SAN ANGELO Texas
Many of the children have seen little or no television. They have been
essentially home-schooled all their lives. Most were raised on garden-grown
vegetables and twice-daily prayers with family. They frolic in long dresses and
buttoned-up shirts from another century. They are unfailingly polite.
The 437 children taken from the polygamist compound in West Texas are being
scattered to group homes and boys' and girls' ranches across the state, plunged
into a culture radically different from the community where they and their
families shunned the outside world as a hostile, contaminating influence on
their godly way of life.
The state Child Protective Services program said it chose foster homes where
the youngsters can be kept apart from other children for now.
"We recognize it's critical that these children not be exposed to mainstream
culture too quickly or other things that would hinder their success," agency
spokeswoman Shari Pulliam said. "We just want to protect them from abuse and
neglect. We're not trying to change them."
The children were swept up in a raid earlier this month on the Yearning for
Zion Ranch run by the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints, a renegade Mormon splinter group that believes in marrying off underage
girls to older men. State child-welfare authorities said there was evidence of
physical and sexual abuse at the ranch.
The youngsters are being moved out of the crowded San Angelo Coliseum and
will be placed in 16 temporary facilities around Texas some as far away as
Houston, 500 miles off until individual custody hearings can be held.
Those hearings could result in a number of possibilities: Some children could
be placed in permanent foster care; some parents who have left the sect may win
custody; some youngsters may be allowed to return to the ranch in Eldorado; and
some may turn 18 before the case is complete and will be allowed to choose their
own fates.
Several attorneys for FLDS children called Wednesday for custody cases to be
spread out among family law courts across Texas venue changes that, they
acknowledged, would likely require authorization from the Texas Supreme Court.
"It's one court that's bogged down with 437 children. There is no possible
way that my client's needs ... can be addressed in a timely fashion," attorney
Laura Shockley at a Dallas news conference.
Children raised on the FLDS compound must wear pioneer-style dress and keep
their hair pinned up in braids, reflecting their standards of modesty. For the
same reason, they have little knowledge of pop culture. They must pray twice a
day. They tend vegetable gardens and raise dairy cows, and must eat fresh food.
And they are exceedingly polite, always saying "please" and "thank you."
In contrast, many other children in foster care are worldly-wise beyond their
years, and are there because they have been exposed to drugs or other criminal
behavior.
Experts and lawyers say foster care will change the sect children.
"These children who have lived in a very insular culture and are suddenly
thrust into mainstream culture. There's going to be problems," said Susan Hays,
who represents a toddler in the custody case. "They are a throwback to the 19th
century in how they dress and how they behave."
Ken Driggs, an Atlanta lawyer has long studied and written about the FLDS,
said that if kept away from their parents' culture long enough, the children may
begin to emulate those around them.
Pulliam said the temporary foster care facilities have been briefed on the
children's needs. "We're not going to have them in tank tops and shorts," she
said.
Authorities will try to obtain the youngsters' traditional clothing from
their parents, and also arrange for visits from some of the adults, state
attorney Gary Banks said.
In addition, CPS has sent instructions to the foster homes to feed the
youngsters fresh fruits and vegetables, chicken, rice and other foods that may
have been grown on the 1,700-acre ranch.
"They don't eat a lot of processed food and we're not going to encourage
that," Pulliam said, but noted that if the children want to eat processed or
junk food, no one is going to stop them.
Those who cling to the old traditions may pose another problem for the state
they might run away. Driggs said polygamists' children have fled foster homes
before because "they want to go home, and they want to go to people and
circumstances they're used to."
The children have been educated in a schoolhouse, using a home-school
curriculum, on the compound, and may actually be ahead of public-school students
their ages, lawyers said.
Hays and Pulliam said the children will continue to be home-schooled by the
temporary foster-care providers instead of being thrown into big schools, where
they could be bullied because of their differences.
While their diets, dress and prayers can be accommodated with a little
planning, other experts said their emotional needs may be trickier to deal with.
Dr. Bruce Perry, a child psychiatrist who testified for the children last
week, said FLDS children may be easily taken advantage of by outsiders because
of the strict control church leaders have had over their daily lives.
People who have left the sect "felt emotionally incapable of
decision-making," he said.
Associated Press writers Monica Rhor in Houston and Paul Weber in Dallas
contributed to this report.
Copyright 2008 Associated Press