| |
 
|
May 2008 - Erin Isings
There's a common misconception
that men abuse women because they can't control their anger. Not true,
say our experts. It's not about anger, it's about control and power, says
Wheeler. A person can be angry and have anger issues, without being an
abuser. For example, I could be a very angry person, but not choose to
be abusive towards my partner. We have to be very careful about chalking
abuse, power and control down to anger. What we know is that abusers tend
to be very controlled people. They're very nice out in public, they do
very well in terms of controlling themselves at work, but when they get
home, they target their family. So that says to me that they are in full
control and they are choosing to exert power and control over a certain
person.
Walker says the same analogy applies to the myth that abusive men are
drunk or high, mentally ill or stressed out at work. What we can say with
some certainty is men abuse women for no other reason than women's gender,
and they feel they have a right to because there are ownership issues
over women. They feel that they can abuse women because society will allow
for it, and it is their way to gain and maintain power and control over
women in their lives.
Who are the men who abuse women?
These men are judges, lawyers, doctors, garbage collectors and newspaper
men and journalists. These men are people who live next door to you, who
live across the street from you, they teach our children. These men come
from all walks of life, all cultures, all religious backgrounds, all financial
backgrounds, says Walker. Woman abuse is not divided by race or culture
or religion or affluence. All women can be abused for no other reason
than their gender. But she stresses that most men aren't abusive. The
majority of men are good men, and those good men are part of our efforts
to end women abuse.
What is the solution?
Walker says children who grow up in abusive homes often become abusers
or victims of abuse in their adult relationships.
If it is a learned behaviour, then it can be unlearned, which is why we
want to get to kids at a young age and talk to them about appropriate
behaviours in relationships.
We need to hold (abusers) accountable through longer sentences and more
serious consequences for domestic violence. We still look at it as something
very private… I think until we can hold abusers accountable, the
problem is not going to stop, says Wheeler.
|