MAJOR AP ARTICLE ON JWs CHILD ABUSE ISSUE GOES NATIONWIDE IN USA

by hawkaw 52 Replies latest watchtower child-abuse

  • hawkaw
    hawkaw

    I know this has been posted already but I am not sure if it is being absorbed or not or the significance. This was probably one of the best articles yet written on this and even Barb Anderson stepped out of the "silence" of her court case to help out. The comment by WT attorney Brumley is a killer and yet nobody has chewed on it. This is too important an article for people to have missed and thus I am reposting it. The Tennessee newpaper around Barb's place has picked it up and its really a huge column inch wise. Laurie Goodstein at the NY Times has read it too and was happy that Richard Ostling was there and has done these articles. Laurie's newpaper (only the biggest in the country) had it on the AP ticker yesterday as well. It makes quite an impression. This is a terrific article that people including Bill, Heather, Kim Norris and Barb did and it's a damning article too.

    I would just like to take this opportunity and thank all of you for setting differences aside and coming together to do one of the best written pieces I have ever read on this issue. You guys kicked a$$ in my not so humble opinion.

    hawk

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Religion today

    By Richard N. Ostling, AP Religion Writer, 4/1/2004

    NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- They're an all-volunteer organization with little money, and could only muster two dozen attendees to their first national meeting last weekend. But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's Witnesses.

    Founder William Bowen says silentlambs exists to educate the public and "give a voice to survivors of child sexual abuse that had been silenced by the institution of Jehovah's Witnesses."

    The group claims rules of the Witnesses protect child molesters: The Witnesses, however, insist that they are committed to doing everything their faith allows to prevent abuse.

    Meanwhile, the whole situation highlights the fact that, while the clergy sex abuse crisis in the Roman Catholic Church has dominated headlines the past two years, smaller American religious bodies are dealing with variations on the same problem.

    The Hare Krishnas, with 100,000 devotees in the United States and Canada, are working on a settlement with 540 students who claim they were abused in boarding schools while their parents were practicing the faith by chanting and begging. A $400 million suit by 91 of them drove the Hindu group into bankruptcy.

    In a trial scheduled to open Monday in Marshall, Texas, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America agencies, including an Ohio seminary, are charged with negligence in ordaining a pastor who molested 14 boys.

    And the upcoming Presbyterian Church (USA) assembly will discuss rules to tighten handling of abuse allegations after a case in which a missionary molested 19 girls.

    The Jehovah's Witnesses dispute involves a highly insular community of 1 million U.S. followers of the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, whose unique doctrines include a belief that the end times are imminent. Adherents are famed for door-to-door distribution of Awake! and Watchtower magazines.

    The Governing Body at Brooklyn, N.Y., headquarters commands not only an obedient flock but formidable finances and a corps of trial-hardened attorneys.

    Their opponents are motivated by what some say is a problem comparable with, or even worse than, the scale of abuse by Catholic clergy.

    Bowen founded silentlambs three years ago after he quit as an elder in Draffenville, Ky., saying Watchtower took no action against an alleged molester. He charged that the group's rules created a "pedophile paradise."

    The central issue is the Witnesses' policy of first bringing accusations of any sin to local elders. If an accused person denies the charge, two credible witnesses are required to establish guilt -- due to literal application of such Bible verses as Deuteronomy 19:15 ("only on the evidence of two witnesses, or of three witnesses, shall a charge be sustained").

    Philip Brumley, Watchtower's general counsel, says his religion cannot alter its beliefs and doubts secular courts will demand this.

    "Do you change doctrine because someone feels something is more convenient, even if it's not in harmony with Scripture?" he asks.

    But getting two witnesses in a molestation case "just goes off the scale of improbability," Bowen says.

    And if two witnesses are lacking, the accused is deemed innocent, charges remain confidential and -- silentlambs says -- parents who warn others are subject to disfellowshipping for slander.

