Blaming the Victim

If it wasn't tragic enough that Jamie as a young child was terribly abused, she was forced to beg forgiveness from her evangelistic abusers for being a temptation to them...

4 min

Dr. Zev Ballen

Posted on 18.07.24

Jamie and John are new converts to Judaism. After our third meeting together, Jamie sent me the following and asked me if I would share it with you. It was written before she and her husband discovered the Breslev Israel website and made contact with us.  Of course their names and other personal details have been changed in order to safeguard their privacy:

It started for me as a child, when I was repeatedly used and abused by men in my own nuclear and extended family. My life was a living hell full of sexual, emotional, verbal, and physical abuse. Yet according to my former “religion,” all my abusers had to do was declare: ‘G-d was their Lord and Savior,’ and then they could continue to act like the devil that they claimed was controlling them. Nothing was their fault. All they needed to do was ‘claim the blood of JC’ and they were forgiven for what they did to me, regardless of how many times they continued to do it. When I was only three or four years old I remember crying out to G-d to ‘please let my father think I was sleeping so he would leave me alone this time’ –  of course he never did. 

As an abuse survivor, I felt inherently ‘bad’ even when I hadn’t done anything wrong. I also felt incredible guilt that I was unable to so easily forgive  the many people who abused me. I felt rejected by G-d and doomed to hell because I had been told ‘if you do not forgive others, G-d will not forgive you.’ In my former ‘religion’ I was taught that ‘if people abuse you, just turn the other cheek and let them abuse you some more.’ This made me furious with G-d! How dare He expect me to love and forgive the people who were hurting me over and over again and who didn’t show the slightest feeling of guilt for what they did to me! The abuse that I suffered was so severe that all of my therapists asked me the same question: ‘how did you survive it!’

Today, as a result of the abuse that I experienced,  I cannot be left alone without feeling overwhelming panic and anxiety. My husband and I are literally joined at the hip. I can’t do anything without him next to me. I feel like a dependent little child. I have no joy, satisfaction, or sense of accomplishment from my life and I’ve been living this way for years. In addition, I can’t separate myself emotionally from my parents without my feeling sorry for them – despite their never having taken responsibility for what they did to me. My parents expect me to deny what happened  and when I don’t, they treat me like I’m the crazy one!

Jamie has been in extended psychotherapies on numerous occasions and yet after only three sessions of coaching based on the teachings of Rabbi Arush, she has broken though her sense of helpless dependence on her husband, has shown the ability to be alone and has even driven places by herself for the first time in years. Jamie has also decided to break off contact with her parents, at least for now.  Jamie is now feeling very close to G-d and is seeing signs of His love for her everywhere. Her mood has become very elevated and optimistic.

As I’m writing this, Jamie is only about half way through The Garden of Emuna, yet she is already growing at supersonic speed.  Here’s one example: Jamie and John recently borrowed money from John’s father to buy a business that had been losing money for a long time. After our last meeting, on her own, Jamie decided to shave off her hair (which was “seen by other men”) and grow new hair that only her husband will see. She has done this despite having been Jewish for only several months. Jamie now proudly covers her head despite being the only woman in her synagogue that does so. She feels a purity and cleanliness that is practically euphoric. When Jamie’s neighbors saw her with her head covered, they thought that she was in chemotherapy, G-d forbid. This just made Jamie laugh.

Literally from the first day that Jamie covered her hair, there has been an explosion of new customers coming into their store. Jamie and her husband are feeling so grateful to Hashem for their livelihood that they also decided to close the business on Shabbat from now.

Jamie now writes:

Despite the abuse that I suffered, or maybe because of it, my yearning for a relationship with G-d keeps growing. Now I  feel a part of something greater than the chaos that was my life –  I just needed a G-d that didn’t blame the victim! What I’ve found is a G-d that understands my heart and is patient with me; a G-d who  delights in my efforts to know Him even when I fall short!  I now have a G-d who allows me to think for myself and never rejects me even when I wrestle with Him. This is what I’ve found and so much more in the G-d of the Jewish people!

I am looking forward to sharing the freedom I have found through Judaism with other sexual abuse survivors. So many of them are filled with guilt and shame because they have been told by their “religion” to “forgive and forget” – and when they find that to be impossible, they think that there’s something wrong with them and that G-d is going to punish them. I remember reading a “religious” book for sexual abuse survivors that actually said that the victims must go to the abusers and ask for forgiveness for their part in the abuse and for not forgiving sooner! This is a common teaching of my former “religion” which I believe is incredibly damaging to survivors!

If I can ever help people who have been abused, the way I was, to find Hashem and heal –  it will be the mitzvah that I’ll enjoy the most!

Jamie – you’re doing it already!  May you be blessed to  continue what you’ve started!

Tell us what you think!

1. Rachel

11/25/2017

What about me?

I was raised by xtian grandparents. My grandmother was verbally and physically abusive. She denies it to this day. Chasing me into my room, pulling my hair and hitting. When she asked if she has ever laid a hand on me and i say yes she calls me a lying piece of s.h.i.t. i know i was disrespectful back. I remember one when she pulled my hair and i grabbed at her hair back and we stood their in a lock. I refused to let go of her hair until she let go of my hair. I remember the many times i was chased into my room. Then she treats me like im the bad guy. Yes i had no respect for them growing up and felt i had to defend myself against her. I know even a noahide can be punished for disrespecting parents. With the abuse she put me through and the fact i feel like ive been punished a lot lately. Will i be punished for the disrespect i showed her because i always felt i had to defend myself against her?

2. Rachel

11/25/2017

I was raised by xtian grandparents. My grandmother was verbally and physically abusive. She denies it to this day. Chasing me into my room, pulling my hair and hitting. When she asked if she has ever laid a hand on me and i say yes she calls me a lying piece of s.h.i.t. i know i was disrespectful back. I remember one when she pulled my hair and i grabbed at her hair back and we stood their in a lock. I refused to let go of her hair until she let go of my hair. I remember the many times i was chased into my room. Then she treats me like im the bad guy. Yes i had no respect for them growing up and felt i had to defend myself against her. I know even a noahide can be punished for disrespecting parents. With the abuse she put me through and the fact i feel like ive been punished a lot lately. Will i be punished for the disrespect i showed her because i always felt i had to defend myself against her?

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