Relationships that Destroy
This week, God, by His providence, brought me into a place most people have purposed to avoid. I sat among a family whose loved one had been killed by her boyfriend, the father of their three children. It happened in June of 2023.
Though strangers, we became united in our resolve to see justice. We met, wept, and prayed on the sixth floor in Courtroom Five at the Walter L. Bailey Criminal Justice Center, better known as the Shelby County Jail at 201 Poplar.
I am reminded by Oswald Chambers in his devotional, My Utmost for His Highest,
“All your circumstances are in the hands of God, and therefore, you don’t ever have to think they are unnatural or unique. God brings you to places, among people, and into certain conditions to accomplish a definite purpose”.
My purpose? I was a participant in the trial this week because My Cup of Tea’s cameras captured ninety-five percent of the deadly deed. The murder scene was in clear view next door. I was at The House when the guns reported 6 shots. I met the investigators and nine of the Memphis Police Department officers that day. We served all of them tea as the crime tape was strewn on our neighbors’ front yard among the crowd of curious.
Until this week, I knew nothing of the victim, the perpetrator, their connection to each other or the depth of character of her devoted family. I had never met the two district attorneys, nor the presiding judge for the trial. They absorbed my time and my thoughts for five long days and sleepless nights. Now, they are embedded in my emotionally charged view of domestic violence.
The victim had been entangled with her boyfriend for ten years. An unhealthy attachment had formed through the cycle of abuse. Most likely, complex psychological, practical, and social layers cemented her isolation away from support systems, family, and friends who could help.
The National Domestic Violence Hotline reports that an average of 24 people per minute are assaulted physically or sexually or stalked by an intimate partner. That’s 12 million people per year, 4 out of 5 are women. Memphis and Shelby County account for nearly 17,000 of those cases. One in 4 women and 1 in 7 men have been the victim of severe physical violence by an intimate partner. In the 20 cities with the highest incidences of aggravated domestic violence, 29% to 53% of cases go unreported. It is nearly certain that each of us knows someone.
The boyfriend was convicted Friday, and he will spend the rest of his life in jail without parole. We beg the question, “Why didn’t she just leave?” Tragically, that question places the burden on the victim. A better question is why the abuser chooses to be violent, and what are the barriers that make leaving him so difficult? I work among women who have the answers to the first question.
Among the women currently employed at My Cup of Tea, nine are survivors of domestic violence. The disruptive details of the murder case have profoundly deepened my understanding of how courageous those nine women truly are. I am celebrating their strength and resilience and am even more committed to supporting their progress in healing and empowerment. Each has stepped away from the endemic dead end of relationships that destroy. Specifically:
· Acute poverty is often the outcome of women who have lived to change their partnership with violent abusers.
· Dependence on government assistance becomes necessary and deflating.
· Fear of losing custody of children because of mental health and depression shrinks her stamina.
· The stigma and stress of single parenting devalue her reputation among two-parent families.
· She must ignore the immense cultural pressures to keep the family together.
There are many more.
My preoccupation with offering dignity to our employees has overlooked the dignity they have already achieved by choosing to leave behind the corrosive past and bravely venture into the unknown. It has taken immense courage to turn away from and boldly pray for new possibilities. Each step toward the uncharted providentially brought them to the embrace of My Cup of Tea in Orange Mound. Each is a testament in truth of resilience and hope.
What I once thought we might offer in dignified work and community is far less valued than the safety and protection we command in their behalf.
If you or someone you know is experiencing domestic violence, help is available. You are not alone.
- National Domestic Violence Hotline (US & Canada): 1-800-799-7233 www.thehotline.org
- National Coalition Against Domestic Violence (NCADV): www.ncadv.org
- RAINN (Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network): 1-800-656-4673 www.rainn.org
In Memphis/Shelby County:
- · Crime Victims and Rape Crisis Center 901-222-3950