Female sexual abuse: The untold story of society's last taboo
Sharon Hall is a small, timid figure with wide brown eyes that dart
nervously between the floor and her hands as she speaks.
During our conversation, her sentences fluctuate between slow, fractured
prose and sudden, spluttering outbursts as her words fall over each other in a
fight to assemble. It has been almost 10 years since Sharon last tried to speak
about the childhood memories she has spent much of her life trying to suppress
– and that particular encounter, as we shall see, left her feeling sorrily
dejected. The experience of sharing her story today she describes as a
gruelling rite of passage, one she feared would prove too painful to complete:
"Every moment I feel the effects of what I went through," she starts
in a small, raspy voice, pausing briefly to brush an imaginary strand of hair
from her cheek, before continuing, "I've been trapped by my past for all
these years. Being able to finally talk about it is strangely
exhilarating."
The story that Sharon, who is now 40, has been unable to tell before
today is one that few would wish to hear: from as far back as she can remember
until the day she left home at the age of 16, Sharon, an only child, was
sexually abused by her mother. The particulars of her abuse are too horrific to
bear repeating in detail; this was sustained sexual violence, which she
suffered silently at the hands of the one person who was supposed to love and
protect her above all others.
Sharon's ordeal went undetected for her entire childhood, despite her
becoming increasingly withdrawn over the years; her weight fell to below six
stone by the age of 15, and she had few if any friends at school. The problem
was, she says, that even if others had suspected something was wrong, few would
have guessed what it was – and fewer still would have wanted to know the whole
truth. "I did try telling my doctor once," she says, blinking
heavily, pulling at her shirt, "but it's like I said, no one really wants
to know that."
It was at the age of 30, when she became pregnant with her own daughter,
that Sharon finally summoned the courage to speak to her GP for the first time
about what had happened to her. Her fear was that if she didn't seek help to
overcome her issues, they could in turn have a damaging effect on her unborn
child. But her doctor's response was: "Don't be silly, mothers don't
sexually abuse children. You're understandably worried about becoming a parent
yourself, but don't let your imagination run away with you."
And it seems this reaction is all too common.
While researching this piece, I spoke to a number of adults – men and
women – who as children endured horrific sexual abuse at the hands of their
mothers, aunts, grandmothers and female carers. Very few of them had ever had a
chance to tell their story before, and the effect of keeping their experiences
to themselves for so long has had a disastrous effect on their mental state.
Sharon's mental scars are manifest in her serious anorexia and
agoraphobia, and the effect on her daughter has been devastating, too; Debbie,
who is now 10, suffers from severe panic attacks and low self- esteem.
"The problem," Sharon explains, "was that I never knew how to
bond with Debbie. I was terrified of even touching her."
Sharon says that she might have learnt to cope better if she had been
given the help she so desperately needed when she approached her doctor before
her child was born. "You can't imagine how deflating it is after all those
years of keeping your disgusting secret to finally get the courage to tell
someone and then be told that you're making it up," she recalls. "But
the worst thing about it is that even though my mother is now dead – and never even
met her granddaughter – she has managed to ruin my daughter's childhood
too."
The systemic denial of female sexual abuse is one of the scandals of our
times. While in recent years the issue of male paedophilia has been placed
firmly at the forefront of public debate in Britain, with endless high-profile
media and Government campaigns bringing this formerly underground issue into
the public spotlight, it seems that the involvement of women in cases of child
molestation is an enduring taboo, and in order to break that wall of silence we
must start by addressing a series of serious shortfalls that run throughout the
child protection services in this country.
According to Zoe Hilton, policy advisor for child protection at the
National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC),
"Professionals in all areas of the system tend to be disbelieving of cases
of female sexual abuse". In her role at the NSPCC, Hilton is responsible
for lobbying the Government and advising on what systems need to be put in
place to tackle the sexual abuse of children across the board. She argues that
– as a first step – there needs to be "far more training and education and
greater reporting of female sexual abuse when such cases do come to
light".
Yet, she continues, it is hard to imagine how the child welfare system
is supposed to progress when the underlying denial of the issue of women who
sexually abuse runs far deeper, throughout society and into the very Government
departments charged with overseeing and directing these individual welfare
organisations.
Hilton is not the only one to have noticed how deep-rooted the problem
is. Michele Elliott is the founder of the children's charity Kidscape, which
she set up in 1984. She observes that the situation now is very similar in many
respects to that in the Seventies and Eighties, when the existence of
paedophilia in any shape or form was scarcely believed. Around the time that
she set up Kidscape, Elliott recalls approaching the Department of Health and
expressing concerns over the cases of male sexual abuse she was learning of in
her line of work. The response of officials there, she says, was: "This is
not a problem in this country."
