silentlambs
in the Media/
News Articles
National
Press Coverage of Silentlambs
The
associated press did a second national story on the silentlambs and
jehovah'sWitnesses abuse. The story went into more detail and we were
happy to see it hitting papers across the USA. The story is as follows,
Group:
Jehovah's Witnesses protect child abusers
Religion
Today
04-03-04

William Bowen, former leader of
a Jehovah's Witnesses congregation, speaks with Kim
berlee Norris ,
an attorney representing 47 alleged abuse victims in cases against
Jehovah's Witnesses organizations and individuals. (Christopher
Berkey/The Associated P ress)
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By
Richard N. Ostling
The Associated P
ress
http://www.sltrib.com/2004/Apr/04032004/saturday/153619.asp
NASHVILLE
, Tenn.
-- They are 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 P
resbyterian 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 proble m c omparable
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").
P
hilip 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 pena liz
ed fo r
r aising 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 s tori es.
Often "the victim
is taken to a backroom 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 fro m
c ongregational leadership
or full-time work.
The conflict escalated in mid-2002 when Kim
berlee 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
ab user s
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."
-------------------------------------------------------
Religion
Today
Fort Wayne News Sentinel, IN - Apr 1, 2004
... 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 ...
Providence Journal (subscription), RI - Apr 1, 2004
... But a group called silentlambs has still gained
visibility in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's
Witnesses. ...
Group:
Jehovah's Witnesses protect child abusers
Salt Lake Tribune, UT - Apr 3, 2004
... But a group called silentlambs has still gained
visibility in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's
Witnesses. ...
Religious
sect faces slew of molest cases
Contra Costa Times, CA - Apr 3, 2004
... But a group called silentlambs has still gained
visibility in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's
Witnesses. ...
Religion
Today
Tuscaloosa News (subscription), AL - Apr 1, 2004 ...
But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility
in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's
Witnesses. ...
|
Religion
Today
Worcester Telegram, MA - Apr 1, 2004 ...
But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its
campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's
Witnesses. ...
|
Religion
Today
Fort Worth Star Telegram, TX - Apr 1, 2004 ...
But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its
campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's
Witnesses. ...
|
Religion
Today
Akron Beacon Journal, OH - Apr 1, 2004 ...
But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its
campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's
Witnesses. ...
|
Religion
Today
Duluth News Tribune, MN - Apr 1, 2004 ...
But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its
campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's
Witnesses. ...
|
Religion
Today
Centre Daily Times, PA - Apr 1, 2004 ...
But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its
campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's
Witnesses. ...
|
Religion
Today
The Ledger, FL - Apr 1, 2004 ... But a group
called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign to
change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's
Witnesses. ...
|
Religion
Today
Biloxi Sun Herald, MS - Apr 1, 2004 ... But
a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign
to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's
Witnesses. ...
|
Religion
Today
Kansas City Star (subscription), MO - Apr 1, 2004 ...
But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility
in its campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's
Witnesses. ...
|
Religion
Today
Times Daily, AL - Apr 1, 2004 ... But a group
called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign to
change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's
Witnesses. ... |
Religion
Today
Wichita Eagle, KS - Apr 1, 2004 ... But a
group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign
to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's
Witnesses. ...
|
Religion
Today
Fort Wayne Journal Gazette, IN - Apr 1, 2004 ...
But a group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its
campaign to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's
Witnesses. ...
|
Religion
Today
Miami Herald, FL - Apr 1, 2004 ... But a
group called silentlambs has still gained visibility in its campaign
to change the sexual abuse policies of Jehovah's
Witnesses. ...
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