In a "visitation center, the father is not allowed
to hug his own child - he can't even say: "I love you."
to hug his own child - he can't even say: "I love you."
By Joel Leyden,
Director, Fathers4Justice Israel
Israel is a wonderful place.
A sparkling democracy in the Middle East.
Known and respected for achievements in defense, high tech and providing humanitarian aid on a global scale.
But when it comes to the father and child relationship as dictated by the Israeli government - Israel becomes a father's worst nightmare. So bad that even the UN has condemned the social services system in Israel for discriminating against men!
All it takes for a father to be removed from having normal contact with his children is an angry ex-wife. If she invents a child or sex abuse charge against the father - he losses his children.
But there is hope.
The father needs to retain a forensic psychologist.
This professional can clear the father's name.
But it costs money .......
Outside Israel very little is
known about the horrendous policies of Israel’s Welfare Authorities when
it comes to fathers in divorce seeking contact or visitations with
their children, or when women whose children are forcefully kidnapped
into outplacement facilities and foster homes. The fathers and mothers
end up seeing their children in supervised visitation facilities, known
as Contact Centers, “Merkaz Kesher”. These are secured and heavily
guarded facilities where the parent gets one hour a week, and sometimes
even less to be with the children in a tiny room, watched by a social
worker, and under strict compliance rules such as no photos, no gifts
and no spontaneous dialogue.
In
case of men in divorce, the chances of a man ending up in a Contact
Center are almost one in four, i.e. almost 25% of fathers are sent
there, as opposed to 1%-2% in USA and 3% in Australia. In Israel a man
can be sent to a supervised contact center simply upon the wish of the
woman, “lack of trust”, upsetting the social worker, or as a tool to
coerce higher child support.
Overseas Supervised visitations normally serve
violent, alcoholic or homeless men. In Israel, because women are
immune from prosecution for false domestic violence, false complaints
are the norm, the standard, de rigueur. Almost every
contested divorce in Israel starts with a false complaint by a woman, an
immediate 15 day order of removal from the marital home, and a
“recommendation” (which is actually a determination) by a social worker
to the Judge, to allow child contact only under supervision of social
workers.
The article below sheds light into one of
Israel’s most atrocious aspects of gender apartheid against men.
However, some women also see their children in Contact Centers. That
happens because when poor women ask for help from the Welfare
Authorities, the woman are branded as “neglectful” and the children are
taken away, into shelters for which the government pays $4,850 a month.
The Welfare policies are unwilling to invest a single shekel into the
mother’s economic well being, so that she will be able to provide better
for the purportedly “neglected” children.
This is a translation of an article published
in Hebrew at Israel Hayom by Naama Lanski and Michal Yaakov Itzhaki on
February 2, 2014.
“The Trauma of the Contact Centers”
Every Sunday as three o’clock approaches, Gili
sets aside all other matters; and rushes to the contact center in his
hometown. He knows better than to be late – for he has only one hour per
week. 60 minutes. 3600 seconds, not a second more at his disposal to be
with his only daughter, aged five and a half. If he arrives late, he
loses a few seconds of time with her, and he can in no way afford that.
Moreover, he may be punished. Someone might get the wrong impression
that he does not care, or he is not a responsible enough father, and
take away those 60 minutes for which he has been waiting all week.
Before and after those 60 minutes, his life is insipid, empty and sad.
So he arrives early, always. At three o’clock
he enters the contact centre; and paces down the driveway as cameras
document his steps. At the entrance he is thoroughly searched by an
armed security guard; passes through a metal detector; and sits and
waits in the single room that serves other parents too, who have been
removed from their children.
In the centre Gili is forbidden to hug his
daughter, to kiss her, or to whisper in her little ear how much he loves
and misses her; and that she is the only reason that he is willing to
endure these humiliating visits. “In the only room available to us there
was a drug addict father, who sat around watching his son play on the
floor. Beside him sat a mother who had succumbed to prostitution and
drugs; and myself, a normal father who had never hurt a fly, but who had
at the moment of divorce become a ‘violent father who sexually harasses
his daughter’; that is what my x-wife claimed.”
“In the only hour of the week in which I was
allowed to see my daughter, all that crossed my mind was how to make
this meeting with my daughter appear normal in this bizarre place, that
has nothing to do with me or with my life. I tried to cram everything I
possibly could into that time.”