These days, of course, we can hardly ignore the issue of the sexual
abuse of children in Britain. According to ChildLine, the 24-hour counselling
service provided by the NSPCC, the number of reports they receive is at an
all-time high. Some 13,237 children called their helpline with such stories –
an increase of more than 50 per cent in three years. The NSPCC claims that as
many as one in six people in Britain suffers sexual abuse by the time they are
18 years old. Yet, while such figures have forced us to face the reality of
male child sex abuse in the UK, there are enduring myths that surround our ideas
of paedophilia – including ideas about the type of people who abuse.
As well as founding Kidscape, Elliott is also a child psychologist with
40 years' experience and the author of Female Sexual Abuse of Children: The
Ultimate Taboo. She understands all too well that predators come in all shapes
and sizes, male and female. In the early Nineties, while researching her book
on female sexual abuse, Elliott was a guest on the Richard and Judy breakfast
show. During her brief television appearance, she invited viewers with personal
experiences of female sexual abuse to phone in and share their stories.
Immediately, she says, the lines started buzzing. There was barely enough time
on air to answer a fraction of the calls she received from men and women of all
ages, from across the country, getting in touch to share their stories.
Since then, Elliott has been contacted by some 800 victims, 780 of them
in the UK, each desperate just to talk. In a large percentage of these cases,
the abuse took place within the family home, which is one of the reasons why
cases of female sexual abuse are so incredibly hard to spot. Yet, sadly, this
doesn't mean that the abuse isn't happening. As Elliott points out:
"Considering that I am just one woman working for one relatively small charity,
and this many people have managed to get in touch with me, I dread to think of
the true scale of the problem."
Extraordinarily, in the vast majority of cases involving female sexual
abuse (of both boys and girls), the child's mother turns out to be involved in
that abuse, whether offending alone or with another woman or a man. Almost all
of the victims who have contacted Elliott to share their stories have mentioned
being "brainwashed", and many have spoken of being made to believe
that their abuse was what constituted parental love.
Very few have ever before felt able to talk about the abuse because they
feared they would not be believed – and those who have already come forward, to
a doctor or therapist, have usually had their worst fears realised. One man,
now 60 years old, recalls: "When I tried to tell my therapist of my abuse
when I was 35, I was told: 'You are having fantasies about your mother and you
need more therapy to deal with that.' In reality, my mother had been physically
and sexually abusing me for as long as I can remember. The abuse was horrific,
including beatings and sadomasochistic sex."
Another victim recalls how she had been sexually abused by her
babysitter between the ages of six and 10. She explains: "I actually
thought all babysitters did that to kids until we got another babysitter. When
I tried to get her to have oral sex with me she told my mother and I got into
trouble. Believe me, from then on I kept it a secret."
Quite how much it meant just to be listened to and believed was summed
up in one letter sent to Elliott soon after her appearance on Richard and Judy:
"Finally someone is willing to open up the subject of female sex abuse and
really listen to us victims," the woman wrote. "This is fabulous – a
day I never thought would come." But sadly it seems her response might
have been optimistic, as very little seems to have been done on a wider level
in the intervening years to help bring the matter of female sexual abuse out
into the open.
And this view is one corroborated by a number of frustrated officials
currently working in child welfare organisations and different parts of the
British justice system, who wish to remain anonymous. These individuals say
they just aren't being given the tools they need to address this issue, or even
being made aware that it is an issue at all. This is perhaps not surprising
when you learn that there is hardly any official information available
pertaining specifically to the area of women who sexually abuse children, and
barely any research being carried out, either. There have been a couple of
Government-led initiatives to educate officials in welfare agencies about the
issue – including a conference held in Manchester last April entitled
"Child Abuse: The Female Offender". But still nowhere near enough is
being done.
In fact, during the course of my research for this article, all I could
find – under the direction of several Government press officers, from the
Ministry of Justice to the Home Office – was a figure relating to the number of
women who have been convicted of sexual offences in the UK. This figure derives
from a report released in 2006, and suggests that women form just 0.5 per cent
of all sex offenders in prison, and around 1 per cent of convicted sex
offenders in England and Wales.
Yet this is not entirely helpful – as conviction rates in cases
involving sexual offences across the board are hardly indicative of the true
state of affairs. Indeed, the 0.5 per cent statistic might be more useful in
highlighting the shortcomings of the British justice system than painting a
true picture of female sexual abuse. Prosecutions in cases of sexually
motivated crimes in the UK are generally few and far between, and rarely
reflect the true story. Take the proportion of reports of rape cases that
result in prosecution in Britain, for instance. This is the lowest in Europe,
according to a study released earlier this year, which claimed that the rate in
England and Wales is just 6.5 per cent, and an even more pitiful 2.9 per cent
in Scotland.
