NEWS ALERT - VICKI BOER TRIAL/Canadian Press

by hawkaw 7 Replies latest watchtower child-abuse

  • hawkaw
    hawkaw

    This story should be in most Candian news papers tomorrow morning. Also look for it on the radio. Also we have had major local TV news play in Toronto. The media is going with it. We should have hit anywhere from 3 to 4 million people with the story.

    More to come and take care

    hawk

    http://ca.news.yahoo.com/020909/6/ou8m.html

    Former Jehovah's Witness weeps as she describes abuse at hands of father
    By JAMES MCCARTEN

    TORONTO (CP) - A former Jehovah's Witness told a harrowing tale of alleged sexual abuse Monday on the first day of a civil suit that is expected to bring the church under scrutiny. Vicky Boer, 31, wept on the witness stand as she described the three years of fondling and abuse she allegedly suffered at the hands of her father, the patriarch of a devoted family of Witnesses.

    Boer, who is suing three church elders and the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of Canada, the religion's governing body, was 11 years old when the abuse allegedly began in the early 1980s, she said.

    But it was how the church to which she had devoted her young life treated her when she came forward with the allegations that prompted her to launch the legal action that began Monday in a Toronto courtroom.

    "When you grow up as a Jehovah's Witness, that is your life, and outside of that you don't have a life," Boer told the court during an emotional day of testimony.

    "If you dare to leave the organization, you're basically left with nothing."

    Three years after the abuse ended, Boer told her mother her story, and church elders within their congregation in Shelburne, Ont., about 100 kilometres northwest of Toronto, were notified.

    But rather than inform the Children's Aid Society and permit Boer to seek counselling outside the church, she was forced to confront her father and give him a chance to repent his alleged "sins," court was told.

    At that meeting, she testified, her mother insisted the abuse was in the past and that it had already been dealt with. The elders agreed, saying the father "is really showing signs of spiritual repentance," she said.

    They also allegedly refused to allow her to see a psychologist, warning her that it would lead to an investigation and might cost her father his job and her mother her only source of financial support.

    "They said there's going to be consequences of that," she testified.

    "My father would lose her job, the family would be investigated and my mother would be destitute."

    While victims of sexual abuse normally aren't identified in public, Boer has agreed to allow her name to be publicized as part of her effort to promote what she alleges is widespread abuse within the confines of the church's congregations.

    As part of their beliefs in a strict interpretation of Bible teachings, Jehovah's Witnesses reject anything political or "worldly" that distracts from their focus on Christ and the second coming, which they consider imminent.

    Birthdays, secular holidays and Christmas are not celebrated; children are often required to leave class during the Lord's Prayer and the national anthem, Boer said.

    The Watchtower has not yet had the chance to defend itself in court, although in a statement of defence it says it has "no knowledge of the allegations" that Boer was abused and that the abuse was never reported to church elders in Shelburne or to the Children's Aid Society.

    The defendants also deny that two elders, Brian Cairns and Steve Brown, prevented Boer from reporting her allegations to the society or from seeking psychological help.

    "The defendants deny they prevented the reporting of the subject matter to the proper authorities," the statement says.

    "To the contrary, the defendants Brown and Cairns were instrumental in ensuring the matter was reported ...if the plaintiff chose not to seek advice from a psychiatrist or psychologist, it was solely of her own volition and because she believed such advice was unnecessary."

    They go on to argue Boer never "mitigated her losses" by seeking such help in the eight years between her original allegations and the filing of the suit.

    The suit alleges that the church failed in its fiduciary duty to the victim for waiting nearly two months to report the abuse to the "secular authorities," and was negligent in forcing the father and daughter to settle their differences in a face-to-face meeting.

    Boer's 58-year-old father, Gower Palmer, continues to live in Shelburne and has never been criminally charged.

    It's not the first time that the teachings of the Jehovah's Witnesses have made headlines. The most recent example is the case of a 17-year-old girl in Alberta who died last week after a lengthy and unsuccessful court battle to avoid blood transfusions to treat her leukemia.

    Edited by - hawkaw on 9 September 2002 19:29:53

  • Lady Lee
    Lady Lee

    NEWS Canada.com is carrying the story

    http://www.canada.com/news/story.asp?id={65975F8A-745B-47B6-B293-57BDB52AC481}

  • Sam Beli
    Sam Beli

    back up

  • abbagail
    abbagail

    This story was posted in another thread as well, and there are more comments there:
    http://www.jehovahs-witness.com/forum/thread.aspx?id=36335&page=1&site=3#489694

    Edited by - Grits on 9 September 2002 21:20:28

  • Pathofthorns
    Pathofthorns

    This letter was found in yesterday's issue of the Toronto Sun newspaper...

    Sunday, September 8, 2002

    As one of Jehovah's Witnesses in the area for nearly 30 years I can honestly say it was disturbing to read in your article ("Storm in the Hall," by Brodie Fenlon, Sunday Sun) - the allegations of the Jehovah's Witness organization covering up allegations of child abuse. While the outcome of this case remains to be seen, with all of the recent exposure in the media it is hoped that the church leaders will recognize that their elders are simply not qualified to investigate crimes of this nature and bring all allegations of crimes to the authorities without exception. I also hope that if errors have been made in the past that the church will do the honorable thing and acknowledge the harm they have caused and do what they can to help these ones recover from what happened.
    -Randy J. Bigham
    Brampton

    editor's comments: We should expect nothing less of any church.

  • abbagail
    abbagail

    Will he be DF'd for that? (his letter to the editor?)

    Good letter, and even better comment from the ed!

    Thanks for sharing that, Path.

    Grits

  • Had Enough
    Had Enough

    Hi Path:

    Thanks for posting this letter. It says it all about the basic problem.

    After hearing the testimony of what a 15 year old was put through by those elders, I shudder to think of how younger children could possible withstand it. I can only hope that the WTS will be able to see the damage they have done and take the proper steps to correct it.

    The editor's comment added the icing to it as well.

    Had Enough

  • hawkaw
    hawkaw

    Why are there two threads going?

    Anyway well done all.

    Vicki was also on CITY TV and CBC local. On City TV she creamed them and Charles Mark did one helluva job too.

    Not one comment from the WTS on TV.

    I did not see the local CBC and I was hoping someone would report in.

    Randy is a real thinking person. There should be something in the Sun tomorrow too.

    hawk

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