“Because there’s always a social worker
present, who observes you, hears and records all that is said and done,
in time we developed a sign language of our own. Two blinks means ‘I’ve
missed you’. Tightly shutting the eyes: ‘ I love you ‘. And when my
child rubs her eyes with her little fists, it goes to say, ‘don’t worry,
everything will be fine’. The first time we were out alone into the
garden she ran up to me and told me, ‘Dad, let’s go out quickly and hug
each other tightly before they can forbid it.”
45-year old Gili (name changed for privacy)
found himself at the contact centre following a bitter divorce from his
wife, when his daughter was five years old. He is a famous man, whose
name everyone knows, which goes to show that no one is immune to these
sagas.
In the first four months following divorce, before the visiting
hours at the centre had been arranged, he would barely see his daughter
one hour per month. “My former wife complained to social services that I
touch my daughter sexually. She later submitted three complaints to
police that I had threatened her. I was subpoenaed to an investigation;
but they did not even open a case. They understood that it was all
invented.” Nevertheless, the contact centre became the centre of my
fatherhood for two whole years.”
As the sixty minutes with his daughter drew to
a close, Gili would remain in his seat at the contact centre, while his
daughter would go out to her mother, who had come to pick her up. The
reason: “For reasons of security and conflict prevention while the girl
was passed from father to mother”. Gili had to wait about twenty
minutes, “and I cannot put this picture out of my mind: I watch the CCTV
screen and see my daughter walking the path away from me; and know that
another week full of tears is beginning, until the next meeting.”
Contact centres appeared in Israel in the
nineties, for dysfunctional parents for whom this was the only way to
meet their children, or for children who had been removed from their
families due to claims that parents had put them in harm’s way. With
time and the increase in the divorce rate, contact centres became the
default solution of social services and courts in cases of severe
conflict between the parents, disagreements concerning visitation, and
manifestations of parental alienation: refusal or avoidance of a child
to meet with one of its parents, often due to incitement by the other.
Even children staying with their mothers in battered women’s shelters
might meet their fathers in this way, as do children of parents with
mental issues or addictions to drugs or alcohol.
Contact centres are attached to municipal
welfare services and are staffed by social workers, who supervise the
parents during meetings with their children. Sometimes high school
graduates from the National Service for Observant Young Women also serve there. Meetings at contact centres may be divided into three types:
- Fully supervised – the social worker sits next to the parent and child for the duration of the meeting;
- Partially supervised – the social worker is in the room intermittently or observes from another room through a one-way mirror or CCTV;
- Unsupervised – taking place outside of the contact centre, where the contact centre serves only as a pick-up and drop-off point in order to prevent parental conflicts.
64 CONTACT CENTERS, 4,100 CHILDREN
Israel has no less than 64 contact centres
serving 4,100 children. According to data published by the welfare
ministry to conform with the Israeli Freedom of Information Act, the
budget for contact centres was about 4.5 million shekels in 2012. In
that year, the centres served 2,540 families; about 4,100 children met
with one or both of their parents in this way. On average, each contact
centre serves about 65 children meeting their parents.
In 2004, for comparison, there were 67 contact
centres, but only 1,774 families were served – or about 3,100 children.
In other words: in eight years the number of families treated at the
contact centres grew 43%. The number of children meeting their parents
at contact centres grew 33%. The contact centres budget has burgeoned a
whopping 91% from 2.3 million in 2004 to 4.4 million in 2012.
According to the welfare ministry instructions
published in the social workers regulations the contact centre’s
purpose is “to build and to restructure the parent-child relationship.
The approach is to construct an intervention plan that, as much as
possible and according to the needs of minors and their parents, will
allow a gradual transition from that of meeting one’s children in a
protective institutionalized setting to that of meeting independently
without supervision.”
Families are referred to the contact centre by
the welfare officer (the Child Protection Service Parental Evaluation
Assessor) by a court order. There are cases in which the court delegates
to the welfare officer the power to decide upon the duration of visits
until return to independent visitation is possible. [Ostensibly] the
officers’ top priority is the child’s best interest, the need to protect
the child and to take extensive security measures to prevent injury to
the child.
