startingovernow
It is so sad to read that one person caused so much trouble. The WTS' refusal to encourage JWs to get professional help for abuse and other serious mental health issues is just one more hurtful way they deal with this problem in the congregations.
I suffered for years from anxiety attacks eating disorders, a myriad of psychosomatic health problems, severe depression and a lto of thinking about suicide. After 20 years the elders fianlly said I could go to a professional and talk about the childhood abuse but I was forbidden to tell the counsellor that I was a JW. That in effect was a gag and made most of the recovery process stall. There were too many questions that I could not answer without lying.
Despite the fact that I was sexually abused in the org and by baptized JWs I shut my eyes to the problem just like all other JWs. For one thing I thought I was alone. I was the "rare case". Looking back now I can see a whole long list of JWs I knew who may have been sexually abused as children in the org. Another long list would include those who were physically and/or emotionally abused.
The question for me is this:
Is there a percentage of JWs who are victims of abuse (a consistent pattern of physical, sexual or emotional abuse for a long period of time) that is less than, equal to, or greater than what we find in the real world.
I think the answer would be YES for any cult or abusive family or cultural group. Any time the leadership does not have accountability, coerces members to be silent and refuses to acknowledge its serious problems the risk of abuses increase over the population at large.
Before I got involved with the WTS my sexual abuse was reported to the police once it was discovered. Not so after my contact with the WTS. Then it was covered over. To me that speaks volumes.