Porterville Recorder

Brazil branches of U.s.based church target of numerous probes

- BY PETER PRENGAMAN

RIO DE JANEIRO — Every day before work, Liliane Souza says, she and three dozen fellow workers at a Brazilian picture-framing factory affiliated with the Word of Faith Fellowship church were obligated to pray.

When workers made a mistake, such as cutting a frame too short, she says they were screamed at and sometimes even hit to expunge the "devil" behind the error. And when Stylofino stopped paying its workers for months, Souza said the company's co-owners — members of a Brazilian branch of the U.s.based church — had a ready explanatio­n.

"They said the business was struggling because we were sinners," she said.

The business and its labor practices are under investigat­ion by Brazilian authoritie­s — just one of several inquiries launched into a pair of churches connected to Word of Faith Fellowship, a secretive evangelica­l sect based in Spindale, North Carolina.

The Associated Press has learned that Brazilian prosecutor­s also are looking into possible impropriet­ies in a land deal involving one of the churches. And education ministries in two Brazilian states said they are investigat­ing allegation­s that church schools physically and psychologi­cally abused students and redacted textbooks in violation of state policy.

The investigat­ions were spurred by AP stories in July detailing allegation­s that Word of Faith Fellowship created a pipeline of young congregant­s who say they were brought to the U.S. from Brazil and forced to work at church-affiliated businesses for little or no pay. The stories also documented how the church steadily took over the two Brazilian congregati­ons, institutin­g a fundamenta­list vision that included verbal and physical abuse aimed at expelling devils.

Pastors at the Word of Faith Fellowship branches — located in the Brazilian cities of Sao Joaquim de Bicas and Franco da Rocha — have issued statements denying the accusation­s, but did not respond to numerous interview requests from the AP.

After the stories about the Brazilian churches were published in July, authoritie­s in both Brazil and the United States launched investigat­ions into the allegation­s of abuse, forced labor and visa fraud. Investigat­ors told the AP that interviews stemming from that ongoing probe led them to scrutinize the conditions at Stylofino.

The small factory in the Sao Paulo suburb of Franco da Rocha was opened in 2000 by Gerson Jose Garcia and Juarez de Souza Oliveira, according to tax records.

De Souza Oliveira and wife Solange Granieri founded Ministerio Evangelico Comunidade Rhema, or Rhema Community Evangelica­l Ministry, in 1988. Garcia is a long-time member of the church, which includes an adjoining school.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States