Wider image: Mexico Mormon family has tearful Christmas after cartel
murders
Send a link to a friend
[December 28, 2019]
By Lizbeth Diaz
COLONIA LEBARON, Mexico (Reuters) -
Surrounded by dozens of his descendants, Adrian LeBaron gave thanks to
God as he prepared to celebrate Christmas for the first time since
suspected Mexican drug cartel hitmen murdered his daughter and four
grandchildren last month.
The patriarch of a large family of U.S.-Mexican Mormon origin, LeBaron
was thrust into the media spotlight when gunmen shot dead nine women and
children in the northern state of Sonora on Nov. 4, sparking outrage on
both sides of the border.
LeBaron, who has 35 living children, 87 grandchildren and a
great-grandson, cried as he remembered his daughter Rhonita Miller, 30,
whose charred body was found after the massacre in a torched vehicle on
a rugged dirt track near her home.
"We thank you for giving us the strength to withstand the things that
have brought pain to our souls," the 58-year-old said in Spanish
standing next to Shalom, Rhonita's mother.
Before the family sat down for a dinner of roast turkey and Mexican
food, mementos of Rhonita and her dead children adorned his spacious
hilltop home in the northern state of Chihuahua with a commanding view
of surrounding farms and walnut groves.
As the night ended, LeBaron sang a song to Rhonita in memory of their
last dance at a Mexican celebration in September.
Her sister Lian sported a bracelet made of two pacifiers used by
Rhonita's slain seven-month old twins Titus and Tiana, while other
family members wore rings made of metal taken from the wreckage of the
SUV in which the family was killed.
Lian son's Xavier thought of his dead cousin, Howard, 12.
"I miss him so much," the boy said.
Mexico has arrested several suspects linked to the massacre, which
investigators believe pitched the women and children into a dispute
between warring drug cartels. Gang violence in Mexico has claimed more
than 200,000 lives in the past 12 years.
Dressed for scenes from the Nativity and in Christmas garb, cousins of
the departed children sang carols in English amid Mexican flags that
pointed to their bi-national roots.
"I'm happy to see them all play, but a part of me is dead, asleep," said
Shalom LeBaron, one of four women to have borne Adrian children,
including 12 of her own. At length, she raised her hands to her eyes,
unable to contain the tears.
"They took away their chance to live," she wept.
[to top of second column]
|
Rhonita Miller's mother Shalom Tucker (R-L), Miller's sister Melissa
Conklin and her niece Samantha Conklin unwrap newly printed pictures
of Miller and her children, that Tucker received as a gift from a
relative in LeBaron, Mexico, December 21, 2019. Miller was killed
along with four of her children by unknown assailants. REUTERS/Alexandre
Meneghini
CONSTANT THREAT
The LeBarons first came to Mexico in the early 20th century when
their polygamist beliefs brought them into conflict with U.S.
authorities. Ever since Adrian's grandfather founded the village of
Colonia LeBaron in 1941, violent organized crime groups have been a
threat to their farming activities, he said.
Though the family prospered by growing walnuts, peppers and cotton,
the rule of law in the sparsely-populated arid expanses of the
borderlands has remained weak, posing constant security challenges.
Some have even taken to arming themselves.
"Life isn't life if you're being threatened. My message to the world
and to my children is that you have to fight to know that you're
free," LeBaron said.
Like dozens of his relatives, Adrian LeBaron said he will keep
pushing the Mexican government until those responsible for the
brutal massacre have been brought to justice.
He believes Mexico must work closely with the United States if it is
to get a grip on record levels of gang violence.
But the native of Chihuahua is also a patriotic Mexican.
"You're from where your family grows up, where you bury your dead,"
he said. "What more right could I have if they're here?"
Mexico's President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who met members of
the family after the massacre, sought U.S. cooperation, inviting the
FBI to help in the investigation. But he has firmly rejected any
U.S. "intervention" in Mexico.
"Fear has stopped people from reacting," said Adrian's cousin Julian
LeBaron, who recovered a baby from the site of the slaughter after
the child's mother was killed. "But we're no longer afraid, we'll
continue to fight and we'll mobilize."
(Reporting by Lizbeth Diaz; Editing by Alistair Bell)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |