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Child Molestation Research & Prevention Institute



Last Updated: 12/10/2009

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Gender: Female
Status: Single
Age: 100
Sign: Capricorn

City: Oakland
State: California
Country: US
Signup Date: 5/18/2007

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Thursday, October 15, 2009 
Op-Ed Columnist

No More Suffering in Silence

Published: October 9, 2009
(source: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/10/opinion/10blow.html)

Last Saturday, actor, playwright and impresario Tyler Perry posted a heart-rending message on his Web site recounting the abuses of his childhood. It was hard to read it without welling up.

His father had constantly belittled and savagely beaten him. Perry wrote that one beating was so merciless that “the skin was coming off my back.” When he was about 10 years old, while trying to leave a friend’s house, Perry wrote that the friend’s mother made lewd and disgusting suggestions and pulled him on top of her.

At another point, Perry wrote about a man from church who had molested him.

Coming on the heels of the arrest of Roman Polanski for his 1977 crime of plying a 13-year-old girl with Champagne and Quaaludes before raping and sodomizing her, and the revelation from Mackenzie Phillips that she had had a 10-year “consensual incestuous” relationship with her own father that she believes began when she was a teenager, it raises the question: How pervasive is child sexual abuse and how often do these crimes go unreported?

The statistics are sobering.

According to a 2000 report by the Bureau of Justice Statistics, nearly 70 percent of all sexual assaults are committed against children. While the age with the greatest proportion of assaults reported was 14, more than half of all child victims were under 12. And of those under 12, 4-year-olds were at the greatest risk.

According to a Unicef report released this week, “5 to 10 percent of girls and up to 5 percent of boys suffer penetrative sexual abuse.” Up to three times of those numbers experience some type of sexual abuse.

The good news: Reports of sexual abuse in the United States seem to be sliding. The not-so-good news: Reports and prevalence are not the same, and it’s not conclusive that they move in concert. The bad news: If up to 3 in 10 girls and 3 in 20 boys are still being assaulted, these are epidemic proportions. And, if most cases are never reported, it’s a silent epidemic.

Like Perry, most child victims — scared, confused and ashamed — tell no one. Instead, they shunt the unsavory secret into a dark corner of the mind, where they try, alone, for years to make sense of it.

We must do a better job of helping these children realize that they are not alone, not at fault and not powerless, that there is hope and help and healing.

We need a public education campaign that speaks directly to children — on Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network, at the beginning of G-rated movies, on classroom bulletin boards, everywhere. Nothing graphic, just something simple: “If it feels wrong, it’s wrong. Say something. It’s your body.”

I invite you to visit my blog, By the Numbers. Please also join me on Facebook and follow me on Twitter, or e-mail me at chblow@nytimes.com.


GET RIGHT

 
AMEN! My nephew had recently told me that his father was molesting him which is my sisters only son she ignored it and said he was a liar but I believed him. I contacted OCS several times and when my nephew came to visit and had a black eye he said that his father punched him so I called 9-1-1 which did absolutely no good at all .. After spending about 5 hours dealing with cops and detectives they decided they wanted to take me to jail for a simple traffic attachment that I had knew of before I dialed 9-1-1 ... Now the molesters mother has my nephew and they gave my 2 nieces up for adoption .. I don't know if I will ever get to see any of them ever again I really miss them alot but I do not regret attempting to get them help..  I wish there were better laws to protect children in situations like this. God Bless

 
Posted by GET RIGHT on Friday, November 13, 2009 - 6:02 PM
[Reply to this
Juanita
Juanita Bowman

 
Yes, we need to educate children to speak up as soon as it happens! I am 36 years old, just stood up to my Mom and her husband, my abusers, in the last 4 years. I have absolutely nothing to do with them anymore, nor my sisters who abandoned me when I spoke up. They were abused also but can't or won't speak up for me!  There is no statute of limitations in my state of KY, so I reported the abuse. There has been an investigation, I was undercover and he admitted many disgusting things on tape. However, I don't think the state is going to move forward with prosecuting because it is very difficult to prove the "sexual gratification" aspect! Detectives contacted my sisters and they refuse to say anything, they just say they don't remember anything! I know they do, I know they endured the same things that I did! Without my sisters, they just don't think they can win my case, and therefore will not move forward!  I think it is a shame that "sexual gratification" must be proved, because in my experience and through all my reading I have learned that it is not always about the sex, but more about rendering their victims powerless, it is about their insatiable need to be in control.
Something must be done to protect our children and break the cycle of abuse.

 
Posted by Juanita on Friday, November 13, 2009 - 6:03 PM
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