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| Kidnapper for the Lord Laura Silsby behind bars in Haiti. God has yet to comment publicly on the case. |
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"HELP US...That's the message I would give to Mr. Obama and the State Department. Start helping us."
You might think that was the plea of a Haitian citizen following the
devastating earthquake in January. But no, those words came from Carla
Thompson--one of a group of 10 U.S. missionaries arrested by Haitian
authorities on January 29, accused of trying to kidnap 33 Haitian
children and take them across the border into the Dominican Republic.
At least 22 of the supposed "orphans" were found to have at least one parent still alive in Haiti.
The 10 missionaries are mostly from a Baptist church based in Idaho.
Following the earthquake, the group apparently set out with a trailer
full of children's clothes and a vow to help Haiti's orphans "find
healing, hope, joy and new life in Christ." The group's creepy leader,
Laura Silsby, told reporters: "God wanted us to come here to help
children, we are convinced of that. Our hearts were in the right place."
But Silsby at least knew that the missionaries were flouting the
law. In a letter to the United Nations, Anne-Christine d'Adesky, a
writer and human rights activist, said she met with Silsby on January
24 in a hotel in the Dominican Republic. Silsby allegedly told d'Adesky
that her authorization to pick up Haitian orphans and bring them into
the Dominican Republic came from an unnamed Dominican official.
"I informed her that this would be regarded as illegal, even with
some 'Dominican' minister authorizing, since the children are Haitian,"
d'Adesky wrote, adding that she directed Silsby to UN agencies dealing
with orphans and adoptions in the country.
D'Adesky told the Wall Street Journal that Silsby responded:
"We have been sent by the Lord to rescue these children, and if it's in
the Lord's plan, we will be successful."
Silsby's personal motives may not have been so noble. Back home in
Idaho, she faces a string of lawsuits for allegedly failing to pay
employees of her Web site shopping business. MSNBC noted that "the
$358,000 house at which she founded her nonprofit religious group, New
Life Children's Refuge, was foreclosed upon in December." Which raises
the question of whether Silsby thought she might have profited from
arranging for Haitian children to be adopted by people in the U.S.
The other people with Silsby on her "mission," including at least
two teenagers, may have been victims of their own arrogance and
stupidity--but that doesn't excuse their crime. On the contrary,
there's something stomach-turning about using a tragedy like the
earthquake in Haiti to promote religious beliefs. (Right-wing
Christians aren't the only ones guilty--the Church of Scientology flew
in volunteers after the quake to "minister" to Haitians.)
In the case of Silsby's group, the Eastside Baptist Church Web site
laid out the missionaries' plans for a "Haitian Orphan Rescue Mission."
According to the itinerary for January 23, the group would "Drive bus
from Santo Domingo into Port-au-Prince, Haiti, and gather 100 orphans
from the streets and collapsed orphanages, then return to the D.R."
The group apparently planned to take the children to a hotel in the
Dominican Republic, where they would live until a permanent orphanage
was constructed. According to the New York Times, the Web site
said the group would "strive" to "provide opportunities for adoption
through partnership with New Life Adoption Foundation," which
subsidizes adoptions "for loving Christian parents who would otherwise
not be able to afford to adopt."
There's no evidence that the missionaries were in any way prepared
to care for the children they planned to "gather" from the
streets--it's unknown whether any spoke Haitian Kreyol or had any
familiarity with the country's culture or legal system.
Even in the best of times, international adoptions can be fraught
with corruption and difficult question about the rights of birth
parents. Those questions are especially complicated when the adoptive
parents are white and wealthy, and the birth parents and children are
poor and people of color. Closed adoptions, where all ties are cut
between children and their birth parents, are especially prone to
abuses.
In Haiti, it seems that the desperate parents contacted by the
missionaries weren't told that their children might one day be adopted.
Instead, they were told the children would be cared for and schooled in
the Dominican Republic--and that they could visit one another. "If
someone offers to take my children to a paradise," a mother told the New York Times, "am I supposed to say no?"
As adoption expert David Smolin of Cumberland Law School commented in the New York Times:
The risks are very high that children with families would be "adopted"
into families in the United States, based on the pretense that they are
"orphans." We know from past history that those children most likely
would never be returned to their original families, even if those
original families were able to find them and sought their return.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
IN SPITE of the fact that the missionaries are accused on strong
evidence of kidnapping and child trafficking, the U.S. media has
positively fawned over them--stopping just short of portraying them as
the victims.
In one story after another, the missionaries have been allowed to
plead their innocence--and even complain that the Obama administration
has not done enough to help them. Typical was the Today show, which described the "frustrating few days" in jail for people "who insist they had only the best intentions."
Imagine the level of sympathy in the media if the disaster had been,
say, a hurricane in South Florida, and a group of Black missionaries,
or perhaps Muslims, from another country came to "rescue" white
children in the U.S.--with "only the best intentions."
One writer for the right-wing National Review, Kathryn Jean
Lopez, even stooped to citing a Human Rights Watch report detailing the
deplorable conditions in Haiti's prisons--as if the American
missionaries have been suffering like an ordinary prisoners. On the
contrary, the alleged kidnappers have been giving access to the media,
were allowed to speak to relatives via satellite phone, have a large
legal team of American lawyers standing by and were allowed to receive
food and other supplies from other missionaries.
That's a far cry from conditions a couple hundred miles to the west,
at the U.S. government's Guantánamo Bay prison camp. As Salon.com's
Glenn Greenwald pointed out, referring to one of the missionaries, Jim
Allen, singled out by right wingers:
Why would National Review--which endorses far
worse abuses when perpetrated on Muslims convicted of nothing--take up
the cause of an accused child smuggler and possible child trafficker,
and suddenly find such grave concern over detainee
conditions?...Because, as a Christian, Allen is deemed by National Review to deserve basic human rights, unlike the Muslim detainees whose (far worse) abuse they have long supported...
The very same people who have been demanding for years that Muslims
be imprisoned for life, tortured and killed with no trials or charges
of any kind suddenly become extremely sensitive to the nuances of due
process and humane detention conditions. They start sounding like
Amnesty International civil liberties extremists--the minute it's a
Christian, rather than a Muslim, who is subjected to such treatment.
Socialist Worker