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Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll

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Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll,

Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll View from Israel

Opinion

Everyone should feel safe in their own home

Everywhere, the lockdowns are adding pressure to an already neglected issue — domestic violence and sexual abuse

May 18, 2020 08:02
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3 min read

In the UK, two women were murdered by their husbands in the first weeks of quarantine. In Spain and France women are using codewords at pharmacies to signal that they need help from an abusive situation.

In New York City, traffic to websites for help with domestic abuse has surged. In Australia, Google searches for domestic violence help have increased 75 percent. And in Israel, five women were murdered over a seven-week period since the government imposed lockdown. Three of them were from Arab communities. During the month from March 15 until April 15 the national domestic violence helpline received a total of 244 complaints, an average of eight complaints a day. From April 16 to April 27, the helpline received 400 complaints, an average of more than 33 every day.

Everywhere, the lockdowns are adding pressure to an already neglected issue — domestic violence and sexual abuse. Here, women took to the streets, demanding the government provide more budgets and assistance. And one community has used the coronavirus crisis to chip away at the culture of silence around domestic and sexual abuse.

Domestic violence is not often discussed in the Orthodox world. People who turn in abusers are often shunned and told they are ruining a family. Still too many put the pressure of a happy home solely on the woman. While organisations that cater to religious victims of abuse exist, they are known mainly by word of mouth. The topic itself does not make it to rabbis’ Shabbat sermons or to the pages of Orthodox publications