Leicester Mercury

Vardy given ‘closure’ as she returns to scene of torment

REBEKAH TELLS OF HER TROUBLED CHILDHOOD IN RELIGIOUS COMMUNITY

- By BEN HURST ben.hurst@trinitymir­ror.com

REBEKAH Vardy has spoken for the first time about her experience­s of growing up as a Jehovah’s Witness, as she alleges in a Channel 4 documentar­y that the religion failed to support her through sexual abuse as a child.

The media personalit­y and wife of Leicester City footballer Jamie Vardy was raised as a Jehovah’s Witness in Norfolk, but said she left at the age of 15 after she was “shamed” for the sexual abuse and was shunned by the community, alongside family members, following her parents’ divorce.

Mother-of-five Vardy, 41, claimed she was abused by an individual between the ages of 11 to 15, which she alleged was covered up by senior male religious leaders.

Jehovah’s Witnesses, a Christian denominati­on with about 8.5 million followers worldwide, impose a strict moral code on members and punishes those who deviate from their beliefs by “disfellows­hipping” them, ostracisin­g them from the community.

In the documentar­y, Mrs Vardy returns to Norfolk, where several members of her family still live as Jehovah’s Witnesses and with whom she has had little contact since leaving the community.

She said: “I was brought up in a strict and controllin­g religious organisati­on. What happened to me during my childhood still affects me every single day.

“From the age of around 12 years old I was being abused and instead of being supported I was blamed, manipulate­d into believing it wasn’t the best thing to take it to the police.

“I told my mum about the abuse that I was experienci­ng. She cried, but didn’t believe me.

“I told numerous members of my family, Jehovah’s Witness community, and they called a meeting. I think I was about 15, it was suggested that I had misinterpr­eted the abuse for a form of affection.

“I knew that I hadn’t, I was well aware of what was right and what was wrong, and it was explained that I could bring shame on my family, and I was basically manipulate­d into believing it wasn’t the best thing to do to take it any further and take it to the police. It’s hard to see how I survived that.”

Mrs Vardy recalls a childhood without Christmas or birthday celebratio­ns, in line with the religion’s beliefs, with Bible studies and visits to the Kingdom Hall, the religious centre of worship for Jehovah’s Witnesses.

As a child, she said she believed she would die at Armageddon if she was not “perfect” and recalls “upsetting” images shown to her depicting the end of the world, which still cause her nightmares as an adult.

Visiting the Kingdom Hall where her congregati­on gathered, and where her grandfathe­r was an elder,

Mrs Vardy said: “You would have to do things to keep Jehovah happy, because He was always watching.

“Who you spoke to, how you spoke, how you dressed, how you held yourself, how you conducted every part of your whole life, and we were told if we didn’t pray enough, bad things would happen to us.”

Mrs Vardy said she always knew her family was different from an early age, their faith causing her to be bullied and picked on at school.

At home, her parents’ relationsh­ip was difficult, with elders regularly called to their home to “calm down” arguments.

When she was 11, she said, her family were shunned by the community after her parents’ divorce.

She claimed that relatives and friends were forbidden from associatin­g with her family, which contribute­d to her “resentment” of religion and her parents.

She said: “I think that’s where my real resentment to religion started, was being made to feel so bad, so different.”

During the documentar­y, she also meets former members of the Jehovah’s Witnesses, including a victim of child abuse and the mother of a man who died by suicide after being expelled by the organisati­on.

Vardy described the experience of revisiting her past as an “emotional rollercoas­ter”.

She told reporters: “I had closed Pandora’s box and didn’t want to revisit that. I went into this thinking this was going to be quite easy and actually, wow, it was a real challenge. It was an emotional rollercoas­ter. I have never been so open and personal about my experience­s but also to discover other people who had been through similar experience­s, witnessed similar things, if not worse, and to hear their stories, I just think they’re incredibly brave for being prepared to speak out.”

Asked whether making the documentar­y had given her closure on what she experience­d as a child, Vardy said: “Definitely. I think this chapter has closed. It already really was, but I really wanted to do this when Channel 4 approached me, because I was fascinated by it.

“Knowing that I had a voice, knowing that my voice could help and hopefully there will be more people who come forward to share their experience­s.”

Rebekah Vardy: Jehovah’s Witnesses and Me, is on Channel 4 at 10pm today. See also TV Choice, Page 25.

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