This is such a complicated picture. Each of us thinks our own family was the normal one (well, most of us still think that... acknowledging at least one exception in the room .. ahem, Bemused!). Children, in order to survive, cling to the adults who feed and clothe them. Sometimes those adults are abusive. In some cases that was a dorm parent or staff member, in other cases it was a child's own parent/s. We go to strange places in our heads to rationalize and justify the fact that people who were supposed to love us were cruel to us. I have heard adults relate stories of terrible physical and emotional abuse by their parents, proclaim that they turned out just fine, and then use their own history of being abused to justify why it is okay for them to inflict harsh corporal punishment on their own children!
When NTM MKs fly to the defense of their parents, I'm not sure what we can do to dissuade them. We will probably never be able to get a clear picture. Was the missionary parent abusive to the MK, but they have accepted their childhood as normal, and okay? Did the missionary live a Jekyll and Hyde existence, and treat some vulnerable MKs differently than they treated their own children? Is the adult MK's own identity, position or livelihood threatened by the truth about their family, so they feel they must stay in denial for their own survival now, as an adult? Did an MK raised in an abusive home become an abuser themselves, and so they must now hide their own shameful evil side?
I am of the opinion that most missionaries who abused other people's children had a very unhealthy family life that had to have an effect on their own children, on some level. In some cases I know this be a fact. In other cases it's just conjecture. I know that some victims of incest within the mission actually grew up to become NTM missionaries themselves.
There are also some adult MKs who I think are completely unaware of what their parent was capable of, or what they did. Other adults at the time of the abuse may have known, but they hid the facts from the child (understandably), and over the years, this became a deeply buried secret that would be devastating to the now-adult child.
And then there are the children of missionaries in leadership positions who did not handle cases of abuse in the right way. Naturally we all live with the fear that some decision we made in the past is going to come back to haunt us. I think we can all relate to that. And as a woman whose father, husband, brother, brothers-in-law and other assorted relatives and close friends have all been NTM leadership, I can say that I actually know the fear of wondering whether a mistake made by one of them is going to be exposed in these IHART investigations. I can relate to the desire to protect those I love, and I can predict that if I learn that one of them is being named as a participant in a cover-up, I will feel defensive and protective. After all, we are family. Which is exactly what we are discussing here.
But I am committed to pursuing justice and healing for wounded children. They MUST remain my focus. They were defenseless long ago. They must be protected now, and believed. Even if that makes us and our families very, very uncomfortable.
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