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  Sect members live 'normal' life on polygamous church ranch
Last updated: 2008-04-16


Sect members live 'normal' life on polygamous church ranch
2008-04-16

Event
2008 Texas Polygamy Case
Company
Wal-Mart
The women who belong to an embattled polygamist sect wear 19th Century-style dresses, but their daily lives don't differ much from their neighbors', including trips to discount super stores and the orthodontist, members said Wednesday.

Members of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints gave tours of their Yearning for Zion ranch two weeks after it was raided by law enforcement searching for a 16-year-old girl who called a hot line claiming her husband beat and raped her.

Child welfare officials have removed all 416 children living there from the custody of their parents. The 16-year-old has yet to be found.

Members said Wednesday they wanted to show that their lives -- isolated from what they regard as a hostile and sinful outside world -- center on family and faith.

A gleaming, white limestone temple is the center of the 1,700-acre ranch with large, log-style homes, a school, a dairy, a rock quarry and a community garden planted with vegetables, fruit trees and a grape arbor.

Set back some three miles from a state highway, the ranch sits behind two locked gates, which outsiders and excommunicated members suggest is a symbol of the control church elders have over the lives of the faithful.

No one who lives there calls it a compound.

"All of us say the ranch. It's the ranch. It's home," said Rozie, a 23-year-old married member of the sect. Members won't allow their last names to be used because they worry about the effect on their children in state custody.

Although they grow much of their own food, the members still shop at Costco and Wal-Mart. A ranch school using an accredited home schooling curriculum teaches kids from first through 12th grade. Women say modesty dictates their custom of donning long dresses, and they say they are not forced to marry.

A tour inside of one the homes, given by one of sect's mothers to CNN, showed a modern kitchen with women baking bread from wheat ground at the ranch. The plain dining area included dozens of chairs arranged at long folding tables, and bedrooms included multiple bunks and a row of twin beds spaced closely together.

"Can I leave the premises? Yes," said Nancy, a 40-year-old mother of four, who rises daily at 4:30 a.m. "We have a post office box. We get mail and we take the children to the orthodontist."

Families meet daily for religious devotions, prayer and singing. The community also gathers for church meetings on Sundays.

"It is lifeless here without our kids around here" said Dan, 24, whose wife remains housed in the San Angelo Coliseum complex 45 miles to the north with their 4-year-old daughter and 2-year-old son.

On Thursday, a custody hearing starts in the Tom Green County Courthouse to decide whether the children, who range in age from six months to 17 years, will be placed in permanent state custody. State officials alleged a pattern of abuse by adults, including marriages between young girls to older men.

Sect members deny children were abused.

"It's the furthest thing away from what we do here," Dan said of the abuse allegations. "There's nothing that's more disliked and more trained against.

Under Texas law, the Child Protective Services, an attorney for each child and attorneys for the parents must be given a chance to weigh in on whether the children should remain in state custody.

Typically, each child also is given a separate hearing, but given the number of cases, it's likely the judge will have the state, the children's attorneys and the parents' attorneys make consolidated presentations, at least initially, said Harper Estes, the president-elect of the state bar.

"You can't go one-by-one," Estes said.

A parade of attorneys appointed to represent each child -- many volunteers recruited by the bar association -- met with the children being housed in shelters and filed notices with the court on Wednesday. A separate group of attorneys arrived at the compound in Eldorado to meet with their parents.

The children have been held in shelters, first in Eldorado and then in San Angelo since they were removed from the sprawling compound nearly two weeks ago. All but the youngest children are being cared for by state workers and child care providers.

The FLDS came to West Texas in 2003, relocating some members from the church's traditional home along the Utah-Arizona border. The faith practices polygamy in arranged marriages and believe the lifestyle brings exaltation in heaven.

The sect traces its religious roots to the early theology of the mainstream Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which now denounces polygamy and excommunicates members found practicing it.

___

Associated Press writer Michelle Roberts contributed to this report from San Angelo.

 2008 Texas Polygamy Case  
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  3 more polygamist-sect members indicted in Texas (2008-09-23)
  Girl from polygamist group ordered into state care (2008-08-19)
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  Police: Polygamist sect leader Jeffs hospitalized (2008-07-09)
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  Deal on reuniting polygamist families delayed (2008-05-31)
  Sect members waiting for children to be returned (2008-05-30)
  Texas gets DNA sample from polygamist leader Jeffs (2008-05-30)
  US court says polygamy kids must be returned to parents (2008-05-30)
  Texas appeal says FLDS families are flight risks (2008-05-27)
  Sect parents cheer court ruling, await next step (2008-05-23)
  Texas sect parents complain of vague custody plans (2008-05-20)
  Polygamist sect's finances are murky (2008-05-15)
  Sect mother of newborn not a minor, Texas concedes (2008-05-13)
  Church records offer rare look inside polygamist families (2008-05-08)
  Former follower: Sect leader wanted to sleep with teenagers (2008-05-03)
  Warrant dropped against man named in polygamist retreat raid (2008-05-03)
  FLDS teen gives birth to boy as state officials stand by (2008-04-29)
  31 of 53 teen girls at FLDS ranch are pregnant or had baby (2008-04-28)
  Caretakers get hints on handling children seized in Texas (2008-04-27)
  Mothers from polygamous sect separated from young children (2008-04-25)
  Polygamist sect kids leave shelter for foster care, for now (2008-04-23)
  Polygamist sect kids leave shelter for foster care, for now (2008-04-22)
  Texas officials seek DNA samples of polygamist sect members (2008-04-22)


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