Tag Archives: battered women

Mother’s Day Flower Project

JWI’s Mother’s Day Flower Project raises awareness of domestic violence nationwide and delivers encouragement to the 45,000 women and children living in shelters every day. Every gesture of care reminds these women that someone is thinking about them.

Each contribution to the Mother’s Day Flower Project helps us deliver beautiful bouquets to 200 battered women’s shelters and support JWI’s year-round work to ensure secure and healthy futures for women, girls and families.

Watch our video and make a difference for mothers at risk.

It’s very easy: Make a $25 gift in honor of your mother or another special woman in your life and JWI will send her a special Mother’s Day card. Your support of this project underscores your commitment – and ours – to make a difference in the lives of women everywhere.

    

Rihanna’s “Man Down”

October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month. Pass it on.

By Alexandra Huss, JWI Intern

In a CNN opinion piece, Leslie Morgan Steiner explains why she believes Rihanna’s video for the song “Man Down” sends a positive and important message. The video begins with Rihanna shooting a man on the street, and ultimately flashes back to show that this was a man who had raped her the previous night. Despite the backlash from those who believe the film was too violent, Steiner goes so far as to thank Rihanna for depicting “the rage and vengeance fantasies that often constitute a normal, healthy reaction to rape and domestic violence.” She also believes the video should become mandatory viewing as part of a real world sexual violence awareness campaign.

There are valid points on both sides of the argument. On the one hand, Rihanna’s bold act glorifies the shooting of her attacker, and conveys the message that violence breeds violence, a vicious cycle that domestic violence awareness hopes to end, not perpetuate. Perhaps a scene of Rihanna ultimately coping in a more constructive and realistic manner, such as seeking support and bringing the man to justice legally, could send a far more positive message.

Yet it is also true that so often, victims feel voiceless and helpless, leading them to fantasize about bringing their attacker to justice on their own terms. It is only natural that these emotions can come from such an intense violation of a woman. As Steiner suggests, perhaps what offends and disturbs some viewers is not the death of the rapist, but the portrayal of a victim with regained her inner strength, fighting back.

Rihanna is an artist who has also become a representative for domestic abuse victims because of her own experience. She is a signal of strength, and thus her messages have very far reaching consequences and reactions.

Abused Heiress – Anne Scripps Douglas

Anne Scripps and Scott Douglas

Anne Scripps and Scott Douglas

Anne Scripps Douglas lived the typical life of a battered woman — the whispered telephone calls, the lies to friends and family, the coded messages to the few she could trust. Like a frightened animal she jumped at every loud sound, each ring of the phone, and most of all at the drunken curses of the man she had once loved but who now terrified her…

Read Mark Gribben’s entire account of the Anne Scripps Douglas story at TruTV online.

Am I Finally Safe?

When my son found my ex-husband dead of an overdose, I had to put my grief aside and be there for my children.

My children witnessed some of the abuse that occurred during my 18-year marriage, but worse, they were forced to witness my ex-husband’s obsessive drive to destroy me after I ended our marriage. I was at high risk of being murdered and had many safety precautions in place: alarms, bars on my windows, a personal protection dog and a lot of education about domestic violence.

I lost all sense of peace for 10 years after we divorced. The abuse continued through my children, broken windows, a car set on fire, a winter coat slashed through the back, and on and on. I could only control my domain and I decided at some point that I had to choose to be happy and peaceful in spite of him. That was a turning point for me.

I had a career teaching but I wanted to counsel others about domestic violence. I went back to school at night and became a school counselor. I have helped many young children, teenage children and mothers through this distressing time in their lives. I want them to know that they do have a future and that they will find peace. The sense of hopelessness is one of the worst human emotions that one can feel. No matter how bad it gets, you must believe that there is so much good in the world—good fathers, good men, good counselors, good women and good neighbors.

My children loved their father even though they knew that he had done many bad things. They were kind to him but kept their distance, especially during the last few years. Now there is much regret, guilt and sadness about how long ago they really lost the man they called “dad.” I see progress also. My son is finally mentally well enough to work. His eyes are soft and brown again with no sign of the blackness I once saw in them. My daughter is getting married and crying about her dad not being there but she will be alright too. My other two daughters are so much alike even though they are 10 years apart in age. They grieve privately.

My reaction to his death? Lots of nightmares where he comes to kill me again. Lots of tears for his parents and my children. Thankfulness that he will no longer suffer or cause great suffering to others. Sadness for the young man I married and wanted to grow old with. Great relief that I don’t have to be afraid of him anymore.

It seemed fitting to me to face my fears and go to his grave. I did not go there to rejoice. I felt fear that he would push up from the ground and grab me. I heard strange animalistic sounds coming from my mouth that I had never heard in my life. I wiped off his headstone with my wet tissue. I forgave him. Then, I  turned and walked away from his grave and it was very empowering. I will never forget what he did to all of us. But I WILL have my peace.

Afghan women hiding for their lives

For years, some women have been considered property in Afghanistan. Now, some are getting help. CNN’s Atia Abawi reports.

KABUL, Afghanistan (CNN) — Shameen’s brown eyes seem lost as she thinks about the one day she wants to forget, but it is all she can think about.

Nearly 90 percent of Afghan women suffer from domestic abuse, according to the U.N.

//

Still traumatized, she recounts the events that led her to a safe house in Kabul.

She was raped and nearly stabbed to death by her husband just seven days before we met her.

Her lips are quivering and her eyes full of fear.

“He forced himself on me,” she said. “All I could do was scream.”

She was married off 15 years ago when she was a teenager.

Throughout those years she was tortured and abused, suffering daily beatings with an electrical wire or the metal end of a hammer.

This was her normal life.

Read the full article at cnn.com.

10.30: Where There’s Smoke

Jennifer Jay’s story was recorded by The Moth, a not-for-profit organization devoted to storytelling that breathes modern life into the world’s most ancient art form. Moth evenings feature true stories told by people from all walks of life — legendary artists, retired pick-pockets, scientists, and everyone in between. For more information on touring shows, open mic nights, and free-of-charge community storytelling workshops, visit www.themoth.org.


10.29: Christine

This and other videos in “Run Jane Run,” produced by videographer, photographer and computer artist Lynn Estomin, were created at a “Silence Speaks” digital storytelling workshop for survivors of domestic violence, sponsored by the YWCA of North Central PA.