    Disfellowshipping -- also the fate of some silentlambs whistle-blowers -- is an extreme penalty that means a total cutoff of relationships by family members, friends and business associates who are Witnesses. Silentlambs notes that during the Catholic crisis, no parishioner has been penalized for raising complaints.

    Former Witness Heather Berry, of Claremont, N.H., said that when she was molested by her father, a "ministerial servant" in the congregation, local elders told her mother "to pray more and Jehovah would take care of it." Others at the Nashville meeting of silentlambs had similar stories.

    Often "the victim is taken to a back room with guys who don't know diddly-squat about rape investigation," complains Bowen, who insists all allegations should be referred immediately to police.

    Silentlambs also says Witnesses discourage police involvement because they believe Satan controls everything outside the faith.

    However, official Watchtower policy states that victims have the right to file secular charges, and that elders report allegations to police where state laws require this.

    Witnesses headquarters says it must follow what the Bible teaches, and that includes the belief that "child abuse is abhorrent." It points to a 1997 Watchtower article stating that, except for a few instances, proven molesters are barred from congregational leadership or full-time work.

    The conflict escalated in mid-2002 when Kimberlee Norris, a tenacious Fort Worth, Texas, attorney, began working full-time on Witnesses litigation. She has since filed suits for 47 alleged victims in California, Nevada, Oregon and Texas, with 20 more cases in the pipeline.

    Norris targets Watchtower organizations and alleged abusers who are leaders in local congregations. She told the silentlambs she culled the strongest cases from 2,000 people who contacted her, making accusations against 729 Witnesses.

    She says the Witnesses' policy will change only when "the cost is too much, in the court of law or in the court of public opinion."

    Eventually, Norris plans to get testimony from Barbara Anderson of Tullahoma, Tenn. Now disfellowshipped, Anderson says that, while working as a Witnesses headquarters researcher, she compiled an inch-thick dossier about believers' child abuse and other psychological maladies that went to the Governing Body in 1992.

    Says Anderson: "Yes, they knew (about abuse), and didn't do a thing about it."

    ------

    On the Net:

    Silentlambs: http://www.silentlambs.org

    Jehovah's Witnesses official child protection memo:

    http://www.jw-media.org/newsroom/index.htm?contentbackground.htm

    Links to news stories,

    Religion TodayThe Ledger, FL - 8 hours ago... But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's Witnesses. ...

    Religion TodayKansas City Star (subscription), MO - 8 hours ago... But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's Witnesses. ...

    Religion TodayBiloxi Sun Herald, MS - 8 hours ago... But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's Witnesses. ...

    Religion Today

    Religion TodayWichita Eagle, KS - 8 hours ago... But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's Witnesses. ...

    Religion TodayJournal Gazette, IN - 8 hours ago... But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's Witnesses. ...

    Religion TodayMiami Herald, FL - 8 hours ago... But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's Witnesses. ...

    Religion TodayNews Sentinel, IN - 8 hours ago... But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's Witnesses. ...

    Religion TodayTuscaloosa News (subscription), AL - 8 hours ago... But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's Witnesses. ...

    Religion TodayWorcester Telegram, MA - 8 hours ago... But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's Witnesses. ...

    Religion TodayFort Worth Star Telegram, TX - 8 hours ago... But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's Witnesses. ...

    Religion TodayAkron Beacon Journal, OH - 8 hours ago... But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's Witnesses. ...

    Religion TodayDuluth News Tribune, MN - 8 hours ago... But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's Witnesses. ...

    Religion TodayCentre Daily es, A - 8 hours ago... But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's Witnesses. ...

    Jehovah's Witnesses join the US religions facing key molestation ... rovidence Journal (subscription), RI - 3 hours ago... But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's Witnesses. ...

  • SpannerintheWorks
    SpannerintheWorks
    Philip Brumley, Watchtower's general counsel, says his religion cannot alter its beliefs and doubts secular courts will demand this.

