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Editorial
Reviews:
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TRANSCENDING:
Reflections of Crime Victims
portraits and interviews by Howard Zehr
- Are victims of crime destined to have the rest of their
lives shaped by the crimes they've experienced? ("What
happened to the road map for living the rest of my life?"
asks a women whose mother was murdered.
- Will victims of crime always be bystanders in the justice
system? ("We're having a problem forgiving the judge
and the system," says the father of a young man killed
in prison.)
- Is it possible for anyone to transcend such a comprehensively
destructive, identity-altering occurrence? ("I thought,
I'm going to run until I'm not angry anymore," expresses
a woman who was assaulted.)
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Howard
Zehr presents the protraits and the courageous stories
of 39 victims of violent crime in Transcending:
Reflections of Crime Victims. Many of these people were
twice-wounded: once at the hand of an assailant; the second
time by the courts, where there is no legal provision for
a victim's participation.
"My
hope," says Zehr, "is that this book might hand
down a rope to others who have experienced such tragedies
and traumas, and that it might allow all who read it to live
on the healing edge."
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Editorial
Reviews:
Through
words and portraits, Howard Zehr presents stories of recovery,
rebuilding and transcendence of men and women who have survived
violent crime. January 07, 2002
Camera Works
showcases new forms of storytelling by merging the best of print
journalism, photojournalism and documentary filmmaking with the
interactive properties of the World Wide Web.
Click to
view their wonderful presentation
of Transcending: Reflections of Crime Victims.
Camera
Works
Washington Post
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"This
book is essential reading."
"I came
away impressed by the simplicity of Dr. Zehr's approach in presenting
the victims as they wish to be seen photographically, and then
letting them express their storeis in their own words. I defy
anyone who reads this book to remain indifferent to the issues
it raises.
"I applaud
Dr. Zehr's efforts to bring clarity to this process by offering
victims a chance to tell fully their side of the story.
"This
book is a powerful wake-up call on so many levels. We no longer
have an excuse for avioiding the issues this book raises. I hope
it can be used to enlighten, inform, and encourage discourse about
the kind of society we want to inhabit."
Tom
Kennedy
Washington Post
(former Editor of Photography for National Geographic)
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Longtime
criminal justice worker Zehr became a creative exponent of restorative
justice, which focuses first on crime victims and their self-defined
needs and second on bringing offenders to understand and take
responsibility for the harm they have done, after concluding that
current U.S. criminal justice systems ignored victims. This book
of testimonies and photographs of some direct victims of crime
and many spouses, parents, children, and siblings of victims responds
primarily to the prime focus of restorative justice, though the
secondary focus comes up in the statements of several persons
who have met or want to meet their or their loved ones' attackers.
Zehr says he hasn't editorially skewed the depositions, and apart
from lacking verbal tics and bad spoken grammar, they ring utterly
true. Most subjects report how crucial their religious faith was
to dealing successfully with the rage, despair, and brokenness
that engulfed them, and many remark how poorly the courts, in
particular, served them. Moving and awe-inspiring, this is very
high-order advocacy literature.
Ray
Olson
American
Library Association
All rights reserved.
Copyright ©
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Can
a book about crime victims be described as beautiful?
In the case of Transcending, by Howard Zehr, the answer
is a resounding yes. Transcending is a beautiful collection
of personal essays and striking photography that explores the
intimate feelings of victims of violent crime.
Dr. Zehr,
an internationally known advocate of restorative justice, proves
again with this book that he is a leader in this area. More than
many of his colleagues, Zehr holds steadfast to his belief in
the importance of victims rights and needs. While his contemporaries
are inclined to move quickly into the benefits of restorative
justice for the offender, Zehr maintains a conviction that victims
must always come first.
As I read
Transcending, I could imagine Zehr demonstrating acute
listening skills with the survivors he interviewed. I suspect
he may have squirmed at times from what he heard; such as a resistance
to forgiveness by some survivors, an act Zehr advocates as a peacemaker
and a proponent of the Mennonite faith. By declining to edit out
bad grammar and even strong expletives that may be difficult for
some readers, Zehr has maintained the integrity of this project.
