
Saturday, men gather at the meetinghouse to go over a roster of building and
maintenance projects around town in need of volunteers. In one display of
solidarity, the men built a four-bedroom home, from foundation to roof
shingles, in a single day.
This communal spirit continues inside the polygamous
home. Although living arrangements vary—wives may occupy different wings of a
house or have their own granny cottages—the women tend to carve out spheres of
influence according to preference or aptitude. Although each has primary
responsibility for her own children, one wife might manage the kitchen, a
second act as schoolteacher (virtually all FLDS children in Hildale and
Colorado City are homeschooled), and a third see to the sewing. Along with
instilling a sense of sorority, this division of labor appears to mitigate
jealousy.
"I know it must seem strange to
outsiders," says Joyce Broadbent, a friendly woman of 44, "but from
my experience, sister wives usually get along very well. Oh sure, you might be
closer to one than another, or someone might get on your nerves occasionally,
but that's true in any family. I've never felt any rivalry or jealousy at
all."
Joyce is a rather remarkable example of this
harmony. She not only accepted another wife, Marcia, into the family, but was
thrilled by the addition. Marcia, who left an unhappy marriage in the 1980s, is
also Joyce's biological sister. "I knew my husband was a good man,"
Joyce explains with a smile as she sits with Marcia and their husband, Heber.
"I wanted my sister to have a chance at the same kind of happiness I
had."
Not all FLDS women are quite so sanguine
about plural marriage. Dorothy Emma Jessop is a spry, effervescent octogenarian
who operates a naturopathic dispensary in Hildale. Sitting in her tiny shop
surrounded by jars of herbal tinctures she ground and mixed herself, Dorothy
admits she struggled when her husband began taking on other wives. "To be
honest," she says, "I think a lot of women have a hard time with it,
because it's not an easy thing to share the man you love. But I came to realize
this is another test that God places before you—the sin of jealousy, of
pride—and that to be a godly woman, I needed to overcome it."
What seems to help overcome it is an
awareness that a woman's primary role in the FLDS is to bear and raise as many
children as possible, to build up the "celestial family" that will
remain together for eternity. It is not uncommon to meet FLDS women who have
given birth to 10, 12, 16 children. (Joyce Broadbent is the mother of 11, and
Dorothy Emma Jessop of 13.) As a result, it's easy to see why this corner of
the American West is experiencing a population explosion. The 400 or so babies
delivered in the Hildale health clinic every year have resulted in a median age
of just under 14, in contrast with 36.6 for the entire U.S. With so many in the
community tracing their lineage to a handful of the pioneering families, the
same few names crop up over and over in Hildale and Colorado City, suggesting a
murkier side to this fecundity: Doctors in Arizona say a severe form of a
debilitating disease called fumarase deficiency, caused by a recessive gene,
has become more prevalent in the community due to intermarriage.
The collision of tradition and modernity in
the community can be disorienting. Despite their old-fashioned dress, most FLDS
adults have cell phones and favor late-model SUVs. Although televisions are now
banished, church members tend to be highly computer literate and sell a range
of products, from soaps to dresses, via the Internet. When I noticed how few congregants
wore glasses, I wondered aloud if perhaps a genetic predisposition for good
eyesight was at work. Sam Steed laughed lightly. "No. People here are just
really into laser surgery."
THE PRINCIPLE of plural marriage was revealed
to the Mormons amid much secrecy. Dark clouds hovered over the church in the
early 1840s, after rumors spread that its founder, Joseph Smith, had taken up
the practice of polygamy. While denying the charge in public, by 1843 Smith had
shared a revelation with his closest disciples. In this "new and
everlasting covenant" with God, plural wives were to be taken so that the
faithful might "multiply and replenish the earth."
After Smith was assassinated by an
anti-Mormon mob in Illinois, Brigham Young led believers on an epic 1,300-mile
journey west to the Salt Lake Basin of present-day Utah. There the covenant was
at last publicly revealed and with it, the notion that a man's righteousness
before God would be measured by the size of his family; Brigham Young himself
took 55 wives, who bore him 57 children.
