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33 Photos Of Life Inside The Creepy Confines Of Warren Jeffs’ Fundamentalist Mormon Cult
By Mark Oliver | Checked By John Kuroski
A polygamist father leads his two wives and ten children in prayer. Centennial Park, Arizona. February 2008. Stephan Gladieu/Getty Images
Some of Warren Jeffs' 70 wives pose in front of his portrait. Gordon Shumway/YouTube
A young girl, born into an FLDS family peers out the window. San Angelo, Texas. 2008. Robert Daemmrich Photography Inc/Corbis via Getty Images
A woman of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints holds a hymn book.
Eldorado, Texas. April 14, 2008. Keith Johnson/Deseret Morning News/Getty Images
A polygamist family which lives about an hour outside of Salt Lake City. Sept. 19, 2006. Heather Stone/Chicago Tribune/MCT via Getty Images
Former FLDS Prophet Rulon Jeffs with two of his teenaged brides, Ruth Edna and Mary Marie Fischer. Gordon Shumway/YouTube
Young girls play football in the dirt yard outside of a public school in the FLDS town of Colorado City. Colorado City, Arizona. March 3, 2004. George Frey/Getty Images
Enoch Foster and his two wives read their children a bedtime story. The Foster family lives on Rockland Ranch, a polygamist community south of Moab built into the side of a sandstone cliff. Dry Valley, Utah. 2012. Craig F. Walker/The Denver Post via Getty Images
A young man on horseback stops at the local store in Colorado City, the home of Warren Jeffs' FLDS. Colorado City, Arizona. April 2006. George Frey/Getty Images
An FLDS family, 66 years ago, sits by their doorstep. Every child in this picture shares the same father.
Short Creek, Arizona. Aug. 29, 1953. Joern Gerdts/Picture Post/Getty Images
A modern polygamist family, including two sister wives and ten children. Centennial Park, Arizona. February 2008. Stephan Gladieu/Getty Images
FLDS sister wives and their children bow their heads and pray for the safe return of their family patriarch, who was arrested on polygamy charges. Short Creek, Arizona. 1953. Apic/Getty Images
A modern polygamist family bows down before their meal to pray. Centennial Park, Arizona. February 2008. Stephan Gladieu/Getty Images
A group of FLDS children run and play through their hometown, then called Short Creek. Short Creek, Arizona. Aug. 29, 1953. Joern Gerdts/Picture Post/Getty Images
Children run through their backyard in a modern polygamist community.
These children are in the Timpson family. At the time of this photograph, their family consisted of one father, six mothers ,and 41 children. Centennial Park, Arizona. February 2008. Stephan Gladieu/Getty Images
FLDS children play volleyball with a makeshift net. Short Creek, Arizona. 1953. Loomis Dean/The LIFE Premium Collection/Getty Images
Children play volleyball outside a school in Colorado City, the hometown of the FLDS church. Colorado City, Arizona. 2004. George Frey/Getty Images
Mormon women and their daughters working in the kitchen. Short Creek, Arizona. Aug. 29, 1953. Joern Gerdts/Picture Post/Getty Images
A man in the polygamist community of Rockland Ranch kisses his wife goodbye while his other wife, in the kitchen behind him, looks on. Dry Valley, Utah. 2012. Craig F. Walker/The Denver Post via Getty Images
The five wives and some of the children of Richard Jessop who was a member of the FLDS church who lived in Short Creek. Short Creek, Arizona. August 22, 1953. Joern Gerdts/Picture Post/Getty Images
The family of modern polygamist Ray Timpson, including his six wives and 41 children. Centennial Park, Arizona. February 2008. Stephan Gladieu/Getty Images
Four children in a polygamist family crawl on the bunk beds they use to fit such a large family in a single home. Centennial Park, Arizona. February 2008. Stephan Gladieu/Getty Images
Some of Ray Timpson's 41 children play on the trampoline in the backyard. Centennial Park, Arizona. February 2008. Stephan Gladieu/Getty Images
FLDS Prophet Warren Jeffs (above) and his father Rulon Jeffs (below). Gordon Shumway/YouTube
Joseph Smith Jessop, the founder of Short Creek, is arrested during a raid of the FLDS town. Geneticists say that residents of Short Creek today suffer from high rates of so-called "Polygamist Downs" because so many members of the town can trace their ancestry back to either Jessop or the town's co-founder, John Yeates Barlow. Short Creek, Arizona. 1953. Loomis Dean/The LIFE Premium Collection/Getty Images
Women and children of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints who were removed from Warren Jeffs' Yearning for Zion compound in Eldorado, Texas walk around the temporary holding center. San Angelo, Texas. April 8, 2008. Mike Terry/Deseret Morning News/Getty Images
A Mormon father holds two of his children in the aftermath of the Short Creek Polygamy Raid. Short Creek, Arizona. July 26, 1953. Loomis Dean/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images
Women and children of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints who were removed from the Yearning for Zion compound in Eldorado, Texas embrace as they arrive at Fort Concho where they will temporarily be held. San Angelo, Texas. April 6, 2008. Mike Terry/Deseret Morning News/Getty Images