10.28: “Maria”

“Maria,” a 14-year-old migrant farmworker, is one of many women working out in the fields - thousands of “Marias” who are victims of discrimination, sexual harassment, sexual assault, domestic violence, pesticides and unfair labor conditions. Her art and poetry were sent to JWI through the Domestic Violence Project of Farmworker Legal Services of New York, Inc.

"Before and After"

You see silence

You hear silence

You can almost taste silence

(they think that is beautiful….they think)

You’re also forced to ignore silence

You also choose to ignore silence, because….you want to live

No longer will i stay silent from your abuse

(not so beautiful this time around)

No longer will i be cornered by silence and its impurities

No longer will i be encaged…encaged in you, by you and around you

I was given a voice, too scared to be used until now…..

If ayone is going to be silent ….it’s going to be you……

Yo escucho silencio

Yo veo silencio

Casi puedo saborear el silencio

(piensan que es bello..lo piensan)

Eres forzada a ignorar el silencio

Tambien escoges ignorar el silencio…..porque quieres vivir

Ya nunca mas estare en silencio por t u abuso

(que a estas alturas , ya no es bello…

Ya nunca mas estare acorralada por el silencio y sus impureza

Ya nunca mas estare enjaulada..enjaulada en ti, por ti y alrededor de ti

Se me dio una voz alguna vez, demasiado asustada para usarla hasta ahora…..

Si alguien va a estar en silencio……..vas a ser tu.

10.27: Sole survivor of triple murder talks about domestic violence

“A North Idaho woman nearly killed in a shootout with her estranged husband is now speaking out to about her personal experience with domestic violence as a warning to others. KXLY4′s Jeff Humphrey reports.”

10.26: faces around the seder table

It is Sunday, April 20, 2008, 7:00 p.m. at a synagogue in Cleveland, Ohio. Four women, from different parts of the world, are sitting around the Seder table. What they have in common is that they are all victims of domestic abuse who sought refuge at the Hebrew Shelter Home in Cleveland, Ohio.

One of the women table is Rebecca, who has three small children. Rebecca escaped her husband, a successful business man, social charmer and abuser. She came to Cleveland from Cincinnati because she feared nobody in the observant community she lived in would believe her. She was referred to JFSA by the National Domestic Violence Hotline. Rebecca was relieved to hear of a shelter that would not only provide safety, but also an observant, kosher space for her and her children.

Sitting next to Rebecca is Hannah, a 19-year-old Jewish girl who escaped from her abusive boyfriend, goes to a local community college, and wants to be a teacher. Her boyfriend, six years her senior, was her manager at the McDonald’s restaurant where she worked. After dating for two years, they moved in together. He controlled her every move, called her cell phone every five minutes, and accused her of having an affair. When she told him that she was leaving, he locked her in a closet. Hannah’s mother, who was Jewish, died when Hannah was 15 years old, and her father, who is Catholic, remarried to a woman who was uninterested in Hannah. Hannah has not practiced Judaism since her mother passed, and this is her first Seder in nine years. She is surprised by how safe and reconnected she feels.

Next is Jessica, a 32-year-old Jewish woman with two children who was married for 12 years to her high school sweetheart. Jessica always took his controlling nature as a sign of how much he loved her until his behavior escalated, and she realized she needed a healthier life. Jessica’s husband isolated her from her friends and family. He threatened that if she divorced him, he would make sure she would not ever be with anyone else. She saw a flyer advertising a JFSA Family Violence Services support group for empowering women. Since she began participating in the program, she has received the knowledge, resources, strength and support to leave her husband safely. Jessica has a good job at a local bank, and JFSA is providing her with legal services so that she can get a divorce, obtain a protection order, and receive child support.

The most recent addition to this group is Mrs. T, a 65-year-old woman who came to the Hebrew Shelter Home to escape abuse from her daughter and son-in-law. A widow in Ukraine, she came to the USA to look after her granddaughter. Now that her granddaughter is going off to college, Mrs. T’s daughter and son-in-law are threatening to throw her on the streets. Mrs. T knows that her daughter endures abuse too, but she cannot get through to her. When Mrs.T. read an article in the Russian newspaper about the services at JFSA for domestic abuse victims, she knew she had to get help. Mrs. T has learned how to take the bus, registered for English classes, and made friends at the Hebrew Shelter Home. She has obtained affordable housing and a part-time job through the resources offered to her. Sitting at the Seder table with her new friends, she is thinking of all they have in common. They are all Jewish survivors of domestic abuse, and more importantly, with the support of the community, they are all becoming empowered women who are not merely surviving, but thriving.

10.25: Judgment Day

Originally published in People magazine, November 06, 2000 (Vol. 54, No. 19)

After 15 Years, a Surgeon Stands Convicted of Killing His Long-Missing Wife

Robert Bierenbaum stood in perfect silence as the verdict was read at his murder trial on Oct. 24, but his appearance spoke volumes. As the jury forewoman pronounced the once-proud plastic surgeon guilty of murdering his wife, Gail Katz Bierenbaum, whose body he is believed to have dumped in the Atlantic Ocean from a plane in the summer of 1985, the defendant turned ashen, while across the courtroom a somber celebration was beginning among members of the victim’s family. “We got him, Gail,” her brother Steven Katz said moments later on the steps of the state supreme court in Manhattan. “I’m sorry it took us 15 years, but we got him.”

So ended the trial of Dr. Robert Bierenbaum, 45, a cruel and exacting husband who lashed out lethally at his wife at the very moment she threatened to leave him. Police never recovered the 29-year-old victim’s body or any other physical evidence linking her husband to the crime, leaving prosecutors to argue a circumstantial case. But the evidence was compelling nonetheless, including proof of Bierenbaum’s violent temper and a flight log prosecutors say he altered in a botched attempt to hide his actions on the afternoon of his wife’s death. In the end it took jurors less than seven hours to find him guilty of second-degree murder. “I won’t say I’m surprised,” said Steven Katz, 30, after the verdict, “because that would mean I didn’t believe…that he was the one who murdered my sister.”

Certainly it had never been a secret that Robert and Gail Katz Bierenbaum’s three-year marriage was troubled. Gail, a psychology graduate student at the time of her death, was an emotionally vulnerable two-time college dropout when she met Bierenbaum, a handsome doctor so intellectually gifted that he had finished medical school at 22 and spoke several languages. “Gail used to say Bob was very impressive—on paper,” says Gail’s sister, attorney Alayne Katz, now 42.