[According to the ministry] meetings at the
contact centre continue for six months, after which there is an initial
periodic evaluation by the competent authorities who accompany the
family. If it is decided to continue the meetings, the case is brought
to the attention of an expert panel once in several months, in the
presence of both parents and representatives of the department of social
services, a regional welfare officer for legal arrangements and
additional welfare officers, and sometimes the social workers who
accompany the family. While preparing this article we spoke to parents
who met with their children at contact centres for years. The longest
lived case that was brought to our attention is that of a father who met
with his daughter at the contact centre for six years.
“In many cases, the parents attend the expert
panel unrepresented,” says attorney Shahar Schwarz, expert in family
law. “The time is short and sad; and people feel that they are not
heard. Parents usually do not receive the minutes following the panel.
At best, they will see the report two days prior to the court hearing-
In many cases the attorney does not see the report; and the judge must
announce recess for a few minutes to allow the attorney to familiarize
himself with it.
Many parents, especially fathers, as well as
professionals with whom we spoke claim that a parent can easily find
himself unjustly or for no good reason referred to a contact centre.
According to data from 2010 collected by the “Coalition for Children and
Families”, an organisation created on behalf of divorced fathers and
their children, 25-33% of fathers requesting visitation were sent to
contact centres. In contrast, the welfare ministry claims that only 15%
of fathers are referred to centres – 1,725 out of 11,500 surveys
conducted after divorce. For comparison: in the United States the rate
of referral is 1-2%; and in Australia about 3%. It should be noted that
the ministry of welfare did not answer our request to access their
figures of demographic breakdown and reasons for referral.
In every case of resistance by the mother to
regular visitation between the father and the children, the father is
automatically referred to the contact centre,” says D, who was employed
at such a contact centre for years. “Unfortunately, I have seen cases of
completely normal fathers, who posed absolutely no risk to their
children, where the mothers nevertheless took advantage of the fathers’
willingness to sacrifice other things in order to see the children. I
estimate that about 20% of divorced fathers arriving at the centres are
not supposed to be there. Even when visitation takes place at the
contact centre, there are mothers who impose additional hurdles by
opposing the contact; or they call last-minute to cancel by claiming
that the child is ill. There are cases in which I have examined the
medical confirmation of illness and discovered that it was falsified.”
“But our hands are tied. The welfare system has very strict rules; and whoever opposes them gets sanctioned.”
“In one case I identified that the mother was
using the children to goad the father. When I tried to warn the father
and other social workers, I was reprimanded. They did not like me to
interfere or to take a stance. This is a system that cannot and will not
accept criticism.”
A BARE COURTYARD AND BROWN CHAIRS
A few years ago in an “Haaretz” interview, the
national child protection officer for court ordered parental
evaluation, Simona Steinmetz, claimed that a “therapeutic process” takes
place in the contact centre, “that will ultimately construct a
normative relationship outside of the contact centre.” D claims that
this is far from the truth: “We are not therapeutic figures. We are not
allowed to treat people who arrive at the centres – only to supervise
and to observe. After several months we write an expert opinion which is
forwarded to welfare officers. In the meantime parents and children
experience enormous pain. Backed by our expert opinion and all of the
information she has, the welfare officer writes a review, which she
passes on to the court with her recommendation as to whether or not
visitation through the centre can be stopped. Usually the court accepts
her recommendation. There are situations in which the contact centre
supervisor forms and reports a positive opinion of the parental
relationship, but this is ignored in the welfare officer’s final survey
report.
The exact location of contact centres is not
published for fear of protests or vengeful conduct by parents. In August
2012, several divorced fathers petitioned the court for administrative
affairs in the Jerusalem District Court for information according to the
Freedom of Information Act. Their petition included sixty paragraphs
concerning ministry of welfare policies as they relate to protecting the
rights of children whose parents are in the process of divorce. Among
other things, they requested that the ministry of welfare publish the
list of contact centres, including their addresses. The ministry of
welfare is to submit its reply to the petition by next week.
We attempted to enter several contact centres.
In each case, we were met by a security officer or by a social worker,
who forbade us to enter the locked steel gate without accompaniment of a
welfare officer or social worker. In the end we were able to enter the
contact centre in Ness Ziyona, located in a quiet neighbourhood not far
from the city centre. Similarly to other contact centres, it is
surrounded by a tall fence and guarded. The small yard is clear of toys,
flowers or grass, aside from weeds and a large fig tree, which casts
its shadow. In any case, parents are not allowed to exit the building
with their children.
