Evangelicals in Venezuela: Long Bizarre History
Evangelicals in Venezuela: Robertson Only the Latest
Controversy In a Long and Bizarre History
• Vice President Rangel leads a campaign for anti-evangelical vigilance as the Robertson affair reminds him and the nation of the suspect activities of the New Tribes Mission decades ago.
In a clear sign that the Chávez administration is more than a little concerned about the nature of missionary activities of the Protestant evangelical sects residing in the country, the Venezuelan government announced on August 29 that it would suspend all new applications for missionary visas. It is unclear how long the suspensions will last and and when asked to comment the Venezuelan Embassy in Washington would not elaborate. According to the head of the Justice Ministry's religious affairs unit, Carlos González, the government was already weighing the suspensions even before the Robertson affair broke out on August 22, but “these declarations have made us speed things up." He of course was referring to U.S. televangelist Pat Robertson, who remarked on his Christian television show “The 700 Club,” that if Chávez "thinks we're trying to assassinate him, I think that we really ought to go ahead and do it." Robertson went on to say that Chávez was a "terrific danger" to the United States as he intended to become "the launching pad for communist infiltration and Muslim extremism." Robertson added: "It's a whole lot cheaper [assassination] than starting a war. And I don't think any oil shipments will stop."
Robertson Grabs the Headlines, But
Venezuela’s Not Amused
Robertson’s explosive comments
managed to inflame Venezuelan public opinion and led to
strong statements from incensed officials. Vice President
Jose Vicente Rangel, with a long and conflictual history of
dealing with evangelicals, remarked that Venezuela was
weighing court action against Robertson. "There is a legal
measure in the United States that condemns and punishes
statements of this nature," Rangel observed, referring to
broadcasting regulations dealing with calls for the
assassination of another nation’s leader.
Chávez and
Protestant Groups
On the other hand, according to David
Zelenak, Director of the Resource Department at the
evangelical New Tribes Mission which operates in Venezuela,
Chávez was initially somewhat partial to Protestants and
evangelical groups like his own. Zelenak says that before
Chávez came to power in 1999, Christian radio and TV were
outlawed, a policy reversed by Chávez. Robertson in fact
broadcasts his 700 Club to Venezuela over TV station
Televen. Ironically then, “Robertson’s program would never
have been there if it wasn’t for Chávez.” Zelenak suggests
that Chávez conducted a pro-Protestant policy as a way of
sparring with the Catholic Church. Some Venezuelan Catholic
bishops have accused Chávez of trying to create Cuban-style
communism in the country. Chávez has countered by saying
that he is a Catholic and that the bishops are siding with
the rich to bring down his regime. What is more, Chávez
accuses the Catholic hierarchy of supporting the aborted
coup d’etat against him in April 2002.
Robertson Shoots
Evangelicals in the Foot
There is no question that after
the Robertson outburst, the evangelical groups now have less
leverage in Venezuela and that the pendulum has swung
against the militant wing of protestantism. Even before,
Venezuelan Protestants were not the most likely group to
have opposed the president. Indeed, they only number 2% of
the population and by and large have a working class
pro-Chávez constituency. What is more, leading Venezuelan
Protestants in the country have flatly denounced Robertson’s
fatwa against Chávez, complaining that his statements
haven’t made their work any easier. Zelenak says the
Venezuelan government has put a hold on foreigners trying to
acquire visas. Not only are U.S. missionaries headed to
Venezuela being delayed, but those who already are present
in Venezuela are wondering if they should return home on
leave. Though New Tribes Mission did not put out an official
statement about the Robertson controversy, he says
Robertson‘s strong words “did not help us in Venezuela.”
Indeed, Robertson‘s offensive hardly stands to benefit New
Tribes, which has fallen under attack in the past and
presents a vulnerable target. Zelenak adds that other
missionary groups were concerned about Robertson‘s remarks
and worry that the war of words might escalate.