Transcending
presents the stories of 39 victims. My only criticism of the book
is that it doesnt include more victims of drunk driving
crashes. Most of the victims in his book have lost loved ones
to murder. As we know, the experiences of family members of drunk
driving victims closely resemble those of family members of murder
victims. The exception is that families of murder victims frequently
are more satisfied with longer prison sentences than are those
killed by a drunk driver. MADD families, however, will identify
with the thoughts and feelings of the men and women on the pages
of this book.
Zehr is fond
of quoting Vaclav Havel, who said, Transcendence is the
only alternative to extinction. Either one moves toward
getting better or is slowly killed by the killer, too. The 39
survivors who share their stories here make the choice
sometimes after a long personal war in darkness to press
on and make something meaningful from their experiences. Because
their brief stories, usually 3 or 4 pages in length, are direct
quotes, the collection is powerful and honest. The integrity of
the words, coupled with the artistry of Zehrs images, result
in a sense of having the victims in the same room. As readers,
we can almost feel their arms around us and hear their words of
encouragement. They seem to be saying, I think you can make
it, too.
Reviewed
by Janice Harris Lord
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December
23 column
We all try
to begin again, in ways large and small, each New Year. Few of
us, however, have had to muster the strength to begin again after
enduring losses and heartbreaks and violent acts so terrible that
they are almost beyond imagining.
Few of us
-- thankfully -- have stories to tell like those in the recently
published documentary book, "Transcending: Reflections
of Crime Victims," by Howard Zehr, a professor at Eastern
Mennonite University in Harrisonburg, Va., and a proponent of
restorative justice, which seeks redress in the criminal justice
system for victims of crime.
"Transcending"
consists of interviews with more than 40 people, including a son
whose 76-year-old mother was tortured and murdered, a woman left
paralyzed by an ex-boyfriend who broke her neck, and two fathers
who lost daughters as a result of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing.
Their painful
stories do not make for easy reading. But there are threads of
hope and redemption throughout the book, and there is wisdom in
the books repeated discussions about forgiveness -- as apt
a subject as any for us to explore, as we stand on the precipice
of this New Year.
Some in the
book say they have forgiven the criminals who caused them terrible
suffering. Others say they are struggling toward forgiveness.
Some arent sure if theyll ever be able to forgive
-- or even want to try. I think theyre courageous just to
consider the question. And I think we all can learn something
from their struggles and their stories. None of the stories in
"Transcending" is more wrenching than the very
first one in the book. It is related by Lynn Shiner, whose 10-year-old
daughter Jennifer and 8-year-old son David were brutally stabbed
to death by their father early Christmas morning in 1994.
The children
were on an overnight visitation at the Lower Paxton Twp. home
of Tom Snead, Shiners ex-husband. Snead killed Jennifer
first, then David, then himself.
Shiner and
her current husband, Paul, learned what had happened when they
came to pick up Jennifer and David on Christmas morning.
In "Transcending,"
Shiner says that after her children were murdered, she learned
that Snead had "had an actual checklist of everything he
needed to do. The last item was to kill Jennifer and David. He
thought David was the devil and Jennifer was an angel. We found
out later that he thought he was God and that he was doing some
kind of wonderful thing by saving them from this life."
Shiners
life as shed known it ended with her childrens lives.
She had constant panic attacks, she says in "Transcending,"
and struggled with suicide. "The what-ifs were just endless
for me," Shiner says in the book. Eventually, her anguish
was joined by a resolve to help others avoid her sorrow.
Shocked to
learn after her childrens deaths that her ex-husband had
been stalking a disc jockey in Lancaster, Shiner led the fight
for what is now known as the "Jen and Dave Law," which
states that if one parent or guardian in a child custody arrangement
is charged with a violent crime or dangerous offense, the other
parent or guardian has the right to find out about it. Shiners
determination to help others also led her to her current job with
the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency, where she
has been credited with dramatically reducing the wait victims
have to endure for compensation payments.
Shiner now
says she feels as if she has to make the most of her life, to
make a difference, on behalf of her children. For her own sake,
she has begun -- tentatively -- to broach the question of forgiveness.
She says
in "Transcending" that she jokes with a friend
that she knows she needs to forgive, "so when Im on
my deathbed and theres only five seconds left, then Ill
forgive ... Ill just sneak that in right at the end."
A subsequent
passage, dated 18 months later, has Shiner saying this: "Through
recent experiences, Ive come to realize the darkness and
anger that are still in my head, and the amount of energy they
take from me. (Snead) has ruined my past. Im beginning to
toy with the idea of forgiveness so that I dont allow him
to destroy my future as well." I wanted to speak to Shiner
about this subject but, for understandable reasons, she was reluctant
to be interviewed. She agreed, though, to respond to some questions
by email.
