[REL] Sexual Abuse in the Amish Community, says ABC

lars

Membership Revoked
Does anyone know about Amish? I would not believe this is widely true based on one story.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


<b>Sexual Abuse in the Amish Community. Woman Endured Childhood of Repeated Rape by Her Brothers</b>

Dec. 10, 04

http://abcnews.go.com/2020/story?id=316371&page=1





The Amish community is a mysterious world within modern America, a place frozen in another time. The Amish live without automobiles or electricity. Education ends at the eighth grade and life largely centers on farming, family and faith.


"I would read books and I'd imagine. I had a great imagination that would take me to faraway places, you know, places where I was afraid I would never be, but wanted to be," she told "20/20's" Elizabeth Vargas.


Mary says she'd use those fantasies as an emotional escape from what she says was her horrible reality — a childhood and adolescence of sexual assault and rape.


"If somebody was raping me, I'd look up to the ceiling, count the blocks or count the cracks in the wall, or just I was completely not there emotionally. I would have committed suicide many times over if I wouldn't be strong," she said.


Through the years, by Mary's account, she was raped by several different attackers. But one abused her more often than the others — her brother Johnny. Johnny, one of Mary's eight brothers, began assaulting her when he was 12 and she was 6. The assaults continued into her teen years, she said.

"I couldn't go to the outhouse because there was always somebody waiting there. I couldn't go anywhere alone. There was just no place I could be alone," she said.

As time passed, another brother, Eli, followed suit.


"He'd rape me down in the milk house when I was cleaning up the milk house. He'd rape me down in the barn," she said.


The violence in Mary's family began with the head of it — a stepfather who, she says, continually beat both Mary and her brothers.

"He hit them with shovels and hacksaws, fists, halters, anything and everything he could get his hands on," she said.


A Community of Submission

Irene Garrett left the Amish community to marry an outsider and has written several books on Amish life. Sadly, Garrett says, Mary's plight is not an isolated case.

"Overall in an Amish community, women are very quiet, they're very submissive," Garrett said.



Amish women are not taught anything about sex, according to Garrett, which makes it even harder for a girl who's being abused to describe what's happening to her.



Mary said she didn't know how to describe what was happening. "I thought they were being bad to me. That was the only word I had to express it," she said.




Sex Abuse Case Shocks Amish Community


Michael Crichton Takes on Global Warming in Latest Work
Sexual Abuse in the Amish Community
John Stossel's Web Page

In an Amish culture unaccustomed to women speaking up, Mary felt she got more scolding than sympathy when she told her mother what was going on.




She said her mother told her, "You don't fight hard enough and you don't pray hard enough." Mary said her mother made her feel as if the assaults were her fault. "Every time I would talk about this she would say that they have already confessed in church and you're just being unforgiving," she said.



Indeed, Mary's brothers had confessed in church. In this closed society problems are handled internally, the church elders are both judge and jury.



And the punishment might be surprising to outsiders.



"The Amish emphasize the simplicity of life, plainness of life. They accentuate several themes, such as pacifism, the importance of community," said Donald Kraybill, professor of sociology at Elizabethtown college and author of "The Riddle of Amish Culture."



"They feel that the use of force, even legal force, even filing a lawsuit is outside the spirit of Christ, and outside the spirit of Christian faith," according to Kraybill.



Kraybill said punishment for individuals who confess to offenses — regardless of the seriousness — are banned from church activities for six weeks and only restored to full membership in their community if they are truly penitent.



"The Amish church has a very strong emphasis on first of all, the importance of confession, public confession, if you transgress the teaching, but secondly forgiveness for that and then forgetting it, and letting it go," Kraybill said.



"The funny thing is that they view drinking alcohol until you puke as bad a sin as raping somebody. They get the same punishment for either one," Mary said.



But Amish-style punishment was not going to bring Mary the justice she wanted. And for her, the final straw came when she suspected a younger brother, David, was molesting their 4-year-old sister.


Mary recalled, "She said to me, 'You know, Mary, David is bad to me.'" Mary said her sister told her their mom, Sally Kempf, said she shouldn't talk about it and that she should forgive her brother.