The centre is located at the bottom floor of a
two-storey building. It is very quiet. Its walls possess light colours;
and the lobby is nearly devoid of objects or decorations. Two rooms
serve to accommodate meetings between parents and children – each one
about 9 m². In each room is a small sofa, a few chairs or armchairs, a
rug and a coffee table. In the corner of the room is a computer on a
small table; serving the social worker when no families are present.
The furniture and curtains are shades of brown
and grey, without design. There is nothing about them to convey a warm,
happy, embracing atmosphere, as would befit a room to accommodate
children. In every one of the contact rooms there are a few board games
and books in a corner – and nothing else. On the wall of the room there
is a CCTV installed; and on one of the walls is a large one-way mirror,
through which the parent and his children may be observed. There is also
a speaker, through which the social worker may thunder her remarks and
prohibitions. The two contact rooms are bordered at one end by a
kitchenette; and on the other by a secretary’s office. Even prior to
commencing meetings at the contact centre, the parent must sign a
derogatory agreement, which includes “consent to searching my
possessions and body at the entrance to the meeting, at the discretion
of the security guard”, and also a commitment to cleaning up the room at
the end of the meeting.
The parent agrees “not to whisper with the
child during the meeting and not to involve the children in the subject
of conflict through interrogation, accusation or sending of notes or
money to the custodial parent.” An especially outrageous clause reads:
“the parent agrees not to photograph the children with a still or video
camera and not to record them without permission from personnel.” The
parent agrees “not to punish the children during the visit, not to
conduct arguments at the centre with the other parent and/or with centre
personnel”.
In addition, the parent must state: “I know that if centre
personnel perceives behaviour that does not allow the visit to take
place, it will not take place or will be curtailed” – a clause giving
power to the centre employee to control whether the visits may take
place. Tardiness of more than twenty minutes without prior notice will
cause cancellation of the visit. Failure to comply with any of the
clauses may cause the visit to be curtailed; and even complete
cancellation of visitation rights until the matter is brought to court –
which may take several months.
“If you whisper to your child, ‘sweetie,
I love you’, the social worker will get involved and you will risk
curtailment of the meeting,” says Lilach (45), who has been meeting her
son, now nine, at the centre for the last four years. Her former husband
submitted a complaint that she is violent. The child was removed from
home and sent to a boarding school. He was later returned to his father,
who incited him against Lilach. All complaints have long ago been
closed “for lack of culpability”.
“At our contact centre, everybody sits in one
large room. Many families are crammed inside, and you need to fight for a
quiet spot. It is a degrading and hopeless place, where you conduct an
engineered visit under neon lights with the most precious thing in your
life.”
“I feel I must whisper in his ear so that any
type of closeness is established, but I cannot. There is a limited time
for hugging. If my son clings to me for more than a few seconds, they
will put an end to it. And I only want to hug my child and hold him to
me and kiss him endlessly. What a strange and distorted relationship
this is because I only have ninety minutes a week to be with him.
Everything I do is planned to the minute. Ten minutes for a board game –
there are very few games there, played with by thousands of hands –
four minutes to draw, fifteen minutes to update each other. I try to
cram into ninety minutes what a normal mom is supposed to do in a week.
So in this time I never answer the phone, never go to the bathroom, and
don’t even drink a glass of water. What parent in his right mind can
survive such conditions? There is no spontaneity, no ability to flow
with the child. Everything is metered, recorded, reported. You are
constantly being tested and constantly afraid that even the most
innocent and even correct actions of yours will be misinterpreted. I am
so jealous of regular parents,” she says and her voice shakes, “parents
who can be with their children whenever they want and in any way they
want. I remember how I used to go out of the house with my son at night
to watch bats, and no one could tell me it’s forbidden. I am missing the
most beautiful years of my son’s life.”
THIS FREEZES YOUR BLOOD
Eliezer Koppel, manager of the Sever Institute
and an expert in the phenomenon of parental alienation, says that
contact centres have become another venue through which to deepen
conflicts having to do with divorce. “Contact centres do not supply any
kind of therapeutic environment. They serve as a judgmental and punitive
place, that not only prevents the building of relationships, but also
aids in breaking them up. Every parent that arrives at the contact
centre is treated as dangerous; and that causes incalculable damage to
all sides. Parents who are at the centre for no reason feel great
frustration and humiliation. A child, who sees its parent in such a
place, experiences him as anxious and humiliated. This feeling of parent
and child alike is strengthened by the fact that the other parent is
not required to attend meetings in this format. Many of the parents ask
themselves whether the visits at the centre are worth the damage caused
to themselves and their children. Many forgo the meetings out of concern
for their children.
