The Awareness Center's Official Blog


The Awareness Center, Inc. is the international Jewish Coalition Against Sexual Abuse/Assault. We are dedicated to ending sex crimes in Jewish communities globally. We do our best to operate as "the make a wish foundation" for Jewish survivors of sex crimes, by offering a clearinghouse of information, resources, support and advocacy.



The Awareness Center is currently on a sabbatical while we search for funding to continue on with our mission. The Awareness Center, Inc. is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization. All contributions are tax deductible to the full extent allowed by law. Please feel free to send your financial support to us either by sending checks to the address below or by clicking on the YELLOW donate button.

The Awareness Center, Inc.

PO Box 4824

Skokie, IL 60076



Friday, August 28, 2009

Lisa's Story


Lisa's Story
© (2009) The Awareness Center, Inc.

The story I am about to share is not uncommon, yet is one in which is rarely discussed in the Jewish community.

We all need to understand that a vast number of those who were sexually abused as children stand a higher risk of being sexually victimized again in adulthood.  The Awareness Center hears numerous accounts of this phenomenon happening several times a month.  

The Awareness Center was contacted by a “Lisa” who is an adult survivor of child sexual abuse, who was recently sexually victimized by the relative of a good friend.

It took Lisa weeks to make a police report because she feared loosing her friend and her community.  She became very irritable, depressed and was having difficulty sleeping.  She finally called a rape crisis hot-line who helped her to make a police report.  

Lisa’s fear was that if she did this she would loose everything that had meaning to her, yet she also wanted to feel safe again.  Lisa did everything in her power to do the right thing.  She wanted to maintain a friendship with the relative, yet after making a police report against her offender the long time friendship ended.  

Lisa’s story is not unlike many other women put into this same position.  She had to make some difficult choices.  She could keep her silence, which would help her maintain the long term friendship, or she could fight to have the right to choose who has the right to touch her body.  Unfortunately, by choosing to fight to protect her body, she ended up loosing a friend and the entire community she belonged to.  

Lisa is no longer welcome in the home of her friend, nor the only synagogue she knew and felt comfortable attending.  The high holidays are approaching and Lisa has no place she feels safe to daven (pray).  She described her experience as being shunned by the only family and home she ever really felt safe in.

Lisa has been in tears feeling that she is being punished for trying to protect herself and other women who might also have been assaulted by her offender.  She said she would be unable to walk into any other shul for fear that this could happen again and that if she made new friends she could loose them all over again.  

As a people and a nation, we as Jews need to figure out what we can we do to help survivors like Lisa!  Please do what you can to start discussions on this issue with your rabbis, other community leaders, synagogues and friends.  

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