What then is the likely fall out resulting from the Robertson fiasco? Chávez has undoubtedly benefited from the controversy. By stating what U.S. policymakers are afraid to say openly, Robertson gave Chávez even more backing, both in his own country and in the region. Of course, Chávez would be wise not to alienate his Protestant constituency without considerable forethought. For missionary groups such as New Tribes, the situation has become more than delicate. In the short term, New Tribes may seek to lay low. For the time being the group would seem to have little to fear from more outbursts from Robertson: the minister has apologized for his remarks. However, if the U.S. government continues its confrontational policy towards Chávez, U.S.-affiliated missionary organizations like New Tribes could experience further problems by way of reaction.
Washington Versus
Caracas
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld offered a mild
rebuke to Robertson’s provocative comments regarding Chávez,
declaring, "Certainly it's against the law. Our department
doesn't do that type of thing.” Both Rumsfeld and State
Department spokesman Sean McCormack were careful to state
that the remarks regarding a possible assassination of
Chávez came from a private citizen and did not represent
official U.S. policy. "Private citizens say all kinds of
things all the time," Rumsfeld remarked. It was noteworthy
that McCormack did not forcefully condemn the evangelist’s
statements, although he noted that they were improper. "Any
accusations or any idea that we are planning to take hostile
action against Venezuela or the Venezuelan government – any
ideas in that regard are totally without fact and baseless,"
said McCormack.
Rumsfeld and McCormack’s disclaimers notwithstanding, the Bush administration’s tepid response lacks credibility, perhaps because Robertson’s remarks did not markedly stray from the spirit of official U.S. policy towards Caracas. Venezuelan chancellor Alí Rodríguez suggested that McCormack criticized Robertson only for his style, not substance. “It would appear that in their subconscious what they are condemning is imprudence and not the call for assassination,” Rodríguez tartly remarked.
Perhaps it’s an overstatement to say that Bush and his immediate team would countenance the violent demise of Hugo Chávez (although in April 2002 they sanctioned an attempted coup against the Venezuelan leader which could easily have ended with his death.) For many months now, the Venezuelan president has claimed that the White House has targeted him for assassination. In March, the State Department retorted that Chávez’s spate of accusations regarding a CIA plot to assassinate him were “wild.” However, serious doubts emerged over the weight of the administration’s latest display of supposed indifference to Chávez’s fate when Felix Rodriguez, a former CIA operative in Central America and influential Bush-backer in South Florida, claimed in a Miami TV interview that regarding Venezuela, the administration has "contingency plans." When pressed to explain, Rodriguez said the plans "could be economic measures and even at some point military measures."
Rodriguez’s views must be given some weight because in the past he has been linked to such Bush hemispheric ideologues as Otto Reich and Roger Noriega. As the Washington Post has noted, Rodriguez “is well known in Latin America for his role advising a Bolivian military unit that captured and executed Cuban revolutionary Che Guevara in 1967. He was also well-connected with President Bush's father during his tenure both as president and vice president.” Clearly, Chávez is not taking any chances: he recently beefed up his security detail.
Washington Fuels
the Opposition
While the accuracy of such Chávez
misgivings is unclear, it’s not as if the Venezuelan leader
is entirely unjustified in feeling somewhat hunted: In the
run up to the April 2002 failed coup d’etat against the
Chávez regime, the Bush administration funneled U.S.
taxpayer money to the anti-Chávez Venezuelan opposition
through the National Endowment For Democracy and USAID. As
the coup was being carried out, Chávez was taken prisoner by
elements within the military. The civilian opposition who
helped spring the coup invented the tale over the television
networks which it dominated, that Chávez had willingly
resigned. As he watched the announcement from inside the
military headquarters of Fuerte Tiuna, Chávez thought to
himself, “Now they are going to kill me.” An officer lent
Chávez a phone and he called his wife, bidding his last
farewells. Fortunately, Chávez narrowly escaped death. “The
order to kill me had been given,” he remarked later. “What
happened was that the generals that were up in arms did not
have true leadership and some generals, but above all the
young officers that were taking care of me, neutralized that
order.”
