Escape by Carolyn Jessop
My Thoughts:
A brave and beautiful memoir. I wish all the best for Carolyn Jessop. The FLDS belief system is both intriguing and disturbing. I enjoyed following Jessop’s progression to freedom.
Amazon.com Description:
“The dramatic first-person account
of life inside an ultra-fundamentalist American religious sect, and one woman’s
courageous flight to freedom with her eight children. When she was eighteen
years old, Carolyn Jessop was coerced into an arranged marriage with a total
stranger: a man thirty-two years her senior. Merril Jessop already had three
wives. But arranged plural marriages were an integral part of Carolyn’s heritage:
She was born into and raised in the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-Day Saints (FLDS), the radical offshoot of the Mormon Church that had
settled in small communities along the Arizona-Utah border. Over the next
fifteen years, Carolyn had eight children and withstood her husband’s
psychological abuse and the watchful eyes of his other wives who were locked in
a constant battle for supremacy. Carolyn’s every move was dictated by her
husband’s whims. He decided where she lived and how her children would be
treated. He controlled the money she earned as a school teacher. He chose when
they had sex; Carolyn could only refuse—at her peril. For in the FLDS, a wife’s
compliance with her husband determined how much status both she and her children
held in the family. Carolyn was miserable for years and wanted out, but she
knew that if she tried to leave and got caught, her children would be taken
away from her. No woman in the country had ever escaped from the FLDS and
managed to get her children out, too. But in 2003, Carolyn chose freedom over
fear and fled her home with her eight children. She had $20 to her name. Escape
exposes a world tantamount to a prison camp, created by religious fanatics who,
in the name of God, deprive their followers the right to make choices, force
women to be totally subservient to men, and brainwash children in church-run
schools. Against this background, Carolyn Jessop’s flight takes on an
extraordinary, inspiring power. Not only did she manage a daring escape from a
brutal environment, she became the first woman ever granted full custody of her
children in a contested suit involving the FLDS. And in 2006, her reports to
the Utah attorney general on church abuses formed a crucial part of the case
that led to the arrest of their notorious leader, Warren Jeffs.”
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