Teens
Defend Polygamy at Utah Rally
By JENNIFER DOBNER
Associated Press Writer
Los Angeles Times
2:32 AM PDT, August 20, 2006
SALT LAKE CITY — Calling their lives blessed, more than a dozen
children and young adults from polygamist families in Utah spoke at a
rally Saturday, calling for a change in state laws and the right to
live the life and religion they choose.
"Because of our beliefs, many of our people have been incarcerated and
had their basic human rights stripped of them, namely life, liberty and
the pursuit of happiness," said a 19-year-old identified only as Tyler.
"I didn't come here today to ask for your permission to live my
beliefs. I shouldn't have to."
Polygamy is banned in the Utah Constitution and is a felony offense.
The rally was unusual because those who practice polygamy typically try
to live under the radar.
It drew about 250 supporters to City Hall, said Mary Batchelor,
co-founder of Principle Voices of Polygamy, which helped organize the
event.
The youths, ages 10 to 20, belong to various religious sects, as well
as families that practice polygamy independent of religious
affiliation. They said they spoke voluntarily. They gave only their
first names, saying they were protecting the privacy of their parents.
Dressed in flip-flops and blue jeans, bangs drooping over their eyes,
the teens at Saturday's rally talked on cell phones and played rock
music, singing lyrics written to defend their family life.
All of the speakers praised their parents and families and said their
lives were absent of the abuse, neglect, forced marriages and other
"horror stories" sometimes associated with polygamist communities.
Speakers said that with "dozens of siblings" and multiple "moms" they
are well supported, encouraged to be educated, and can make their own
choices about marriage.
"We are not brainwashed, mistreated, neglected, malnourished,
illiterate, defective or dysfunctional," 17-year-old Jessica said. "My
brothers and sisters are freethinking, independent people; some who
have chosen this lifestyle, while others have branched out to a
diversity of religions."
First brought to Utah by members of The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints in 1846, polygamy was abandoned by Mormons as a
condition of statehood in 1890. The church now excommunicates members
found to be practicing plural marriage. It also disavows those who call
themselves "fundamentalist Mormons," although most Utah-based
polygamists identify themselves with those terms.
Fundamentalists split with the Mormon church in the 19th century and
continue to believe plural marriage is the key to eternal salvation.
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