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The Schmooze

Our community needs to tackle the rise in sexual violence against younger women

Jewish Women’s Aid has seen a 64 per cent overall increase in calls from women and girls who have experienced sexual violence

April 18, 2025 09:54
Activists from feminist groups sing beside a banner reading "Stop sexist and sexual violence" during a protest in January outside a courthouse in France of a man accused of f
Activists from feminist groups sing beside a banner reading "Stop sexist and sexual violence" during a protest in January outside a courthouse in France during a trial of a man accused of fatally stabbing his former partner (Photo: Getty)
2 min read

Earlier this year, a young woman came to Jewish Women’s Aid (JWA) after experiencing sexual violence. She was traumatised and struggling to navigate the complex legal and emotional aftermath of her assault. Should she call the police, go to a sexual health clinic, confide in loved ones? The questions were endless – and came at a time when she was at her most vulnerable.

And so she called JWA. With the support of JWA’s independent sexual violence advocate (ISVA), she was able to access specialist counselling, obtain informed legal guidance and begin the long journey to recovery. Sadly, her case is not a one-off.

Over the past year, JWA has seen a 64 per cent increase in the number of Jewish women and girls affected by sexual violence who have come to us for support. Beyond that, our latest figures – released this week to mark Sexual Assault Awareness Month – show that younger Jewish women make up the majority of those we support through our sexual violence support service – with more than 60 per cent aged 26 to 35 and nearly 30 per cent aged 16 to 25. And 25 per cent of sexual violence victims supported by JWA also experience domestic abuse. These staggering statistics highlight a crisis that we – as a community – cannot ignore.

At JWA we are committed to supporting victims of sexual violence and domestic abuse. We provide a comprehensive support package that includes trauma-informed counselling, legal advocacy and practical guidance. Our ISVAs accompany clients to rape crisis centres, sexual health clinics, police interviews, and, if the client chooses to pursue legal action, court proceedings.