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The boys who remember and the school that forgot
antrim |
miscellaneous |
opinion/analysis
Tuesday March 09, 2004 15:42 by Celeste
'The boys who remember and the School that forgot' a documentary shown last night, told the harrowing story of how the sexual abuse of young boys was brushed under the carpet by a Top ulster private establishment school Campbell College. One father told how he has battled for years to bring the school to account for the legacy of emotional and physical scars his son suffered due to sexual abuse.
A once happy bright, confident 10 year old who entered Campbell college as a child boarder, was left a broken, suicidal and disturbed teenager, who attempted suicide and self harm on numerous occasions after suffering sexaul abuse whilst a 10 year old boarder. The father told how his son's behaviour changed after becoming a boarder at Campbell college, how he had to restrain his son from jumping out of a third storey window on return home from Campbell college.
Graham Nieto a former pupil at Campbell College told how he had witnessed a 13 year old prefect classmate sexually abuse 10 year old boarders in his care on numerous occasions, and had dragged the abuser to the headmasters office to inform the headmaster of what was going on.
And that all the school did was to remove the 13 yr old abuser who was the son of a soldier from his position of responsibility over the 10 year old boarders, after which there was no mention of the matter to pupils or parents. The abuser was not expelled from the school or referred to social services for treatment. The headmaster dismissed the sexual abuse, as teenage experimentation.
Those pupils who suffered sexual abuse at the hands of the 13yr old heard no more about the matter. Parents were not informed of what had happened. Social services were not informed of the serious sexual abuse, a teacher was not designated to investigate the matter and to ensure the welfare of the pupils, abused pupils were not referred to the social services. The abuser only recieved an adult caution from the police, which is inapropriate compared with recent case such as that of 13 year old sex abuser from Ballymena called Bateson who was recently given a custodial sentence for his years of sexual abuse of his younger neighbour.
The father of one of the abused boys wrote to all the members of Campbell college school governors to highlight his son's plight but not one of the Governors responded. The boys who were abused at Campbell college are campaigning to make the school accountable for its actions and transparent its dealings with pupils and parents in the aftermath of the sexual abuse at Campbell college.
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Jump To Comment: 1Sending young children to boarding school offends 11 articles of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
By George Monbiot. Published in The Guardian 26th March 1998.
Seldom has the role of the social worker been so clearly spelt out. On Monday the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) released a report arguing that adoption should be used as a first resort for children abused or neglected by their families. Childcare professionals were criticised for their reluctance to place working class children with middle-class families.
Social workers have long suspected that they are employed to police the parenting of the underclass, while turning a blind eye to the abuses perpetrated by their social superiors. Middle class families whose children suffer behavioural abnormalities tend to be referred to the child psychiatrist, not the social worker. Partly as a result, we continue to believe that working class people make far worse parents than middle class people, and should be regulated accordingly.
This judgement, which underpins the IEA report, is false. It persists only because Britain's most overt and qualmless form of child abuse is mysteriously and systematically ignored. Perhaps because this peculiar cruelty is the preserve of the middle and upper classes, it has never been the cause of referral to the child protection register, though both neglect and emotional abuse are clearly demonstrable. It is, if you haven't guessed already, the barbaric tradition of dispatching children as young as eight, seven, or, in the case of one friend of mine, three and a half, to boarding school. This practice offends no fewer than 11 articles of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, which Britain signed in 1991. Yet it attracts scarcely a murmur of concern.
I have an interest to declare. Good at work, bad at sport, with heterodox opinions and a crippling stammer, I would have been bullied at any school, but at boarding school the bullying was remorseless and inescapable. Sometimes it lasted through much of the night. To have "sneaked" would only have made it worse, so from the age of eight I was thrown upon my own puny resources. It is hard to believe that the teachers didn't know what was happening: perhaps they thought it was "character building".
Less visible, but just as prevalent, was sexual abuse: new boys were routinely groped and occasionally sodomised by the prefects. Sexual assault was and possibly still is a feature of prep school life as innate as fried bread and British bulldogs.
While some seemed to thrive in this environment, many of us did all we could to get away. One boy escaped at every possible opportunity, sometimes running as far as 15 miles from the school, before the mysterious tentacles of surveillance and collusion that seem to surround this system captured and returned him. Some schools retained boys and girls during the holidays, when their parents were working abroad or simply couldn't be bothered.
I hope this doesn't sound like special pleading from a poor little no-longer-rich boy. It shouldn't be hard to see that everyone in Britain suffers from the brutalisation of the elite. Few of its victims have grown up to fight the system which gave rise to these abuses; many more, like the uncaged bird which returns to its perch, defend and promote it. Empowered by the sociopathy in which they were schooled, they visit their agony upon other people. One had only to look at the retributive misfits of the Thatcher cabinets to see how dangerous is the damage done to the captive offspring of the ruling class.
Our silence on this issue is astonishing. The NSPCC has never compiled a report on private boarding schools, has no data and no information. Prep school children are shielded from social workers; the teachers, like everyone else in this system, close ranks. Old boys argue that the harshness of their schooling made them the men they are. In truth, early boarding is no more character building than any other form of brutalization. Private boarding schools strive to turn every boy into a monstrous Coriolanus, every girl into a mannered debutante. Character emerges despite, not because of, this system.
The insatiate middle class, having preyed upon its own, now demands the children of the unemployed. Yet, if any parenting patterns need examination, they are surely those which are currently least investigated. The IEA argues against taking children into council care, and rightly so. But how can this position be reconciled with the brutal incarceration of tens of thousands of small children, as a result of a different, and decorous, form of parental neglect?
26 Mar 1998