ISRAEL I Best Wishes For A Healthy and Happy New Year Child Protection: Meeting The Challenge SHELLEY KLEIMAN Special to The Jewish News n the opening day of the International Conference on Child Abuse held in Jerusalem in November 1991, a 32-year-old Haifa policeman was charged with assault after banging his eight-year-old son's head , against a wall. Unfortunate- ly the incident was not mere • coincidence; such reports in- creasingly appear in the Israeli press. Close to 25,000 children (1.5 percent of the child popula- tion) are abused in Israel ; every year, according to a re- cent survey by the American Joint Distribution Commit- tee. While every case is regrettable, Israel's statistics are far below those of other developed countries. But fears of a possible increase have spurred Israel into legislative I action. And Israel is, in fact, now among the most advanc- ed in the world in terms of legislation to protect the child. The three-day event, the first of its kind, drew over 250 participants from 14 coun- tries, many of them leading • experts in their fields. The eighty sessions ranged from the various forms of preven- c, tion and handling to medical and legal issues. Dr. Hanita Zimrin, director of ELI, the Israel Association for the Pro- / tection of Children, is heartened by a mounting public awareness of the pro- blem: "Until recently, child abuse was greeted in Israel with outright denial," she says. "When I raised the topic ( 20 years ago, I was dismissed as a crazy woman." This assumption that Jewish parents don't abuse their children was so strong that up until two years ago, according to Dr. Yitzhak Kad- man, executive director of the National Council for the Child in Israel, "Child abuse was considered an internal ;---= family matter and not even classified as a criminal of- fense." Today, child abuse is a felony carrying stiffer sentences when the offender is the child's primary caretaker. - According to Dr. Kadman, the turning point occurred in 1989 following the death of three-year-old Moran Danamiam from Tiberias, whose uncle had physically abused her, eventually caus- ing her death. The incident caused a public outcry and within nine months a series of changes and amendments were enacted in the Israeli law. The Mandatory Reporting Law obliges parents and child-care professionals, as well as neighbors, to report even a suspicion of child abuse either to the police or a social welfare agent. Says Dr. Kadman: "It is now a legal and not simply moral imperative to report such cases." Failure to report is a criminal offense. According to Miriam Faber, head of the Social Welfare Ministry's department of child protective services, the number of cases reported over the past two years has doubl- ed, and in some areas has in- creased five-fold. This is in part due to the tremendous publicity the law has receiv- ed. The law, however, has opened up a Pandora's box, as teachers, health-care officials and parents are coming to the slow realization that child abuse cannot remain behind closed doors. In fact, 80 per- cent of the calls to ELI's hotline are made by the perpetrators themselves. Children under 14 are pro- tected by Israeli law both from police interrogation and from testifying in court. A closed interview is carried out by a special youth inter- rogator, who may even testify in court on the child's behalf. Thirty-six years have passed since this law's enactment, and according to Tamar Morag, legal director of the National Council for the Child, "In spite of having undergone a number of amendments, it remains a highly original piece of legislation. Its main innova- tion is that it excludes heresay evidence and denies the right to cross- examination," says Ms. Morag, "something which ex- ists nowhere else." Other innovations in the law empower the court to remove the offender from the courtroom when a child does testify in court and order a violent family member out of the home, as opposed to the more common practice of removing the child from the threatening environment. Notes Jerusalem attorney and pro-child activist Philip Marcus, "These laws are con- sidered highly progressive by legislators and lawyers in other countries." ❑ WZPS "Kirk Nemer is uniquely qualified to be an outstanding new state representative. We urge you to support Kirk, he is the change we need in Lansing!" ‘. ),-4;4•010 United States Senator Member of Congress COURAGE, COMPASSION COMMON SENSE KIRK SEND A FRESH NEW VOICE TO LANSING' Paid for by People for Kirk Nemer. 6726 Ped Cedar Lane West Bloomfield MI 48387 MONT BLANC PENS $99.00 2 BRUSH 40% OFF SUGG. 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