Clearly then, Rumsfeld’s distancing of the Pentagon from Robertson is not completely convincing in light of the administration’s consistently hyperbolic foreign policy towards Venezuela. The Robertson incident has now forced the U.S. media to address the exotic confluence of interests between the Bush White House and Christian fundamentalists. What the media has failed to report, even at this late date is that U.S. evangelical sects have played a long and often problematic role in Venezuela and elsewhere in Latin America. The Robertson incident is sure to bring back bitter memories for many Venezuelans of past religious intrusions in their country, further fueling anti-U.S. sentiment. To comprehend Venezuela’s alarm over Robertson’s outlandish remarks, one must be aware of the operation of various U.S. evangelical sects in the country, most notably, the New Tribes Mission.
The Evangelical Connection: The
Arrival of The New Tribes Mission
One strand of the often
unsavory and arcane history of U.S. evangelicals in
Venezuela goes back decades. In 1946, members of the North
American based New Tribes Mission, a fundamentalist
Protestant sect, entered Venezuela from across the Colombian
border. Posing as tourists and “curious explorers,” they
settled along the Negro River in the region known as
Casiquiare. At the time, the area was used for the
exploitation of natural rubber which had not yet been
replicated as a synthetic fiber and was, as such, still a
vital strategic material. The arriving missionaries were not
given a particularly warm welcome by the indigenous peoples
living in the immediate area. The Aquencwa Indians, then led
by their leader Horacio Acisa, soon began to violently
resist their unwelcomed northern visitors.
From 1945 to 1948 a coalition of nationalist military officers allied to the anti-clerical political party, Acción Democrática, ruled the country. Nonetheless, New Tribes continued to reside in Venezuela in spite of the central government’s marked hostility to its members. Following a coup d’etat in 1948, Venezuela came under outright military rule. However, to the consternation of Antonio Justo Silva, the governor of the federal territory of Amazonas, “no one thought to ask why these missionary groups were staying in Amazonas.” But in 1954 their status was officially legalized thanks to a permit issued by the military authorities under the pro-U.S. General Marcos Pérez Jiménez dictatorship.
Curiously, in that same year, the New Tribes missionaries abandoned their villages along the Negro River and settled in the Guayana Shield, where deposits of radioactive minerals had been discovered. What is more, a tantalizing tidbit was provided by muckraking journalists Charlotte Dennett and Gerard Colby: “On Brazil’s border with Venezuela were uranium deposits that the [Brazilian] regime had targeted for the development of nuclear energy and, some feared, nuclear bombs.” They also claimed that the presence of uranium ore was found on the traditional lands of the Yanomami, the largest unacculturated tribe in the Brazilian Amazon. Also present in the adjoining area was the Summer Institute of Linguistics, a New Tribes ally as well as an evangelical missionary organization in its own right, that specialized in translating the Bible into local dialects. Its adherents could be found among the Yanomami in Venezuela, where they were studying the languages of the region from their Porto Velho base in Brazil. Writing to Venezuela’s Minister of Justice, Justo expressed his concerns about the New Tribes. In the course of six years of residence, according to the official, the missionaries had nothing to show for their work and had not accomplished anything for the Indians. Justo was openly suspicious of the evangelicals, who would inexplicably abandon sites and move to other areas. “It makes one suspect,” he wrote, “that they [the New Tribes missionaries] have another objective.”
New Tribes: A
State within a State?
New Tribes was fast on the road
towards becoming a veritable transnational organization
spanning much of Latin America. Operating in remote,
far-flung areas, usually distant from the effective reach of
the central government, the missionaries could count on
every form of communication and transportation equipment,
including aircraft. What’s more, New Tribes at the same time
was indoctrinating indigenous tribes in other South American
countries such as Colombia, Brazil, Bolivia and Paraguay. In
1959, Acción Democrática returned to power and President
Romulo Betancourt authorized the missionaries to operate in
Amazonas. Eventually, the missionaries would be active in an
immense zone encompassing not only this territory but also
the states of Apure, Bolivar, and part of Monagas. In total,
New Tribes had access to 30% of Venezuela’s national
territory.