But behind the brilliant résumé lurked a dark personality given to violence. Just a month before the couple wed in 1982, Bierenbaum, furious at the attention Gail lavished on her cat, tried to kill the animal by drowning it in a toilet bowl. The following year, as jurors learned during the three-week trial, he caught his wife smoking a cigarette on the balcony of the couple’s Upper East Side apartment and choked her until she lost consciousness. “He was having so much trouble reviving her that he had to call 911,” psychiatric social worker Marianne DeCesare, a friend to whom Gail later confided the story, told the court on Oct. 5.

But Gail didn’t press charges after the incident and, following a brief separation, returned to her husband. “Like a lot of people in unhappy marriages, Gail had one foot in and one foot out,” says Alayne.

Born in Brooklyn, Gail was the oldest of three children of the late Emanuel Katz, president of a firm that printed company names on pens and pencils, and his wife, Sylvia, who worked at a card shop the couple owned. When Gail was in fourth grade, she moved with her family to Bellmore in suburban Long Island. After two years at the State University of New York in Albany, she eventually returned to New York City, where she briefly studied dance therapy at New York University and ended up working as a secretary at an advertising agency. In 1979, at 23, she attempted suicide by slashing her wrists after a breakup with a boy-friend. “She wasn’t happy with where she was in life,” says Alayne.

Then, two years later, a friend introduced Gail Katz to Bierenbaum, the son of a well-to-do physician from New Jersey. The two moved in together and were soon engaged to be married—a commitment Gail was unwilling to break even after the incident involving her cat. As the relationship progressed, Bierenbaum asked Gail to quit her job, told her to dress more conservatively and pressed her to finish college—which she did, completing a bachelor’s degree in psychology at Hunter College in Manhattan. “He was a terrible control freak,” says Steven, now a financial advisor. “But Gail was an eternal optimist. Maybe she thought she could change some of his ways.”

After Bierenbaum nearly strangled her in 1983, Gail was urged to get out of the marriage by a psychiatrist whom she and Robert had seen. According to witnesses at the trial, Gail came to the same decision herself about a year later. By that time, she had had at least two affairs and the marriage seemed irretrievably broken. “She wasn’t without blame,” says Alayne. “None of which rises to the level of murder.” In fact, Alayne testified that by the morning of July 7, 1985, the day she was killed, Gail was preparing to leave her husband and was considering moving in with her latest love. She chatted with a friend on the phone at 10:30 a.m.; when another friend called 40 minutes later, Robert said Gail wasn’t available.

Bierenbaum later told police his wife had stormed out of their Manhattan apartment following an argument and never returned. But he did not report her missing for 30 hours. Although he initially cooperated with investigators, he abruptly stopped speaking to police after they questioned him about the cat and strangulation episodes a few days later. It would be another year before cops discovered that Bierenbaum had rented a Cessna 172 for a two-hour flight over the Atlantic from an airport in Caldwell, N.J. But at the time, with no body and no sign of a struggle at the Bierenbaum apartment—which police failed to search until months after Gail’s disappearance—the investigation came to a standstill.

Bierenbaum, who began dating again within three weeks, started a new life, first in Las Vegas and then in Minot, N.Dak., where he was running a successful plastic surgery practice. He was living with his new wife, obstetrician Janet Chollet, and their 2-year-old daughter, when he was finally indicted for the 15-year-old murder last December, after investigators learned that he had altered a date in the flight log to make it appear that his mystery flight had taken place a month later than it actually had. After the guilty verdict—Bierenbaum will be sentenced Nov. 12—Alayne Katz credited New York police detective Thomas O’Malley, who continued to investigate on his own time, for keeping the case alive. “He never gave up,” she says.

Nor did the victim’s family. For years after her daughter was last seen alive, Gail’s mother, Sylvia Katz, periodically left messages on Bierenbaum’s answering machine, calling him a murderer. Sylvia, like her husband, Emanuel, died of cancer before their daughter’s killer was brought to justice, but her surviving children fully appreciate the vindication that she was denied. Said Alayne after the verdict: “I don’t ever want to talk about Robert Bierenbaum again. He got what he deserved.”

Patrick Rogers
Sharon Cotliar and Steve Erwin in New York City

10.24: “Children See, Children Do”

public service announcement, U.K.

10.22: Window Pains

According to Webster’s dictionary the word ‘window’ means:

1. An opening that makes it possible to see something.
2. An opportunity to see or experience something.

Webster goes on to say the word pain means:

1. The extremely unpleasant physical discomfort experienced by somebody who is violently struck or injured.
2. Severe emotional or mental distress.
3. To make somebody feel saddened or distressed.
4. Risking or threatened with something like-DEATH.

Putting these 2 words together gives the title of this reading:
‘Window Pains’

Shh! Be Still! Lend me your eyes – your ears – and your heart.
Look! Listen! Feel! Come with me, in your minds if you will, as we
Pull back the curtains, Open the blinds and Raise the shades to peer into the lives of battered women, through their window pains.
Come right up to the windowsill. See the pain, hear the pain, feel the pain that exists behind their window.
And remember, like the candles you hold, they represent
The millions of window pains around the world.

• Ming Li’s window

I don’t know how long I’ve been up here. It’s been a while though.
My white dress is now black from the dirt on the floor.
The blood from the gash in my forehead has ceased to flow.
There is a stench so bad from where I couldn’t hold it, I had to go.
Through a small window I have watched people walk to and fro.
I can see them but they can’t see me.
I scream and shout but they don’t respond. Neither does he. I wish he would open the door and let me out.

• Danielle’s Window

It all happen so fast, I don’t remember what went wrong
He was reading the newspaper and I had the stereo on
Listening to our favorite song by Luther Van Dross
‘Here and Now’
Out of the corner of my eye I watched him as he put the paper down
Something inside of me knew, here comes the first round.
POW! He hit me so hard I fell to the ground.
He began to shout: ‘There you go making me cross
I know what that song is about I know what you’re trying to do
You think playing that music is going to make me love you’
POW! he hit me again. ‘That ones for Luther’
POW! another one right on the chin. ‘That’s for you-Don’t play that song again.’

• Laura’s Window

Like Sleeping with the enemy the towels had to be hung straight.
More than straight they had to be hung perfect.
Every fold in place. Each towel separated by a 2-inch space.
He even put a ruler near by
Once I was off by less than half an inch
He took the towel rack and rearranged my face. Leaving me with one eye.

