By Kelly Clark
October 11, 2010
The news that over 1000 teachers in Kenya have been dismissed in recent years for sexually abusing girls is stunning. Read The Article Here.
No matter how long I do this work, I never get used to such things—and especially not to such numbers. If you assume that, on average, each teacher involved had 10 victims—a conservative number, according to psychological literature—there are at least 10,000 girls affected. But wait: we know that only a handful ever get caught or reported: 10% would be a very high number. But even if it is that, there would be as many as 100,000 girls abused. Again, the problem seems to be of staggering proportions.
This dynamic is similar to what we learned in the sex abuse trial of the Boy Scouts in Portland this past spring. We had over 1200 “Perversion files” introduced into evidence, all concerning Boy Scout leaders sexually abusing boys, just from 1965-85. Expert testimony established that, for such an environment, each such Boy Scout leader would have, on average, 10-20 victims, and that, perhaps 10% of all sex abuse in the Boy Scouts would ever be reported—a very optimistic number, the experts agreed. But if you do that math, it means that somewhere between120,000 and 240,000 boys were sexually abused in Boy Scouting, JUST from 1965-85. And we know that the Boy Scouts have been keeping their “confidential Perversion files” on child sexual abusers since 1925. As I have said repeatedly since the trial, I am personally convinced that the problem of child sexual abuse in the Boy Scouts is at least as serious, if not worse, than the sexual abuse problem in the Catholic Church.