Two young women hug each other in the aftermath of the Short Creek Raid of 1953. Short Creek, Arizona. 1953. Loomis Dean/The LIFE Premium Collection/Getty Images
An FLDS woman breaks down into tears after the raid on Warren Jeffs' Yearning For Zion compound. FLDS mothers saw their children taken away over allegations of sexual abuse. Eldorado, Texas. April 24, 2008. Scott G. Winterton /Deseret Morning News/Getty Images
The wife of John Barlow, one of the two founders of Short Creek, answers police questions with two of her children at her side. Short Creek, Arizona. 1953. Loomis Dean/The LIFE Premium Collection/Getty Images
A woman and her three children walk through the government holding center where they are being kept after the raid on Warren Jeffs' Yearning for Zion compound. San Angelo, Texas. April 9, 2008. Mike Terry/Deseret Morning News/Getty Images
A woman in the FLDS church sits on the steps of a ranch located just outside of the church's infamous Yearning for Zion compound which was possessed by the state in 2014. Eldorado, Texas. April 12, 2008. Keith Johnson/Deseret Morning News/Getty Images
33 Photos Of Life Inside The Creepy Confines Of Warren Jeffs’ Fundamentalist Mormon Cult
Mark Oliver is a writer, teacher, and father whose work has appeared on The Onion's StarWipe, Yahoo, and Cracked, and can be found on his website .
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On the border between Utah and Arizona rests the twin towns of Hildale and Colorado City. To drive through either feels like a time warp. Women wear pastel-colored prairie dresses, most homes have livestock, and each man has nearly a dozen children - and at least three wives. This is the home of prophet and fundamentalist Mormon president Warren S. Jeffs and the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, better known as the FLDS Church.
10,000 people are believed to be followers of the FLDS Church and most of them live in these two towns of Hildale and Colorado City, though a handful are scattered across the United States as well as parts of Canada and Mexico.
In most respects, Warren Jeffs' followers are not too unlike the rest of us. They go to school, go to work, and spend time at home with their families.
It's just those families tend to be a little bit bigger than most because the fundamentalist Mormon members of the FLDS Church follow the commandment of Jeffs, who has told them: "You can't go to heaven and be a god unless you have more than one wife."
Wikimedia Commons The former FLDS temple at the YFZ Ranch near Eldorado, Texas.
The FLDS splintered off of the better-known Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for the explicit purpose of practicing polygamy.
It could be said that the church came into being in 1890 when amidst growing pressure from the U.S. government, LDS president and prophet Wilford Woodruff released a manifesto telling his followers to "refrain from contracting any marriage forbidden by the law of the land."
A handful of people refused to obey and so they set up their own church in Hildale and Colorado City. These towns were known then as Short Creek and living in these twin cities on state lines meant that the members of the new church could race across the border to dodge police raids.
Every man in Short Creek was expected to have at least two wives, although even that was considered a little on the low side. If a man wanted to achieve the highest form of salvation after death, the FLDS Church taught that a man really ought to have at least three wives. Officially, this facet is one of only a few of the FLDS Church's differences from the LDS church; but in practice, it affects a lot.
Because they believe that any man should have a collection of wives who live under a doctrine of subservience to him, this means that there often isn't enough women to go around. In a society where each man has three wives, equality is difficult to achieve and so some of the men have to leave town to maintain the ratio.
When a teenage boy comes of age, his status in the FLDS Church is in constant jeopardy. He has to be on guard that he lives his life by the book because if he dabbles in sins like dating and listening to rock music, he could be damned to join the "Lost Boys": the hundreds of young men who have been kicked out of the FLDS church.
Those who make it through don't get to choose their own wives. Love doesn't play a big role in an FLDS Church marriage; instead, young men and women wait for their prophet, in this case, Warren S. Jeffs, to assess their worthiness and assign them their spouses.
But even then, the FLDS Church still struggles to make the numbers work. And so they import young girls from elsewhere in the country.
In 2011, the RCMP alleges, more than 50 young girls between the ages of 12 and 17 were taken out of their homes in Bountiful, British Columbia and sent off to Hildale and Colorado City, where they pushed into arranged marriages with FLDS men. At least two of those girls ended up married to the prophet Warren Jeffs himself. When they got married, one of those girls was 13 years old. The other was 12.