• Shauna’s Window

All day he was calling me names using words that rhyme with ditch.
Playing mind games
Reminding me it was because I was pregnant
That we even got hitched and that He didn’t think it was his baby anyway.
He said I was an ugly no good piece of crap.
And that I planned to get pregnant that I had on purpose set a trap.
He said I couldn’t cook and I looked like a dead fish on a hook.
No one would ever want me not even someone blind who couldn’t see.
The day ended. Now it was night. Had he forgotten what he said in the light?
Did he seriously think I might? I said no. I didn’t tell him where to go I simply said no not tonight
The next morning I was so sore. I don’t say no anymore.

• LaQuita’s window

He said I was his queen Then he kicked me hard in the stomach
And ruptured my spleen
I only have eyes for you He would smile and say
I couldn’t see him He blackened both my eyes
The other day
I love you like no other he would whisper in my ear
Next he called me names that began with mother.
You’re my special princess are the words I heard
When the Dr. said I failed the stress test.

• Carla’s Window

I was getting out of the hospital that day
My ribs had healed according to the x-ray.
All 283 stitches had been taken out.
He came to pick me up he said he had something to say
And he promised not to shout.
A dozen roses were on the front seat with a card that read I’m sorry
Sometimes I act like a geek.
Please say you still love me Forgive me for the last few weeks.
He reached up and gave me a pat Tears ran down my face
But I couldn’t feel them the meat cleaver he used
On me paralyzed my cheeks I could forgive him
But I couldn’t forget a mirror would make sure of that
This was the fourth time yet here I was going back.

• Zoë’s window

He came from behind while I was sitting in the chair and grabbed a handful of my hair pulling it out.
30 minutes you were gone I heard him shout
It doesn’t take that long to buy a ham
You were probably somewhere else spreading your legs for another man.
Wham! I don’t know what hit me but I knew my arm was broke.
I told him the line was long and there was only 1 cashier.
But he just grabbed my neck and proceeded to choke.
The pain in my arm wouldn’t let me reach his hands
I could feel myself going under my heart sounded like thunder in my ears. Oh Please! Please no! My body went limp. And he let me go.
• Kerry’s window

It was a beautiful day. The month was June. No the month was May.
I remember it well because it was Mother’s Day.
2 weeks earlier I went to see a judge and got an OP
He was not allowed Within 25 feet of me.
The kids were wired and wanted to play
So I decided to take them to the park that day.
A friend went with me though I had the OP I wanted extra security,
I clutched the paper in my hand As the Kids and I ran through the park.
Time went by so fast and before we knew It was getting dark.
‘It’s time to go’ I said as I motioned to the kids
BANG! BANG! – Your DEAD!!
The words rang out loud as the bullets went through my chest and my head. I fell on one knee and dropped my OP
He wasn’t suppose to be within 25 feet of me.
I could hear him speak: Bullet 1 and Bullet 2 Were for you
Bullet 3 is for me I’m not going to jail See you in HELL
He opened his mouth and fired 1 shot my stomach was in a knot.
Get my kids I yelled to my extra security
Everything went black. I didn’t die that day I have 2 bullets in me
And a metal plate in my head But at least I wasn’t dead.

• Gwen’s window

My name is Martha. Gwen is my mother she’s no longer here.
After 15 years of living in fear. I miss her so.
I gave her my word to tell her story till everyone heard.
Domestic Violence Is a REALITY. It took my mother away from me.
I don’t know when it started but I can remember back to the age of 3
It seemed like there was a fight every night. The last one caused me the most fright,
We came home from our family vacation early because mom’s eyes were black and swollen shut. She couldn’t see.
He didn’t want others to know. And that meant mom couldn’t go out.
The bruises and gashes alone would give strangers something to talk about.
As he opened the door letting us know our vacation was no more
He dropped the keys and demanded that mom pick them up.
She didn’t, she couldn’t see.
He picked up the keys and slashed her nose. Next there came what seemed like 50 blows.
Blood was everywhere. He gave us kids such a scare.
I went to call 911 just like I’d done before so many times in the past
I knew in minutes they would be at our door.
But this time he had cut the line.
I knew then this was going to be the last time
Help was not on the way things weren’t going to be fine
I closed my eyes real tight hoping someone would hear my pleas for help that night.
My mother yelled and I opened my eyes to see the final strike
He had my brother’s baseball bat and was rearing back to give the final blow. I tried to yell – No words came out. She – Just – Fell.

Webster offers another meaning for the word window:

1. A Period of available time
2. A period of free time in a schedule available for use.
3. A limited time during which conditions are right for something to take place.

All too often we are willing to only look at lives displayed behind windows, much like window-shopping without a serious intention of buying anything.
Tonight, I tell you
Time is available – Conditions are right for something to take place
We have seen – We have heard – We have felt the pain.
I challenge you. I challenge me to help in some way
Toward the cause Of Setting battered women free.
Domestic Violence is a REALITY….

-ike

10.21: My Private Hell:

Our Marriage Looked Like a Dream Come True, but Nobody Knew I Was a Battered Wife

by Cheryl Kravitz

THE NIGHTMARE WOULD COME IN the hours before morning. It was always the same. I was crouched in the corner of my kitchen, hands over my head, eyes shut tight, gasping. In the background I could hear someone shouting obscenities while pummeling my back.

Sometimes I’d wake trembling, trying to get my bearings in the middle of the night. Fists clenched tight, my heart beating hard, I’d slowly take in my surroundings. It was just a bad dream, I’d tell myself. You’re safe. No one is going to hurt you.

Years later, I can believe that I’m safe. But as one of the 4 million women physically abused every year by their husbands and boyfriends, it’s taken the death of my tormentor for me to go public.

Many of those women are professionals, like myself, even elected officials, which I once was. Their abusers are clergy, doctors, psychologists, and executives, belying the stereotype that domestic violence is most prevalent among the poor or uneducated.

“Despite having greater resources available, it can be as difficult for middle-class women to leave a batterer as it is for poor women,” says Chevy Chase psychiatrist Susan Fiester. “They feel humiliated and believe they will be stigmatized once the community finds out about the situation.”

But going public gives another battered woman a chance to see that she’s not alone. So it’s a gamble worth taking for me.