Jonathan (50), divorced for ten years and
father of a 12-year-old girl, is one parent who decided that the damage
caused by such visits is greater than the good. He has not seen his
daughter at all for two years, until recently. This is one of many cases
that have been brought to our attention, in which the contact centre
has become the disconnect centre.
“Until four years ago there were no problems
in visitations between me and my ex; and I raised my daughter half of
the time. The turning point was on a holiday eve in the year 2010, when
my former wife falsely complained to police that I had sexually molested
my daughter. According to visitation rights, my daughter ought to have
stayed with me for the holiday; and the only way my former wife could
prevent this was to submit a false claim. The complaint was closed
without them ever having opened a case against me; but it sufficed to
prevent me from seeing my daughter for two months. Six months later, an
additional complaint was submitted; and then the welfare officer in
charge of us recommended we submit to parental competency testing. I had
no doubt that I would pass these test with ease, I am such a good
father. The testing institute asserted that my interaction with my child
is outstanding; but the child is ‘fearful’. The court accepted the
testing institute’s recommendation; and instructed me to receive
treatment at the institute, after which I would be allowed to begin
fully supervised visitation at the centre.”
Jonathan went to visit the contact centre in
his city. For three hours he stood outside the building and looked at
the visitors quickly coming and going. There were crying children,
frustrated and angry parents, and especially fathers with a downward
gaze, entering or exiting with quick steps. “More than twenty children
entered during those three hours. It looked like a full-fledged
industry. It is unthinkable that in Israel so many children are fed into
these contact centres. It is unthinkable that as soon as you get
excited, you stop being a normative, contributing parent, and start
being an ‘at risk’ parent that needs such a place. I told myself I would
not contribute to this. I will not allow the institutions with which
welfare works to profit at my daughter’s expense. There is a limit to
what a parent can take from the nation. My daughter and all other
children do not deserve to see their father in such a dark and
humiliating place.”
“I met with the social worker; and she asked
me, ‘you see it is not so bad after all?’ I looked at her and could not
believe my ears. I told her it was worse than I had imagined. It curdles
my blood. My daughter will not see me in a place where I am treated as
the worst of criminals. And then, naturally as ever, she told me that
perhaps I ought to go to the contact centre in Modiin, because it is
fancier and serves the elite of Israel: pilots, doctors and lawyers.”
This last year, Jonathan stood every morning
at the entrance to the courthouse where his trial was being held with a
sign in his hands, blaming the judge for not being able to see his
daughter. Recently he has been notified that his perseverance has paid
off: after his request for another hearing had been accepted; and after
an additional year of further surveys and lengthy hearings, the court
decided that Jonathan would gradually be allowed to see his daughter
outside the walls of contact centres. “My first two meetings with my
daughter were conducted with the parental guidance counsellor at
welfare; and afterward there were a few meetings where I picked her up
from school, and spent the afternoon and evening with her until 8
o’clock. Soon she will be allowed to sleep over, like she used to – just
as she should have all along. The fact that I did not submit to contact
centres only goes to prove that there was no need for them from the
start, because there was no danger.”
“WHERE IS THE PRESUMED INNOCENCE?”
Eight years have passed since Ronen (40), a
police officer, met his toddler son at a contact centre. But the
feelings of humiliation and degradation have not left him to this day.
He arrived there after his former wife expressed concern that he might
hurt the child to hurt her; and that had been enough to cause welfare
and the court to decree that he has to visit his son in a small room
under lock and key. The boy had been less than two years old at the
time.
I would come there after pursuing criminals
all day and defending people with my own body. At once I would switch
roles and feel like a prisoner with no rights. The most absurd about
this situation was that when things got out of hand at the contact
centre, the social workers called on me to assist. They told me they
felt calmer to have me there; and would brag about having a personal cop
to watch over them.