So, Mary did something that drew more shock from her community than the sins of her brothers. She called authorities outside the Amish community, and she let them use her to gather evidence against her own brothers. She visited her brother Johnny wearing a wire and he admitted freely that he had sexually abused her.




Don Henry from the Vernon County, Wis., Sheriff's Department said he had enough evidence to make an arrest in the case. When he spoke with Johnny, he freely admitted to raping her. The only question was how many times, according to Henry.




Henry said, "He wanted to know how many times she had said, and with him alone she said it happened between 100 and 150 times. He thought it was too many and that he thought it was between 50 and 75 times."




Greg Lunde, Eli's lawyer, said Eli admitted to more assaults than Mary had alleged. " I think Mary's allegations against Eli were 12 or 13 times. By Eli's own admission, it was 15 or 16." David also confessed to authorities.




All three brothers pleaded guilty.




David, charged with second-degree sexual assault of a child, was sentenced to four years in prison. Eli, charged with second-degree sexual assault of a child, and with a prior misdemeanor conviction on his record, was given eight years in prison. Johnny Byler's sentencing brought out the largest crowd — and the most tears — not in support of Mary, but in support of the confessed rapist.




The community's reaction did not go unnoticed by the judge in the case, Michael Rosbrough. "The thought occurred to me," he said, "How many of you have ever cried for Mary Byler? … You may have prayed for her, I don't doubt you have, but how many of you cried for her? For the loss of her childhood."




Victim Is Viewed as Villain




The community viewed Mary, not Johnny, as the villain, because they had already punished Johnny within the church, according to Garrett. "He went through that process. He was sorry for what he had done, so to the Amish he was forgiven and it should be forgotten," she said.

Ironically, Johnny, who raped Mary first and most often, got the lightest sentence. Now married and with children of his own, he was given 10 years' probation. For the first year he can work in the Amish community during the day but must spend every night in the county jail.



The Vernon County court also sentenced Mary's mother to two years probation for failure to protect her daughter. Her stepfather was sentenced to 18 months probation for battery and disorderly conduct.



Garrett says Mary's case may strike people as particularly startling because the public has an idealized perception of Amish life. "It's like any other society. You have great families, very well balanced, but you also have dysfunctional ones. Take the Amish off the pedestal. They're just like everybody else," she said.




Mary has not lived in the Amish community for nine months. Her life's now got some distinctly not-Amish trappings — a driver's license, a smoking habit, a G.E.D., and a job at Wal-Mart.



She says her life now has not only new pleasures but new responsibilities.



And she's on a mission to help other abuse victims, in and out of the Amish community.



"If somebody, some girl or some boy or some child who's being hurt by somebody, would get some good out of this story. That would make me feel really good," Mary said.



Also, for Mary, there's an ironic carry-over from her former life an abiding faith. She said, "I feel like God helps those who help themselves. You know, there's a verse in the Bible to that effect, and I really believe it's true, because, you know what, if you don't have the strength to stand up for yourself, there's really not much he can do for you."
 
Last edited:

Bubba Zanetti

Inactive
It's no more in the Amish than anywhere else. Just another hit piece on Christain America. Sad that she was attacked and suffered. Sad that they, with this article, painted a broad brush over all Amish, which was probably the real intention of the article.
 

lisa

Veteran Member
What a brave young lady...it took a lot of guts to go against her whole society like that.
 

inskanoot

Veteran Member
You'll find more in the Time Bomb archives. It's a much bigger problem in the Amish community because of the way that it's handled.
 

solookup

Membership Revoked
It's no more in the Amish than anywhere else. Just another hit piece on Christain America. Sad that she was attacked and suffered. Sad that they, with this article, painted a broad brush over all Amish, which was probably the real intention of the article.
 

Amazed

Does too have a life!
I'm with you, lisa. What a brave girl. It's just another example of the teachings of Christ being twisted. :shk:
 

hillbilly

Membership Revoked
see it now we need more gov. control ,who will they come after next
its sad for that lady though or anyone else thats happen to
china mart are getting these amish here to sign contracs for their food they grow
man are they going to take a beating soon
the gov. has been sending under cover people buying stuff off them 4 cash
no tax , now they go buy the book
now their scarred to death
 

fruit loop

Inactive
She was brave and it's not really about religion

This is not a "Christian bashing" piece....just an example that sexual abuse happens in all kinds of cultures and "being raised religious" doesn't mean that some people won't go bad.

