JWs: Child abuse claims can go unreported

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    Jehovah's Witness: Child abuse claims can go unreported

    11 February 2001
    By Kimberly Hefling
    Associated Press
    <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<

    BENTON -- As a boy, William Bowen sat quietly in his
    seat while his classmates recited the Pledge of
    Allegiance.


    As a member of Jehovah's Witnesses, he spent years
    going door-to-door evangelizing and serving the
    denomination. In time, he became an elder, a position
    of authority, in his western Kentucky congregation.


    But as an elder, he was privy to information that
    caused him to question the Jehovah's Witnesses faith
    -- and to question it publicly, an ultimate
    transgression in the denomination.


    In a letter dated Dec. 31, Bowen resigned as an elder,
    in protest of how the denomination, a society that
    shuns the outside world, handles accusations of child
    molestation. His claim is that in such a culture,
    accusations of child sex abuse can go unreported to
    secular authorities by Jehovah's Witnesses members who
    don't want to go against their faith. The claims of
    abuse victims are discredited, he said.


    "They want to act like pedophilia doesn't exist. Shame
    on them," Bowen, 43, said in an interview from his
    Draffenville home where he runs a candlemaking
    business with his wife, Sheila.


    Though Bowen expects to be kicked out of Jehovah's
    Witnesses -- or disfellowshipped -- for speaking out,
    no disciplinary action has been taken by his
    congregation. Still, some members refuse to shake his
    hand or associate with him outside the church.


    "They treat us like we have the plague," Sheila Bowen
    said. "You don't go against God, and they think the
    organization is God."


    Bowen's decision to resign has made him a hero among
    the denomination's dissidents.


    "People have been intimidated into not saying
    anything. There are pieces of this all over the
    country where one person has a piece of evidence and
    another has a piece of evidence, but they're scared to
    bring it up because they'll be disfellowshipped,"
    Bowen said. "So these people stay silent and they
    think, 'I'm the only one.' "


    A person who is disfellowshipped is considered
    invisible by denomination members and may even be
    shunned by members of his own family.


    "It's not just being out of a health club," said Steve
    Hassan, a former Unification Church member who is now
    a therapist and author. "It's losing your connection
    to God and members of your family inside the group."


    Bowen chose to speak out anyway, and his story has
    appeared in religious publications and the secular
    media. In Kentucky, The Paducah Sun and WPSD-TV
    covered it. The (Louisville) Courier-Journal published
    a story in which it examined court records in seven
    child molestation cases around the nation involving
    members of Jehovah's Witnesses.


    Bowen said a Jehovah's Witnesses policy requiring two
    people to witness wrongdoing before it is acknowledged
    by leaders makes it nearly impossible to prove child
    molestation occurs. Victims who do come forward
    confident they will receive help from church leaders
    are often left feeling betrayed, Bowen said.


    Bowen said he became interested a couple of years ago
    after reading a confidential file alleging a member
    had molested a child in the early 1980s. He said he
    disapproved of the way the case was handled by church
    officials even after he spoke up about it.


    J.R. Brown, spokesman at the Jehovah's Witnesses'
    headquarters in the New York City borough of Brooklyn,
    said he believes Bowen does not have a full
    understanding of church policies.


    Members are free at all times to report abuse to
    secular authorities, Brown said. "This is a personal
    decision on how you want to handle this," he said.


    What is revealed to church leaders is generally kept
    confidential unless state law requires that
    allegations of abuse be turned over to police, he
    said.


    "We deal with sin, and law enforcement deals with
    crime," Brown said.


    In some cases, however, the matter is turned over to
    secular authorities regardless of the law, Brown said.


    Of Bowen, he said: "He's concerned about victims of
    child abuse, and we are, too."


    Brown said the faith does require at least two
    witnesses to prove any kind of wrongdoing -- including
    child molestation -- because that is what is taught in
    the Bible. But corroborating evidence can be used
    instead of a second witness to prove wrongdoing, Brown
    said.


    James Bonnell, an elder in Bowen's congregation, said
    the faith reaches out and helps people in need. It is
    not controlling, he said.


    "It's a free choice," said Bonnell, of nearby
    Gilbertsville. "Everything you do is based on love of
    God and your neighbor."


    'An identity thing'


    The Jehovah's Witnesses denomination has 89,985
    congregations and 5.5 million members worldwide,
    according to its Web site. It was founded in
    Pittsburgh in 1872 by Charles Taze Russell, a former
    Congregationalist layman.


    Members refuse to bear arms, salute the flag or
    participate in secular government. They also refuse to
    accept blood transfusions. They reject a number of
    doctrines taught by traditional Christianity,
    including the divinity of Jesus Christ.


    Jehovah's Witnesses are taught that the faith is the
    authority and the only way to salvation. They are to
    bring all problems to their religious leaders first.


    Members attend numerous meetings, do Bible lessons and
    go door-to-door to evangelize, and some who have left
    the faith say that schedule leaves little time to
    think individually.


    "It's like an identity thing," said Marilyn Zweifel,
    an ex-Jehovah's Witness in New Berlin, Wis., who runs
    a telephone helpline for current members. "Somewhere
    along the way, you lose your identity."


    Debbie Shard, an ex-member who also operates a
    helpline from Ocoee, Fla., said members are told going
    outside the religion could hurt the faith's image and
    make it difficult to recruit and retain new members.


    "If there's a fire, you'd call the fire department,"
    Shard said. "If it's something that's not a
    life-threatening emergency, then the elders would be
    the first line of defense."


    She agreed with Bowen, saying: "If you go to the
    elders, they will generally discourage you from going
    to (secular) authorities because it will bring
    reproach on the organization."


    A former elder agreed. "Denial and secrecy are
    elemental to the way the society operates," said Mike
    Terry, of Conway, Ark.


    Raymond Franz, a high-ranking Jehovah's Witness who
    was disfellowshipped and then wrote two books about
    the inner workings of the faith, said he doesn't
    believe cases of pedophilia are any more prevalent in
    the denomination than in others. But the religion's
    insularity leads to problems, he said.


    "The thing is to keep everything within the system,"
    Franz said. "That's a natural reaction for Witnesses
    because they are essentially a closed community..."

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