At some point I could no longer stand the
humiliation of having a social worker sitting next to me and my son at
all times, watching me and listening to every word. I gave up and
stopped coming. I was ashamed. I didn’t want my son, small as he was, to
think that his father was really a dangerous man who needed to be
watched. I didn’t see my son for six months, until I missed him so
badly. The social workers knew that there was no good reason for my
being there. However, they did not expressly write in their expert
opinion that an end must be put to abusing me in this way. My ex-wife
would submit all these complaints about me. It seemed I would be called
to Police Internal Investigations Department (“Makhash”) twice a week. I
lost promotions and almost lost my job. At some point they understood
that she was making it up – but they had to investigate each claim.
After three years all of the complaints she had submitted were closed.”
Danny (32) had had enough after only two
visits at the contact centre to understand he would not be able to
endure the repeated experience. He had been referred following a
complaint his wife had submitted concerning violence against his
daughter. For six months he could not see his daughter, the relationship
suffered; and when the pain was too much to bear, he returned to the
centre for an additional period of six months.
Danny (32): “Finally the complaint against me
was closed, and I returned to normal visitation. But the damage to both
of us had already been done.
“I begged the social worker to let me out
already – she had already witnessed that my relationship to my daughter
was terrific,” he tells. “The feeling at the contact centre is that you
become a lab rat, examined under a magnifying glass. Every word or deed
they did not like made them invalidate me as a father and require more
supervised visits, thus lengthening the period of visitation at the
centre.
“I remember one time my daughter told me that
her mother had asked her to call her new boyfriend ‘daddy’. She was very
disturbed by that and shared it with me. Without thinking twice, I told
her that only I was her daddy; and that she should not call anyone else
‘daddy’. The social worker at the centre reported that immediately to
my welfare officer; and the following day I was reprimanded. She told me
I ought not have spoken that way with the child.”
“Finally the system understood I was not an
abusive father. The complaint against me was closed; and I returned to
normal visitation. But the damage to both sides had been done.”
“Reality at the contact centres is very
humiliating,” says Attorney Shahar Schwarz. “You are squelched there as a
parent and as a person. You feel like crying out: ‘who are you to
stipulate how I am to hug my children and how I am to speak to them?’
People who have not been through this will have a hard time
understanding.” Schwarz is not speaking only out of experience as a
lawyer – he himself had been referred to a contact centre following
complaints by his former wife to welfare and to police, claiming that he
had been violent against her. Only after he was already allowed to see
his daughters outside of a contact centre, a lawsuit was submitted
against him; and he fought for his innocence and won. “For one whole
year I met my twin daughters there, who were one year old at the time –
daughters for whose birth I had waited for many years. One hour for the
both of them, out of which the first 15 or 20 minutes were lost to
separation anxiety from their mother. The visits would terminate roughly
and rudely, unnaturally and without regard to the situation. They would
tell the mother to come in and get the girls, with no regard at all as
to whether we were in the middle of something.”
“The time at the contact centre was so
difficult that I was almost ready to give up my daughters; but I knew
that if I gave up, I would never be able to look them and myself in the
eye. On the other hand, I have clients who have given up; and I
understand them. One’s entire parenthood is disrupted in this place. In
Israel, if one of the partners simply claims that the other is violent
towards him, the way to the contact centre begins to be paved. Where is
presumed innocence?”
MEETINGS ACCOMPANIED BY SECURITY GUARD
Not only divorced parents go to contact
centres. Isaac (54) comes to the centre to meet his eighteen-month-old
grandson, an active little blond, whose eyes are large and pretty. He
was born to his high functioning mentally handicapped son and a young
woman with mental illness who lives in a hostel in the community. “While
still in his mother’s womb, his fate to live with a foster family, and
to be made available for adoption, was decided,” says Isaac. “When we
saw him in hospital several hours after birth, we were accompanied by
security guards, as if we were criminals. Immediately after
circumcision, for which we had to fight, the baby was taken from us to a
foster family with concealed identity. We do not know who or where they
are. Only after we turned to the legal system and demanded to see the
baby, they allowed my son, my wife, my younger daughter and me to meet
him for one hour per week, which actually turns out to last only 50
minutes, at a contact centre an hour away from where we live. I am an
only son to holocaust survivors; and I can’t stand a situation where I
cannot see my grandson. An hour a week in this terrible place.”
Isaac is conducting a lively and stubborn
battle on two planes. First he is fighting the decision to offer his
grandson for adoption and to send him to an anonymous foster family and
not to an identified one, where he could visit the baby more freely; and
keep in touch with him in a natural environment. In addition he has
requested that he be allowed to adopt his grandson himself, to live with
him and his wife and son. For that purpose he is gathering letters of
recommendation from his employers. On the day of our meeting he showed
us his discharge certificate from the IDF, after serving professionally
for thirty years. He recently asked for it to be reissued in order to
show it to welfare authorities.
