Terrible Abuse of Young Boys in Australian Salvation Army Homes

by fulltimestudent 8 Replies latest watchtower child-abuse

  • fulltimestudent
    fulltimestudent

    These details are emerging from a Royal Commission Court of Inquiry into child abuse in religious groups: As usual the religion has done nothing until exposed - then they weep the usual crocodile tears about it. Worse some of the alleged perpetrators are still alive, and there would have been no punishment without this inquiry.

    I'd heard whispers of this as supposedly the teenage son of a Jw circuit overseer had been with a group of boys when some of the group committed a crime (no evidence that this boy had been involved in the ofence) and was sentenced to detention in a SA home.

    Salvation Army locked boys in cage, raped and beat them, royal commission hears

    Date: January 28, 2014 - 2:12PM

    Paul Bibby

    Salvation Army 'didn't believe' abused children

    Young boys were locked in a cage for days on end as part of a brutal regime of physical and sexual abuse meted out to dozens of youngsters at Salvation Army homes in the 1950s, '60s and '70s, a royal commission into child-sex abuse has heard.

    And the Salvation Army's leadership often failed to discipline or remove the perpetrators, but simply moved them to other homes where they frequently continued the abuse.

    The revelations came during the first public hearing in Sydney by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse for 2014.

    In his opening address, counsel assisting the commission, Simeon Beckett, said the focus of the hearings would be on the "contemporaneous response by the Salvation Army and relevant government agencies to child-sex abuse within the Alkira home for boys in Indooroopilly, Queensland; the Riverview Training Farm, also in Queensland; Bexley Boys home in North Bexley; and the Gill Memorial Home in Goulburn".

    "It will examine processes at the time to identify, investigate, discipline, remove, dismiss and/or transfer persons accused of or found to have engaged in child sexual abuse," he said.

    "The evidence will explore whether those who maintained the homes jointly engaged in child sexual abuse and whether the position of manager was used to frustrate the making of complaints of sexual abuse and their investigation."

    The commission will focus on the alleged abuse inflicted by Salvation Army officers Laurence Wilson, Russell Walker, Victor Bennett, John McIver and Donald Schultz on boys aged from about six to about 17.

    On Tuesday, it heard that the violence and sexual abuse inflicted on the boys at the homes was at "the severe end of that examined by the commission" during the course of its investigations.

    "The boys were frequently punched with a closed fist, thrown on the ground with force, hit with straps until they developed welts or bled," Mr Beckett said.

    They were repeatedly anally raped and forced to undertake oral sex on their house parents. They were also abused by other boys at the homes.

    One witness, ES, is expected to tell the commission that he was placed in a cage on the verandah of the Riverview home for nine days.

    Upon his release, he was allegedly sodomised by Mr Bennett, his house parent.

    Mr McIver allegedly broke one boy's arm during an assault and on another occasion refused to allow a boy with a dislocated shoulder to attend hospital, instead forcing the injured shoulder "back into its socket".

    Boys who complained were often disbelieved and severely punished, Mr Beckett said.

    "Some will indicate that even when they ran away they were returned to the home where they were physically punished," Mr Beckett said.

    "Many didn't complain due to fear of punishment and retribution."

    At the Riverview farm, one witness would tell how he was made to sort fruit and vegetables given to the farm to feed the animals, picking out what could be given to the boys, Mr Beckett said. If he made a wrong choice, he was flogged.

    "Other forms of punishment included sweeping the playground with a toothbrush, cleaning 50 pairs of shoes ... and on one occasion forcing a boy to eat his own vomit."

    Mr Beckett said the Salvation Army had a policy of simply moving officers to different homes rather than properly disciplining them or ensuring they had no further contact with children.

    He said the commission would hear from two former house parents, Cliff and Marina Randall, who were dismissed after making a complaint against Mr McIver.

    Three of the five officers being examined are still alive - Mr McIver, Mr Schultz and Mr Walker.

    Only one was charged; Mr Walker with an act of indecency.

    They deny the allegations against them.

    Mr Wilson died in 2006.

    The hearing continues.

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/national/salvation-army-locked-boys-in-cage-raped-and-beat-them-royal-commission-hears-20140128-31k5u.html#ixzz2rfcCRxIn

  • RottenRiley
    RottenRiley

    Full-time, don't you find it strange how some people lament "Things are not the way they were when I was growing up!' lamenting about the "Good Old Days" days when my Mother, her mother were molested and no justice was available because of the stigma of speaking out!