To carry on its ambitious work, the organization had a staff of more than 150 including missionaries, linguists, pilots, engineers, technicians and others. It also had its own communication network. By 1980, God’s soldiers had 2 Bible institutes, 6 basic training camps, a linguistic institute, a radio station, a medical center, and a housing complex for retired missionaries. Even more impressive, New Tribes built 29 air strips from which their light aircraft fleet operated. The airstrips and settlements all fell under their exclusive control. According to one investigator, “not even the armed forces can easily use those airports. In fact, the runways are constructed for specially equipped planes that can land on extra short runways.”
It was at this time that two anthropologists dropped a bombshell by charging that New Tribes was trying to create a state within a state by turning the Indians against the Venezuelan military. According to their findings, the missionaries had circulated flyers amongst the Panare Indians, written in the E’napa tongue but edited in the United States. The literature attempted to discredit the National Guard and sought to pit the Indians against its local units.
At the time, New Tribes was working with two aviation companies, Mission Air Force and Wings of Aid. In fact, the president of New Tribes, Jaime Bou, was also president of the latter. One of the principal tasks of the airlines was to transport supplies and missionary staff from Brazil to Venezuela and onwards to the U.S. From Puerto Ayacucho southwards, the Amazonas area was considered a transit zone prohibited to civilian traffic. However, New Tribes missionaries were allowed to circulate freely and the missionaries were not subject in the least to rigorous controls by Venezuelan authorities. In an overview of the New Tribes operations, one writer noted, “this adds up to a colonial enclave in the middle of the Amazon jungle.”
“I Speak To Caracas:” A
Bombshell
Perhaps due to New Tribes’ far-flung
infrastructure, by the 1970s the missionaries had come under
widespread public fire. The first salvo came from Pablo
Anduza, the former governor of Amazonas, who remarked in
1973 that missionary education was alien to Indian
traditions and “…missionary teachings encourage the creation
of an artificial society which separates children from
parents.” The second blow came from Julio Jiménez, a Guajibo
Indian. In 1976, Jiménez publicly disclosed that in 1958 he
was sent by New Tribes to the U.S. to undertake specialized
courses with the Summer Institute of Linguistics. Jiménez
then disclosed that to his observation, missionary work had
a pernicious effect upon the indigenous lifestyle. He
remarked that, “New Tribes has done more harm than good, and
they should be expelled.” On the main campus at the Central
University of Caracas, things were heating up against the
New Tribes Mission. At a seminar held at the School of
Sociology and Anthropology, various indigenous leaders
called for its expulsion.
But the public relations nightmare for New Tribes was just beginning. In late 1976, Carlos Azpurua released a new 18 minute short film, “I Speak To Caracas.” The film featured the historian and shaman of the Yecuana people, Barne Yavari, who tells the camera, “They [the missionaries] prohibit all our customs…our drinks, our mythology, music and our form of life. I don’t mean that no North American has helped me spiritually. We don’t need spiritual help because we have our religion.” Yavari goes on to tell the people of Caracas that his people have their own God, Wanadi. “It’s not known how he began nor who made him,” says Yavari. “Wanadi has been my beginning.” “I Speak To Caracas” became a sensation, hitting the country like a space shot. The film earned various prizes both in Venezuela and abroad. As a result of its screening, the role of New Tribes Mission and the plight of Venezuelan Indians hit the international stage. The film was shown at hundreds of forums held in universities, film clubs, unions, parishes, public libraries, legislative assemblies, and even border posts. Everyone from indigenous leaders to public law firms participated in the forums accompanying the film’s screenings. The organizers eventually published a document entitled, “Let Us Stop Ethnocide,” in which they called for an end to the war that “these missionaries carry out against culture and the lives of our Indians.”
For some prominent government figures, the issue of New Tribes and the abuse of indigenous peoples had become a matter of national pride. Simon Alberto Consalvi, the former Venezuelan chancellor, remarked that “The accusations about what is happening in Amazonas and some other Venezuelan regions…constitute a recurring theme. This is not a superficial matter…It’s not a secret to anyone that light aircraft go and come without oversight. Some time ago I accompanied the Mexican chancellor to a beautiful place in the Venezuelan Guayana. I was greatly surprised (certainly not very agreeably), when a Venezuelan Indian began to speak in English as if we were a group of tourists. The Indian was surrounded by Bibles…I had the impression that I was in some place in California, where they invent religions and cults in bulk.”
