ABUSE CENTERS DON'T
HELP MEN
by Philip Cook
Author of
Abused Men : The Hidden Side of Domestic Violence

"I spent hours calling, saying 'This is
what happened. The police refuse to take a report. I need a
restraining order. How can I get her arrested?' They said, 'Well, we
don't know what to say to a man.' Or, "Well, we just help women.'"
Stanley Green's experience is typical
of men physically abused by their wives who attempt to call domestic
violence shelters. Green says he suffered years of abuse and finally
decided to seek help after a beating in a car. While he was in his
seat belt, his wife allegedly used a cell phone to hit him and then
jumped on him and kicked him, resulting in a fractured rib and
numerous other injuries. Most abused men however, don't bother calling
shelters or domestic violence crisis lines because they rightly assume
they won't get help. If they knew that domestic violence shelters and
crisis lines would not discriminate and treat men fairly, they would
call. Minister Joe Cogan, after police allegedly failed to arrest his
wife for throwing a knife at him and cutting him the shoulder, says he
"very definitely" would have called such a service: "It seems as
though I had no one to really turn to. To say, you know, 'How can I
cope with this?' I felt as though I was out in a boat in the ocean all
by myself. I saw so many opportunities for help for women in my
situation. I don't deny them that opportunity, but the other side is,
I felt I had been an abused husband, and an abused parent, with really
nowhere to turn."
Green sums up the situation facing male
victims of domestic violence: "I don't know of any state in the nation
where it's legal for an agency that accepts government funds to
discriminate on the basis of sex. Maybe you could argue for a separate
but equal basis, though that's a very tenuous argument, too. How can a
feminist, or anyone, argue for sex discrimination? Yet that's exactly
what's going on in shelters and crisis lines across the country."
Opponents of gender neutral services or
language say it is too difficult to provide services for both sexes,
but in fact, there are a few shelters like the Valley Oasis Crisis
Center in Lancaster, California that easily accommodate both genders
without conflict. In Charlottesville, Virginia and Kelso, Washington
for example, gender neutral crisis lines do not provide on site
shelter, but do help arrange transitional housing and discount hotel
rooms, as well as provide traditional counseling, court advocacy and
some support groups. Any existing shelter or crisis line could help
males with these types of services, but discrimination and often
outright hostility towards the male victim is the norm.
When Erin Pizzey opened the world's
first shelter for battered women in 1972, and wrote the first modern
book on domestic violence, "Scream Quietly, or the Neighbors Will
Hear" in 1974, government, police, and the news media predicted that
her shelter would stand empty. No one would come, because these women
were so few in number and were being adequately served by exiting
institutions. Pizzey's shelter of course, and others that followed
were soon filled to overflowing. The same situation exists for men
today, with the important difference that an even larger entrenched
structure has successfully denied services to victims. Pizzey herself
understands this: "For the last twenty-five years, a powerful women's
movement, has managed to silence anyone who dare question their mis-appropriation
of funds and their refusal to accept that millions of men have been
denied their legal rights."
The Federal Violence Against Women Act
with it's emphasis on providing large amounts of taxpayer dollars for
women-only domestic violence services aids the current sex
discrimination and denial of services. In fact, funds are being used
not only to discriminate in provision of services, but also to promote
the idea that men don't need the services! It is also quite plainly, a
violation of the 14th. amendment's equal protection clause.
Even with over forty published studies,
(many funded by government arms like the National Institute of Mental
Health), conclusively proving that domestic violence has a large
number of male victims, and the same sources used in government
hearings to show the incidence of female victims, there are few
politicians courageous enough to vote against the VAWA act, or even
give its funding criteria the kind of scrutiny routinely given to
other programs. The unprecedented government legalized and richly
funded sex discrimination continues. Erin Pizzey says it should come
as no surprise: "Most of the shelters aren't there to help women come
to terms with what is happening in their lives. They are there to fund
their conferences and their statements against men."
This may be a bit of an overstatement
on Pizzey's part (but then her home was shot at by advocates who
wanted to silence her) as there are many shelters that do care and
provide excellent services for women victims. However, anyone who
wants to change things faces an uphill battle, as Janis Dimmitt the
Executive Director of the Kelso, Washington Emergency Shelter
explains: "The road to enlightenment has been a rocky one. We are
looked upon as being friends of the perpetrators rather than friends
of the victims, because all males are supposed to be evil and bad.
This attitude prevails in many shelters."
According to reports from thousands of
women in violent relationships current government policy and services
are based on only half the truth, as they report that half the time
they hit first, and a quarter of the time, only they were violent.
If Pizzey and others are right,
powerful forces are intent in keeping the the truth about domestic
violence hidden. It will take attorneys and politicians with uncommon
courage willing to challenge these forces in order to establish fair
and equitable programs that will in the end provide more meaningful
results in the battle against domestic violence for women, children,
and men.
Philip W. Cook is the author of
Abused Men : The Hidden Side of Domestic Violence (Praeger).
He frequently lectures on the subject around the U.S. and has appeared
on "Sally," the "Crier Report, " "MSNBC" and other nationally
broadcast programs. He can be contacted at PO Box 951 Tualatin, OR
97062. or through the web site at: www.abusedmen.com .

Copyright 1999 Philip
Cook, all rights reserved