    Religious Authorites are the only ones who lament they can't keep their secrets locked and people scared stiff, like the "Good Old Days", "Inquisition".

  • smiddy
    smiddy

    The common thread here , whether it be a religous or secular institution is to protect the organisation involved with no regard for the victim .

    Adults abusing children , and instead of exposing such abuse and the perpertrators , and bringing them before the courts , the organizations concerned , chose to cover it up and move the offenders on to other areas , where the abuse continued , to protect the " good name ."of their organization .

    Royal Commission Court of Inquiry into child abuse in religious groups: Does it have any real powers to enforce its findings ? Or is it a paper tiger .

    I am sure, you along with me , will be very interested in just what this inquiry will acheive if anything , is it just another avenue of seeming to do what is right ? without actually accomplishing anything ?

    I have my doubts that they will do anything to bring justice to those abused .I think we need to watch this space , and make our voice heard if its a sham .

    smiddy

  • fulltimestudent
    fulltimestudent

    smiddy:

    I am sure, you along with me , will be very interested in just what this inquiry will acheive if anything , is it just another avenue of seeming to do what is right ? without actually accomplishing anything ?

    At the very least, smiddy, we should expect to see the inquiry examine the evidence against the named survivors, and recommend prosecution if the evidence warrants, and if thepowers of theinquiry permits that.

    On the surface it appears that the SA is going to co-operate.

  • fulltimestudent
    fulltimestudent

    RR:

    my Mother, her mother were molested and no justice was available because of the stigma of speaking out!

    Very true RR. That community attitude fostered by the prevailing morality of the times became a screen hiding the wicked deeds of many evil men.

  • fulltimestudent
    fulltimestudent

    More evidence: but first let me ask readers to watch the first section of this video that portrays the claimed love that Jesus had for children

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJMKYShjLD0

    Now that you've watched, I want you to ask yourself, where was Jesus when these young boys were being tortured and tormented by people who bore his name?

    Reference: http://news.ninemsn.com.au/national/2014/01/29/02/22/salvo-child-abuse-extreme-inquiry-hears

    Boy raped when he reported abuse

    5:51pm January 29, 2014

    A boy who told a Salvation Army officer he had been sexually abused by another boy was later raped by the officer, an inquiry has been told.

    Check for warnings near you

    A man, identified as ES, said he ran away several times from a Salvation Army Training Farm at Riverview in Queensland when he was a teenager but was always brought back, either by the farm manager, Captain Victor Bennett or police.

    Mr Bennett who has since died, is one of five officers against whom the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has heard numerous allegations.

    The commission is holding a public hearing in Sydney into what happened at four homes run by the Salvos in NSW and Queensland in the 60s and 70s.

    ES said on Wednesday he was locked in a cage on the veranda at Riverview - some times for weeks.

    There was no bed or blankets and a bucket was used as a toilet in the cage, which some boys called a 'holding cell' or 'lock-in'.

    He said after time in the cage he was sodomised by Cpt Bennett, to whom he had reported being molested by an older boy.

    ES had been placed in an orphanage in NSW when he was four. At age 11 he was moved to St Vincent's Boys Home at Westmead, Sydney where he was sexually abused by a Marist brother.

    He ended up at Riverview in Queensland where: "I felt Captain Bennett hated me from the start."

    He told of punishments like being made to crawl around naked holding up a dead chook and naked boys being made to run around a maypole.

    At Wednesday's hearing several witness statements were read.

    A man identified as GK wrote of the profound hate and anger he felt and could not shake off from the time spent at Riverview.

    He told of psychological, sexual and physical abuse when he was 12.

    "I feel sorry for the people who have tried to help me at times and have been hurt by my hate against society".

    He had been told by a Salvation officer his parents did not want him and later found out letters sent to him by his parents and brothers were kept from him.

    He applied to get the letters, held by the Queensland Children's Department, under Freedom of Information.

    In 2006 he told the Salvos: "We will be getting letters from the dead. God help me when I get them..."

    Another man FP said residents at Riverview lived in constant fear. They were beaten for talking or laughing.

    He was asked by Simeon Beckett, counsel representing the commission, if he had told state welfare officers who regularly visited the farm of floggings and sexual abuse by officers and older boys.

    FP said he had not because of "fear of what was going to happen to you if you opened your mouth".

    Both FP and another witness EY told of being sexually assaulted by older boys. EY ran away when he was 16. Police picked him up four months later sent him back and he was severely flogged with a razor strap.

    Earlier on Wednesday Wally McLeod, who was a resident at Indooroopilly Boys Home and Riverview Training Farm from 1960 to 1966, said he saw Victor Bennett grab children as young as four and punch them.

