Learning how to fight child abuse peacefully
MICHELE MARR
April is National Child Abuse Prevention Month.
Several years ago, during a break from a meeting at the church I
was attending, I found myself sitting with a couple, listening to
them tell me about their children, their parenting and their
home-schooling methods, when their good-natured conversation abruptly
took an unpleasant turn.
A mix of disbelief and horror swept through me. I gave in to the
disbelief; I laughed. “You’re pulling my leg, right?” I asked and
looked intently for their confirmation.
This mother with sparkling brown eyes and a perpetual smile, this
soft-spoken father wearing a well-pressed white shirt and neat blue
suit looked at each other and then, with raised eyebrows, looked at
me. “No,” said the mother. “Why?” asked the father, smiling.
I felt my throat tightening and tears welling in my eyes. I
searched the face of this mother who had just told me that when her
children, ages 4, 6 and 7, were unruly, she put Tabasco sauce on
their tongues. And when they didn’t finish the food they were given
for snacks and at meals, the cost of the leftovers were deducted from
their allowance.
If worse came to worst, the father took an offending child to a
local hobby store to select an appropriately sized dowel for his or
her punishment. At home, he used it to whip the child until the dowel
broke in two.
I waited for his smile to segue into a laugh. Ha-ha. Gotcha! “He
who spares his rod hates his son,” this father said, in all
seriousness, instead.
Never mind that the Hebrew word for rod, “shebet,” means
“correction,” figuratively as well as literally “stick.” It’s the
same word used in Psalm 23’s “your rod and your staff, they comfort
me.”
Never mind that Scripture urges, “Fathers, do not embitter your
children, or they will become discouraged” -- Colossians 3:21, and
“Fathers, do not exasperate your children; instead, bring them up in
the training and instruction of the Lord” -- Ephesians 6:4.
I didn’t sleep that night and after several nights when I still
was not sleeping well, I went to my pastor for counsel. To my
surprise, my concerns were heard nonchalantly.
It was a family matter, none of my business. They were the
children’s parents; they surely didn’t mean them harm. From all
appearances they were a happy family with three well-behaved
children. If I went to authorities outside the church, it would be a
most unchristian gesture. I would surely regret it.
As the recent sexual abuse scandals in the Roman Catholic Church
have made all too clear, the tendency in dealing with child abuse can
be to hush it up or turn a blind eye. It’s a disconcerting subject to
talk about, especially among those who are expected to love and
observe God’s highest standards.
Which is not to suggest that child abuse is found solely in the
closets of Christendom.
Three years ago, under the direction of Queen Rania, Jordan opened
the first center for abused children in the Arab world. A
psychologist employed at the center remarked, “It’s a new subject
that’s being talked about now, and people are not so comfortable yet
with it.”
In 1997, the 41st Assembly of Women of Reform Judaism drew up a
resolution on child abuse that acknowledged, “There is overwhelming
anecdotal evidence that [child abuse] exists in all branches of
Judaism. As a community, Jews have yet to acknowledge that not all
Jewish children are safe in their own homes. The ‘conspiracy of
silence’ once used to deny violence against women is now used to hide
abuse against children in the Jewish community.”
The resolution called on the whole sisterhood of Jewish women to
“become knowledgeable about domestic child abuse in their
communities” and to “work with community, advocacy and service
organizations to provide professional help for child victims and
their families ... including but not limited to support groups,
counseling and medical and legal services.”
The women assembled resolved to do many of the things that Prevent
Child Abuse America has been educating and encouraging people to do
for 30 years: reach out; raise the issue; know and remember the risk
factors; recognize warning signs; report suspected abuse and neglect;
take legislative action and stay informed.
According to a U.S. Health and Human Services report earlier this
month, 900,000 children were neglected or abused in 2002, the most
recent year for which statistics are available. Of those, 1,400 died
as a result. In Orange County, there were 27 reports of child abuse
for every 1,000 children.
It’s long overdue, in our communities and as a nation, for us to
heed the words of William D. Persell, bishop of Chicago: “Confronting
[abuse], stopping it and caring for those who are or have been abused
is the responsibility of us all ... May we pray for the strength and
courage to struggle and eradicate abuse from the church’s life, and
from our homes and communities, and to be vigilant in protecting the
most vulnerable among us.”
For more information on child abuse, National Child Abuse
Prevention Month and how you can take part in it, go to
https://www.preventchild
abuse.org and https://www.stops-hear.org.
* MICHELE MARR is a freelance writer from Huntington Beach. She
can be reached at michele@soulfoodfiles.com.
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