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Study Puts Abuse Rate at 7 Percent in Missions' Elementary
Grades
By David Briggs, Reporter - Plain Dealer
Nearly 7 percent of former missionary children said they were
sexually abused during their elementary school years, according to a
study by a consortium of mission groups. In 1993, the consortium of
eight major missionary organizations performed the most
comprehensive survey ever made of missionary children. More than 600
former missionary kids responded to the survey out of a sample of
1,200 randomly selected.
Although other portions of the study have been released, the results
on sexual abuse have not been published until today.
Forty-one respondents, 6.8 percent of the total, said that, looking
back as adults, there were times during grades one through six that
they experienced sexual abuse. Four percent said they were sexually
abused during grades seven through 12.
The survey question did not define what constituted sexual abuse.
The respondents had to make that judgment.
The survey results, provided by research coordinators to The Plain
Dealer, puncture a hole in the wall of silence that has kept secret
much of the data on evangelical sex abuse.
David Pollock, a researcher, said the results on sexual abuse struck
those involved with the project "with a great deal of pain and
frustration."
Pollock said publication of the results "will be the kind of thing
that will awaken some."
Why the delay?
"I don't think it was a matter of not releasing. It was just a
matter of not getting it done," said Pollock, executive director of
Interaction, a Hoghton, N.Y.-based group that provides ministry
resources for missionary families.
Psychologist David Wickstrom, another researcher with the project,
said coordinators face the constraints of working other full-time
positions, and publication of much of the data from the 47-page
survey has taken time.
The study, done by mission organizations themselves, provides
powerful evidence of a problem many evangelical groups have
dismissed.
In a 1995 article, the Journal of Psychology and Theology reported
that sexual abuse by missionaries can be found in almost every
country where missionaries are working.
However, the journal reported, in part because of fears that
sponsors might withdraw money, the tendency among mission agencies
"is either to deny the possibility or to bury the problem through
various administrative strategies . . . . We must rely almost
entirely on anecdotal data."
The Rev. Marie Fortune, author of "Sexual Violence: The
Unmentionable Sin" and founder of the Center for the Prevention of
Sexual Violence in Seattle, said all the research indicates there is
no significant demographic difference among religious groups
concerning child abuse.
Yet many Protestant groups still like to portray it as a Catholic
problem because of the publicity given to priestly pedophilia,
Fortune said. "Certainly, the denial is there still, everywhere."
Published in the Sunday, March 18, 2001 Plain Dealer
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