Furthermore, conviction rates only tell us about cases that actually
make it to court, and according to one expert, Hilary Aldridge, the large
majority of all cases of sexual abuse aren't even reported – as many as 90 per
cent, she says – let alone put before a judge. In the unlikely event that a
case of sexual abuse is reported, there is still a long and arduous process to
go through in order to get it to court.
Aldridge is the chief executive of the Lucy Faithfull foundation, one of
the few organisations in the UK which works solely with female abusers. She
works on a daily basis with offenders in cases referred to her organisation by
the family and criminal courts. She explains how tricky it can be to get a case
of child abuse to court. "In the first instance, a child has to first come
forward and tell someone what is happening, which is often extremely difficult
for them to do," she explains. "Or someone else needs to notice that
something is wrong, and then pick up on what that is. They then have to make the
police take the allegation seriously and if they are able to do that, which is
often difficult, then the child protection services will become involved and
someone there has to take it seriously, too."
All things considered, we might do better to look somewhere other than
the Government data for an idea of the prevalence of cases of child abuse
involving female offenders in the UK – and the most widely respected sources
for this are the independent studies from ChildLine and the National Society
for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, which are believed to provide a much
more accurate picture. Suddenly, the issue of female sexual abuse doesn't look
quite as uncommon as we might otherwise have believed.
In 2004, childline asked each of those callers who were ringing their
helpline about sexual abuse to tell them the gender of their abuser. It
revealed that over the period of one year, 11 per cent of callers said they
were being abused by a woman: a total of 8,637 children, of whom 6,538 were
girls and 2,099 boys. The NSPCC also conducted its own research in 2005, the
results of which suggest that around 5 per cent of children who suffer sexual
abuse in Britain do so at the hands of a woman, which is the number regularly
cited by other experts in the field. But as Zoe Hilton, the charity's policy
advisor for child protection, suggests: "The true extent of female sexual
abuse is still a hidden picture." Furthermore, it is not a picture that
many seem in any hurry to clarify.
One of the biggest problems, of course, is that the idea that women can
and do sexually abuse children is highly provocative in itself – a fact
confirmed by a spokeswoman for the Child Exploitation and Online Protection
Services (CEOP), a newly formed Government taskforce charged with "eradicating
the sexual abuse of children" in Britain. "Women are perceived as the
nurturers, those who are there to look after our young people," she
explains, adding that female sexual abuse is often even more threatening than
male sexual abuse as it undermines what we understand about the way women
relate to children. In order for us to recognise it, the spokeswoman continues,
we have to set our preconceptions aside. Otherwise, children will continue to
suffer in silence: "How can a child be expected to understand they are
being abused and that what they are enduring is wrong if we as a society cannot
recognise women as abusers?" she asks.
Sexual abuse is usually understood as something bound up with issues of
male aggression and power, and the idea of a female abuser totally undermines
this well-established belief. Then there is a further problem in getting female
abuse recognised: many people simply don't understand how – practically – a
woman could abuse.
Understandably, this is a sensitive and highly emotive subject, the
fallout from which Michele Elliott of Kidscape has witnessed at first hand. In
1992, she held a conference in London while compiling her book on the subject
of female sexual abuse. She recalls how 30 women turned up to disrupt her
address: "They stood up and started yelling about how terrible it was that
I was detracting from the fact that male power was to blame. It is very
disappointing when you encounter such extreme and closed-minded reactions. I
was simply responding to what victims had told me."
And such closed-mindedness is rife in the criminal- justice system too,
Hilary Aldridge confirms: "There is a tendency in the courts to see the
woman as a victim of a male counterpart." But this isn't always the case
by any means. Even when there is a male co-offender, this doesn't automatically
mean that the female partner is an unwilling accomplice.
Indeed, one of the most disturbing aspects of child abuse committed by
women is that – according to studies by independent researchers and highly
respected charities – the large majority of it takes place in the home.
Aldridge asserts that 60 per cent of cases take place within the family unit –
and "women who abuse children regularly do so in the guise of normal,
basic care". This, of course, is part of what makes it so hard to detect.
Sharon Hall, whose abuse by her mother went unnoticed for her entire
childhood, knows all too well the devastating effects of being forced to suffer
in silence. "If I'd had just the smallest impression that I'd be
believed," she says, "I might have had the guts to come
forward." The reality, she says, is that no one wanted to know what she
was going through, and even today we continue to switch ourselves off from the
suffering of an unknown number of children across the country.
If we are to have any chance at all of saving those children who are
suffering now and those who will no doubt be suffering in the future, she says,
the best place to start is by opening our eyes to the abuse going on around us.
"I never had the chance to come to terms with what happened, and not only
has my life been ruined, but so in turn has my daughter's," Sharon
concludes. "All I hope now is that by coming forward and raising awareness
of this issue, that I might in some small way be able to help those children
for whom it isn't too late."
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