But in 1890, faced with the seizure of church
property under a federal antipolygamy law, the LDS leadership issued a
manifesto announcing an end to plural marriage. That certainly didn't end the
practice, and the LDS's tortured handling of the issue—some church leaders
remained in plural marriages or even took on new wives after the manifesto's
release—contributed to the schism between the LDS and the fundamentalists.
"The LDS issued that manifesto for
political purposes, then later claimed it was a revelation," says Willie
Jessop, the FLDS spokesman. "We in the fundamentalist community believe
covenants are made with God and are not to be manipulated for political
reasons, so that presents an enormous obstacle between us and those in the LDS
mainstream."
Upholding the covenant has come at a high
price. The 2008 raid on the YFZ Ranch was only the latest in a long list of
official actions against polygamists—persecutions for simply adhering to their
religious principles, in the eyes of church members—that are integral to the
FLDS story. At various times both Utah and Arizona authorities attempted to
crack down on the Short Creek community: in 1935, in 1944, and most famously,
in 1953. In that raid some 200 women and children were hauled to detention
centers, while 26 men were brought up on polygamy charges. In 1956 Utah
authorities seized seven children of Vera Black, a Hildale plural wife, on
grounds that her polygamous beliefs made her an unfit mother. Black was
reunited with her children only after agreeing to renounce polygamy.
MELINDA FISCHER JEFFS is an articulate,
outgoing woman of 37, and she gives an incredulous laugh when describing what
she's read about the FLDS. "Honestly, I can't even recognize it!" the
mother of three exclaims. "Most all of what appears in the media, it makes
us sound like we're somehow being kept against our will."
Melinda is in a unique position to understand
the conflicting views of this community. She is a plural wife to Jim Jeffs, one
of the prophet's nephews and an elder in the FLDS. But she is also the daughter
of Dan Fischer, a former FLDS member who has emerged as one of the church
leadership's most vociferous critics. In 2008 Fischer testified before a U.S.
Senate committee about alleged improprieties within the FLDS, and he now heads
an organization that works with people who have been kicked out of the church
or who have "escaped." When Fischer broke with the church in the
1990s, his family split apart too; today 13 of his children have left the FLDS,
while Melinda and two of her half siblings have renounced their father.
"And that is not an easy thing,"
Melinda says softly, "obviously, because I still love my father. I pray
all the time that he will see his errors—or at least, stop his attacks on
us."
If there is one point on which FLDS defenders
and detractors might agree, it is that most of the current troubles can be
traced to when its leadership passed to the Jeffs family, in 1986. Until then,
the FLDS had been a fairly loosely run group led by an avuncular man named
Leroy Johnson, who relied on a group of high priests to guide the church. That
ended when Rulon Jeffs took over following Johnson's death. After being
declared the prophet by the community, Rulon solidified the policy of one-man
rule.
Charges that a theocratic dictatorship was
taking root in the Arizona Strip grew louder when, after Rulon's death in 2002,
the FLDS was taken over by his 46-year-old son, Warren. Assuming the role of
the prophet, Warren first married several of his father's wives—and then
proceeded to wed many more women, including, according to Carolyn Jessop, eight
of Merril Jessop's daughters. Although many FLDS men have multiple wives, the
number of wives of those closest to the prophet can reach into the double
digits. A church document called the Bishop's Record, seized during the Texas
raid, shows that one of Jeffs's lieutenants, Wendell Nielsen, claims 21 wives.
And although the FLDS would not disclose how many plural wives Warren Jeffs has
taken (some estimate more than 80), at least one was an underage girl,
according to a Texas indictment.
Although the issue of underage marriage
within the church has garnered the greatest negative media attention, Dan
Fischer has championed another cause, the so-called Lost Boys, who have left or
been forced from the community and wound up fending for themselves on the
streets of Las Vegas, Salt Lake City, and St. George, Utah. Fischer's
foundation has worked with 300 such young men, a few as young as 13, over the
past seven years. Fischer concedes that most of these boys were simply
"discouraged out," but he cites cases where they were officially
expelled, a practice he says increased under Jeffs.
