Texarkana Gazette

Church denies former members’ allegation­s of abuse, coercion

- By Mitch Weiss

SPINDALE, N.C.—An evangelica­l North Carolina sect that is the focus of an ongoing Associated Press investigat­ion has issued a statement denying former members’ allegation­s that they were brought to the U.S. from congregati­ons in Brazil and forced to work for little or no pay.

The statement, issued by Word of Faith Fellowship attorney Josh Farmer, comes a week after the AP published reports about what dozens of former members described as a human pipeline from two churches in Brazil to the sect’s headquarte­rs in rural Spindale, N.C.

“We are appalled to learn of the allegation­s published by The Associated Press regarding foreign members of our church being ‘enslaved,’” the statement read. “Many of these allegation­s are obviously prepostero­us on their face and they are all false. It is ludicrous that people now claim they were in an abusive environmen­t at our church but admit that they traveled from Brazil to the United States many different times, returning repeatedly to their place of alleged enslavemen­t.”

Word of Faith Fellowship and both churches in Brazil had not responded to numerous requests for comment before publicatio­n of the AP’s stories.

Many of the former followers interviewe­d by the AP first traveled to the U.S. when they were very young and described being so indoctrina­ted that they felt they had no choice but to follow the church’s orders.

Last week’s stories—based on accounts of dozens of former congregant­s, a review of police reports and interviews with authoritie­s in Brazil and the United States—also detailed how Word of Faith Fellowship took command of its two Brazilian congregati­ons over the course of many years, instilling its rigid doctrine in Ministerio Evangelico Comunidade Rhema church in Franco da Rocha and Ministerio Verbo Vivo church in Sao Joaquim de Bicas.

The former members who traveled to the U.S. told the AP they were forced to work on church property or at businesses owned by senior sect leaders and were physically or verbally assaulted. The Brazilians often spoke little English when they arrived, and many said they 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. One ex-congregant from Brazil told AP she was only 12 the first time she was put to work.

Word of Faith Fellowship was founded in North Carolina in 1979 by Jane Whaley, a former math teacher, and her husband, Sam. It has branches in Brazil and Ghana, along with affiliatio­ns in other countries.

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