IT WAS THE YEAR OF SQUEAKY FROMME AND Sara Jane Moore. Cher divorced Sonny, and Jimmy Carter was preparing his run for the presidency. In my mid-twenties, I’d finally reached a point where I felt that life was good. I had become a mother at 17, and my daughter and I had weathered a lot together, but by 1975 our lives were placid.

We lived in Chicago in an apartment with a view of Lake Michigan. I was editor of the community newspaper, the Hyde Park Herald, and my daughter attended third grade at a neighborhood school. My parents helped with my daughter, and my friends formed a tight circle of support, albeit one that concentrated mostly on assisting each other with dating advice.

That spring I enrolled my daughter in day camp at the Jewish Community Center. Soon after, a staff member there asked if I’d consider writing an article about the new executive director, considered a rising star in the community. Besides, she said, he was single.

After quick consultations with my friends, we decided this was the perfect opportunity. I could find out everything I wanted to know about a potential suitor in a legitimate interview.

LOOKING BACK, I CAN SEE WHY THE INCENtives to settle down were so strong. My parents disowned me when I became pregnant at 16. We had no contact for three years, and when the reconciliation finally occurred I swore I would do whatever I could to become a “good girl” again.

By the time 1975 rolled around, the relationship with my parents was smooth. The only thing missing in my life was the companionship of a man. In my mind, this man, through his religion, education, occupation, wit, and style, would be the acknowledgment to the outside world that I was approved.

Enter Larry.

The day of the interview I primped for an hour, double-checking my questions. By the interview’s end, I was smitten with this Yale-educated man. That afternoon he called and asked if I’d like to go to a Smothers Brothers benefit that weekend.

The next few months were an avalanche of lavish dinners, weekend trips, and beautiful gifts. He won a high approval rating from my family and friends. By the time the engagement announcement ran on page three of the Herald, we were considered a hot couple in Hyde Park.

There were just a few things that I chose to ignore.

IT DIDN’T OCCUR TO ME TO QUESTION WHY Larry neglected to tell me that he had been married twice before or that his tendency to disappear into another room several times a night was a chance for him to down a couple glasses of vodka.

I felt no need to respond when his father, as gently as he could, suggested I might wait a bit before making this commitment, but didn’t tell me why that might be wise. The day before the wedding Larry was upset that I was on the phone for a long time with my best friend. I chalked it up to nerves when he found an antique cup my friend had given me and smashed it against a wall.

By winter of 1977, blinded by my new standing in the community, I didn’t notice that there had been a shift in power between Larry and me.

With Larry’s encouragement, I’d left my beloved newspaper job and, at twice the salary, went to work for a local hospital as communications director. Because I’d never had to manage this much money I began turning my paycheck over to him, receiving an allowance in return.

I barely noticed that my circle of friends had dwindled since I was increasingly unavailable. Even lunches out became hard because my allowance was not large, and every penny needed to be accounted for at the end of the week.

My parents took care of my daughter every weekend because Larry felt we needed time alone to do things as a married couple. In our new apartment, amid the nice furniture and lovely wedding gifts, my attention wasn’t focused on reality. We weren’t going out at all. The weekends were spent in the apartment, with me trying to read and him drinking vodka openly now, constantly complaining about his job.

In the spring of 1978 the problems at his job were overwhelming. Larry had alienated people by his argumentative posturing at meetings, and many of the community leaders with whom I had been close were calling for his ouster. I felt torn between my duty as a wife and my knowledge that these were good, decent people who were seldom wrong.

Finally, one of Larry’s mentors suggested the time was right to leave. There was a job opening in Tulsa, Oklahoma, to head the Jewish Community Center there. Within a few weeks, the job was his.

WE WERE SCHEDULED TO LEAVE AT THE end of August. Larry had lived in five cities. I’d never lived anywhere but Chicago. The farewells were wrenching.

Our car headed south toward unfamiliar Tulsa and away from the city and the life I’d always known. No friends, no job, separated from my family, with no money of my own, I went to Oklahoma. My isolation was now complete.

Larry was elated. We bought a beautiful home and, with my 11-year-old daughter in an excellent school, the halcyon days were back. My urge to go back to work was met with approval and within two months I’d found a perfect position, with the Red Cross.

By the time I turned 30 the problems in Chicago were a distant memory. My work was exciting and my daughter was thriving. I’d made new friends and was freelance writing for a daily newspaper.

It’s hard to remember when the ground shifted. Once again the changes were slow and subtle. It might have been when I resisted handing over my paycheck for the first time or when the phone kept ringing because I’d won an award for my newspaper column.

The pouting and drinking seemed to increase incrementally with any outside recognition that I received.

Such jealousy and possessiveness are common traits of batterers, who become overinvolved in their partner’s life in order to feel secure themselves, according to Lenore E. Walker in her landmark book, The Battered Woman. Also not unusual was Larry’s insistence that I turn over all money to him.

“The use of economic deprivation as a coercive technique results in bargaining and tradeoffs,” Walker writes. “Not only is the woman deprived economically, but also she is emotionally deprived as an adult.”

So I started withholding information, sharing only those items that I knew would gain Larry’s approval. A raise would do that. Or another freelance job. Once again I signed my checks over to him.

We’d been in Tulsa for two years when the complaints about his job started. “They” didn’t appreciate him; he was much too good for this; he was tired of constant meetings and decisions. And I was no help. I was more concerned about my own job and my daughter than about his troubles. The cleanliness of the house wasn’t up to his standards. The dogs were a nuisance. I wasn’t making enough money. I looked ugly. On and on and on.

I CAN’T REMEMBER THE FIRST TIME LARRY hit me. I’ve blocked that memory. I know by the summer of 1981 his behavior was bizarre. Somehow he was able to function at his job, but when he came home it was a different story.

The minute he arrived he would open a half-gallon bottle of vodka and start to drink. He then began a ritual of going through the house to see what was wrong. The infringements could be anything from a spoon out of place to an unmade bed. The worst were when one of the dogs had an accident or my daughter failed to put away her clothes.

At first the aggression was confined to pushing and verbal abuse. If the plates weren’t lined up in the dishwasher just right, he might grab my arm and propel me into the wall. Or, if I saved my allowance and bought a new dress, he would complain about how badly it fit or how ghastly the color was. Nothing I did was right.

