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Incestuous sexual abuse: Family secrets
In the past few years, media attention has been focussed on the
issue of child abuse. What has come as a shock to most people is
the fact that much of the atrocity is perpetrated by members of
the family. AMMU JOSEPH writes on a film that has, in a sensitive
manner, uncovered the truth about the prevalence of the problem
in South Asia, and the social and cultural resistance to dealing
with it.
"I was the apple of my parents' eye - I did well in school,
teachers gave me a good report card. To all appearances, I was
the good South Asian daughter - withdrawn, buried in my books, an
achiever. Wouldn't it have been great if the characteristics of
this "proper" South Asian girl weren't also the characteristics
of a child living with a terrible secret, trying to cover up the
shame that should never have been hers? I grew up in a home where
we were taught valuable lessons about not wasting money, not
wasting time, not wasting an education. I am left with a wasted
childhood."
Grace Poore, film-maker, writer and activist
* * *
THE terrible secret Poore refers to here is the sexual abuse to
which she was subjected as a child by two of her uncles. Her
childhood was snatched away by these predators within her family.
But she has ensured that her adulthood has not been similarly
wasted. Instead, drawing on her own experience of a violent
family, she has worked in different ways towards the goal of
ending violence in families across the world.
She has done work in Sri Lanka for the United Nations Special
Rapporteur on Violence against Women and in the United States for
the National Coalition against Domestic Violence. She has made
two films on issues of violence within the home. In "Voices
Heard, Sisters Unseen," she focussed on battered women
marginalised by stereotypical notions about victims of domestic
violence. In "The Children We Sacrifice," her latest film, she
zooms in on the incestuous sexual abuse of girls in South Asian
families, both on the sub-continent and in the diaspora.
A 61-minute video documentary shot in India, Sri Lanka, the U.S.
and Canada, "The Children We Sacrifice" "exposes the irony of
home as source of refuge and source of violation, family as
source of comfort and source of betrayal for the South Asian
girl," as Poore puts it.
"I think I've been making this video in my head for about ten
years," she says towards the end of the film. "I felt we needed
to have a collective letter from survivors and advocates and
concerned people that put out a message, a message to South Asian
communities across the world that incest happens, it happens a
lot. And it damages thousands and thousands of children who grow
up into thousands and thousands of women with a profound sense of
betrayal and abandonment by those who were supposed to care for
them."
The film explores the universal crime of incest through the prism
of the South Asian experience. The stories of women who have
suffered incestuous sexual abuse in childhood - some from the
time they were two-year-old toddlers - uncover the truth about
the prevalence of the problem, the attitudinal and behavioural
patterns that foster it, as well as the social and cultural
resistance to dealing with it, within South Asian communities
everywhere.
The video highlights the effects on victims of both the abuse and
the fact that it is rarely acknowledged and tackled by their
families. It seeks to destigmatise the abuse as well as speaking
out about it so that more survivors can feel free to talk about
and thereby deal with their experience of abuse. And, perhaps
most significantly, it celebrates the struggle and resilience of
women who have managed to survive the trauma of their childhoods
- bringing home the important point that while survival and
recovery may be difficult, they are far from impossible.
Despite the grimness of its subject, the film is not hard to
watch. In fact, it is marked by an unexpected gentleness.
Interviews with survivors, therapists and lawyers, including
several based in India, are intercut with footage of children
laughing and playing, a minimal amount of text and statistics,
and paintings, poetry, dance and music by survivors of sexual
violence - in an effort, explains Poore, "to provide a forum for
art that captures the pain of and triumph against violent
trauma."
"I would never have made a harsh film," says Poore. "that is not
my style." According to her she made a conscious effort to ensure
that the film is aesthetically pleasing - not merely to
counterbalance the distressful narratives but also to
subliminally suggest that the beautiful public image presented by
many families may well conceal considerable ugliness and pain in
the private sphere.
The video is now available not only in English, but also in
Bengali, Hindi and Tamil. A Sinhala version is also planned. A
resource book originally meant to accompany and supplement the
film has evolved into a stand-alone document that can help in
efforts to promote understanding of the issues involved, improve
detection and intervention, and develop effective support for
those who have been abused.
A Malaysian of South Asian origin, Poore was born and raised in
her country of birth but has lived in the U.S. over the past 19
years. She was in India recently screening her newly-released
film and facilitating discussions at workshops in different parts
of the country on the sexual abuse of children within South Asian
families.
Why the focus on South Asia? Apart from the fact of her own sub-
continental roots, Poore cites a number of reasons for the
special focus. "Sex and family are controversial topics in South
Asian communities - they often draw defensive responses," she
points out. "Sexual abuse by itself is an uncomfortable subject -
it often elicits silence. Put sexual abuse and family together
and you face a stone wall."
There is widespread resistance to the idea that sexual abuse,
including incest, is prevalent among the famously child-loving,
family-oriented communities of South Asia - despite growing
evidence of the universal nature of sexual crimes against
children, increasingly supported by statistics yielded by
systematic research.
