Why Jewish child molesters are your problem
When I’m scrolling through my
Facebook newsfeed, nothing sickens me, or catches my eye more than a new
sex abuse scandal in the Jewish world. There’s something so invasive,
so humiliating, and so abhorrent about a religious Jew committing such a
heinous crime. I feel a certain embarrassment reading the details, “Oh
no! Not that community! My friend from camp lives there!” I skim
through the article with a dread that at any moment I might see a name
of someone that I know. The truth is, when it’s Jews, especially
religious Jews involved, it’s personal. It’s mishpacha. And here’s the
bottom line — there is something very sick happening in our mishpacha,
and only we can change it from within.
Children
are sexually abused everywhere — and to assume that within the G-d
fearing Jewish community, the risk is lower is not only naive, it’s
extremely dangerous. The days of teaching children about “stranger
danger” are over. We now know that 90% of childhood sexual abuse is
committed by someone who the child knows, and not a stranger, which is
more uncomfortable to believe. It’s worse to think that someone we
trust, someone in our religious circle is capable of violating and
damaging a child.
But it’s the truth.
When we see how horrifically these cases have
been dealt with – that victims were pressured to stay quiet, or that
abusers were circulated throughout different communities instead of
being reported to the police, many of us will proclaim “Those terrible
leaders!” And yes, they are terrible. Anyone who protects a child-abuser
over a victim is terrible.
But it is the cultural discomfort with the subject that fuels this evil fire. Our leaders represent us, and it’s up to us to make our children the priority. At the expense of an abuser’s anonymity, at the expense of a Yeshiva’s reputation, and most importantly, at the expense of our illusion that sex abuse doesn’t happen in the religious community.
But it is the cultural discomfort with the subject that fuels this evil fire. Our leaders represent us, and it’s up to us to make our children the priority. At the expense of an abuser’s anonymity, at the expense of a Yeshiva’s reputation, and most importantly, at the expense of our illusion that sex abuse doesn’t happen in the religious community.
Last week I had the privilege to attend a
Jewish Community Watch event about childhood sexual abuse, brought to
Israel by Magen. In the past I had avoided these types of events. It’s
uncomfortable, it’s unpleasant, and it’s downright depressing. But you
know what? I left the event, and instead of feeling down, I felt
invigorated. I felt angry and passionate and excited. I realized that we
are on the verge of a huge break-through in Jewish history. The
incredible people behind organizations like JCW and Magen are leading a
revolution. Why are we complicating something so simple? Why are we
protecting the guilty, and shaming the innocent? Why are we, the light
unto the nations, allowing child molesters to live their dirty secret
lives amongst our own vulnerable brothers and sisters, while our abused
are left to live their lives in self-hatred, feeling abandoned by their
own people?
JCW is pushing back. With the Wall of Shame,
in which unrepented child-molesters are featured, JCW is sending out a
very clear and very simple message: If you molest a child, you get no
protection from us. In Israel we call it protexia – “knowing the right
people” – well from now on, the child has full protexia. Their message
is a beacon of hope for the hundreds and hundreds of Jewish abuse
victims who have lost faith in both our community and G-d.
So why go to these events? Why not just get
the “relevant” information online so that you can make sure your own
kids are educated? Why sit through such an “uncomfortable” two hours
when “it’s not your problem?” Because, as uncomfortable as it might be
for you to endure accounts of sex abuse, imagine how the survivors feel,
facing an audience of a hundred strangers, sharing their darkest and
most private part of themselves. They are putting their pain, their
shame, their fear on public display. Why? Because they believe that they
can make a difference. That they can save someone else from suffering
the same horror. Don’t we at least owe them two hours of our time to
listen? To be moved, and feel their pain, and decide that no more
innocent children should have to endure it?
If there is an event coming up near you, I
implore you, take the time. Make the trip. Get the babysitter. And start
talking about childhood sex abuse. Say it out loud to yourself in the
bathroom mirror if you have to. It can’t be a taboo phrase anymore! This
is a new era – one of justice in this world, as well as the world to come. It is our children at stake.
URGENT: THE LAST EVENT OF THIS JCW TRIP IN ISRAEL IS TAKING PLACE SUNDAY, MAY 3 IN EFRAT. SEE DETAILS BELOW.