altered wom‘e V Victims of e .J‘, j PaulaSiepnl’e'wicz ’. ,V: I aren was just 14 when she met Richard. He carne with his ily to one of her parents-’lsummer barbecues. He was 19, a meyman electrician, working’in the construction business, did both their fathers, Karen’s father liked him im- diately. y the time she was 15, Karen and Rich were ‘going steady’. st of their social life was with Karen’s brothers and sisters, . it was generally a happy time. ccasionally, when there were other boys from Karen’s 001 included, Rich would become moody and silent. He . they were immature, and he made her promise that she uld not pay attention to them. He talked about getting rried as soon as Karen was old enough. Plans become more cific; they were married soon after Karen’s 17th birthday. t was soon after this, after a party at her sister’s that they 0 arrived home and no sooner had the door closed then h suddenly and viciously punched her in the face. She reeled back in horror and surprise. He accused her of ting with her brother-in-law — suggested she had probably n carrying on an affair with him. She denied this and he hit again. She locked herself in the bathroom until she heard go to bed. She spent the night on the living room Chester- ld. She told no one. 7 he beatings continued. Karen, ashamed, told her parents thing. When the bruises couldn’t be'hidden by sunglasses or ,h—necked sweaters, both she and her husband would lie out them. ' I ' When finally he threatened to kill her or her baby, she tried tell her parents. They wouldn’t believe her. Such things, n’t happen. She should. just go on being as good a wife and ther as she could, and everything would be alright. One day she heard a staff member from a transition house women who have been battered being interviewed on the i0. Four days later Rich beat her up again. The next day, ' er he had gone to work, she packed up the children and nt to the house. She had been married five years. She had ises on her face, neck, and abdomen. Finally her parents were forced to face the fact that some- ng terrible had been happening. Karen stayed at the transition house for three weeks while - went through the court process. During that time she met th a counsellor from the community college and discussed,- th growing excitement, the possibilities for further ucation. ‘ Before she had left the transition house she had enrolled for ‘ coming term in an upgrading program to complete her h school. Day care would be provided by the college, and r parents would support her until she was self-sufficient. Two weeks after she returned home, Rich broke in, locked ‘ two children in the bedroom, beat Karen, and finally shot r. He then went into the basement and hanged himself. tracted from Wife Battering in CanadarThe Vicious Circle Linda MacLeo'd, for the Canadian Advisory Council on ‘ Status of Women) / What wife battering isn’t Family violence is not an uncommon or ‘freak’ occurrence. cently there has been much publicity about child abuse, and ‘ police, the courts, and concerned citizens have been quick rally to the cause. However, there has not been nearly as ch attention paid to wife battering. nfortunately, wife battering occurs in every neighborhood 055 Canada: in upper class homes in Vancouver, within rking class families in Cape Breton, in the McGill student tto in Montreal. It crosses all economic, geographic, and tural lines. ‘ ife battering is not merely the result of a family ‘tiff’ that a bit out of hand. More than 75 per cent of the women eyed in a British study on battered wives stated that the t sical abuse was rarely preceeded by verbal disagreements. or is wife battering a one-time occurrence. According to ‘ of the staff members at a Montreal shelter for battered men, more than three-quarters of the women they receive e been beaten at least ten times. it top of physical violence, battered women are subjected he psychological violence of the. taunts and threats by their bands, and of trying to reach out for help outside the ily help that is often' not there for them. ‘1! I. if f/vl'! - I” .,. ,, 7/ [‘I/‘l if n 7/4/- I. 7 ' \\ / just a bit ‘roughed up’. In a survey of battered women in shelters across Canada, MacLeod found that more than one third of the cases required and received medical treatment. Battered women are slapped, punched, kicked, bound, burned, knifed, and shot. Battered wives are more than Why men do it It is hard not to wonder why men beat the women they supposedly love. If ,wife beating is not an uncommon occurrence, there must be some common factor in cases of marital violence that explains the phenomenon. According to. MacLeod, men’s and women’s socialization have set the scene for marital violence. She notes four historical themes that have led to wife beating: 1. men were considered to own their wives 2. women were expected to obey their husbands and conform to the ideal of self-denial (and self-sacrifice) - 3. men had complete authority over their wives that was unquestionable within their own home 4. women’s place was in the home Wendy Ayotte, a member of the collective operating; Assistance aux femmes, a Montreal transit shelter for battered women and their children, elaborated on this theory. “It comes down to the patriarchal power in the family. Women have only been persons before the law in the past sixty odd years. A lot of men see violence as a means of disciplining their wives which, in their minds, is perfectly justified. And it ‘ is condoned by society — by relatives, the courts and the police, who all turn a blind eye to the situation,” says Ayotte. Personal experience seems to confirm this explanation. When asked why she thought her husband beat her, a woman recently out of a_Montreal transit shelter for batter women replied, “Society — my husband was taught every horrid thing he did to me from the day he was born”. Men have been raised to assume power and control. They have also been socialized to be aggressive — aggression that has often mistakenly been labelled as ‘natural’ or ‘instinctive’. According to J .J . Gayford, author of Battered Wives, “Pregnancy is the factor that most often precipitates violence in marriage.” This supports the theory that men use violence to assert control, and beat their wives when they feel a lack of power. Pregnancy and women’s sexuality are areas where men feel they have little or no control, and to many men, this poses a threat to their power over their wives. Why Women put up with it Battered women do not get a masochistic thrill out of being beaten. Unfortunately, however, it is not very easy for battered women to pack up and leave after one punch. Their situation, sociological, financial, emotional. and legal, make escape very difficult, if not impossible. According to Linda MacLeod, the most important factor that keeps the battered wife with her husband is her isolation. Says MacLeod: “Our society has been organized around the belief that the home is a private and peaceful domain, and that a woman’s role in the home is to preserve privacy and peace. When a woman asks for help because she is being beaten, she challenges this belief and so challenges the very roots Ol many of our institutions, among them our legal and medical institutions The result is that the woman is frequently punished by and isolated from the outside world if she ventures into it for help.” A second reason why battered women remain in a violent relationship is the wife’s financial dependence on her husband. A woman cannot receive welfare payments a single mother until she has her own address, and she can not have her own address until she has the financial means to live away lrom her husband. Even in middle or upper class homes, where there is no shortage of cash, the wife has no access to the famin funds, and is completely dependent on her husband :0 pay for her and her children’s‘basic needs. Thirdly, in spite of the violence that exists in the family, there is often still a lot of love, and that is hard to surrender. Says Ayotte, “A lot of women remain silent hoping that their husbands will change. They don’t. Few men seem to even question their behavior.” A final tremendous barrier for battered wives seeking escape is the legal system. Under Canadian law, a man can not rape his wife, and a woman can not sue her husband. Comments Ayotte, “The legal situation points out that assault within marriage is not criminal, making the battering of women almost acceptable. There is no support for the crown prosecutors and police, which is not surprising, cot:- sidering the fact that there is a very high incidence of violence in police families. Men are practically encouraged to beat their wives.” 1' Upon examining the facts, it is hard not to feel that the situation is hopeless. - We are far from adequate law reform, sufficient funding for transit shelters for battered women, government funded cooperative housing for single mothers, adequate counselling for violent husbands, and, above all, a society where no man has a blinding desire for power. ' When we have all that, We’ll have just about everything. Reprinted from the McGill Daily by Canadian University Press Netted Gem , , November 11/83 _. page 7