Logic says that at this point anyone with any self-respect would have left, but my self-respect was in shreds, and I felt there were no options. I couldn’t go back to Chicago. In my mind that would be admitting defeat, hurting my parents again. I barely had contact with any of my old friends and I felt my return would be shameful. It was unthinkable to tell Larry’s family, and to “come out” in Tulsa would have been impossible. I felt I was too well known, too respected to let anyone in on my secret.

My reaction fit author Lenore Walker’s description of “learned helplessness.” The battered woman, she says, presents a passive face to the world, while somehow finding the strength at home to manipulate her environment enough to prevent further violence or being killed.

In my case, the “incidents” were spaced far enough apart that a pattern hadn’t emerged. I could excuse it by blaming his moods on stress. Periodically he would become maniacally nice, sending flowers, buying extravagant gifts, and, in one rare instance, letting me keep my paycheck.

And so I stayed.

AROUND THIS TIME IT BECAME APPARENT that Larry was going to lose his job. Again, it was his confrontational nature — arguing with volunteers, posturing in meetings, fighting with his boss. So the only place he felt totally in control was at home.

One day I came home from work to find everything taken out of the kitchen cabinets and scattered over the foyer. I was told that because I was such a poor housekeeper it might be easier to keep everything on the floor, and that nothing should be returned to the cabinets. He delighted in lining up his empty vodka bottles on the floor of his study, one of the rooms in the house that were off-limits to me.

My daughter, meanwhile, was in the throes of a difficult adolescence. We didn’t talk about what was happening to me or about what she heard or saw. Once an outgoing and sunny child, she now was increasingly sullen and withdrawn. She was hanging out with a wild crowd, and I didn’t have the energy to help her.

The abuses seemed to expand with my success. In 1982 I was cited nationally by the Red Cross for my work, and I traveled to Atlanta to receive an award, leaving my daughter with friends.

Larry seemed contrite when I arrived home. He handed me the newspaper. The Tulsa dailies listed all arrests for drunk driving, and there was his name.

He lost his job immediately. And I came to learn that the previous abuse was a rehearsal for what was to come.

THE NEXT TWO YEARS HAVE BLENDED together into a bad memory. I was no longer allowed to sleep in the bedroom; Larry told me I was so unattractive that I didn’t deserve to be in the same bed with him. My choices were the kitchen floor with the dogs, the front hall surrounded by the cans and dishes, or with my daughter.

He threatened to kill my favorite dog and make me watch while he did it. His pushes escalated to slaps, and then punches. He was careful not to hit my face. To cover the black-and-blue marks, I wore long sleeves and long pants, even in the heat of a Tulsa summer.

By 1984 I was in a deep depression, but had become so adept at hiding my wounds and my psychological pain that no one guessed what was going on at home.

I was like many battered women, as described by Lenore Walker: socially isolated, humiliated, and believing that if I did not obey orders I would be seriously harmed. The battered woman might not reach out for help because she sees her abuser as more powerful than anyone who might attempt to save her.

Middle-class women, especially, think no one will help them, Walker says, because no one wants to believe that men regarded as pillars of the community are capable of this behavior.

THAT YEAR TWO IMPORTANT THINGS happened: I was selected to be a member of Leadership Tulsa, part of the same movement as Leadership Washington, and I was recruited to run for the school board. Without any sound reasoning, given my personal circumstances, I chose to do both.

Leadership Tulsa had a graduation requirement: You had to serve for a year with a nonprofit organization – one with a mission different from that of any other group you had worked with in the past. I was assigned to help run the capital campaign for Domestic Violence Intervention Services — never revealing my own situation.

The group that asked me to run for the school board was headed by the mother of one of my daughter’s friends. It was the friend whose house I insisted my daughter stay at when I went out of town for work, or sensed an incident was imminent.

The election and my work with the domestic-violence group took on lives of their own. When I was out making speeches, or helping raise money for the new shelter, I almost felt like myself again. The election was tough, but I won. And then the ground shifted again.

One night Larry started a new game. He would turn off all the lights and hide. I would sit in the kitchen, waiting for him to emerge. Some nights nothing happened. Other times the battering took new turns. He took the dog’s flea spray and held it on my face in an unrelenting stream. He kept a bat under his bed and threatened to bash my head in. Instead, he shattered all the wedding crystal.

When he’d knock me to the ground, my new way of coping was to pretend I was wrapped in yards and yards of cotton, so I couldn’t feel the blows. I also had a fantasy of sending my soul to the ceiling so the only thing he was breaking was my body, not my spirit.

I would look in the mirror after a beating and I couldn’t seem to make out my face. I was that detached from

myself.

MARCH 10, 1985, WAS ONE OF THOSE yellowish-gray Oklahoma days that portend a storm. The night before had been particularly hard, and I knew the night to come was going to be no different. I called the mother of my daughter’s friend and asked if my child could spend the night there.

This time she didn’t automatically say yes. She started questioning me: Why wasn’t I letting anyone into the house? How come I was always wearing long sleeves? Why was I always so secretive about Larry? And then she asked the question. “You’re being hurt, aren’t you? Can I help you?”

In that moment I knew I had to let her into my life, at least a little. I told her I was in a bad situation that was getting worse. I promised that if she let my daughter spend the night at her house I would sleep in my daughter’s room with a portable phone nearby.

When I arrived home from work Larry was drunk. I turned on the oven to heat a frozen dinner.

Larry grabbed me by the hair and threw me to the kitchen floor, kicking me as I tried to crawl away. Crouched in the corner, hands over my head, eyes shut tight, gasping, I prayed for my life. I prayed that there would be a sign that someone cared about me. Larry wouldn’t let up, finally grabbing my arms and sticking them in the oven, burning them on the rack.

I fell screaming. He kicked me again, stormed into the bedroom, and soon passed out from the alcohol. I found my way to the bathroom and put salve on my arms. So drained I could barely move, I crawled into the guest room and fell asleep on the floor.

A few hours later I heard pounding on the front door. It was a police officer and the mother of my daughter’s friend. She had tried to call, but I hadn’t heard the phone. She cared. Suddenly, I cared too. I walked outside and into her waiting arms.

WE DROVE TO HER HOUSE, AND I SPENT the next few hours talking about everything that had been hidden for so long. My daughter joined us, visibly relieved. Although Larry had never touched her physically, her mental anguish was palpable.

Our friends said we could stay with them for a while. They lent us money until I received my next paycheck, the first one I could use to finally establish my own checking account.

