The Star Malaysia

Brazilians funnelled as slaves by US church, claims former members

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SPINDALE ( North Carolina): When Andre Oliveira answered the call to leave his Word of Faith Fellowship congregati­on in Brazil to move to the mother church in North Carolina at the age of 18, his passport and money were confiscate­d by church leaders – for safekeepin­g, he said he was told.

Trapped in a foreign land, he said he was forced to work 15 hours a day, usually for no pay, first cleaning warehouses for the secretive evangelica­l church and later toiling at businesses owned by senior ministers. Any deviation from the rules risked the wrath of church leaders, he said, ranging from beatings to shaming from the pulpit.

“They trafficked us up here. They knew what they were doing. They needed labour and we were cheap labour, hell, free labour,” Oliveira said.

An Associated Press investigat­ion has found that Word of Faith Fellowship used its two church branches in Latin America’s largest nation to siphon a steady flow of young labourers who came on tourist and student visas to its 14ha compound in rural Spindale.

Under US law, visitors on tourist visas are prohibited from performing work for which people normally would be compensate­d. Those on student visas are allowed some work, under circumstan­ces that were not met at Word of Faith Fellowship, the probe found.

On at least one occasion, former members alerted authoritie­s. In 2014, three ex-congregant­s told an assistant US attorney that the Brazilians were being forced to work for no pay.

“And do they beat up the Brazilians?” Jill Rose, now the US attorney in Charlotte, asked.

“Most definitely,” one of the former congregant­s responded. Ministers “mostly bring them up here for free work”, another said.

Though Rose could be heard promising to look into it, the former members said she never responded when they repeatedly tried to contact her in the months after the meeting.

Rose declined to comment when contacted, citing an ongoing investigat­ion.

Oliveira, who fled the church last year, is one of 16 Brazilian former members who said they were forced to work, often for no pay, and physi- cally or verbally assaulted.

“They kept us as slaves,” Oliveira said, pausing at times to wipe away tears. “We were expendable. We meant nothing to them. Nothing. How can you do that to people – claim you love them and then beat them in the name of God?”

The Brazilians often spoke little English when they arrived, and many had their passports seized.

Many males worked in constructi­on; many females worked as babysitter­s and in the church’s K-12 school, the former members said.

Although immigratio­n officials in both countries said it was impossible to calculate the volume of the human pipeline, at least several hundred young Brazilians have migrated to North Carolina over the past two decades, based on interviews with former members.

The church has rarely been sanctioned since it was founded in 1979 by sect leader Jane Whaley, a former math teacher, and her husband, Sam. Another previous AP report outlined how congregant­s were ordered by church leaders to lie to authoritie­s investigat­ing reports of abuse.

The AP made repeated attempts to obtain comments for this story from church leaders in both countries, but they did not respond.

 ?? — AP ?? No labour of love: Oliveira says he was forced to work 15 hours a day.
— AP No labour of love: Oliveira says he was forced to work 15 hours a day.

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