    "Do you change doctrine because someone feels something is more convenient, even if it's not in harmony with Scripture?" he asks.

    But getting two witnesses in a molestation case "just goes off the scale of improbability," Bowen says.

    It's a killer.

    Spanner

  • sf
    sf

    Hawkaw,

    As you will notice, I've just submitted new thread here re: my own local newspaper and its failure to report any of this AP news in the last week. Please view it and give me your comments and any more suggestions on what I can do besides what I'm already doing and will continue to do.

    I still cannot get a grasp on why certain papers who do indeed subscribe to the AP wire, get this news and STILL do not print it.

    As I tried to convey on the phone with a couple of them, one whom is the State Bureau chief, it is getting a bit ridiculous in thinking that soon I will have to be the one to take out an ad and/ or write in an editorial (and trust me, I have written several they still will not print) to report the news that they should be printing. I'm at my wits end...(no pun intended).

    Take good care, sKally

  • hawkaw
    hawkaw
    I still cannot get a grasp on why certain papers who do indeed subscribe to the AP wire, get this news and STILL do not print it.

    I hear you and have had bouts of that too during the Boer trial no mater how I spun it. To this day I still wonder where the hell the Star was. Its an editoral thing and its a section thing .... What stories in the section (usually the National section) will sell the most newspapers.

    hawk

  • Dansk
    Dansk

    Hawk,

    Would an e-mail campaign help?

    Ian

  • cyber-sista
    cyber-sista

    YES!!! my non-jw father who lives in a small town called me to tell me about this article he saw in his local paper..I think it is being well circulated...

  • DevonMcBride
    DevonMcBride

    Hawk,
    I agree this is the best article to date. I hope there are many more to come.

    I still cannot get a grasp on why certain papers who do indeed subscribe to the AP wire, get this news and STILL do not print it.

    I can't understand it either. The Philadelphia Inquirer never prints these articles and they are owned by the same company as the Miami Herald who does print them.

    Devon

  • somebodylovesme
    somebodylovesme

    Thank you for posting this!! I had not seen it yet, but it is so good to know the AP has picked it up.

  • amac
    amac

    Hello Hawkaw,

    My 2 cents, at first I thought this letter did not have the damning effect that you posted. But upon consideration, I realized that I'm coming from a different angle than some and I'm always thinking of whether or not something is damning in the eyes of an active JW whereas your work focuses on creating external legal and public pressure on the WT.

    To me, the 2 witness rule is irrelevant. I could care less how the elders judge someone. My problem is with their reporting policy and would like to see all accusations handed over to the authorities. I wish either the WT would be proactive and change their policy or that the states in the US that do NOT require this would catch up to the modern awareness of this problem and require it.

    I think the JWs two witness rule for DFing is completely within their realm of freedom of worship, especially since they have conceded to allowing two single witnesses from two single accounts in the case of sexual offenses. But their unwillingness to report accusations of such an illegal abhorence is damaging to society and people in general. That is what I would like to see changed.

    If any JW says that the WT is just following caesar's law, then they should be reminded that the law was created for confidentiality of Christendom's tradition of confessions to priests which JWs do not practice, so they are participating and abusing a law created for Christendom, not "true Christians." Again, just my 2 cents on a very personal issue against the WT.

  • cyber-sista
    cyber-sista
    Philip Brumley, Watchtower's general counsel, says his religion cannot alter its beliefs and doubts secular courts will demand this.

    "Do you change doctrine because someone feels something is more convenient, even if it's not in harmony with Scripture?" he asks.

    But getting two witnesses in a molestation case "just goes off the scale of improbability," Bowen say

    So...what Brumley is saying here sounds like ...

    Anybody else reading it like this?

    The WT relgion will not change their policy for child molesting, because of the 2 witness biblical thing. Thus things will remain the same in the pedophile paradise--and they will continue to silence the voice of the victims...

Share this

Google+
Pinterest
Reddit