Fischer attributes the exodus partly to a
cold-blooded calculation by church leaders to limit male competition for the
pool of marriageable young women. "If you have men marrying 20, 30, up to
80 or more women," he says, "then it comes down to biology and simple
math that there will be a lot of other men who aren't going to get wives. The
church says it's kicking these boys out for being disruptive influences, but if
you'll notice, they rarely kick out girls."
Equally contentious has been the FLDS
restoration of an early Mormon policy of transferring the wives and children of
a church member to another man. Traditionally, this was done upon the death of
a patriarch so that his widows might be cared for, or to rescue a woman from an
abusive relationship. But critics argue that under Jeffs this
"reassignment" became one more weapon to hold over the heads of those
who dared step out of line.
Determining who is unworthy has been the
exclusive province of the prophet. When in January 2004 Jeffs publicly ordered
the expulsion of 21 men and the reassignment of their families, the community
acquiesced. Jeffs's diary, also seized during the Texas raid, reveals a man who
micromanaged the community's every decision, from chore assignments and housing
arrangements to who married whom and which men were ousted—all directed by
revelations Jeffs received as he slept. He claimed that God guided his every
action, no matter how small. One diary entry reads: "The Lord directed
that I go to the sun tanning salon and get sun tanned more evenly on their
suntanning beds."
In 2005 a Utah court transferred control of
the trust that oversees much of the land in Hildale and Colorado City from the
FLDS leadership to a state-appointed fiduciary; the church is currently waging
a campaign to recover control of the trust. As for Jeffs, after spending over a
year on the lam avoiding legal issues in Utah—and earning a spot on the FBI's
Ten Most Wanted list—he was caught and is currently serving a ten-year-to-life
sentence as an accomplice to rape. He awaits trial on multiple indictments in
Arizona and Texas. The 11 other church members awaiting trial in Texas include
Merril Jessop, who was indicted for performing the marriage of Jeffs to an
underage girl.
Yet Jeffs's smiling portrait continues to
adorn the living room of almost every FLDS home. In his absence, his lieutenants
have launched a fierce defense of his leadership. While conceding that underage
marriages did occur in the past, Donald Richter, contributor to one of the
official FLDS websites, says the practice has now been stopped. As for the Lost
Boys, he argues that both the numbers involved and the reasons for the
expulsions have been greatly exaggerated by the church's enemies. "This is
only done in the most extreme cases," Richter says, "and never for
the trivial causes they're claiming. And anyway, all religious groups have the
right to expel people who won't accept their rules."
Certainly Melinda Fischer Jeffs hasn't been
swayed by the ongoing controversy. "Warren is just the kindest, most
loving man," she says. "The image that has been built up about him by
the media and his enemies is just unrecognizable to who he really is."
Like other church members, Melinda has ready answers for most of the
accusations leveled against Jeffs and is especially spirited in defending the
policy of reassignment. According to her, it is almost always initiated at the
request of a wife who has been abandoned or abused. This is debatable. In his
diary Jeffs recounts reassigning the wives of three men, including his brother
David, because God had shown him that they "couldn't exalt their ladies,
had lost the confidence of God." One of his brother's wives had difficulty
accepting the news and could barely bring herself to kiss her new husband.
"She showed a great spirit of resistance, yet she went through with
it," Jeffs records. "She needs to learn to submit to
Priesthood."
Yet Melinda's defense of Jeffs underscores
one of the most curious aspects of the polygamous faith: the central role of
women in defending it. This is not new. In Brigham Young's day a charity rushed
to Utah to establish a safe house for polygamous women seeking to escape this
"white slavery"; that house sat virtually empty. Today FLDS women in
the Hildale–Colorado City area have ample opportunity to "escape"—they
have cell phones, they drive cars, there are no armed guards keeping them
in—yet they don't.
Undoubtedly one reason is that, having been
raised in this culture, they know little else. Walking away means leaving
behind everything: the community, one's sense of security, even one's own
family. Carolyn Jessop, the plural wife of Merril Jessop who did leave the
FLDS, likens entering the outside world to "stepping out onto another
planet. I was completely unprepared, because I had absolutely no life skills.