Asked where
she now stands on the question of forgiveness, Shiner replied
that most of the definitions of forgiveness in Websters
Dictionary -- "to excuse for an offense ... to release the
liability for or penalty entailed by an offense" -- "dont
quite fit my feelings or needs."
A little
closer, she says, is this definition of "forgive": "to
renounce (give up or disown) anger or resentment against."
Finding the
dictionary wanting, Shiner decided to write her own definition
of forgiveness: "Empowering oneself to rid them of the rage
and anger caused by the heinous selfish act of another. This type
of forgiveness may allow one to transcend all of the energy it
takes to harbor the anger and hatred, and provides the ability
to channel energy into more constructive, positive things.
"In
essence," she explains, "I'm disowning the anger and
resentment, knowing that in the end, the one who is responsible
for such a heinous act will be judged and punished by someone
much higher than myself."
Shiner says,
"To forgive will not bring Jen and Dave back. To forgive
is something I must do just for me ... to help me move forward
emotionally and spiritually."
No one can,
or should, tell a crime victim to forgive, she says. "Everyone
is so unique in their experience and how and when they to chose
to react is very personal," she writes in her email, adding,
"They need to do what they need to do to survive and move
forward ... Until we walk in their shoes, we have no right to
suggest, second-guess or tell them if and when they need to forgive.
If and when it is time, they will know it and act on it."
Forgiveness
doesnt mean letting a crime go unpunished. And a sharp distinction
must be drawn between forgiveness and forgetting, Shiner reminds
us.
"Forgiveness
has absolutely nothing to do with forgetting!" she writes.
"I don't believe it is conceivable that a victim/survivor
could ever forget." Shiner says for a time, she found it
hard to forgive God. "I was angry at God. Why would God ever
allow or cause this to happen? Two precious children whose death
has affected so many people? In the beginning, I doubted God and
his existence. Over time, through listening to my pastor's sermons
and much reading, I know that God is not to blame.
"God
has chosen to empower each of us with the ability to make choices.
As long as God gives us this ability, there will always be those
of us who will suffer at the hands of those who make bad choices
... I no longer question God. He has his reasons and someday I
will understand why." She has made peace with God, but not
with Christmas. She didnt celebrate Christmas last week.
She hasnt since her children died.
That day,
more than any day, is a time of thoughts and memories, unfortunately
both good and bad. It is a very quiet and sad day. It's easy to
think that I should be able to allow the celebration of Christmas
back into my life for me, my family and friends. But ... on days
like this I really have no control over my broken heart."
Suzanne
Cassidy
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Worth
Reading
by
Russ Immarigeon
a contributing editor
563 Route 21
Hillsdale, NY 12529
(518) 325-5925
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Howard
Zehr, a professor of sociology and restorative justice at Eastern
Mennonite University in Virginia, started his professional criminal
justice life working with offenders, people whom in one form or
another have generally victimized others. In this offender-oriented
role, a role still played (often appropriately) by many people
through the broad criminal justice process, Zehr remembers that
he did not pay much attention to crime victims, nor did he really
want to do so because it was a difficult thing to do, personally
as well as procedurally. Zehr transcended this limited focus when
he and others established the first victim-offender reconciliation
program (VORP) in the United States. As Ive heard him say,
and as he has observed in Changing Lenses (Herald Press,
1990) and other notable writings, victim-offender mediation, as
well as restorative justice more generally, is about both victims
and offenders.
In addition
to his academic and criminal justice work, Zehr is also a savvy
and seasoned photographer. Transcending is Zehrs
second collection of photographs and interviews. In Doing Life:
Reflections of Men and Women Serving Life Sentences (Good
Books, 1996, $15.95), Zehr simply and sensitively pictures and
portrays, many years after their crimes, men and women incarcerated
in Pennsylvania for killing others. For each of these persons,
Zehr photographs them in black and white - against a plain
backdrop, while printing their reflections or testimony
about their crimes, incarceration, and lives. The result
is a powerful series of vignettes that provides rich details of
the complexity of these peoples lives. In reading through
this book, it is difficult to view offenders or murderers
casually, caustically, or off-handedly. In short, Zehrs
photographs and interviews really make you stop and think about
the experiences of these men and women and, indeed, about the
changes that have occurred in their lives.