I called the director of Domestic Violence Intervention Services and told her everything. She told me she had suspected something from watching my behavior and other clues. She contacted the DVIS support network and in no time I had an attorney and a therapist. The more people who knew, the less alone I felt. My embarrassment began to fade as I learned more about abuse.

The divorce was not easy. Because I’d left in the middle of the night with only the clothes on my back, we needed a court order to get back in the house so I could retrieve our clothing, some furniture, and our dog. I was even able to see the humor in my friend’s shock at the pots, pans, and food in the front hallway. She thought Larry had emptied the cabinets earlier that day in a fit of pique.

The attorney filed a protective order. Larry was required to stay away from my daughter and me. I didn’t want a long court battle, so I decided not to file assault charges against him.

I called my parents and told them what had happened, omitting the worst parts. They were not surprised. After all this time, my mother said she always thought Larry was a bit odd. My father agreed. So much for my concern about their anger.

MY DAUGHTER AND I FOUND A SMALL apartment and moved in within the month. It was the first time in years that we were able to live in a place that reflected who we were. The house had always been dark because Larry insisted that the curtains remain closed. Now we opened every window and let the sunshine inside.

Within months the divorce was final. On that day, I spent the time with a friend making a picture frame for a print for our apartment. I wanted to do something I’d never tried before and looked for the type of activity Larry would say I could never accomplish. The framed poster hangs in my living room today.

My daughter had graduated from high school that June and decided to attend the University of Arizona. She wanted to become a social worker with a special interest in working with abused children — a goal she has accomplished.

The following spring, in 1986, I was offered a position at Red Cross headquarters in Washington. When the plane circled the city, I knew I was coming home.

I thought I had left behind the drama of domestic abuse. Yet while I was waiting in a real-estate office one day, my gaze fell on the cover of that month’s Washingtonian. It was a photograph of an attractive woman looking straight at me. Her name was Charlotte Fedders, and she told the story of her marriage to a powerful lawyer, her country-club membership and house in Potomac, and how her husband often beat her.

I couldn’t believe there was another woman in circumstances like mine — a life filled with outward appearances of success but tortured by abuse. Reading her story confirmed for me that I had done the right thing when I left my husband.

THE YEAR AFTER I ARRIVED IN Washington, I met my soul mate. We just celebrated our 11th wedding anniversary and have a seven-year-old daughter we adore. My husband is witty and smart, and in a million years I couldn’t imagine him raising his hand to hit me.

My life in Tulsa seemed a distant memory as my life in Washington blossomed. I became executive director of the National Conference for Community and Justice, where my work centers on fighting prejudice of all kinds.

In my job, I meet with community groups and talk about the roles bias and bigotry play in our lives and what we can do to change our behavior. In one exercise I do with groups, we talk about the “real person behind the face.” But for the longest time I wasn’t able to reveal that part of my “real person” is someone who is a former battered wife.

The biggest change for me took place at home. Like a prisoner of war must feel upon his or her release, I felt that every day is a gift. In the first months after my new marriage, it felt like a victory to wake up with my husband beside me. Putting a pan in the cabinet, buying a new dress, not accounting for my paycheck — it was like being granted a second chance at life.

And because I wasn’t on edge all the time, I found Washington to be a warm, welcoming place to live and work. When we adopted our daughter, our circle of friends grew even larger. The best part is being free to invite these people into our home — something I never dared do during my first marriage.

LIFE WAS GOOD. EXCEPT I WASN’T SURE where Larry was. Every day I feared that he would reappear and beat me one last time.

I figured he knew I had moved here and it was just a matter of time before he tracked me down. I had recurring nightmares, and despite my husband’s assurances that everything was fine, I kept waiting for the other shoe to drop. Every time I’d read a story about domestic violence I’d shudder in fear. During the O. J. Simpson trial I relived my own terror daily.

One night last year I went on the Internet to look for him. There was a listing for a Larry with his last name in his hometown of Kansas City. He was living there with his wife. And according to the listing, her name was Cheryl.

I was frightened. I called a friend who had access to Lexis-Nexis and was able to do a comprehensive search. He called back and asked me to sit down: “You’re not going to believe this — he’s dead.”

LARRY HAD DIED IN 1995. IN SOME WAYS IT was his final strike at me. I’d spent the past few years living in fear of him, and he wasn’t even alive. Because I didn’t stay in touch with his parents or his brother, and we didn’t have mutual friends, there hadn’t been any way for me to hear about his death.

I took a deep breath and called my daughter with the news.

Then I did what years ago would have been unthinkable. I decided to “come out.” I wrote an article for the

Washington Post about being battered. I briefly told my story and made the point that the signs that a person is being abused are apparent if you’re willing to see them. And then you have to be ready to act.

I hear from women in this city who have been, or are being, abused. I’ve been in a high-level business meeting and had a note passed to me from someone who once suffered physical abuse. I’ve been involved in Leadership Washington and have heard from fellow community leaders who have had the same experience of abuse.

They are like me. Many are middle-class. They are considered bright and warm and generous. And when they read that they were not alone in their confusion, pain, and humiliation, they took a leap of faith and began to tell their stories.

My hope is that every person who is battered will somehow find the strength to walk out of their house of horrors. On the other side of the door, the welcoming arms of a compassionate community will be waiting.

FOUR DAYS AFTER I WALKED INTO THE arms of my friend in Tulsa, I appeared in the courtroom of Judge Deborah Cross, where I was granted an emergency protective order. The order, dated March 14, 1985, was granted because I was “in immediate danger of domestic abuse and serious harm or injury.”

Larry had until March 25 to show cause why he shouldn’t comply with the order. He never showed up in court, which made the order permanent.

I carried the paper everywhere, even when I left Tulsa for Washington.

On the job, I went to meetings, gave speeches, and appeared on the news, and the order was always with me. My fear was that one day Larry would show up and finish the job. I never felt safe until the day my friend called with the news that Larry was dead.

I took the long way home from work that night. When I got there, I took the order out of my purse and read it one last time. Then I folded it and finally filed it away.

Originally published in The Washingtonian Magazine. (Copyright 2000 Washingtonian Magazine, Inc.)

Cheryl Kravitz is executive director of the National Conference for Community
and Justice, an organization that fights prejudice. She is also a freelance writer. More of her published works can be found at www.crkcommunications.com.