Most women in the FLDS don't even know how to balance a checkbook, let alone
apply for a job, so contemplating how you're going to navigate in the outside
world is extremely daunting."
It would seem there's another lure for women
to stay: power. The FLDS women I spoke with tended to be far more articulate
and confident than the men, most of whom seemed paralyzed by bashfulness. It
makes sense when one begins to grasp that women are coveted to "multiply
and replenish the earth," while men are in extraordinary competition to be
deemed worthy of marriage by the prophet. One way to be deemed worthy, of
course, is to not rock the boat, to keep a low profile. As a result, what has
all the trappings of a patriarchal culture, actually has many elements of a
matriarchal one.
There are limits to that power, of course, for it is
subject to the dictates of the prophet. After hearing Melinda's stout defense
of Jeffs, I ask what she would do if she were reassigned.
"I'm confident that wouldn't happen," she
replies uneasily.
"But what if it did?" I ask. "Would you
obey?"
For the only time during our interview, Melinda grows
wary. Sitting back in her chair, she gives her head a quarter turn to stare at
me out of the corner of one eye.
ON A SUNNY AFTERNOON in March 2009, Bob Barlow, a
friendly, middle-aged member of the FLDS, gives me a tour of the YFZ Ranch in
West Texas. The compound consists of about 25 two-story log-cabin-style homes,
and a number of workshops and factories are scattered over 1,700 acres. At the
center sits a gleaming white stone temple. It is remarkable what the residents
have created from the hardscrabble plain. With heavy machinery, they literally
made earth out of the rocky terrain, crushing stone and mixing it with the thin
topsoil. They planted orchards and gardens and lawns and were on their way to
creating a self-sufficient community amid the barren landscape. All that ground
to a halt after the 2008 raid.
"The families are slowly coming back now,"
Barlow says. "We'll come out the other side of this better and stronger than
before."
I suspect he's right. So many times in the history of
Mormon polygamy the outside world thought it had the movement on the ropes only
to see it flourish anew. I'm reminded of this one afternoon in Colorado City
when I speak with Vera Black. Now 92 and in failing health, Vera is the woman
whose children were taken from her by Utah authorities in 1956 and returned
only after she agreed to renounce polygamy. Within days of making that promise,
she was back in Short Creek with her children and had renewed her commitment to
the everlasting covenant.
Now living with her daughter Lillian, Vera lies in a
daybed as her children gather around. Those children are now in their 50s and
60s, and as they recount the story of their long-ago separation—both from their
mother and their faith—several weep, as if the pain were fresh.
"I had to make that promise," Vera says, with a
smile, "but I crossed my fingers while I did it."
Scott
Anderson is a war correspondent and novelist. Photographer Stephanie Sinclair spent
more than a year documenting the FLDS community.
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2010/02/polygamists/anderson-text
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We welcome your feedback at: ngm@nationalgeographic.com
FOLLOWING IS ANDREA MOORE-EMMETT’S LETTER TO NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC:
Mr. Anderson’s piece, ‘The Polygamists’ (Feb 2010) is reminiscent of those journalists who visited The People’s Temple before its murderous demise.
For many of us who have researched this and other Mormon and Christian fundamentalist polygamist cults for numerous years, Anderson’s perspective isn’t new nor is it a surprise. Though Anderson did mention some of the crimes and the problem of genetic disease encountered in the FLDS, for the most part he fell victim to the typical FLDS propaganda, as did his photographer. Like Jim Jones or any other cult, the FLDS are master tour guides. Tours are staged, with only designated members coached and rehearsed in their roles. What they talk about is controlled, restricted and they are commanded to make certain statements. This is especially true for women within this cult.
Anderson’s piece lacks a window on the totality of the problems this community imposes on general society, which include, but are not limited to, the cost to taxpayers in government subsidies. He often generalizes, as with the assertion that detractors view problems only beginning after Rulon Jeffs took over leadership after Johnson died.
Staged, smiling pictures add visual interest but they are smoke and mirrors. Anderson and Sinclair were set up and they fell for it.
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