In addition, the premium placed on family ties and honour in
South Asian communities often prevents them from taking action
against incestuous abuse if and when it is brought to light.
Immigrants of South Asian origin living in other parts of the
world, who bear the additional burden of upholding the image of
their minority communities, are sometimes even more reluctant to
acknowledge such abuse lest it reflect badly on their culture and
society. Another inhibiting factor is the high value put on
female virginity in South Asian communities, which fuels fears
about the implications of exposure for the marital prospects of
girl victims.
The bottomline, as Poore puts it, is that in South Asian
communities, wherever they may be located,
"the main reason for the code of silence is family reputation.
Those who pay the price are the victims whose private pain is
minimised or rendered irrelevant."
The film also seeks to shatter the many myths and misconceptions
that keep South Asians from acknowledging that incestuous sexual
abuse of children cuts across barriers of geography, ethnicity,
class, educational status, and so on - that it happens among
People Like Us as much as it does among People Like Them.
Gender is yet another barrier crossed by sexual abusers of
children: boys are also vulnerable to abuse. While acknowledging
this fact, Poore deals exclusively with female victims/survivors
in the film.
"It is no accident that I chose to focus this video on girl
children," she explains. "...Girls are more frequently targets of
incestuous sexual abuse. In addition, there are different reasons
for the silences around sexual abuse of the boy child versus
abuse of the girl child. The effects of abuse on boys also vary
slightly from effects on girls. How abused girls are viewed by
South Asian society is different from how abused boys are viewed.
And how South Asian society responds to the sexual abuse of boy
children is different from how it responds to the abuse of girl
children." While these differences do not invalidate or minimise
the prevalence of the sexual abuse of boys in South Asian
communities, she says, they do necessitate a separate video.
The gender question comes up in relation to perpetrators of
sexual abuse, too. Research across the world suggests that 80 to
95 per cent of all child sexual abuse is committed by men,
irrespective of whether the victim is male or female. This may be
the reason why the issue of the female sex offender has received
little attention and literature on the subject is sparse.
Existing estimates of female perpetrators range from three to ten
per cent of all sexual abusers.
Poore says she was unable to locate survivors who had been
sexually abused by female perpetrators but acknowledges that this
may have been "the result of not looking hard enough and not
taking this issue seriously enough." She admits that the omission
is a weakness in the video and apologises for the lapse in the
resource book.
A sensitive, compassionate, balanced and inclusive approach to
what is without doubt a highly emotive and complex subject marks
the entire film. For instance, despite the inescapable fact that
the majority of sexual abusers is male, the video does not
demonise men. This is particularly remarkable in view of Poore's
personal experience of abuse by two male relatives and her many
years of work in the field of violence against women, which is
usually perpetrated by men.
She explains that it is her activism within the women's movement
that has contributed most significantly to her holistic view of
these issues, although she has also undergone therapy to deal
with the after-effects of her own abuse. She sees violence,
including sexual abuse, as an issue of power rather than of
gender per se. According to her, "Gender gets into the equation
mainly because gender involves power. Male privilege equals
power. So, by default, gender and power become synonymous."
"Feeling that not all men are the enemies also comes from the
knowledge that not all women are your allies," she says. She
believes it is important to acknowledge that while women may not
possess the privilege of gender they often do have power over
others by virtue of adulthood, class, and so on, and that some of
them do abuse their positions of power and privilege.
She believes that her age (45) and experience have helped her
develop her present outlook, which comes across most vividly in
the measured tone of the film. "Even ten years ago I may not have
seen men as allies," she admits. "But since then I've had the
privilege of meeting a few - albeit very, very few - men whom I
consider my allies. I have been impressed by the few men I have
come across who are truly working very hard to make a real
difference to themselves and to others. Maybe the video would
have had a different tone if I had made it a decade ago. Even
though the content may not have changed substantively, the tone
may have been different. I guess the video is a product of its
time within my lifetime."
She admits that some men have objected to the collage within the
film of images of ordinary men - on the grounds that it implies
that all men are potential perpetrators. She thinks they may have
been more comfortable if the photographs had shown sleazy, slimy,
oily men who fit into their stereotypical image of the "perverts"
who commit such crimes - which in turn reinforces the common but
false assumption that men with a certain kind of liberal
upbringing and education do not.
Nevertheless, she says, most male viewers have so far responded
to the film in terms of wanting to do something about the
problem, despite the fact that it clearly indicates that men are
the main perpetrators of sexual abuse. The tone of the film may
be the critical factor that has prevented them from belittling or
dismissing its contents in a kneejerk, negative reaction. The
tone may also ensure that the film reaches out to a wide spectrum
of women.
"At the end of the day it's all about people working together and
becoming allies in the fight against the sexual abuse of
children," she points out. "What I want above all is for people
to take the issue seriously and to do something about it."
For details about availability of this film, contact
SHAKTIVIDEO@aol.com.
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