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| #Post#: 860-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Tom Kizzia, PILGRIM'S WILDERNESS: A TRUE STORY ... (2013) | |
| By: agate Date: July 12, 2015, 7:47 pm | |
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| Tom Kizzia, PILGRIM'S WILDERNESS: A TRUE STORY OF FAITH AND | |
| MADNESS IN THE ALASKA FRONTIER (2013) | |
| Every man, woman, and child in Alaska has automatically received | |
| a bonus every year just for living in a state where oil was | |
| found years ago. If this situation hadn't given rise to at least | |
| a few opportunists over the years, I'd have been more than | |
| surprised as the bonus is quite substantial (I believe, around | |
| $1,000/year). | |
| This book is an account of one person who was particularly | |
| successful in availing himself of Alaska's bountiful system: one | |
| Bobby Hale, who called himself Pilgrim (as in Pilgrim's | |
| Progress), the son of an FBI agent. He began his family in the | |
| community of Taos, New Mexico--at which time he was active in | |
| transcendental meditation. Eventually he became an ardent | |
| Christian, one who was sure that God was speaking directly to | |
| him and who expected the end time to be just around the corner. | |
| He ended up in the Wrangell Mountains of Alaska with his wife, | |
| appropriating some National Park Service land to house his | |
| growing family--and their animals, snowmachines, and other | |
| paraphernalia. | |
| Eventually seventeen children were born to Papa Pilgrim and his | |
| wife "Country Rose." No one was ever allowed to be seen naked | |
| but the family seems to have slept jammed into one or two beds | |
| over the years. | |
| Papa Pilgrim's word was law, and he trained the family to | |
| address him as "Lord." At first he was home schooling the | |
| children but objected to the books--and as a result all of the | |
| children except the oldest daughter Elishaba grew up illiterate. | |
| The author points out that Alaska has no laws mandating | |
| schooling for children: "The parents have complete authority." | |
| In the Pilgrim household, so much freedom from community | |
| involvement was a license for child abuse and neglect. | |
| For a number of years, the small community of McCarthy, of which | |
| the Pilgrim family were a peripheral part, heartily approved of | |
| their obvious piety, their sunny helpful spirit, their "one of | |
| us" Christian acceptability. | |
| But time passed and, though the true brutality and tyranny of | |
| the household remained hidden, there were enough instances of | |
| questionable behavior on the family members' part to cause even | |
| the strongest supporters to back off. The Pilgrims, though | |
| giving folk-music concerts that pleased their audiences, were | |
| also a gun-toting group of bullying thugs. | |
| However, there were others in the community who had their | |
| complaints about the National Park Service and who felt that it | |
| was an example of government control, an impingement on their | |
| rights, and the Pilgrims became their cause. | |
| Elishaba, however, was to escape--at the ripe age of 29--and | |
| make known the truth about what went on inside the Pilgrims' | |
| private lives. Wanting to father 21 children but estranged from | |
| his wife, Pilgrim turned to his own daughter, Elishaba, to | |
| provide ancillary excitement so that, as he claimed, he could | |
| continue to impregnate her mother. | |
| These sessions with Elishaba often involved brutal beatings, so | |
| severe and catastrophic that she suffered permanent physical | |
| damage. He often beat his other children very brutally as well. | |
| Another devout Christian family, the Buckinghams (parents and | |
| nine children), took in some of the Pilgrim children in their | |
| flight from the prison of their family. This association proved | |
| so fortuitous that a couple of the Buckingham children married | |
| Pilgrims. | |
| Papa Pilgrim had his day in court--and went to prison, where he | |
| died. We don't find out whether his warped theology died with | |
| him or whether some of the children remained the disciples he | |
| must have hoped for though it sounds as if all of them were | |
| relieved to be out of his clutches. | |
| How such a violent, probably insane man can exercise total | |
| control over his entire large family because of the isolation | |
| of a life in the wilderness is an absorbing but horrifying | |
| story. The author seems in thorough command of the facts--having | |
| followed the situation for a number of years as a reporter for | |
| the Anchorage Daily News. | |
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