Over 100 Mormons living in northern Mexico have fled from their longtime settlement to the United States following last week’s bloodbath that left nine of their members dead, according to a new report.

The mass exodus of residents from the Northern state of Sonora occurred the same day the community buried the final victims who were gunned down by cartels on Nov. 4, the Associated Press reported.

Most people packed whatever they could cram into their vehicles and crossed the border without any plans of returning.

“I went down there to get my mother and get my family out, my brothers and sisters and lots of kids,” Mike Hafen said Sunday from his sister’s Phoenix home.

“They’ve been down there for 47 years. They left with the bare minimum, whatever they could fit in the back of my pickup,” he said.

Hafen’s family and other Mormons in northern Mexico lived in either La Mora or Colonia LeBaron.

The settlements were founded decades ago by an offshoot of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints who fled the US after the church’s 19th-century polygamy ban.

Hafen said the violent cartels in northern Mexico will likely keep many in the community from returning.

“What the cartels doing what they’re doing, it’s not safe,” said Hafen. “We have found that out.

“It’s getting worse. Some of my family say they don’t think they will ever be going back.”

Monday’s attack claimed the lives of six children — including 8-month-old twins — and three mothers. The victims were traveling in three SUVs when they were ambushed, authorities have said.

Authorities are probing whether the family was slaughtered by drug lords who mistook their convoy for enemies — or whether the murders were deliberate.

But at least one of the victims’ relatives believes it was a targeted attack by the cartels — since the ambush occurred over a period of three miles, and even after one of the moms hopped out to show she wasn’t a threat, CBS News reported last week.

Hafen said even more residents from La Mora and Colonia LeBaron plan to flee in the coming days.

His family is still trying to decide if they want to call Arizona their new home for good.

“They’re still working on it, trying to figure it out,” he said.

With Post wires