June 10, 2004
The Refugee Industry, Slavery, And Rape
A reader sends
this fascinating story involving Gypsies, Lutherans, the
Refugee Industry, slavery, and rape.
Girl: Mom sold me to be 'wife',
By Patrick Flanigan
[email
him], Rochester Democrat and Chronicle,
May 27, 2004
“A Monroe County grand jury is about
to hear the story of a Rochester teenager who says her
mother sold her for $3,000 to another family that forced
her to do household chores and have sex with a
21-year-old man.
“In statements included in court
documents, the 15-year-old girl said her mother ordered
her to live with the family every weekend for almost a
year.
“Under threat of severe beatings,
the girl said, she was made to clean up after the family
and to live as one man’s bride. She described the man as
the son and the brother of other family members.
“Bekim Lapjani, 21, of 156 Afton
St. has been charged with first-degree rape….
“The girl said her experience with
the other family began in May 2003, when her father said
they were going to visit a family from their native
country in eastern Europe.
“‘I do not know too many people
from my country, so I was excited to go,’ the girl wrote
in a statement to Police Investigator Ron Reinstein.
“At the house, though, the girl
said a man raped her in an upstairs bedroom.
“Moments later, the girl said her
mother stormed into the room and demanded to know what
happened. The girl said she was still bleeding when her
mother took her home and beat her ‘like it was my
fault.’
“The next weekend, the girl said
her mother took her back to the house. When she arrived,
the girl said, the mother of the man who had raped her
‘welcomed me to the family.’
“That night, she said, she was
forced to sleep in the man’s bed, where she was raped
again.
“‘I asked him why he was making me
have sex with him and he told me he had to pay my mom
$3,000 for me to be his bride.” The girl said she went
home and asked her mother what the man had meant.
”She began to stutter,” the girl
wrote. “After that, every Friday after school she made
me go to [the man’s
family’s] house. I asked her why I had to go and she
told me because I was his wife”…
“According to the girl’s statement,
Lapjani’s family is from Albania. The Democrat and
Chronicle reported last year that the family members
are refugees from Kosovo, a Serbian province bordering
Albania and home to many ethnic Albanians.
“A boy who answered the door at
Lapjani’s house referred telephone calls to David
Gerhardt, pastor of Trinity Emanuel Lutheran Church in
Gates, whom the boy identified as the family’s
sponsor. [JF: my
emphasis] He said neither Lapjani nor his
mother spoke English.”
This brings to mind three questions:
The answer to the first two questions
is the same: Albanian
Gypsies. The word Gypsy doesn't usually appear in
American press reports of this kind, but that's who it
was. Bekim Lapjani and his family are Gypsies, although
they are nowadays
referred to as Roma. Gypsies around the world
practice arranged marriage by bride price, with
teenage marriage being the norm.
The answer to the third question—how
did these people get to the United States?—is,
surprisingly enough: Lutherans!
Recently Sam Francis
said that "The Protestant churches are the
Open Borders Lobby at prayer—though a good many
churches seem to spend more time preaching politics than
praying."
This Rochester church apparently
decided to act on this.
According the
Trinity Emmanuel Lutheran Church's Refugee
Resettlement
web page.
“…we looked for another way in 2002
to glorify God’s name, this time by reaching across the
ocean. Through the course of several introductory
meetings with representatives of the Catholic Family
Center (CFC), we learned about the plight of many
refugee families suffering persecution. In response we
formed a team of people who were willing to help one of
these families relocate to Rochester. Finally, on
September 28, 2002
eight weary travelers arrived to our outstretched
arms at Rochester airport, the Lapjani family:
Muharem is the father and he was to
be 44 years old on 4/30.
Fatime is the mother and she is 39.
Bekim is the oldest son and he turned
21 on 4/11.
Zulja is the eldest daughter and she
turned 19 on 4/18.
Nasmija is only other daughter and
she is 16.
Nesim is the next eldest son and he
is 14.
Semsi is the next in line and he is
12.
Nermin is the youngest son and he
turned 9 on 4/3.
This family of eight people is of
ROMA (or gypsy) descent.
The father of the family got sick,
and received about a
million dollars worth of medical care, after which
he passed away anyhow. The congregation made sure that
the house—where the alleged rape took place—was
completely furnished by donations. The website
continues:
“This outreach effort by TELC has
already created interest in the community
[JF note:
Positive interest; this
was before the rape and slavery accusations]
as news coverage appeared on Channel 13, FOX and the
Democrat and Chronicle. One reporter asked TELC's
Resettlement Team Co-chairperson Chris Lynch why our
church would reach out to a family from a completely
different culture. She replied, ‘The love of God is in
our hearts.’”
Which is fine, but if the love of God
could work its way up to your
brain, you want to ask yourself, before reaching out
to a family from a completely different culture, the
following question: "How is this culture
different?"
The Lapjani family are (a) Gypsies,
and (b) Muslims, and (c) Albanians.
That means that they have pretty
predictable attitudes towards women's rights, other
people's property, and America itself.
Why can't the
Refugee Industry figure this out?
[Ask
Trinity Lutheran Church].