Jon Harden
Joy Castro, author of "The Truth Book," Thursday night in the second floor of the library. She tells her story about her life growing up in a Jehovah's Witness family, how she was abused and eventually ran away. | Joy Castro visited SPU last Thursday to read from her novel, "The Truth Book: Escaping a Childhood of Abuse Among Jehovah's Witnesses," which is based on her life as an adopted child in an abusive Jehovah's Witnesses home.Castro read several different sections of her book, but she most emphasized the passages concerning how her stepfather beat her mom, her brother and herself. "My stepfather beats him with a belt and kicks him in the head," Castro read about her brother in one passage. Castro was adopted as a baby and grew up surrounded by a community of Jehovah's Witnesses. Her mom and dad divorced and her mom remarried to a physically abusive man when Castro was 12. Castro was taught to be submissive, especially with her father. Questioning their faith was not an option. For example, Castro once asked her adoptive mother about the "Truth Book," their book of sacred scriptures, during a car ride. "How can you know the principles are right?" Castro said. "They're right because they're in the Truth Book," her mother replied. She then proceeded to scold her, and said she was told not to talk the rest of the car ride home. Castro also remembers making trouble within the church because she would not conform to Jehovah's Witnesses ideals. The elders attempted to get her to behave by taking her to the woods and lecturing her into submission. They returned home with nothing accomplished. When she was 14, Castro ran away to live with her adoptive father who had been "disfellowshipped," or excommunicated, from the church because he smoked, she said. While she lived with her father, Castro continued to practice her family's faith. She eventually left the faith when she was 15 because it no longer made sense to her. Castro was encouraged to run away by a friend of hers, Beth Loughney, who told Castro that there had to be somewhere else she could go -- anywhere but the place that she lived at the moment. But the pivotal moment that influenced Castro to run away was when she heard her mom complain that she didn't know how to appease her abusive husband. "What is it going to take to satisfy him?" Castro recalled her mother saying. Castro's stepfather was later imprisoned for molesting a 9-year-old girl, and Castro's mom divorced him and remarried an elder from the church. Loughney and Castro had lost contact with each other until Castro's book came out. A reporter helped them get back in touch. They were reunited Thursday at the book reading and spent the weekend together. "You don't think to Google someone," Loughney said. Castro sold all 15 books that she brought to the reading. Many students attended the event, either for class or because they loved her book. "It's a fascinating book. I would recommend it to everyone," Sarah Raguini said. "I thought it was very enthralling and engaging," Jon Larson agreed. Her message also changed the preconceptions that students had of Jehovah's Witnesses. "It shed a new light on the folks that knock on my door," junior Steven Pyke said. One-third of the books' proceeds go to an organization of treatment and prevention of child abuse, and another third goes to her brother, who currently lives in Texas. Castro said she was excited "to be reading in a place where matters of faith are taken as seriously as matters of intellects and that's unique." Since college, Castro has been exploring many faiths, including Christianity and Buddhism. She lives in Indiana with her husband and son, and is an associate professor of English at Wabash College. Castro's essays have appeared in journals such as the Mid-American Review, Quarterly West, and North American Review. |