    The commission, in this and future hearings, will examine in detail if the Salvation Army dismissed and/or transferred officers about whom there were complaints.

  • fulltimestudent
    fulltimestudent

    It was kids like these who were violated by monsters who lived in the name of Jesus.

    Bexley Boy's Home in North Bexley.

    Bexley Boy's Home in North Bexley.(Sydney).

    From The Age newpaper: http://www.theage.com.au/national/salvation-army-abuse-of-children-20140128-31l1r.html

    Where was Jesus when all this happened in his name?

    Why did Jesus hide the plight of these kids from his eyes and his church?

    Are you horrified? Are you sick in the stomach?

    Then how could Jesus (if he exists) allow it, when he has the power to stop it?

    Why couldn't the holy spirit make the church act?

    Read on and wonder at the inhumanity of Jesus. (from the same reference as above).

    Salvation Army abuse of children

    Date: January 29, 2014

    Paul Bibby
    Court Reporter

    Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/national/salvation-army-abuse-of-children-20140128-31l1r.html#ixzz2rocxg2oM

    Raymond Carlile's little brother was so hungry he had started eating grass.

    After months of being fed scraps intended for farm animals at a Salvation Army boys' home in Queensland his wasn't the only empty stomach.

    ''They kept a load of raw potatoes under the building and we used to go under there and steal them when we were hungry,'' Mr Carlile, now in his 70s, told the royal commission into child sexual abuse on Tuesday.

    Mr Carlile's story is just a glimpse of the extreme deprivation and abuse suffered by scores of young boys at the hands of the Salvation Army at boys' homes in the 1950s, '60s and '70s, the commission heard in Sydney.

    In his opening address, counsel assisting the commission, Simeon Beckett, set out horrific allegations of brutal sexual and physical abuse in which boys aged six to 17 were raped and forced to have sex with each other under threat of extreme physical violence that included being beaten and locked up in cages for up to nine days at a time.

    The Salvation Army's leadership often failed to discipline or remove the perpetrators, he said, but simply moved them to other homes where many continued the abuse.

    In subsequent years the organisation's eastern arm has received 153 separate claims from former ''home boys'' and girls.

    ''The abuse that is to be detailed in the course of this case study is likely to be disturbing and at the severe end of sexual abuse considered by the royal commission,'' Mr Beckett said.

    The commission will focus on four Salvation Army boys' homes as it seeks to uncover how the institution responded to alleged systemic abuse within its ranks - Bexley Boys Home in Sydney's North Bexley, the Gill Memorial Home, in Goulburn, the Alkira home for boys, Indooroopilly, and the Riverview Training Farm, both in Queensland.

    At the centre of the allegations are four senior Salvation Army officers who ran the homes at various times - Laurence Wilson, Russell Walker, Victor Bennett, John McIver and Donald Schultz.

    The ''most prolific of the alleged child sex abusers'', Mr Beckett said, was Wilson, who was allowed to run the boys' home at Bexley for years in the 1970s despite numerous complaints about his behaviourincluding at the Riverview home.

    ''Wilson seemed to enjoy inflicting pain,'' Mr Carlile said. ''He would froth at the mouth … and he just had this look in his eye.''

    Not long after Mr Carlile arrived at Riverview, aged eight, Wilson dragged him from his bed and raped him. On other occasions he forced him to have sex with other boys while he watched and sometimes participated.

    Afterwards, the boys were flogged and told not to tell anyone or the punishment would be more severe.

    ''The physical abuse inflicted by Wilson at Bexley was … violent and extreme,'' Mr Beckett said. ''In addition, other Salvation Army officers and staff abused residents, as did members of the public.''

    Commission chairman Justice Peter McLellan said: ''What the commission is learning over and over again is that a sexual abuse very often occurs in the context of physical abuse and deprivation.''

    The hearing continues.

  • fulltimestudent
    fulltimestudent

    We should not forget that this was not an isolated example:

    This is standard for church run homes in (according to inquiries held so far):

    Canada

    The USA

    Ireland

    England

    and other parts of Australia.

    Tens of thousands of kids have been affected, while the Christian Lord and Master did nothing - not even forcing HIS church to take action.

  • fulltimestudent
    fulltimestudent

    And in a telephone conversation this morning with another xjw, I learned that the young man (son of a circuit overseer) lived a distressed life after his release from the SA home in which he had been incarcerated and committed suicide at around age 40.

    thank you Jesus!!!!

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