In Transcending,
Zehr takes the same approach and the results are equally as rewarding.
Nearly 40 people who have experienced, and been deeply affected
by, violent crimes (mostly as family members of murder victims
but also as victims of rape and other forms of physical and sexual
violence) are portrayed in this eye-opening, engaging volume.
The printed interviews in this volume are relatively short, taken
from longer conversations with the author. But brevity seems only
to enhance the powerful testimony of these victims, who collectively
raise numerous issues relevant for victim services or restorative
justice programs. As with the lifers Zehr interviewed in his earlier
book, the victims in this volume make sure that we outside
readers do not think of victims in quite the same way again.
The victim
interviews frequently raise the importance of seeking justice
and they make clear that justice, whatever it is, is not an easily
captured concept or reality. Zehr inserts a book-ending essay
that, in part, tries to organize an approach to better understand
the requirements of justice. He argues that victimization undermines
our basic assumptions about autonomy, order, and relatedness.
He says that healing, for victims, involves the (re)discovery
of their stories, their narratives. We must create new or
revised narratives that take into account the awful things that
have happened, he observes. He locates at least five requirements
of justice: the creation of safe space; some form of restitution
or reparation; answers to questions; truth-telling; and empowerment.
About these interviews, Zehr concludes: We need to hear
these voices if we are to have a real dialogue about crime and
justice. We need to hear these voices if we are to do justice.
Good
Books
PO Box 49
3510 Old Philadelphia Pike
Intercourse, PA 17534
(800) 762-7171
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Victims'
voices
Lynn
Shiner, her two young children murdered by their father, locks
away the horror in an imaginary china cabinet.
Leland
Kent takes his sorrow over the brutal killing of his half-brother
back to North Philadelphia, where he talks about the devastating
impact of crime on families and neighborhoods.
Elizabeth
Jackson viciously attached by her estranged husband, finds
joy amid a constant sense of vulnerability.
In such ways,
each is finding a way through the dark, dense fog of violent crime
- stories featured in a new book, Transcending: Reflections
of Crime Victims by Howard Zehr. Zehr, 57, a former Lancaster
County resident who is prominent in the victims' rights movement,
both interviewed and photographed his subjects.
Taken together,
the 39 intimate protraits - drawn with striking black-and-white
pictures and the victims' own words - offer what the book calls
a "choir of voices," angry, sad, strong, but always
moving and inspiring. At a time when the nation has been traumatized
by violent crime, in the form of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks,
Transcending offers the possibility of hope - and a reminder
of human resilience.
"First
you ruminate, you play all of it [trauma] over and over in your
head," said Zehr, a professor of sociology and restorative
justice at Eastern Mennonite University in Harrisonburg, Va. "Then
you have to find some way to put it aside and control when you
think about it."
He chose
the title carefully - picking a word that suggests rising above,
triumphing, going beyond ordinary limits. The men and women in
his book, he writes, "have faced the abyss and... are in
the process of transcending."
Thin and
professional with a gray beard and glasses, Zehr spoke in soft,
measured tones during an interview at the Mennonite Crentral Committee's
headquarters in Akron, Pa., where he used to work documenting
humanitarian work of Mennonite volunteers for the organization's
publications.
He had paused
there after visiting a serial rapist in a Pennsylvania prison.
One of the rapist's victims wants to meet the criminal, 23 years
after the attack, and Zehr is arranging the encounter - part of
his work in restorative justice, a concept that came of age in
the 1970's.
The traditional
justice system, he said, asks: "What laws are broken? Who
did it? What do they deserve?"
Restorative
justice looks at harm done. "And if what really matters is
the harm that's done," Zehr said, "then what is central
is, what are the victims' needs?"
Shiner,
41, who lives in Harrisonburg, manages the Pennsylvania Victims
Compensation Program - a job she took because of her own yearlong
wait for funds to cover the cost of burying her children. Under
her tenure, she said, that wait has shortened to eight to 12 weeks.
"My
life is my job," she said last week.
Shiner has
moved on, in part because she uses that imaginary china cabinet
with glass doors and a lock.
She keeps
the good memories with her, always. But she said she must have
a place to store what happened on Christmas in 1994, when her
ex-husband picked up their two children and then, following a
checklist he had written, stabbed Jen Snead, 10 and Dave Snead,
8, before killing himself.
