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Jehovah's Witnesses act against abuse-policy critics
Louisville Courier-Journal ^ | May 8, 2002 | Peter Smith

Posted on 05/08/2002 10:47:23 AM PDT by HassanBenSobar

Leaders of the Jehovah's Witnesses are taking steps to excommunicate a Western Kentucky man and three other church members who have publicly criticized what they say is their church's secretive handling of child-molestation cases.

Bill Bowen of Benton, Ky., said he was summoned to a judicial hearing to be held Friday at his Draffenville, Ky., church to answer allegations of ''causing divisions within the congregation and organization of Jehovah's Witnesses.''

Bowen resigned as an elder in the Marshall County congregation in December 2000

to protest the church's handling of a

local case and its policies on handling abuse allegations. He has since formed a support group for abuse victims.

Bowen figured prominently in a CourierJournal report in February 2001 on sexualabuse issues among Jehovah's Witnesses, as did a New Jersey couple who also say they are threatened with excommunication, Carl and Barbara Pandelo.

A former employee at church headquarters, Barbara Anderson of Normandy, Tenn., said she also faces excommunication.

The Jehovah's Witnesses Office of Public Information declined to comment specifically on the four cases, citing confidentiality policies.

The Courier-Journal report cited court cases in several states in which Jehovah's Witnesses officials were accused of keeping secret the allegations of abuse by their elders or members in two cases, allegedly in violation of state law.

Leaders of the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, as the organization is formally known, have disputed these claims, saying they obey all laws requiring the reporting of child abuse and do not interfere with police investigations.

They say that in states that do not require reporting of abuse, they prefer taking steps to protect children while not breaching what they see as confidential communications between elders and members.

Church officials say they might advise elders to move victims out of abusive homes or refer them to counseling.

Bowen said he believes the action is being taken to deter Jehovah's Witnesses from listening to him, the Pandelos and Anderson in news reports or on the Web site of his ''silentlambs'' organization (www.silentlambs.org).

He said church members who listen to the words of ''apostates,'' or those who abandon the faith, are at risk of excommunication themselves.

Bowen said he has asked that his hearing be postponed from Friday because of plans for minor surgery.

In its statement, the Jehovah's Witnesses Office of Public Information quoted biblical references in saying elders must use church discipline to ''shepherd the flock of God in their care.''

''In fact, they are required by the Holy Scriptures to see to it that the congregation remains clean and unified,'' the statement said. ''No hasty decision is made in this process.''

The goal is not to expel a member, but to follow the Apostle Paul's injunction to ''try to readjust such a man in a spirit of mildness,'' the statement said.

The Pandelos, of Belmar, N.J., were summoned to a hearing Monday night at their local congregation concerning unspecified ''allegations of apostasy,'' according to a April 19 letter on Watchtower stationery.

Carl Pandelo said he and his wife stayed only five minutes, long enough to deliver letters of protest to the chairman of the disciplinary committee. They have not received a reply.

''It's not like we didn't expect it,'' he said. ''You're not allowed to talk against the church in any way.''

The pandelos, who no longer attend Jehovah's Witnesses services, have told The Courier-Journal that after Carl's father, Clement Pandelo, molested their daughter, the congregation acted more sympathetically to the molester than to his victim.

Elders did tell Clement Pandelo to turn himself in to police, and he pleaded guilty in 1989 to molesting three girls after admitting molesting children for 40 years.

An elder with the congregation told The Courier-Journal that church leaders did the best they could to mediate the situation.

Anderson said she has not seen the charges against her in writing but that her husband, an elder at a Manchester, Tenn., congregation, was told she was accused of ''causing divisions.''

''I categorically deny any of this,'' said Anderson, a former employee at Watchtower headquarters in Brooklyn, N.Y., where she said she first learned about the church's policies on handling abuse cases.

In the past year, two more lawsuits have been filed against Watchtower in New Hampshire and Washington state, accusing local church elders of failing to follow state laws on reporting suspected abuse to police.

In both cases, church members were convicted of sexual abuse.

One suit filed in January by Erica Rodriguez, who said she was repeatedly abused by a church member years ago, claims an elder at her former congregation in Washington state threatened her with excommunication if she reported her abuser to police.

A Watchtower statement denies this, saying that there are no sanctions against anyone who chooses to go to police, and that church elders and Watchtower did not know of the abuse until years after it had occurred.

In New Hampshire, two women are suing Watchtower, alleging elders failed to report suspicions of abuse. Their father was later convicted and sentenced to 56 years in prison for abuse.

Jehovah's Witnesses, founded in the 19th century, number about 1 million members in the United States and 6 million globally.

Best known for its door-to-door evangelism, the church views its teachings as authentic Christianity, though it parts company with other Christian bodies on some fundamental beliefs.

Like some other close-knit religious organizations, Jehovah's Witnesses practice church discipline within their congregations and sometimes ''disfellowship,'' or excommunicate, members who are believed to persist in their errors.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: jehovahswitnesses; pedophiles
These guys make the RCC hierarchy look like a bunch of saints.
1 posted on 05/08/2002 10:47:23 AM PDT by HassanBenSobar
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To: HassanBenSobar
Probably the tip of the iceburg.
2 posted on 05/08/2002 11:02:19 AM PDT by Balata
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To: HassanBenSobar
''It's not like we didn't expect it,'' he said. ''You're not allowed to talk against the church in any way.''