10.20: Adrienne

To show or not to show? To share or not to share? After deliberating, it was a no brainer for me to show other women (and men), just SOME of what I have been through. Yes, a picture tells a thousand words. But why did it happen? What did “I” do to cause it? Was there any domestic violence prevention that could have been done? Why did he do this? Many women ask these same questions.

Sometimes there are absolutely NO “logical” reasons why things happen. Sometimes there are logical reasons. But none of them make us physically, emotionally, or mentally feel any better after they happen.

Was this the only time? Well, I would love to tell you it was. But that wouldn’t be the truth. And the truth is why we are all here, right? To find the truth and seek our own solutions to get out.

Were there red flags? In reflection, “Heck, yes!”

He was so nice at first. A gentleman, seriously. Then we moved in together. BIG mistake. By then, financially, times were difficult. A few months after we moved in, I was laid off from my job. The man who hired me kept me employed until his wife came back from pregnancy leave, then he let me go and she took over my position. He never mentioned his plan to only keep me until she returned.

The strain financially did not make my boyfriend happy. We started getting into disagreements. Then one night the yelling started. So I went into the bathroom and packed a bag to go and stay at my girlfriend’s house. Ahhh, THAT is when it started. He threw me across the bathroom and I hit my head on the sink and fell between the toilet and the sink to the floor. I remember staring at my legs and arms. They were not comfortable in the contorted position in which they landed. But I was in shock mostly that he so effortlessly pushed my chest and I literally flew across the bathroom.

Instead of hearing “I’m so sorry, I didn’t mean to do that!”, I heard, “You’re not f@#$ing going anywhere!” Obviously, I stayed home.

Things seemed to calm down, and he even “allowed” my friends to come over to our place for the first time in the 6 months we had been living together. I wanted things to go so well, I worked very hard to get the food and drinks ready and cleaned diligently.

My boyfriend was a recovering alcoholic and was clean and sober for 7 years. When my friends arrived, I served the drinks. He said he didn’t want one, but I said it was okay for him to have just one. I didn’t want him to feel awkward or left out.

Okay, you get it, right? That’s where I messed up. And having no previous knowledge of what a serious alcoholic was about and thought having a couple drinks wouldn’t be such a big deal, I certainly learned my lesson.

(It took 3 days for my eye to open just to see if I was blind from the injury. There was cornea damage, the thank The Lord, I still had my sight.)

I served everyone drink after drink that night, and everyone, including my boyfriend, had a fantastic time!

When everyone was walking out the door was left open, and I noticed my dog, Pebbles, got out. We lived right on a main road, and I was frantic and asked him to get Pebbles right away. I can’t recall what his reply was, but he didn’t go outside to look, so I said it again, “Pebbles got out, we need to get her now!”

I was cleaning all the beer bottles up all over the coffee table, and I was standing right next to the couch. All I remember is being thrown into the couch on my back and held down. His knee was pushed down on my chest and one of his hands was squeezing my arm. I couldn’t move at all.

Then it began. What seemed to last hours probably only lasted a solid 60 seconds and about 20 or more punches. I will never forget one punch, it sent my eyeball crashing right into my head! It hurt so badly, I thought my eye was gone. I felt my eye being shoved so hard into my brain it was brutal.

(This was taken more than 2 weeks after the incident.)

But he didn’t stop. I weighed 115 pounds and was 5′ 6″ tall. Hardly a match for a guy, even though he was shorter than I was.

The punches to my face, neck and chest continued. I remember saying “I’m sorry, please forgive me. I’m sorry. I’m sorry. I’m sorry. Please. I love you.”

Then he stopped suddenly! He took a beer bottle and broke it over his head. (A sudden rush of guilt came to his mind? Who knows!)

No time for making up or worrying about HIS head, I ran as fast as I could out of the apartment!

I ran to the convenience store area which was in our parking lot. Apparently the store owner saw me bleeding and yelling for help and called 911.

My Pebbles...I got her when she was 5 weeks old. She fit in the palm of my hand. We were together for 17 years, some of the best years of my life. I was very blessed to have her love in my life.

My Pebbles...I got her when she was 5 weeks old. She fit in the palm of my hand. We were together for 17 years, some of the best years of my life. I was very blessed to have her love in my life.

At just that moment, all of my friends came back and looked at me like they saw a ghost. Only about 15 minutes passed by since they left. It turns out they took my dog, Pebbles, as a joke. It didn’t turn out to be so funny though. But she was okay, so I was VERY relieved about that! She was my pride and joy! If you seriously want unconditional love, animals don’t let you down! :o) So I won’t let them down, that’s for sure.

5 police cars, 10 policemen. Searched the vicinity, never found him. When they left, he showed up. He looked at me and started screaming, “Who the hell did this to you!?” I only had one eye to look at him with and disgustingly looked at him while all my friends were there and said, “You did.”

He didn’t believe it. He said he went into a “blackout.” Well, my opinion of whether or not alcoholics actually do go into “blackouts” is neither here nor there. But something happened that was never fully understandable, that’s for certain.

What happened to him? Well, this was a while ago, and California didn’t impose strict standards on domestic violence abuse the way they do today. That’s too bad, isn’t it?

He got 30 days of picking up garbage on the side of the road. BUT, since he had a doctor’s note saying he had a bad back from a car accident, he actually only wound up doing 15 days doing desk duty. He would leave early because the woman running the program said he was a hard worker.

Trying to get a job (remember, I had been laid off) looking beat up was impossible. I didn’t even leave the house for two weeks, and he shut off the phone so I didn’t have anyway to even make phone calls to get a job.

There’s more to the story, but this gives you an idea as to how quickly domestic violence can happen. Or was it quickly?

If you see red flags, get out now while you can. My story doesn’t get happy, and things didn’t get much better, not for quite a while.

Please don’t repeat my mistakes. Because you will end up with a very difficult, unhappy, low self esteem, codependent life like I have lived for far too long.

Trust me, You DO Deserve Better!

P.S. – These pictures were taken 2 weeks after the initial incident. I can tell you this, makeup doesn’t hide these injuries. I went to the supermarket because I had no food, so I tried to look decent. I had two people come up to me and ask to take me to the emergency room and wanted to know who just did this to me. When I told them it happened two weeks ago, they didn’t believe me.

Visit Adrienne DeVita’s website, Domestic Violence No More, for more stories and a wealth of information about relationship abuse.