"Fairly
often I open my china cabinet, and I take out Jen and Dave,"
Shiner says in the book, which reads like journal entries of survivors.
"I go through what happened, but in order to be okay I put
them back in... but I'm only closing the door on that tiny part,
the murder. I have such good memories..."
Across the
page, Zehr displays a simple black-and-white portrait of Shiner,
her eyes a well of sadness.
The book
is full of sorrow, with page after page of faces of those who
have survived great pain.
But Shiner,
like others, found something else in the words and pictures:
"The
strength that comes out of this book just amazes me and feeds
me. I can go on."
Zehr grew
up in the Midwest hearing about justice, especially from his father,
a Mennonite minister. He aimed to turn the talk into action.
He studied
history at Morehouse College in Atlanta, becoming the first white
student to graduate from the traditionally black school. Later,
he earned his doctorate in the history of crime from Rutgers University,
taking up the rights of offenders.
At first,
Zehr was a relucant participant in the notion of victims' meeting
with offenders.
"You
don't sit for long and listen to victims until you start to see
where they are coming from," he said. "Then you take
these people who are enemies and put them together... So often
at the end, they will shake hands. You think, 'Whoa, something
is happening there.' "
Zehr ended
up directing an early victim-offender reconciliation program.
Transcending
isn't a case for restorative justice, though some in the book
have gone as far as to write to or meet with offenders. "My
interest is in using people's words and images to bridge gaps,
to help people connect who wouldn't normally connect," Zehr
said.
Mary Achilles,
the governor-appointed victim advocate for the state, helped Zehr
find many of the 11 Pennsylvania victims in the book. "it
so describes for me in many ways the incredible personal experiences...
and uniqueness of victimization and the journey afterward,"
she said.
Leland
Kent, 30, of East Oak Lane, was reluctant to share his grief so
publicly. But he changed his mind, intent on helping others by
talking to Zehr. It was "a beginning of a journey for me,"
he said.
Kent grew
up in North Philadelphia with his mother and stepfather, blocks
from his father and a half-brother who together ran drugs.
Kent didn't
meet his half-brother till 1991, when his father died from a heart
attack. The half-brother "was real proud of me," Kent
says in the book. Five years later, Kent's "brother"
was stomped to death over $10 he owed a dealer.
Kent, who
worked in the Victims Services Unit in the Philadelphia District
Attorney's Office and has risen to assistant director, was unsatisfied
with the outcome of the trial.
"I've
had some anger that one of the offenders walked," he says
in the book. "I work in the system. I can find where they
hang out, so if I didn't have convictions, I would take justice
into my own hands. But I would be no better than they are. And
I have a family... I have too much to live for."
Since being
interviewed by Zehr, Kent has spoken at schools, neighborhood
rallies, and prisons about his experience with crime.
"We
who have a voice must always speak for those who have no voice,"
he said.
Elizebeth
Jackson, 51, an addictions counselor, was choked and stabbed by
her ex-husband and left to die in 1991. But she survived, returning
to the scene to clean up her own blood.
"I experienced
a lot of shame," Jackson, who relocated from Berks County
to the Philadelphia area, says in the book. " 'You were a
counselor. You should have known better...shame, shame.' I don't
care about that anymore, but I should have listened to my gut.
That's my message to others: If your gut says it's unsafe, pay
attention to that."
The events
of Sept 11 triggered a lot of the old, scary feelings for Jackson.
"It reminded me of the terror and uncertainty and distrust
of the world," she said. "It's important to feel safe,
and the whole nation didn't feel safe."
She thinks
everyone in America now knows how it must feel to be a crime victim,
she said.
But Jackson
also held out hope, like that found in the stories of Transcending.
"There
is nothing so dark," she said, "that you can't enjoy
being alive."
By
Lini S. Kadaba
The Philadelphia Inquirer
Wednesday, January 16, 2002
Resources
for crime victims can be found at:
- Office
of the Victim Advocate for Pennsylvania, 1-800-563-6399
- New Jersey
Office of Victim-Witness Advocacy, 609-588-7900
- National
Center for Victims of Crimes 1-800-394-2255 or www.ncvc.org
- National
Organization for Victim Assistance, 202-232-6682 or www.try-nova.org
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