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Information About DV

DV & Children

 

DV and Children

The Problem

We know much about woman abuse. We know much about child abuse. But if we are to seriously address either one, we must recognize the links between these two forms of domestic violence.

While one form of abuse can certainly occur without the other, the tragic reality is that anytime a mother is abused by her husband/partner, her children are also affected in both overt and subtle ways:

When a mother is abused:

Studies Reveal

What To Do?

When we suspect child abuse, we should also suspect woman abuse; when we see battered mothers, we must also reach out to their children. Because woman abuse is child abuse, the children of an abused woman are also in need of our careful loving attention. We must remember these interconnections as we attempt to eradicate family violence through services, education and public policy.

Our responses as service providers, teachers, community members, friends and family must be geared to protect these children from physical abuse, to help them recognize that they are not responsible for the violence in their homes, and to help them find ways to grow past their present trauma into healthy adults. We must help them avoid the vicious trap of learned patterns by teaching and modeling nonviolent methods of conflict resolution and by helping them express their feelings in healthy, respectful ways.

Those working to end domestic violence should be supported in their efforts to develop services that work with children of battered women as primary clients. The children's needs for support and emotional and psychological attention should be recognized.

Families and friends can intervene when we see or suspect abuse of women or children. We can refuse to accept the deadly myth that we should mind our own business and keep out of private family matters. We must recognize that our silence helps reinforce the shame and pain battered women and children have so long felt, and encourages a new generation of batterers.

Social service and child protective agencies should be ever watchful for all victims of domestic violence. They should have information, and be able to provide services and referrals to aid a battered mother as well as her abused or neglected children.

What Schools Can Do

Only by acknowledging the often silent pain of the children in a battered woman's life, by reaching out to all the victims of domestic violence, can we achieve success in our efforts to bring home the dream of a peaceful family life for all women and children.