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“When a woman reaches puberty, she, according to god, is able to be married. They should be able to be married at 13, 14 and 15 years old. And in some cases, if they’ve menstruated already, 12 years old.”
Those are the words of the late Tony Alamo.
Alamo founded the Alamo Christian Foundation in 1969 and was an evangelist, a pastor, the head of a cult and, later, an abuser and rapist.
A year after Alamo’s death, two women have appeared in a documentary for People Magazine, detailing the horror of their experience as just two of Alamo’s child brides.
In the mid 1990s, Pebbles Rodriguez was just 12 years old. She knew little of independence, of what it was like to be able to go outside on her volition without asking permission. She barely knew life outside the walls of the Alamo Christian Foundation.
Before she was yet a teenager, Pebbles was told she was to marry Tony Alamo. His wife, Susan, had died over a decade before, believed to catalyst for Alamo’s spiral into insanity, polygamy and sexual abuse.
“I don’t know exactly why Tony chose me to be a bride,” Pebbles, now 32, says in the doco to be aired in June.
“I can surmise many things, I was extremely, extremely young looking. I think he liked the fact that I looked like a child.”
Pebbles remembers telling her friend Amy the news: She was to be a wife. One of many, in fact.
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