Uh huh. And what is a religion like that called? Earth to JW's. It's a cult, not "the truth".

3 posted on 05/08/2002 11:31:16 AM PDT by mlo
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To: mlo
Yep. And notice how the totalitarian policy of crushing any critical voices helps create an atmosphere where pedophiles can run wild:

1)Victims need at least 2 people to testify that they witnessed the abuse before the church does anything about the case 2)If a victims was alone with the abuser (duh) and they later make an accusation, the victim can be excommunicated for 'slander'.

Excommunication for JW's means NO ONE who is a member can communicate at all with the ex-member (or they can be tossed out, too). Since JW's are 'encouraged' (read: ordered) to have no friends outside the JW community, this is an extremely severe punishment. Suicides are not uncommon as a result. So what happens? The pedophiles have a field day. Think about THAT the next time one of them comes knocking on your door...what have THEY been up to?

4 posted on 05/08/2002 11:53:18 AM PDT by HassanBenSobar
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To: HassanBenSobar
JW's are 'encouraged' (read: ordered) to have no friends outside the JW community

Didn't realize that. It explains why my JW neighbors a few doors down hardly talk to anyone on the block.

5 posted on 05/08/2002 12:25:36 PM PDT by Hibernius Druid
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To: HassanBenSobar
Jehovah's Witnesses officials were accused of keeping secret the allegations of abuse by their elders..

In 1 Timothy, there is a scriptural requirement that elders who are sinning be rebuked publically.

6 posted on 05/08/2002 12:51:22 PM PDT by aimhigh
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To: HassanBenSobar
No. The press has been having a field day demonizing the Catholics and has now decided to harass the Witnesses, apparently. (I guess we'll find out if they can make as big a stink.)

The Witnesses are clean living people, and genuinely nice folks. Leave 'em alone.

7 posted on 05/08/2002 1:14:30 PM PDT by keri
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To: mlo
It's a cult, not "the truth".

The Watchtower Society practices "shunning", and often breaks up marriages and families.

Once members are initiated, they are expected to spend 5 hours a week going door-to-door, and to sell 12 subscriptions to the Watchtower magazine each month.

Witnesses reject the trinity, hell, the resurrection of Christ, and many other central tenets of mainstream Christianity.
8 posted on 05/08/2002 1:41:18 PM PDT by Belial
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To: Belial
Witnesses reject the trinity, hell, the resurrection of Christ, and many other central tenets of mainstream Christianity.

They do believe in the resurrection, but not the other things you mentioned. They are not alone in that. There are other mainstream christians that don't believe in hell or the trinity.

There is no quota for subscriptions or required minimum time for door to door work.

9 posted on 05/08/2002 2:40:50 PM PDT by mlo
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To: keri
The Witnesses are clean living people, and genuinely nice folks. Leave 'em alone.

That's what they said about Jim Jones' People's Church. So what? They're still a cult.

10 posted on 05/08/2002 2:42:02 PM PDT by mlo
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To: keri
I agree, most of them are nice people. The problem is not so much with the individual members as it is with the totalitarian governance of their organization, which has systematically covered up abuse and squashed anyone with the guts to speak up about it. I think the RCC gets a lot of bad press, deservedly, but no one listens when they say 'other organizations have this problem, too'. If you notice, Bowen and silentlambs have been speaking out for well over a year, and Dateline has been planning a show on this topic for many months. This is NOT the press jumping on an abuse bandwagon--if anything, all the media attention the RCC is getting drowns out the spotlight needed to expose the JW's.
11 posted on 05/08/2002 2:48:17 PM PDT by HassanBenSobar
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To: HassanBenSobar
Expose them for what? The vast majority of these people are true to their faith and obey all the laws. I cannot believe there's a problem with child molestation in JW congregations, either by elders or members, much less a cover-up.
12 posted on 05/08/2002 3:58:30 PM PDT by keri
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To: mlo
They're still a cult.

Maybe, but they make darn good neighbors and citizens.

13 posted on 05/08/2002 4:01:26 PM PDT by keri
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To: keri
In the article they provide a link to silentlambs.org, which has apparently gotten a lot of response from victims in spite of the church's sanctions and intimidation against Bowen et al. In fact, that site claims there are 23,720 child molesters on file at WT headquarters. Should you believe silentlambs or the WT on this? I don't know for sure, but I can't see what motive Bowen would have to do what he's done, consider what he stands to lose.

Like I said before, I AGREE with you that the rank and file of JWs are probably mostly good upstanding people, just like in the RCC. And most priests in the RCC are morally upstanding people, same as most priests (? not sure what they call themselves) probably are in the JWs. This has not so much to do with the individual members--even those individuals who may have committed some sort of abuse--as it really does with efforts to cover up the abuse. By excommunicating Bowen for whistle-blowing, the JW leaders are showing their true colors: stonewalling, intolerant of criticism, and in fact, being vindictive towards anyone with the guts to speak up or speak out. At least in this respect the RCC is open to criticism from both within and without the church, without making reprisals on people who speak their mind. The JWs may or may not have as many cases of abuse in their ranks--but whatever we HAVE heard is likely the tip of the iceberg, with the way they seek to cover things up.

14 posted on 05/08/2002 5:47:12 PM PDT by HassanBenSobar
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