But if Charlene Jeffs, the estranged wife of Warren Jeffs, is to be believed, things are even darker underneath the surface of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
A select group of church leaders, Charlene reported , have been designated as the FLDS Church's "seed bearers". These individuals alone are designated as having a bloodline worthy enough to create children, and so all other men are forbidden to reproduce - including with their own wives.
Instead, a seed bearer will come into their home and force themselves upon their wives, telling them that this is the command of the priesthood. As an ultimate humiliation, they force their husbands to hold their wives' hands as they are raped. Indeed, by some accounts, under Warren Jeffs' leadership, the religion seems to have devolved into a sex cult. According to Lorin Holm, another escaped FLDS member, women who sleep with Jeffs and the other church leaders are forced to engage in what they call the "Higher Law of Sarah."
The "Law of Sarah" has some mystical-sounding justifications, but, in essence, Warren Jeffs forced multiple wives to put on a group sex show before he assaulted them. The bloodline, Warren Jeffs insists, must stay strong and pure and, in a sense, it has. Because of the large number of wives granted to the Church's leaders, nearly every person in Hildale or Colorado City is directly descended from at least one of the town's two founders: Joseph Smith Jessop and John Yeats Barlow.
So many fundamentalist Mormons of the twin cities are cousins that it has become overrun with a birth defect called fumarase deficiency - or as it's been dubbed, "polygamist downs." The disease causes brain damage, intellectual disability, unusual facial features, epileptic seizures, and it's part of the reason that Colorado City is home to an unusually vast graveyard of dead infants.
"It wasn't until I left the FLDS and moved away from the community that I realized I'd been to an unusually high number of funerals growing up in the Creek," an FLDS escapee, Alyssa Bistline, told Vice News.
"Outside, people don't die that often, and usually they're really old."
Today, the FLDS Church is in shambles. Warren Jeffs is in prison, convicted of raping two girls, one 12 and the other 15. He has been sentenced to spend the rest of his life in prison.
Jeffs has gone into a fervor of prophecy and revelation behind bars. Without him, he's told his followers, the world is doomed; in 2012, he prophecized that the world would end.
But the world is still here, and without him, Colorado City is changing. The property once owned by the church is opening up. Thousands of FLDS faithful are flocking out of the city and new arrivals and businesses are taking their place. The city even opened its first brewery in 2018.
Those who live there believe that Jeffs' rule is coming to an end. Colorado City resident Nick Dockstader told Fox 10 that, "That whole Warren Jeffs saga, it's just a tiny part and that part's going away now."
Still, the FLDS Church lives on today. Thousands are still faithful to the religion and to Warren Jeffs, while thousands more continue to follow their own forms of Mormon fundamentalism and polygamy in other parts of the country.
In other polygamist Mormon fundamentalist hotbeds like Rocky Ridge, Centennial Park, Bountiful, and Eldorado, the Warren Jeffs way lives on.
After this look inside Warren Jeffs' life as prophet of the FLDS Church, learn more about the ins and outs of Mormon polygamy and hear the story of the ex-child bride that sued Warren Jeffs himself.






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Published: 19:03 BST, 8 August 2019 | Updated: 08:26 BST, 10 August 2019
A plus-size model is hitting back at the perception that a 230lb woman like herself doesn't work out while showing off her curves in a stunning nude shoot. 
Tabria Majors, 29, bared all for a spread featured in Women's Health's ' Naked Strength ' issue as she continues to fight the negative stereotypes associated with larger bodies. 
'People think that because I'm bigger, I don't work out; but I'm quite strong. I take a lot of pride in that,' Tabria wrote in an essay for the magazine. 
Nude shoot: Tabria Majors, 29, bared all for a stunning spread featured in Women's Health 
Perception: In an essay she wrote for the magazine, the model said people on set often assume she doesn't work out or eats unhealthy foods because she weighs 230lbs
She explained that people often assume that she lives a sedentary lifestyle or doesn't eat a healthy diet because of her size. 
When she is on set, she is often told she is 'lucky' she doesn't have to work out, and some even go as far as saying they wish they could 'eat junk food all the time' like she does, which is far from the truth. 
'My body is powerful, and I want to maintain this muscle. That takes a lot of calculated nutrition and specific workouts,' she said. 
To keep in shape, Tabria likes to do high-intensity interval training and weight lifting, but she said she rarely gets to show off her strength as a plus-size model. 
'On activewear shoots, straight-size models will be in speed training and kickboxing shots. Meanwhile, I'll be told to walk. Or do some lunges,' she explained. 
But why? Even though she does high-intensity interval training and lifts weights, Tabria said she is usually told to walk at activewear shoots instead of working up a sweat
Showing off her strength: Tabria said she wants to see plus-size models sweating and 'doing real workouts' on set
Champion: Tabria explained that her stance on body positivity doesn't mean she will never lose weight, but it does mean she will love he
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