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- <text id=93TT1574>
- <title>
- May 03, 1993: Paths to the Inferno:The Single Mother
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 03, 1993 Tragedy in Waco
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER, Page 42
- Paths to the Inferno
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>THE SINGLE MOTHER
- </p>
- <p> Ruth Mosher will always wonder what led her daughter Sherri
- Jewell to David Koresh. The pictures scattered around the house
- are of Sherri: winning a medal in a marathon; accepting her high
- school diploma; hugging her mother, whom she considered her best
- friend. "I thought her childhood was pretty happy," says Mosher,
- "but maybe it wasn't." Sherri, born 43 years ago in Honolulu,
- the only child of a salesman and a schoolteacher, was uprooted
- when her parents separated and her mother moved with her to
- California. But "I gave her everything--all the ballet, music,
- gymnastics, swimming classes--so she could decide what she
- liked," says Mosher. "We were very close; we didn't have anyone
- else." When Sherri gradfrom Loma Linda University the same year
- her mother earned a master's in education, the two celebrated
- with a month-long trip to the Far East.
- </p>
- <p> But Sherri was already drifting into another life. During
- college she conto the Seventh-Day Adventist Church; she had been
- brought up a Methodist. She went to Michigan to teach high
- school, and married a student seven years her junior, David
- Jewell, who was also a Seventh-Day Adventist. Mosher did not
- trust David. The couple had a daughter, Kiri, but the marriage
- was turbulent. Mosher found that out when Sherri asked her to
- spend a month with them. "She was so sad," Mosher recalls.
- "Sherri was always a very up person. She was having such a hard
- time."
- </p>
- <p> Sherri and David split up and finally divorced in 1984.
- Broke and distraught, Sherri took Kiri back to Hawaii. At a
- Seventh-Day Adventist church there, she was befriended by Marc
- Breault, a disciple of Vernon Howell's--the leader later known
- as David Koresh. When Sherri was back in California and living
- with her mother, Breault "would call her at all hours of the
- night and talk for hours," says Mosher. Sherri was introduced
- to Koresh, who thrilled her with his preaching. "Are you telling
- me you think this guy is the Lamb of God? You think he's Jesus
- Christ?" her mother asked. "I'm just reading the Bible and
- trying to find the truth," Sherri always answered. David thinks
- Sherri wasn't emotionally secure. "The areas of her life that
- were of greatest importance to her--her religiosity and
- spirituality--were where she felt the least amount of
- security," he says. "She had a desperate need to be led."
- </p>
- <p> Once she moved to Waco, Sherri withdrew even more. She was
- impossible to contact, and she sought to end David's regular
- visits with Kiri. He grew alarmed when Breault, who had broken
- with Koresh, warned him and Sherri's mother of the abusive
- practices going on in the cult. Sherri, Breault said, was one
- of Koresh's favored wives. The gold pendant worn by Kiri, only
- 10, was a sign that Koresh planned to take her too as a wife.
- </p>
- <p> When Kiri went to Michigan just after Christmas in 1991 to
- visit her father, he won emergency custody of the child. David
- recalls Sherri's foreboding words to her daughter when they
- parted for the last time: "Have as much fun as you can in the
- time you have left." It was Sherri, though, who had only a year
- to live.
- </p>
- <p> By Richard Zoglin. Reported by Elizabeth M. Brack/Anaheim
- Hills and Elizabeth Taylor/Niles
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-