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'Precious' Raises Issues of Sexual Abuse


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I have to admit to increasing anxiety tonight as I prepared for the screening room to darken. I was there to view the movie "Precious" and my stomach was in knots. What I had heard and read emphasized a dark, depressing sordid tale of incest, brutality and complete evil. Who is ever in the mood for that?

As it turns out, this movie took me on an emotional roller coaster ride that was not all unpleasant. Despite a heartbreaking plot that makes you re-examine every harsh word uttered at anyone that you love, especially a daughter, I felt like I was privy to insider information about the life of an incest survivor. Survivor is the key word. But can we talk about incest?

In the Black community, we tend to keep our secrets held tightly to our chests, without realizing that secrets are meant to be dislodged. Incest is defined as unwarranted or wanted sexual contact between an adult and a minor who are so closely related that a marriage would be illegal, any touching of sexual parts, sexual staring or verbal invitations, photographing  or inappropriate exposure. All of these sickening exposures may remain underreported because of guilt and shame from the victim and their witnesses.

Some researchers estimate that up to 20 million Americans have been victims of parental incest as children. It is also presumed that the prevalence of incest in Black families is a bigger issue than authorities are aware of because of our own protection of 'family business', a fear of legal consequences, and the minimization of active complaints to social services because of institutional racism with a tendency for some workers to brush complaints off.

Up to three-quarter's of incest victims are girls. There is a significant likelihood that these girls will grow up to have low self-esteem, have sexual dysfunction, report difficult social relationships with partners, have depression and are at risk for substance abuse.

Households with a history of incest behavior show some commonalities. There may be a confusion of boundaries and roles, poor impulse control (with possible drug abuse) within the home, generational abuse, families that are socially isolated, a weak mother, and a rigid, restrictive "father figure".

We have to open our eyes to the possibility of incest within our community. As mothers, we can not allow or tolerate any man or boy to sexually violate our children. Loneliness is not a substitute for what's right. If you suspect something 'shaky' happening under your roof, get him out immediately.

We can break the cycle of abuse, by encouraging individual or family therapy for those who need it. Tyler Perry recently released his burdens by telling his story on his website.
We need those kind of public admissions to put a face on a brave survivor.

Let's take the dialogue out of the cinema. Incest in our community needs to be discussed and ended.

Our children are too precious.

Check out Dr. Janet's blog "Real Talk" for more commentary on important issues.

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Along the lines of some of the comments made here, I recently overheard a converstion of a young lady teling her friends that she had just attended a baby shower for her friend who had just given birth to her Uncles second child...The girl she was speaking of was 17 years old, the uncle 30.

 

I have not seen the movie, but have read the book. It took me on a ride of emotions. I was molested by my brother, and brother-in-law. My sister hates me and I don't understand how she can. The book was touching and I can't even phathom living such a life of any of those girls. I thought my situation was bad, but I'm now thankful that that was all that happened to me?

 

Dam they even got lil Mongo down to a tee. The casting for this movie is great. I see Monique as the mom, and Gabby as Mary. Mongo was named so because she was a mongoloid lol

 

I want to support Tyler Perry, but I really do not want to see the movie. The subject is very depressing and tragic, but I will buy a ticket even if I don't actually go in to see the movie. I will more than likely go in though. It is an important film that addresses a very serious issue head-on. Also, someone please remove that idiotic comment made by Deena. Thank you.

 

I cannot wait to see "Precious"! I believe this is a topic like the author of the article says is long overdue for a discussion in the Black community and our families. I do know femaledfriends of mine who suffered incestuous behaviors from cousins, brothers and uncle and I know of one male who was abused by a female cousin. This happens in our community and we need to take our heads out of our butts and deal with it. I have worked with children who have been physically, mentally and sexually abused and they grow up and become adults with issues who either continue to perpetuate what was done to them to their children or suffer low self worth because of it. Precious is a story of hope and hope is what we need to give our young people. Our church is talking about taking our youth to see it. I hope we do.

