The Citizen (KZN)

Don’t turn a blind eye to sexual abuse

FAMILY: 90% OF CHILDREN KNOW THEIR ABUSER

- Karabo Motsiri

Some build up the confidence to tell, only to find out the family already knew.

How many of you know of someone who was abused in their home, and they knew or lived with their perpetrato­r?

How many of those families knew that their family member was molested every other day, but did not do anything about it?

The Darkness to Light organisati­on released a report in 2017 stating that about 90% of children who are victims of sexual abuse know their abuser.

It is a heartbreak­ing fact that 30% of the victims of child abuse are suffering at the hands of their family members.

How many of these sexual predators are held accountabl­e?

I know of a guy who was removed from his hometown in Limpopo after sexually assaulting a young child.

The family quietly swept it under the carpet and decided to relocate him. He came to Joburg and abused another one of his nieces.

A lot of children shy away from reporting these crimes because they are more afraid of the family’s reaction than living with the trauma of abuse.

It’s easier to die in silence, than be to be looked at sideways because you “must have done something” to invite your father’s brother to touch you in that manner.

Some children build up the confidence to disclose their trauma and the perpetrato­r, only to find out that the family knew. So what exactly are the dynamics that make it so easy for families to protect sexual predators?

Abusers have power

Security is an important thing in communitie­s and we will do anything to protect that.

Even if it is at the expense of our children or loved ones.

If you find out that the breadwinne­r has been sexually abusing your child, the thought of removing bread on the table scares you.

So it is more convenient not to expose them, just to ensure that you can continue surviving as a family.

What will people say?

People generally have abantu bazothini (what will people say) syndrome.

This is the disease that makes people more concerned about other people’s opinions, than their own issues.

A family that is perceived to be respectful would not want to deal with the embarrassm­ent of people knowing that they live with an abuser.

So, to protect the image of the family, they protect the abuser.

Liar!

A lot of abused girls and women have been coined liars because the abuser is much loved and would surely not be capable of such a heinous crime.

A priest, the school’s favourite soccer coach or the kid’s most adored uncle ... abusers don’t walk around with stickers on their foreheads.

Accepting someone you trusted is capable of such crimes is hard. So, families would rather deny that one their own relatives could hurt a child.

Children are vulnerable and need to be protected at all costs, even at the cost is shunning your favourite sibling.

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