According to Gerhard Amendt, Professor of Gender and Generation Research
at the University of Bremen, representatives of the supposedly weaker sex
are every bit as violent as their partners. The researcher concludes that
women's shelters foster a devaluation of masculinity and should therefore
be replaced by familiy counseling centers.
http://www.welt.de/politik/deutschland/article4295642/Why-Women-s-Shelters-Are-Hotbeds-of-Misandry.html
10 August 2009
Essay
Why Women's Shelters Are Hotbeds of Misandry
By Gerhard Amendt
At the very moment when the operation of women's shelters in Germany has
been subjected to scientific study for the first time, the German
Bundestag's Family Affairs Committee has decided to review the question
of whether women's shelters should receive funding guarantees through the
German federal government. Given the political ideology of women's
shelters and the ramifications of such a step, this proposal should be
taken under serious review.
The answers to a number of questions are still outstanding. Have the
services performed in women's shelters stood the test of time? Are the
shelters operated in a professional manner, and have they moved on from
an ideology that views men as the perpetrators of violence and women as
nonviolent? Have women's shelters developed a professional understanding
of family conflicts that enables them to extend their efforts and include
all members of a violent family?
As usual, the slated funding guarantees are based on no more than the
convenient statistic that "every fourth woman will become the victim
of relationship violence at some time in her life." Since there is
no comparable data that would apply to men, the number is poorly suited
as legitimization for women's shelters. Up until now, reference was made
to the role of women as victims, and funding for such institutions was
automatically renewed. The effectiveness of the shelters was not
monitored.
At the same time, the statistic was used to popularize their work. In the
pre-Christmas season of 2007, a media campaign was launched in Austria
under the slogan "Verliebt. Verlobt. Verprügelt." ("In
Love. Engaged. Battered"). The German lottery also runs public
service spots pertaining to the matter. While all this has little bearing
on the circumstances under which men and women actually conduct their
lives, it couldn't document more clearly a bias against men.
When women's shelters were first being opened more than 20 years ago, the
object was to focus public attention on the experience of violence from a
woman's perspective. The founding of the Bremen women's shelter can be
traced to just such an intention on the part of the author, who at the
time endorsed the risky attempt to provide political lay self-help. This
coincided with the spirit of the times and its sensitivity to violence as
an aspect of women's lives - although it did not extend to men. In those
days, the author, too, was unwilling to imagine that women's shelters
would make a substantial contribution to a hostile polarization of
society into violent men as opposed to irenic women, thereby creating
many years of stagnation in gender discourse.
Ignorant Family Policies
Today, we know more than we did 25 years ago about the partnership
dynamics that trigger violence. More than two hundred studies in the USA
and Canada have produced findings that have added to public knowledge and
increased understanding in political circles. But it is precisely the
field of family policies that offers stubborn resistance to the very
essence of this research, namely, that women behave just as aggressively
and violently as men, and even slightly more often.
This also applies to their behavior toward their children. It is
particularly conspicuous during phases of a divorce that are high in
violence. All counseling agencies should be expected to help limit
violence so that children, above all, do not become actively or passively
involved in the violent episodes between their parents.
A major survey of divorced fathers conducted by the author in Bremen
showed that violence occurs in 30 percent of all divorces, with 1,800 men
reporting physical or psychological abuse by their partners. This
represents a significantly higher rate of incidence than the
approximately ten percent seen in relationships under everyday
conditions. Within the 30 percent of divorces where violence occurred,
sixty percent was initiated by the men's ex-wives or
ex-partners.
Our survey findings revealed that within the most conflict laden context
of an adult life, women, too, initiate violence. Only from the
perspective of women's shelters does violence emanate exclusively from
men. Instead of making divorce conflicts more tractable, women's shelters
actually exacerbate them.
The "every-fourth-
woman" statistic is therefore being used to
document the necessity of changing the Domestic Relations Law of 1998,
because allegedly the sole source of danger for children during a divorce
is violence stemming from their fathers. By pursuing this approach to
family policy, the advocates of women's shelters are attempting to use
prejudice as a means to rescind the right of children to both of their
parents.
The 60 percent of divorce-related violent incidents that are initiated by
women inflict great suffering on the fathers involved. Their statements
are genuine. Yet there is a difference between science and the
ideologically based enemy image adopted in women's shelters, and it lies
in the evaluation of the numbers. Whereas science attempts to resolve
conflict, the proponents of women's shelters book hostility toward men as
political success. Accordingly, we do not claim that women experience
episodes of violence in exactly the same way that men do. To make that
assertion, we would have to survey them, which we have not as yet done -
and neither have the "every-fourth-woman" agitators.
We have, however, arrived at an entirely different set of conclusions. We
assume that women experienced the abuse in a similar way as their
partners, namely, as stemming from the man. American studies confirm
this. But if both parties are mutually accusing each other of starting
the violence, then what is actually true? Both statements represent
subjective truths. Generally, neither of the parties is lying. Unlike
during their happier times, however, both of them now feel aggrieved and
are no longer able to communicate with each other verbally. They lapse
into lethal silence, scream at each other, or resort to physical
blows.
