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Keren David

ByKeren David, Keren David

Opinion

The uncomfortable truth that can’t be denied

'The furore over their victim’s treatment is in no way fuelled by anti-Jewish prejudice, but has everything to do with the way women are treated by men, how criminal justice systems behave towards alleged rape victims, about the assumptions that some young men make about how to behave towards women.'

January 9, 2020 12:35
Kaitlyn Dever as Marie, the rape victim who retracts her statement in Unbelievable
3 min read

There is a scene in the Netflix series Unbelievable, where a young woman who has been found guilty of making a false accusation of rape is sent to see a court-appointed counsellor who tells her that, whatever happened, “I do believe that you were violated”.

For the viewer — who has watched with horror and rage as the women is first raped, then disbelieved it is an emotional turning point. At last, someone respects her. At last, she has a sympathetic listener. Justice is some way off, but healing can begin.

Unbelievable written by Jewish husband and wife Michael Chabon and Ayelet Waldman is essential viewing for anyone who still harbours doubts about the deplorable court case in Cyprus that concluded this week with the sentencing of the British woman accused of inventing rape charges against a group of Israeli teenagers.

Based on a true story, the series shows how a vulnerable, traumatised American girl was bullied by two police officers into retracting her claim, and then prosecuted for making it. Only the detective work of two women detectives in a different state could track down her rapist and prove her story to be true. Eventually, she is vindicated, her rapist jailed, and she is compensated by the city authorities.