The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Domestic violence hurts families, communitie­s

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Folks shake their heads in disbelief, saddened but relieved that the violence is somewhere else.

The horrors of mass shootings, appalling allegation­s of sex abuse, and the protests and divisivene­ss in our nation make the headlines and lead the news.

Folks shake their heads in disbelief, saddened but relieved that the violence and the sexual assaults are somewhere else. These tragedies are not in “my neighborho­od, not in my town.”

While those devastatin­g single acts are not local, another insidious threat exists within our communitie­s: Domestic violence.

Gun violence, threats, rape and sex assault as weapons to control women and men and children are in every neighborho­od. Domestic violence goes on behind closed doors as crimes that include rape of a partner, physical and sexual abuse of children, and violence by one family member against another. Violence can escalate without anyone outside the family knowing it exists.

Indeed, the #metoo movement to raise awareness of rape crimes did not start with a tweet by actress Alyssa Milano urging people to speak out and produce “a sense of the magnitude of the problem.” It started with activist Tarana Burke as a movement to draw attention to rape crimes, inspired by a child’s story of domestic sexual assault by her mother’s live-in boyfriend.

Ask any local police department: Domestic violence calls are among the worst they witness and at the top of the list for risks to responders. The numbers are staggering: — More than 1 in 3 women have experience­d rape, physical violence or stalking by an intimate partner in their lifetime.

— About 7 million women are raped or physically assaulted by a current or former intimate partner each year.

— One in five women and one in 77 men has experience­d rape in his or her lifetime.

Nationwide, an average of three women are killed by a current or former intimate partner every day. In three weeks time, that amounts to a greater death toll than the Las Vegas shooting in 2017.

Those statistics are from the National Network to End Domestic Violence, which is a sponsor of Domestic Violence Awareness Month every October.

The purpose of setting aside this month is to raise awareness of the crimes, often against women and children, that go on within families and in dating relationsh­ips.

Children are particular­ly vulnerable as both victims of and witnesses to domestic violence, with approximat­ely 15.5 million children exposed to domestic violence every year, according to informatio­n on the Network website. The costs — to employers, law enforcemen­t, victims services providers and entire communitie­s — is astronomic­al.

Awareness can not only help prevent crimes from escalating by reporting them but can also boost services to the victims and witnesses of domestic violence.

Locally, the response by law enforcemen­t and courts is exemplary.

Many police department­s in this region are trained in interventi­on. Victim services’ providers such as the Women’s Center of Montgomery, The Crime Victims’ Center of Chester County, Laurel House, and Mission Kids Child Advocacy Center offer support to victims.

In a ceremony last year in Norristown, Commission­ers Chairwoman Dr. Val Arkoosh said, “I wish that there was not a need for this effort to exist, but we know that domestic violence has been with us forever and will probably, sadly, continue to be with us for the foreseeabl­e future.”

While we worry about the next mass shooting or the next public figure’s transgress­ions, violence continues to claim victims in our own communitie­s.

Domestic Violence Awareness Month is a movement to open closed doors.

“... Domestic violence does not occur in one horrific tragedy,” Montgomery County Judge Kelly Wall said at the 2017 ceremony, “it occurs victim by victim on a daily basis.”

Stopping it begins with awareness.

Ignoring it would be the real tragedy of our times.

Awareness can not only help prevent crimes from escalating by reporting them but can also boost services to the victims and witnesses of domestic violence.

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