In such cases, marriage and family counselors can help to restore the
couples destroyed ability to communicate. Once the partners reestablish a
common language, they have the option of entering into a process of
reconciliation or choosing to separate with respect. They and, above all,
their children do not lose their positive experiences from the
past.
Women's shelters are incapable of providing this kind of professional
intervention because of their ideology: they view a man as every woman's
enemy. For them, it is a foregone conclusion that women do not engage in
violent acts. According to the ideology espoused in women's shelters,
this is always a given, and mutual talks between a woman and her partner
are therefore superfluous. To this end, women are politically manipulated
into a victim role and men are collectively denigrated. Consequently, the
residents of women's shelters are allowed to experience themselves only
as victims and not as participants in a relationship that has turned
violent.
Women's shelters represent a world where the joy of life is missing, and
efforts to resolve relationship conflicts have been replaced by
existential despondency or even self-hatred. Misandry appears to offer a
way out. This oppressive atmosphere surely accounts for the high rate of
employee turnover at women's shelters and the dissension within work
teams. It enables one to understand recent research conducted in the USA
which found that women are increasingly steering clear of shelters
despite the severity of their conflicts. They do not want to be forced
into a world that despises men. Their own problems are burden
enough.
The advocates of women's shelters are unfazed by objections that they are
compromising the ethics of the helping professions, for professionalism
is not their goal. On the contrary, they self-confidently label
themselves as "partisan," which is synonymous with viewing
women as victims who face sinister male powers and an indifferent public.
Professional ethics have been deliberately replaced by political motives.
And that is by no means selfless. It gives them a narcissistic high and a
sense of moral superiority over the rest of the world. It is a mixture of
elitism and pretended self-sacrifice.
In the founding years of women's shelters, this elitism functioned as a
gateway for the disparagement of existing professional organizations that
were sponsored, for example, by Protestant churches, the Catholic Church,
or the German state governments.
In that respect, little has changed. The proponents of women's shelters
believe that their combative, anti-patriarchal rhetoric will have a
greater impact than professionally trained counselors and therapists.
Most of them seem unimpressed that they are not genuinely helping those
who seek counseling, because they attribute their failure to a lack of
political insight on the part of the women. Their sense of mission
appears to provide greater narcissistic gratification than the tough,
daunting task of working with violent families who have elevated physical
expression to the language of everyday life and otherwise no longer have
much to say about each other.
The Feminist Ideology: A Hotbed of Misandry
Granted, there may be shelters that have jettisoned their ideological
ballast, but even the term "women's shelter" itself always
implies the disastrous ideology of radical feminism, whereby
relationships between men and women are characterized by their respective
status as victim and perpetrator. According to that, women can do nothing
and men are completely in charge. Thus, women's shelters perpetuate the
destruction of communication within partnerships as a political project
within the gender discussion.
The conclusions are obvious. The concept of ideologically based women's
shelters is no longer needed. What families with violence problems
urgently need is a network of counseling centers that can provide
unbiased and nondiscriminatory assistance to all of the parties involved.
For family violence is systemic and psychodynamic in nature.
If a woman strikes her husband, and the husband strikes his wife, then
there is a high probability that they are also abusing their children.
And children who have been struck, boys and girls alike, are in turn more
likely as adults to strike their own children or partners. This sets the
course for the reemergence of intra-family violence in the following
generation. Society continuously accumulates a growing potential for
violence. And mothers who do not strike their children, but instead leave
the task to the children's father, are no less integral parts of the
scheme of violence - as is the parent who simply remains silent in
response to the entire situation.
Family Counseling Centers against Domestic Violence
Instead of women's shelters, what we need in the future are
specialized counseling centers for families with unresolved violent
conflicts. These would be staffed by well-trained men and women who
cooperate based on professional ethical standards. They would intervene
directly during violent family crises and, in extreme cases, provide a
temporary safe haven for men and children and women, to the extent this
has not already become unnecessary due to a personal protection
order.
We need family counseling centers that can step in and have an impact at
the very source of the ongoing intergenerational cycle of violence. A
public that is dumbfounded by the apathy of youth welfare offices and
horrified by school murders and the corpses of children should approve
government funding only if those who seek counseling are assured to
receive effective assistance. Counseling and therapy simply must be kept
free of political ideologies. The only place where this does not apply is
in undemocratic societies.
Likewise, we need to initiate a new discussion at colleges and
universities. Politcal correctness has given rise to a prohibition on
thinking about women in terms of aggression and violence, and this must
be confronted with the findings of international research.
About the Author
Gerhard Amendt is Professor of Gender and Generation Research. His
most recent book, "I did not divorce my kids!" How Fathers Deal
with Family Break-Ups was published in 2008. His forthcoming publication
is a text book on intra-family violence. The author can be reached at
amendt@uni-bremen.de or through his homepage:
http://www.igg.uni-bremen.de