Misplaced Pages

Ritual abuse-torture: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 12:11, 9 July 2009 editWLU (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers52,243 editsm Reverted edits by Zippelly (talk) to last version by Dbachmann← Previous edit Revision as of 03:21, 18 July 2009 edit undoWpd857 (talk | contribs)1 edit add information to pageNext edit →
Line 1: Line 1:
“Ritual abuse-torture” (sometimes called “RAT”) is defined as “is one form of non-state actor torture and is about pedophilic parents, families, guardians, and like-minded adults who abuse, torture, and traffic children using organizing ritualisms.” <ref name=RAT></ref><ref name=definitions></ref>.
#REDIRECT]

==History==
In 1991 the Minister for the Status of Women appointed panel members of The Canadian Panel on Violence Against Women. They went to all parts of Canada, met with 4,000 people in over 100 places. Seven hundred reports were submitted to the panel. Several major themes identified by panel reports included the fact that “ritual abuse cults/groups were both intergenerational and extra-familial,” child victims were forced to take vows of secrecy, “programming triggers were put in victims when they were children, children were given “mind-control programming using hypnosis, mind-altering drugging, and the implantation of trigger messages to prevent them from disclosing their ritual abuse ordeals,” children were tortured repeatedly with “pain, deprivation, death threats, harassment, and intimidation,” victims discussed the money earned by ritual abuse torturers from videoing or filming the violence, forced prostitution and drug trafficking of victims, that active cult members were continuing to harm and threaten adult victims in many ways to stay quiet, mostly with death threats if they disclose ritual abuse occurrences and that perpetrators worked in organized ways to discount victim accounts of ritual abuse-torture<ref name=research></ref>.

==Research==
The research on ritual abuse-torture was started by two women from Nova Scotia, Canada, Jeanne Sarson and Linda MacDonald. They began their work with ritual abuse-torture victims in 1993<ref name=biography></ref>. In 1998, they began working on what they call “kitchen table” research with female survivors of ritual abuse-torture<ref name=biography/>.
Sarson and McDonald have also published other works more recently in the field. <ref name=encyc> Sarson, J.; McDonald L. (2007). Ritual Abuse-Torture in Families. in Jackson, N. (ed) (2007). Encyclopedia of Domestic Violence, p. 704, Routledge.</ref> They have made several presentations at the United Nations, including the “Torture of Canadian Women by Non-State Actors in the Private Sphere: A Shadow Report” made in March 2008. The report included women’s testimonies of different forms of torture as well as reproductive tortures.<ref name=UN></ref> Additional research by Sarson and MacDonald included the publication of case studies that identified ten issues of violence that were part of a pattern of group RAT victimization, finding that this victimization happened in infancy or slightly later. <ref name=Childmal>Sarson, J. (2008). "Ritual Abuse-Torture Within Families/Groups," Child Maltreatment, 16, 419-438.</ref>
==References==
<references/>

==Bibliography==
* Sarson, J. & MacDonald, L. (2008). Journal of Aggression, Maltreatment & Trauma, 16(4), pp. 419-438.

==External links==
*
*

Revision as of 03:21, 18 July 2009

“Ritual abuse-torture” (sometimes called “RAT”) is defined as “is one form of non-state actor torture and is about pedophilic parents, families, guardians, and like-minded adults who abuse, torture, and traffic children using organizing ritualisms.” .

History

In 1991 the Minister for the Status of Women appointed panel members of The Canadian Panel on Violence Against Women. They went to all parts of Canada, met with 4,000 people in over 100 places. Seven hundred reports were submitted to the panel. Several major themes identified by panel reports included the fact that “ritual abuse cults/groups were both intergenerational and extra-familial,” child victims were forced to take vows of secrecy, “programming triggers were put in victims when they were children, children were given “mind-control programming using hypnosis, mind-altering drugging, and the implantation of trigger messages to prevent them from disclosing their ritual abuse ordeals,” children were tortured repeatedly with “pain, deprivation, death threats, harassment, and intimidation,” victims discussed the money earned by ritual abuse torturers from videoing or filming the violence, forced prostitution and drug trafficking of victims, that active cult members were continuing to harm and threaten adult victims in many ways to stay quiet, mostly with death threats if they disclose ritual abuse occurrences and that perpetrators worked in organized ways to discount victim accounts of ritual abuse-torture.

Research

The research on ritual abuse-torture was started by two women from Nova Scotia, Canada, Jeanne Sarson and Linda MacDonald. They began their work with ritual abuse-torture victims in 1993. In 1998, they began working on what they call “kitchen table” research with female survivors of ritual abuse-torture.

Sarson and McDonald have also published other works more recently in the field. They have made several presentations at the United Nations, including the “Torture of Canadian Women by Non-State Actors in the Private Sphere: A Shadow Report” made in March 2008. The report included women’s testimonies of different forms of torture as well as reproductive tortures. Additional research by Sarson and MacDonald included the publication of case studies that identified ten issues of violence that were part of a pattern of group RAT victimization, finding that this victimization happened in infancy or slightly later.

References

  1. Persons against ritual abuse
  2. Ritual abuse torture definitions
  3. Ritual abuse torture research
  4. ^ Ritual abuse torture biography
  5. Sarson, J.; McDonald L. (2007). Ritual Abuse-Torture in Families. in Jackson, N. (ed) (2007). Encyclopedia of Domestic Violence, p. 704, Routledge.
  6. Torture of Canadian Women by Non-State Actors in the Private Sphere: A Shadow Report
  7. Sarson, J. (2008). "Ritual Abuse-Torture Within Families/Groups," Child Maltreatment, 16, 419-438.

Bibliography

External links