Sexual Abuse & Violence: The Travelling Missionary… Rapist

Life at home had remained sporadically abusive and dysfunctional, with seasons of peace.

During the peaceful times I loved life. We spent a lot of time playing games, especially outdoor activities like shadow tag, prisoner’s base, baseball and soccer. Besides denial, humour was our survival mechanism during hard times, so that carried over to times when life was good. Practical jokes done by older siblings, like hanging a bucket of water over a door for the next unsuspecting victim, and other pranks, impressed and entertained us.  Sometimes life was wonderful. But then it would take a sudden twist.

Three years after we moved to Canada, our family met the ‘white bonnet’ Mennonites, as we referred to them. Our parents were quickly drawn into their culture and beliefs, convinced that if we embraced their lifestyle, things would be good. Dad’s desperate pursuit of God and His acceptance, would finally be fulfilled, and we would be safe.

High hopes in humanity seldom end well. People, regardless of culture, religion, or any other belief system, are simply human beings. They looked so peaceful, presented so well… with such purity, that it was hard to envision anything lurking beneath that exterior.

It could have happened anywhere, but it happened in the Conservative Mennonite churches of Ontario, where we least expected it, when I was a young preteen….

A single man, a ‘missionary’ with many reels of film, maps, atlases, and picture albums, whom we will call Harold, travelled from Mennonite community to Mennonite community, all across Canada. ‘Harold’ visited many churches out West, and also frequented our little community, near Bayfield Ontario.

What was unique about this man, is that he dressed conservative, even though he was not Mennonite. Not quite like our culture, but close enough to be accepted, though more conservative.

Harold told stories, an engaging speaker, and had a way with children. I loved when he visited our community and especially loved when he spent time in our home. As children we crowded around him to get the best view of the photo albums that brought his stories to life.

I couldn’t understand why some of my siblings were not so engaged, why they withdrew–especially my older sisters. They couldn’t tolerate him. I had hopes that maybe he would marry one of my sisters and become my brother-in-law. But I was only a child then, of about age eleven.

At church I eventually overheard rumblings of negative opinion, criticizing Harold, but that was normal for ‘outsiders’. We never had a visitor that someone could not find fault with, whether it was their cowboy boots, the sideburns, long hair or some other detail that wasn’t within our church constitution. There was simply no one else quite as good as we were. We had a cutting edge on practical Christianity.

Gradually he came around less frequently, until he all but vanished and I all but forgot he existed.

Years later I learned that Harold left a trail of victims in his wake, having seduced young men, raped boys, and made attempts on others unsuccessfully.

What remains troubling to me is that the church leaders knew who Harold was, and that he victimized multiple people, and they did nothing. They could not help what he was, and what he did, but to remain silent and not report him is inexcusable. I do not know or understand their reasoning, and it wasn’t that their lives remained untouched. At least one leader’s family was directly impacted,, triggering a chain effect of abuse, as his victims became perpetrators and their victims became perpetrators. Still the church remained silent.

While I got by with no extreme violations, through the chain effect, others close to me were not so fortunate. In recent years some have shared their stories with me.

Why tell this now? Why not leave the past in the past and only look ahead? On a personal life experience level I have left it in the past. But in breaking the silence it needs to be addressed.

If I was convinced it was in the past, I would leave it there. But I am not and there are a few good reasons to speak up. First of all, people need to be aware that this kind of thing happens, and their children need to be protected. Only a few years ago I learned that his man still travels across Canada, from community to community.

Secondly, if you or your child was victimized by Harold, or anyone else, there is help available. If you don’t know where to turn for help, and don’t know how to access resources available, I will gladly assist you. (info ‘at’ faithgirlsunleashed ‘dot’ com)

Thirdly, it is an appeal to the church to begin speaking up and taking a stand. We are called to protect innocent victims under our care as much as possible. They need us. Jesus said that whoever offends one of these little ones, it would be better to have a mill stone hung around their neck and be thrown into the sea. God does not take lightly the abuse of children.

As the body of Christ we cannot always help what enters our churches. But when innocent children are at risk, and crimes are committed, we have a moral and legal obligation to report crime to authorities and let the law deal with them.

We do not need to stand helplessly by. Together we can make a difference. Together we can stop the ‘Harold’s’ of this world and create accountability.

© Trudy Metzger

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7 thoughts on “Sexual Abuse & Violence: The Travelling Missionary… Rapist

    • Trudy Metzger July 21, 2012 / 12:40 pm

      Thank you for the reblog, Dale.

  1. speakingtruthinlove July 21, 2012 / 12:34 pm

    Trudy, you did a great job with this article. It is sickening but we are finding this happening everywhere. We have a pastor’s daughter who attends our church and when she was growing up they had a missionary speaker stay at their house. He raped her and then spoke in their church as though nothing had happened.
    Dale Ingraham

    • Trudy Metzger July 21, 2012 / 12:44 pm

      I’m sorry to hear of the pastor’s daughter you mention. It is so devastating how many victims have had to carry their shame in silence, and how we have not known what to do, or how to effectively make positive change. It is hard to expose the truth. Even now I fear of judgement, that people will think harshly of me for exposing such negative ‘church press’, but it is necessary. I am, by nature, a very positive person and prefer to look at the sunny side of life, but that feels a lame excuse, as people around me continue to be victimized.

      I appreciate your support and the work you’re doing to break the silence and end abuse! God bless you in all your efforts!

  2. Diana Stooshnov July 21, 2012 / 3:12 pm

    it continues to happen and will forever happen, until someone tells us who Harold is.

    • Trudy Metzger July 21, 2012 / 3:19 pm

      I agree Diana. And I would love to post ‘Harold’s’ real name but would run the risk of a lawsuit. That is the irony in today’s world… the perpetrators are protected and the victims are forced into silence. I’m hoping that people recognize Harold and message me privately if they think he may have been in their area and victimized boys. I would be in there like a dirty shirt to bring justice and help victims, but I cannot reveal his true identity. I know that he spent quite a bit of time in Manitoba, as well as other Western provinces, in the Russian Mennonite and various ‘brands’ of Conservative Mennonite churches.

      Many publishing companies won’t even publish books that don’t use real names if the perpetrators can be identified by location or events, if that perpetrator is still living. They fear being sued. (For this reason a young woman, who was from one of the church cultures I grew up in, chose to self publish.)

  3. Peter Wiebe July 21, 2012 / 10:18 pm

    So tragic. May God help us to courageously stand up to protect our generation of children and stop protecting the ones who abuse them.

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