The Plot
Thickens: New Tribes Accused of Espionage
Though New
Tribes had come under fire from leftist university
professors and the capital’s intellectual elite, criticism
would shortly come from yet another, but unexpected quarter:
the military. In 1976, Tomas Antonio Mariño Blanco, a navy
captain and commander of the Federal Territory of Amazonas
military garrison, ordered the detention of two American
engineers bearing identification cards from Westinghouse, a
leading U.S. defense contractor, and General Dynamics, which
produces military jet aircraft. The engineers were carrying
out mineral prospecting and were in the company of a
missionary working for New Tribes Mission.
Jaime Bou, the New Tribes Mission head in Venezuela, intervened on behalf of the Americans. After staff members from the U.S. Embassy later joined Bou’s efforts, the two were released and the case was closed. However, Antonio Mariño reported that the missionary organization had been financed by General Dynamics, which had sent funds and pilots from California. According to Mariño’s investigation, New Tribes was also linked to a shadowy California foundation called District 1355 as well as the evangelical sect, Summer Institute of Linguistics. All New Tribes missionaries had taken courses with the Summer Institute of Linguistics, an organization repeatedly accused of ethnocide and espionage in other Latin American countries. Antonio Mariño had determined that District 1355 had sought to acquire a concession in Colombia to cultivate rice and other crops, which it proposed flying out of the region in a fleet of C-141 planes.
The concession, located between the Meta and Tomo Rivers, was known to contain deposits of silica and cobalt. Bou along with some of his associates had traveled to Puerto Carreño in Colombia to meet with members of District 1355. Shortly thereafter, Colombian president Cesar Turbay Ayala prohibited the Summer Institute of Linguistics, New Tribes and District 1355 from operating on Colombian soil. The president declared that the missionary groups had lent support to unauthorized overseas transnational companies which were searching for strategic resources.
The Military
Goes Public
With accusations now escalating against New
Tribes from not only leftist university faculties but also
members of the Venezuelan armed forces, the Chamber of
Deputies agreed to open an investigation. Particularly
damning was the report filed by Antonio Mariño who headed
the Amazonas military command in 1978. The report, whose
startling findings were corroborated by Colonel Luciano
Mujíca Herñandez, a senior National Guard officer in
Amazonas who had independently conducted surveillance of New
Tribes, found that the evangelical group had not remained in
its own demarcated jurisdiction, nor had it complied with
Venezuelan aeronautical regulations. Rather, it apparently
had conducted scientific espionage on behalf of
transnational companies, had tried to impersonate Venezuelan
military officers by appearing in their uniforms when
meeting with the Indians, and had even attempted to bribe
military authorities. Antonio Mariño further declared that
in 1977, New Tribes had been able to cultivate the support
of Julio Yañes Marchan, the ex-governor of the Federal
Amazonas Territory. Marchan invited the missionaries to a
forum about the mineral potential in Amazonas. The event was
also sponsored by the armed forces, and when Mariño saw
Jaime Bou there, he promptly escorted the missionary from
the premises. Word of Antonio Mariño‘s explosive report was
picked up in the Venezuelan press and New Tribes became
notoriously famous amongst the Venezuelan public.
Congress Investigates
Growing public resentment had
begun to put pressure on the government to rein in the
evangelicals. Local grassroots’ organizers working against
New Tribes submitted a petition to the Venezuelan
legislature with 15,000 signatures. Organizers of the
petition, entitled “We Accuse,” demanded the expulsion of
New Tribes from Venezuela and urged greater regulation of
religious sects operating in the country. The debate over
New Tribes encouraged fiery polemics in the Venezuelan
congress in 1979. One deputy charged that the missionaries
had subjected the Indians to a system of “internal
colonialism.” The deputy, Alexis Ortiz, called for the
creation of a special sub- commission which would
investigate the activities of New Tribes missions operating
in the Federal Amazonas Territory. Some deputies viewed New
Tribes’ activities there as an affront to Venezuelan
sovereignty. One remarked, “The decision of the government
must be to expel the New Tribes.”
