When the Danger is Us: The March Friends Journal

I’m reshar­ing my March Friends Jour­nal “Among Friends” col­umn here, with a few links and extra thoughts.

For many of us, the act of walk­ing into a meet­ing­house or Friends church, sit­ting on the bench, pew, or chair and clos­ing our eyes brings an imme­di­ate sense of seren­i­ty. We can for­get our wor­ries, our to-dos, our laun­dry and dish­es pil­ing up back home and set­tle into the sweet wor­ship. Togeth­er, safe inside our beloved com­mu­ni­ty, we can turn our atten­tion to the prompt­ing of the Spir­it. There may be wor­ries inside that sacred space — social con­cerns to hold and dis­cern, the joys and sor­rows of fel­low­ship. But the wor­ship space itself is safe, a refuge of Light to inspire, recharge, and reset ourselves.

This is not the expe­ri­ence of every vis­i­tor to a Quak­er space. I’ve been in three sit­u­a­tions in Quak­er meet­ings where my kids have been in close con­tact with some­one who I lat­er learned was a ser­i­al child abuser. I’ve been at Quak­er events where assaults against young adults hap­pened, whis­pered but nev­er pub­licly acknowl­edged to pro­tect the pri­va­cy of the vic­tim — and per­haps of the spon­sor­ing organization.

Two accounts in this issue come from year­ly meet­ings (South­east Year­ly Meet­ing, North Pacif­ic Year­ly Meet­ing) that dis­cov­ered that well-liked — even beloved — youth pro­gram work­ers had been assault­ing teenagers at year­ly meet­ing events. The respons­es of Friends were not always help­ful (one even rein­stat­ed the abuser only to find out there had been more undis­closed vic­tims). Mul­ti­ple authors point out that their meet­ings had no pol­i­cy in place and that the gath­ered body fierce­ly strug­gled to bal­ance com­pet­ing feel­ings of shock, fear, and denial with desires for mer­cy and justice.

If any­thing is unique about Friends’ respons­es, it is our desire to want to see the Light in all, to trust and for­give as we try to under­stand the roots of per­son­al vio­lence. While admirable qual­i­ties, they can some­times leave us unique­ly vul­ner­a­ble to manip­u­la­tion an obser­va­tion made by a few of this month’s authors. As a self-organized soci­ety that is some­times sus­pi­cious of pro­fes­sion­al­ism, we can be ill-equipped to look for, iden­ti­fy, and respond to these kinds of disclosures.

But we need not despair. There are plen­ty of resources out there (Lau­ra McGuire’s “Han­dle with Care: Prepar­ing and Respond­ing to Dis­clo­sures” is a must-read on this). There are pro­fes­sion­als who have stud­ied the issue of abuse in reli­gious com­mu­ni­ties, many of them mem­bers of our own com­mu­ni­ty. There are also year­ly meet­ings that have gone through the pain and heart­break and devel­oped poli­cies that can act as mod­els for all of us.

Need­less to say, these are hard issues and they may be trig­ger­ing. Emo­tions can run high just read­ing these arti­cles. Please exer­cise all the self care you need.

Further thoughts:

There’s a lot of brav­ery among the writ­ers in this issue. Many felt quite ner­vous talk­ing about these issues in such a pub­lic forum. They have expe­ri­enced push-back in pre­vi­ous attempts to raise expe­ri­ences of abuse in Quak­er cir­cles. I’m real­ly proud of the authors and grate­ful that Friends Jour­nal can pub­lish an issue like this.

There’s a online pan­el talk being orga­nized with many of the authors, along with some great co-sponsors. Details are still being worked out but we’re look­ing at March 23 at 1pm ET. I’ll post here when sign-ups are starting.

Posted March 11th, 2022 , in Quaker.