 

I really wish people would read the book before seeing the movie. If you think the movie blew you away just wait until you read the book. The book has been out since 1996. Peacock is right if you read the book she was being molested as an infant.

 

Part of the problem of sexual abuse is that the mothers always take back the prepreator, how they could do that I would never know! When our children tell us someone is touching them inappopriately we should beleive them and kick out these men. I cannot tell you time and time again how the mothers always eventually take them back, i see it every day working as a child therapist. The mothers value the men taking care of them finacially as oppose to their own kids, what message does that send to the child. Sexual abuse is an epidemic and it reaches all cultures and races. This dialoge needs to continue so that we cannot be so trusting with men around our kids!

 

If any of you read the book you will remember that the horrible abuse started when she was an infant. While mom was breastfeeding the baby, the so called father was doing things to the baby. The mother did not stop it

 

If ANYONE puts their hands on my children inappropriately, he/she is asking to die and I will take their life immediately, end of story.

 

I'm not going to see this movie. I'm sick and tired of watching negative movies about the mistreatment of our beautiful black children. Any time a grown a$$ person has some kind of desire or control passion over a child, something's not right. And for you adults who know someone who's doing that to a child(ren), especially if they're yours, then you're just a guilty and you deserve whatever the hell you get!!!

 

Thank you for again opening the dialogue. I thanked God when Tyler Perry stepped out on faith and raised the issue. I thanked God when Oprah Winfrey stepped out on faith and raised the issue.

It is not so much that you end up distrusting any and every man around your child. That's not exactly the healthiest parenting that can happen. But it IS vitally important that you love your children enough to watch, look and listen. I think that had my educated, well educated parents, been more attuned, then I might have been rescued. As it happened, it seemed so . . . "appropriate" to me (started at age 5, multiple abusers in what seems to me to be a never-ending sequence).

There are broader implications here. There is much to be discussed. Thank you for opening the dialogue, stepping out on Faith.

 

There are probably millions of unreported cases of incest and sexual abuse suffered at the hands of relatives and people who were close to our families. We become "shamed" by the wrong things and refuse to report these horrific events. Men are ten times more likely to never tell they were molested. We keep coddling criminal behavior and that's why this abuse is prolonged. I had a 47 year old friend who was gunned down by her step-father with whom she had 2 children by, after she finally got away from the home. Her mother had the audacity to hold their funerals in the same church on the same day. How many of us don't know if our mothers were ever abused when they were growing up? This sickness is generational and if you do have a man living in your home you need to set the proper examples for your sons and daughters and either marry him or put him out. We've had too many friends who were shacking up with "trash" who in turn either had sex with or attempted to have sex with their sons and daughters. When you treat your sons and daughters like they are nothing, the person you are dealing with is observing this and thinks that it OK to molest your child. We are a population of "hurt" people and every wrong thing that we do to others is a mirror image of what was done to us. End The Cycle Of Abuse! We can no longer ignore the truth! Our secrets will continue to imprison us until we acknowledge the truth! There is a crisis in our communities and we must be a part of the solution to change the reality, not condone it!

 

Does anyone moderate these boards? Please remove Deena's ridiculous, inaccurate statement. (Denna, Posted November 6,2009 10:58 PM)

 

Let us not forget that women can be molested by other women as well...it's not always the men although they do take the majority. And we need to watch our children with even older kids because they take their abuse and try to make sense of it by turning it into a game of some sort and the abuse continues but now amongst cousins, sisters, brothers. The abuse is not always male to female or female to male sometimes it's female on female or male on male.

 

Its not so much an outsider that is the abuser but a close family friend, relative etc. It is the person our children are in contact with the most. The people who we don't suspect not just random boyfriends, friends. We as parents have to talk to our children and let them know what's wrong and what's right and that they can tell us anything. That we love them! Then on the other hand report and prosecute ANY one that does this horrid crime, not just sweep it under the rug or turn a blind eye. This is how we will combat this open wound in all communities. And pray that God would deliver these individuals and heal our children so that the cycle can END.

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