By December 1979, a congressional investigative commission had been formed and its members traveled to Amazonas, where they visited the Piaroa community of Chivapure. They also interviewed evangelical missionaries in the region. The commission additionally met with tribal leaders at Pariña, a New Tribes mission along the Brazilian border. In its final report, the commission’s conclusions echoed Antonio Mariño’s document. The officials stated that they had heard accusations that New Tribes had carried out compulsory evangelization and that ethnocide of the indigenous population had resulted. What is more, the body received complaints of economic espionage. In response to these various charges, the commission recommended that the Venezuelan state take over the supervision and operation of the missions and provide housing and education for the Indians.
New Tribes defended itself from the accusations being made against it by claiming it had only offered, not demanded, religious and educational assistance to the Indians. Meanwhile, the evangelical group had cultivated supporters such as the ex-Amazonas governor of the Federal Territory of Amazonas, Pablo Anduza. It also attracted support within the Venezuelan Evangelical Council. Luzardo reports that the latter body had threatened the country’s two main political parties, warning that 500,000 voters would punish any Venezuelan political party which attempted to foil New Tribes. Meanwhile, U.S. Embassy officials also lobbied politicians of both parties to lay off New Tribes. “Unfortunately,” writes Alexander Luzardo, “the report was not taken into consideration by AD [Acción Democrática] and Copei [the two main political parties]. With the exception of a few deputies, the others did not show up when the report was to be approved. Apparently pressuring by New Tribes proved effective in influencing some members of AD."
Coming Full Circle: Jose Vicente Rangel and New
Tribes Mission
The story of New Tribes Mission has
refused to die. In August 1981, Jose Vicente Rangel, then a
deputy in Congress, requested that the investigation into
New Tribes be reopened. Rangel, a long time fixture of
Venezuelan politics, had unsuccessfully run for president
twice on the MAS [Movement Towards Socialism] ticket, in
1973 and 1978. An aggressive opponent of U.S.-backed
military regimes in Venezuela (the military ordered his
arrest after a coup d’etat in 1948 and he was later expelled
from the country), Rangel was particularly incensed by the
case of New Tribes. He personally wrote the introduction to
a book attacking New Tribes Mission, remarking on that
occasion, “What this is fundamentally about is a security
problem and national defense. It’s about the abandonment of
immense frontier territory.” Rangel went on to praise those
who had campaigned against New Tribes, which, in his
opinion, had set up a colonial enclave in the country. In
the face of the missionary presence, Rangel insisted that
Venezuela needed to reaffirm its national identity. Though
the Ministry of Justice and Interior Relations ultimately
heeded Rangel’s calls and carried out another investigation,
the results were never made public.
To this day, New Tribes Mission operates in Venezuela, with over 100 missionaries operating within the country. New Tribes works with indigenous peoples in Amazonas and several other states. David Zelenak, the Director of the Resource Department with New Tribes, considers the historic accusations against his group as bogus. He also says that no missionary was ever put in jail, notwithstanding all of the investigations and media attention. He says that there was never any concrete proof against New Tribes, and claims that missionary efforts helped to make indigenous peoples healthier. As for Rangel: “he has never liked Protestants…He was a fringe communist candidate before, now he’s thrilled to be an international player.”
In 1999, after Hugo Chávez was elected president, he named Rangel as Minister of External Relations. The veteran politician went on to serve as Minister of Defense under Chávez and later as his vice president. Judging from his recent comments regarding Pat Robertson, Rangel is still highly suspicious of American fundamentalist groups, or anyone, or anything else that compromises Venezuelan sovereignty.
This analysis was prepared by COHA Senior Research Fellow Nikolas Kozloff.
Nikolas Kozloff's forthcoming book, Hugo Chavez and His Vision for South America, is forthcoming from St. Martin's Press.
September 19, 2005