Hildale » Holm Sunday School sits just beneath a large red bluff on the edge of Hildale. Like many buildings in the area — known locally as Short Creek — it’s surrounded by a tall wooden fence. A block away, the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints operates its secretive clinic. Security cameras hang from nearby buildings.
Just before 11 a.m. on Feb. 17, members of William E. Jessop’s congregation begin to pull into the Holm school parking lot. As the first large vans stop, the air is so still the sound of a paper cup rolling along the asphalt echoes against the nearby cliffs. A cock crows in a distant yard. Red dust swirls in the partially paved streets.
![]() |
Join the Discussion |
![]() |
Post a Comment |
Quickly, men in charcoal suits and women with tightly coiffed hair move into the school’s cold, cavernous gymnasium. They sit on an array of mismatched chairs with foam padding bursting through the threadbare upholstery. On a wall, photos of past FLDS leaders smile beatifically down on the group. Several propane heaters hiss in the quiet.
Jessop begins the meeting at 11:05 a.m. He rises from his chair on the gym stage and steps up to a podium, several papers clutched in both hands.
"We feel very blessed by Heavenly Father to meet again," Jessop says.
—
‘We’re not alone’ » Jessop and his congregation are all former members of the polygamous FLDS church. At some point in their lives, they followed Warren Jeffs, believing he was a prophet. Eventually, they all abandoned him, often after being kicked out during one of the church’s recent purges.
Jessop organized the group in April or May of 2011. When the congregation began meeting, members gathered in the R&W Building, an excavating business owned by former Jeffs spokesman Willie Jessop. In the fall of that year, the group moved to the Holm school, a building owned by the now state-controlled United Effort Plan.
The group has no name. William E. Jessop’s first wife, Joanna, said some people around town refer to these followers as "WEJes," pronounced similar to "wedges." It’s a play on their leader’s initials. Joanna said she and her husband’s flock don’t like the term.
When asked about his role, Jessop paused before finally describing himself as "acting bishop." The congregation calls him "Uncle William," and he explained that the Sunday services began as an effort to follow Jesus’ teachings to "meet often."
-
Prep boys tennis: Tennis tops among Noh’s many pursuits
Published May 22, 2013 03:16:02PM -
Attorney general: 4 Americans killed since 2009 in drone strikes
Published May 22, 2013 03:11:32PM -
Your town in brief: Crunching numbers
Published May 22, 2013 02:54:02PM -
Prep baseball: Jourdan develops into stalwart on the mound
Published May 22, 2013 02:49:03PM
"It’s to realize that we’re not alone in our effort," Jessop said.
—
A new song » After Jessop’s welcome, the nearly 100-member congregation sings "Let Each Man Learn to Know Himself" — a hymn left out of the latest LDS songbooks but still included in the hodgepodge of hand-me-down, brown hymnals used by the group. Many of the books have broken bindings and the names of former owners — including former FLDS President Rulon Jeffs — scribbled inside. Some of the hymnals have labels saying they are from an LDS stake in Hyrum, 390 miles north in Cache County.
In the corner, a woman with dark hair plays a slow accompaniment as the congregation sings. Sam Allred, whose father led an FLDS choir long ago, conducts with a white baton. When the hymn concludes, a young man in a dark suit offers a prayer, his head bowed and his right hand raised.
The hymn and prayer concluded, Jessop begins teaching the congregation a new song: "Ere You Left Your Room This Morning," which now is called "Did You Think to Pray?" in the mainstream LDS hymnal. Jessop reads a verse, then leads the congregation as they sing it together.
"It’s an effort to restore our Sunday School," he later explained of the exercise.
—
Purges and paranoia » Many of the families in Jessop’s congregation are small for a polygamous community. Few men appear with multiple wives, and no one has more than a handful of children. Several adults even sit alone.
Attendance at the meeting is a testament to the conflicts that have ripped through Short Creek in recent years. After Warren Jeffs took control of the FLDS church in 2002, he unleashed mass purges. Many men were kicked out and their wives and children ordered into new families. Husbands, wives and children were separated. Today, even from a Texas prison, Jeffs reportedly continues to control the church and expel members for any reason, including attending Jessop’s Sunday services.
Many, but not all, members of Jessop’s congregation are consequently secretive. They eschew media attention, and attendance this day may have been smaller due to the presence of Salt Lake Tribune staffers. Several group members pointed to white security cameras on nearby buildings, saying they exist to catch people attending Jessop’s congregation or engaging in other activities barred by Jeffs’ self-described revelations.
The fear among some at Jessop’s meeting is that, if they’re discovered worshipping with the group, they could incur the wrath of FLDS leadership, meaning they could lose contact with their families, among other punishments.
Next Page >Copyright 2013 The Salt Lake Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.






