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Think domestic abuse isn't our problem? Think again

The situation in the Jewish community may be no less dire, claims a leading charity.

November 19, 2009 11:22
Domestic Violence

ByAlex Kasriel, Alex Kasriel

6 min read

To the outside world, Sarah and her family were a typical middle-class Jewish family. But after his business started to fail, Sarah’s husband began to control and humiliate her. He stopped her contacting friends and colleagues, tried to dictate what she wore and forced her into a purely domestic role. He became aggressive with their two children. Eventually she sought help through the charity Jewish Women’s Aid and won a restraining order against him.

Hers is not an uncommon story (a full account can be read below). Figures from a 2002 report by the Council of Europe showed that one in four women experience domestic violence at some point in their lifetimes, and between six and 10 per cent of women suffer domestic violence in a given year.

And according to the head of Jewish Women’s Aid (JWA), Emma Bell, there is no reason to believe that these statistics would be different in the Jewish community. “There are no patterns to domestic violence,” she says. “It’s one of those things that seem to exist in every socioeconomic group, at every age, among women who are terribly affluent and women who are educated.

“There’s sometimes a sense in the Jewish community of ‘it doesn’t happen to us’, but JWA doesn’t have any evidence to show that. All we have evidence to show is that there are a lot of women in the community who are affected by domestic violence and that there is a stigma and shame attached to it.”