I watched the CBS news

by DJ 15 Replies latest watchtower scandals

  • rocketman
    rocketman

    DJ, I'm sorry to hear that you are experiencing such frustration with regard to your family and the situation with the jw religion. I have no doubt taht your mom feels the obligation to "perform" even while your dad is sick and needs attention.

    Considering the fact that the CBS segment was only 5 mins long, I guess it was the best they could do. I would have liked to have seen it pointed out though that all who appeared on the program were disfellowshipped for trying to air their concerns and see to it that justice was done.

    With regard to reporting in states that don't require it, the jws should do so in good faith, as a gesture to show that tey imitate God who is the "Father of fatherless boys", but instead they'd rather ignore the true spirit of bible law.

  • hawkaw
    hawkaw

    Well done Bill and Heidi. For a 3 minute segment you hit most points and you with the help of CBS vaccinated a few more million people (likely 7.1 million).

    It was also good they showed the webs site. That will direct a few more people to it.

    Should be real fun when the Berry case goes to trial.

    hawk

  • UnDisfellowshipped
    UnDisfellowshipped

    In the following Awake! Article, I think you will see a familar name:

    AWAKE!, August 22, 1991 Issue, Page 29:

    Shielding Pedophile Priests? "Some dioceses still shield priests accused of pedophilia," ran a recent headline in the U.S. newspaper National Catholic Reporter. The newspaper interviewed Jeffrey Anderson, a lawyer who specializes in cases of sexual abuse. He estimates that since 1985, when priestly pedophilia came under increased public scrutiny, there have been over a thousand cases in which priests molested children. Anderson had some harsh words for the church’s response to the ongoing crisis: "It is a continuing saga of avoiding responsibility," he charges, decrying the church’s focus on protecting the accused clerics. "As a general rule, the institutional response of the church has been willfully inadequate both in tending to victims and dealing with risks."

  • DJ
    DJ

    I'm sorry UD, it is not familiar to me..so who is Jeffrey Anderson?

  • UnDisfellowshipped
    UnDisfellowshipped

    Hi DJ,

    Jeffrey (Jeff) Anderson is the Lawyer who is shown with Bill Bowen and Heidi Meyer on the Photo on the CBS News Story (from April 29th 2003) on their Website, here is a copy of it, which was originally posted by fjtoth: The following now appears at the CBS web page: http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/eveningnews/main3420.shtml.


    Another Church Sex Scandal

    SOUTHERN MINNESOTA, April 29, 2003
    (CBS) Like any mom, Heidi Meyer fixes boo-boos, serves up breakfast and even reviews some math homework.

    But every day is a fight for this mom to overcome her past.

    "Basically any way that he could put his hands on me, he did," she told CBS News Correspondent Jane Clayson.

    From the time she was 10, until she turned 13, Heidi, a Jehovah's Witness, says she was molested by a member of her congregation. Finally, she turned to the leaders of her faith.

    And what did they say?

    "They asked me, do you think this could be a misunderstanding? And I said, no. No, I'm very sure of how his hands were on my body and there's no way to misunderstand that," Meyer said.

    But the elders dismissed her plea for help and sent her away with a warning: "You need to keep quiet about this. You don't want to drag his name through the mud. You don't want to drag the name of Jehovah's organization through the mud."

    Bill Bowen, an elder for more than 20 years explained, "Anything that an elder says is viewed as the direct word of God."

    Bowen, a former Jehovah's Witness went on, "You could even be excommunicated for questioning what an elder tells you to do. There's no negotiation here. You must obey what the elders direct."

    But what silences most victims is that Jehovah's Witnesses require either a confession or two eyewitnesses to any accusation -- making sexual abuse almost impossible to prove.

    For Leanna Morley, in Oregon, the abuse started when she was five.

    "It's time that the people knew about the secrets that happen in that religion," she said. "It was a living hell."

    Sue was seven years old and living in Washington. Her molester later made a chilling confession. He said there were 24 to 42 little girls that he had molested -- he couldn't remember how many exactly.

    Bill Bowen says by the end of the year he expects at least 100 lawsuits to be filed against the faith.

    The problem is huge, he said. "It's of global proportions. You're talking about tens of thousands of children who've been molested in the last ten years. Tens of thousands, easily."

    The Jehovah's Witnesses Headquarters disputes these numbers but says they're aware of the problem -- and cites a letter it published last May. It says "we have long instructed elders to report allegations of child abuse to the authorities where required by law to do so, even where there is only one witness."

    There is another letter. It denies Heidi Meyer's charges, saying "... no child abuse involved."

    For Heidi, it's another betrayal by a faith she trusted and turned to for help.

    "These are your spiritual leaders, these are men appointed by God in the eyes of Jehovah's Witnesses, and who was I? You know, I was just some kid."

    As a mom she's still fighting to overcome her past -- even choosing to home school her son because she's afraid to leave him with others.

    ©MMIII, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.


    Also:

    Jehovah's Witness William Bowen, Attorney Jeff Anderson and plaintiff Heidi Meyer announce a civil lawsuit filed against the Jehovah's Witness headquarters on Tuesday, July 2, 2002. (AP)
  • DJ
    DJ

    UD.....oooooooh. thankyou! dj

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