Silent Shame - Wife Abuse Crosses all Cultural and Ethnic Boundaries

 

Toronto Star Ontario ed.
LIFE
Friday, August 5, 1994

Last of five parts See CORRECTION at end of story. - Silent shame wife abuse crosses all cultural and ethnic boundaries. But immigrant women face added burdens of language barriers, social stigma and unfamiliarity with Canadian laws

Gori is a petite, soft-spoken and gentle young woman. She has a black eye and bruises all over her body, the result of repeated beatings by her husband.

Counselors have advised her to separate or press charges. She has chosen to stay 
in her marriage.

"It would be considered shameful for me to leave since there is a social stigma attached to a wife leaving her husband, no matter what the reason."

Mina desperately wanted release from her violent spouse of many years. She tried seeking legal help but her husband and his live-in family threatened ex-communication from her family and community.

Mina was kept indoors forcefully until she agreed to overlook the issue. She is still being abused, while those close to her simply look the other way.

Gori and Mina (not their real names) are South Asian and living a daily nightmare of abuse and violence.

Their stories are not unique for wife abuse crosses all cultural, linguistic and ethnic boundaries. But immigrant women often face added burdens and difficulties imposed by language barriers, social stigma and unfamiliarity with Canadian laws and rights.

Within the South Asian community, as an example, "fewer women are willing to seek professional help or counseling," according to counselor Aruna Papp of the South Asian Family Support Services in Scarborough. The majority of cases go unreported, she adds.

Often abuse victims are unaware and uninformed about where to reach out for help. Many suffer from language problems - their agony compounded by the fact that they are simultaneously dealing with adjustment to a new country, climate and culture.

South Asians are generally private people and do not like to talk about their domestic problems. The family is their pride and joy and they will go to great extremes to keep the family name from being dishonored.

Sometimes that means trying to sweep domestic problems under the rug and ignoring issues such as abuse and violence.

When South Asians, whose former homelands include India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, East Africa, Sri Lanka and the Caribbean, come to Canada, their social and cultural norms are distinctly different from those of the local population. Typically, religion dominates the social code of life. This poses a huge problem: how to differentiate between loyalty to their own faith or culture and loyalty to life within the boundaries of the law in Canada?

For example, in some countries it is not a criminal offence for husbands to beat their wives. And very rarely does a court case arise out of such an act of violence.

"Many South Asians are living in a time warp of 20 years ago," says Afroz Usman of Awakening Family Counselling and Mediation Services in Thornhill.

"They have physically settled in Canada but have not come to terms with, or accepted, Canadian laws. When there is trouble on the domestic front, they are more willing to let the elders of the family solve the problem rather than seek legal help."

Usman, who has worked with abused women for over a decade and is a board member of the Women in Transition shelter, cites instances where men have married South Asian women as a means of getting into Canada and then dumped them.

"These women do not turn to the law for help, either because they are terrified of reprisals or because they are under threat of dishonor," says Usman.

"My prime aim is to educate Asian women about the law and their rights in Canada. Once they are convinced they can live within the boundaries of their religion and culture, and still be free, they can move ahead with their lives."

In many cultures women are generally brought up to think of men in the family as the lord and master of their lives. They are programmed to accept their life as fate and take whatever is doled out to them.

The perpetrator of violence in the household is not always the partner, lover or spouse but may be a relative of the partner, says Papp.

But the scenario is slowly changing. Papp started the Toronto Asian Community Centre in 1981 and since then has set the ball rolling toward building organizations to help the South Asian community.

A victim of domestic abuse herself, Papp works with abused women and trains counselors and caregivers. She has also made a video for counselors on how to deal with spouse abuse.

"The needs of South Asian women are specific to the culture," she says. "Battered women will often refuse refuge in a shelter because it does not cater to their specific ethnic needs, like language, religion and dietary restrictions."

Papp explains that the South Asian diaspora is extremely diverse and that dozens of different languages are spoken in India alone.

"There is a burning need for more shelters aimed specifically at South Asians and catering to their needs," she says, adding that there is also a lack of qualified ethnic caregivers in the community.

Leslie Brown, a barrister and lawyer, suggests that a simple awareness of Canadian law will grant women much needed security and protection.

"Cultural, social and religious beliefs are often the biggest barrier to getting justice," says Brown, who works closely with the South Asian community.

He has found that women will generally avoid speaking to a stranger about their domestic problems; others find language an obstacle while many others simply accept violence as a way of life.

On the positive side, women with similar problems and from similar backgrounds are now forming into groups to help each other and train under professionals.

The interaction and knowledge that others, too, are suffering from the dilemma of domestic violence gives the victims, at least, moral support.

Raheel Raza is a freelance writer specializing in women's issues.

CORRECTION

A story about wife abuse in yesterday's Life section incorrectly identified Aruna Papp as a counselor with South Asian Family Support Services. In fact she is in private practice and no longer involved with the organization. The correct number for the support group is (416) 281-5469.

The Star regrets the errors. (Aug. 6, 1994. Page A3)



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