On November 4, three women and six children were killed by an armed group in the mountains between the states of Chihuahua and Sonora . It was reported that they were all Mormons and members of the LeBarón family , a Mexican-American community that settled in Mexico almost 100 years ago.
The LeBarón community was targeted by criminal organizations in 2009 when 17-year-old Eric LeBarón was kidnapped. His family then launched a series of peaceful protests to demand his release and refused to pay the USD $1 million ransom. Two months later, Benjamín LeBarón and Luis Widmar were kidnapped and murdered by a criminal group for their activism .
The LeBarón family arrives in Mexico
The LeBarón family arrived in Mexico in 1900 but established themselves in northern Mexico in the 1920s when Alma Dayer LeBarón , a fundamentalist Mormon , arrived in Mexico after he was excommunicated by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in 1924 for continuing to practice polygamy after the church banned it in 1890.
Nevertheless, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints doesn't recognize the LeBarón community as part of it.
In her book The Sound of Gravel, Ruth Wariner, the granddaughter of Alma LeBarón , tells the story of her childhood in Mexico “My great grandfather was a polygamous Mormon and 1902, he brought his wife and children to Mexico as the first Mormon migration wave . Back then, there were six established Mormon colonies in northern Mexico and around 3,500 fundamentalists living in the area. My grandfather, Alma Dayer LeBarón grew up traveling between the U.S. and Mexico until 1924, when he crossed the U.S. border to Mexico to live there permanently. He moved to Mexico to avoid being lynched by an angry mob of U.S. Mormons who chased him for practicing polygamy .”
According to the memoir, Alma Dayer LeBarón began to build his community in Mexico in 1944 , a place where the fundamentalist Mormon community could prosper and practice polygamy.
Currently. the LeBarón descendants and their families use English as their main language and have prospered by working on the pecan industry, agriculture , and livestock .
NXIVM
According to the New York Post , members of Keith Raniere's cult recruited girls from the LeBarón family to work as nannies in New York , “suggesting at least in part that the jobs would get the girls away from their home region’s drug violence .”
In a documentary filmed by Mark Vicente , which later turned into propaganda to recruit women into NXIVM , Julián LeBarón and other members of the LeBarón family receive advise by Raniere on how to handle the 2009 kidnap of Erick LeBarón and widespread violence in the region.
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