For years rape and sexual abuse victims hid their suffering because they were viewed as the "bad" people....there was a belief that "that" didn't happen in "nice" families, or to "good" girls. There had to be something negative about the person to begin with or this wouldn't have happened to them.

Unfortunately, many religions, with their insistence on female chastity (never mind that the victim didn't willingly copulate) aided and abetted in this belief. that is what is still going on in the Amish community.

Many faiths, like the Amish in this case, still insist that victims "have" to forgive their tormentors. This adds to the suffering of many victims, who have to face this pressure when they're already burdened with the trauma their perpetrator inflicted on them.

Amazed, I don't think this was a "bash the Amish" piece....I think it was a warning that sometimes religious people, in their zeal, fail to protect their most innocent members. There's such a thing as being TOO good, as in this case, when they repeatedly forgive the perpetrator but do NOTHING to help and aid the victim. When the Amish did this, they stopped being good people and started AIDING AND ABETTING A CRIME.

As for more government control - well, obviously in this case it's needed, because the church and the parents aren't doing their jobs. SOMEONE HAS TO PROTECT THOSE CHILDREN.

Unless you think it's not a crime, really doesn't hurt anybody, and that no outside interference is necessary. I guess then that according to that line of reasoning, if a cop sees a murder in progress he shouldn't interfere because that would be "government interference in a private matter."

The judge made an excellent point: WHO CRIED FOR THIS GIRL?

Sadly, nobody, and it's sick to see people on this board continue to defend the system that failed her not once but repeatedly.

She was very brave and I hope the rest of her life is wonderful.
 

piggyandpeewee

Membership Revoked
Unfortunately this is one evil the Amish cannot blame onthe "English"...

Both the existence of the problem and the backward, shameful way of sweeping it under the rug instead of dealing with it are common to most segments of American society.

IMO the differences of societal failure to protect and counsel the victims are relative to the particular mores of the culture(s) in question.
 

FREEBIRD

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Ironic that some here will defend the Amish in this case,where their behavior was reprehensible, but in the past when the equally reprehensible sexual abuse by Catholic priests was being discussed, a very common comment on this board was, "What else would you expect from Catholics?"
 

Bubba Zanetti

Inactive
I don't defent reprehensible behavior, especially when kids are concerned, Amish, Catholic, Inuit or whatever....

This story, however, is very similar to the template that has been used for decades whenever a hit piece on the Amish is cooked up: incest, sexual abuse, wild teens, etc, etc.... It has been researched throughly. This type of abuse crosses most class and cultural lines. It is everywhere, but this fact is not mentioned in the article. Why is that?
 

deja

Inactive
I very much agree with lisa above. It took a lot of gumption.....

I also agree with all of fruitloops points. Well put.
 

Regis

Deceased
Inbreeding among Amish is no "hit on Christianity" or myth, it is well documented FACT and anyone who has had ANY study of Psychology or Psychiatry knows the Amish have long been studied BECAUSE of their inbreeding specifically. They represent one of the few societies where it is pretty much just accepted by THEM and the outside world as just the way it is. The study of inbreeding among the Amish has led to many theories on causative connection between children born of incest and schizophrenia.
It's not just bullshit, the Amish have and continue to breed with their own family members, the only thing startling about the tell all on ABC is the fact that one of the women had the guts to come forward, they are generally intimidated into total and complete submission.
I was born and raised in Pa as Mennonite (really) just one short hypocrisy away from the Amish and I know all their dirty little secrets personally.
You'd be AMAZED at the number of Amish women that die from self inflicted abortion and suicide.
Yeah they are just one big bunch of happy glowing Christians..... take a look at the mental wards in the hospitals in Lancaster....and the beds filled by Amish in state mental institutions.
You got more lunacy in one average Amish family than the whole bag of nuts on this board put together.... myself included.
So.... before you start defending the wholesomeness of Amish Christian values you best get a better understanding about what these people are..... they shut away from outsiders for a very good reason...if they behaved as they do without the protective veil of religion a good percentage would be reaching for the soap in a penitentiary somewhere.
 
Top