The picture we get is that the welfare
authorities are doing their best to cause the baby to be offered for
adoption,” says Attorney Rami Marmelstein , who represents the
grandfather. “They refuse to open fostering by claiming the baby is not
prepared for that.” For now, Isaac and his family fight for every minute
with their grandson. Isaac produced an exact record of the fact that at
least once per month the visits at the contact centre get cancelled.
“One time the foster family couldn’t bring him; another time they were
on holiday; or the social worker was ill; or they claimed he was crying a
lot so we ought not come. Some of the cancellations are sent to us by
SMS, as if they are notifying me of something entirely inconsequential;
and not of the very thing our lives revolve around. And of course, no
replacement visits are scheduled, which stands in rude contrast to court
order. Last week the social worker sent me an SMS saying: ‘we regret to
inform you that the visit at the contact centre will probably be
cancelled because the welfare officer has not transferred the payments
to the contact centre.’ These words are grotesquely bizarre. Why do we
need to be punished for bureaucratic matters having nothing to do with
us?”
“Again and again I find myself going to court,
investing money and fighting for the measly fifty minutes with my
grandson. Fifty minutes per week. I don’t understand why we are
humiliated and treated so poorly. The situation is painful enough as it
is – especially at every separation when my grandson is removed from us,
looking back at us, and our hearts break into a thousand pieces.”
DARKNESS, BLACKNESS, AND HUGE SADNESS…
..a ravine, gloom, paralysis, death. – these
are the words that Ricki (45) uses over and over to describe the time
when she used to meet her children at the contact centre. She is the
mother of four born to the same man, who lived alongside her and her
children; but would disconnect from them at times for long periods.
“When my youngest was born eight years ago, I
understood that I am not Superwoman. The youngest was hospitalized
because he did not eat enough; and that is where welfare zeroed in on me
and declared it negligence. Then the possibility of removing the
children came up. At first I fought terribly; but as time went on,
welfare continued to supervise and the welfare officer spoke to me about
removing the children from home as routine. It was summer, they were
home all the time; and it was hard for me alone. She found I was ready
to listen to her offer; and I was stupid enough to accept. We agreed
that they would be taken to a children’s home for a month or two; and I
would be allowed to visit as I pleased.
The two younger children, two and five years
old, were taken to a home for children at risk near Jerusalem, from
which children are usually transferred to boarding schools or foster
homes. Ricki tells me that at the beginning, to her shock and horror,
she didn’t see them for a whole month. She didn’t know exactly where
they were; and she was not permitted to converse with them on the phone.
Only a month later she was allowed to see them at a contact centre.
The first meeting was full of shame. This
tearing away from the children paralysed me. For eight months we visited
like this. During these months their older sister, who was eight years
old, was taken from home for a month to another children’s home in the
same area; but I was able to take her back home. Afterwards I was able
to get back her younger siblings; and they are all with me to this day,
under a supervision order. But this hour per week at the contact centre,
this cruel hour, I will never forget in my life.”
From the depths of her pain, Ricki wrote in
those days a letter to the judge in charge of her case, in which she
described in real time her experience of the contact centre: “One
measured hour per week that needs to be utilized to its fullest, and in
whose course one must give love and warmth so they don’t forget their
mother. In a fenced-in range, an hour devoid of privacy and familiar
intimacy, under the watchful eye of the social worker. And then he
announces: five more minutes. A stab in the heart.
The kids and I don’t
want the measured minutes to end; and he announces again: one more hug
and kiss. And enter the cab. They measure and mete out my love. And upon
saying goodbyes – crying and asking me to come back home with me, and
confused looks from the children, and the taxi that disappears with my
most precious. And then the terrible moment arrives in which darkness
settles its smile upon me. Darkness and huge sorrow, silenced
communication until the following week. They turned the lights out on
the special connection to my children. They expropriated our right to
love, freedom to choose, to contact. This is a world of dark meetings
between parents and their children. In it you feel as if in dark cellars
of humiliation, degradation and trampling on human dignity. None of the
children there laughs or even smiles. Parents hesitate to approach,
speak in a whisper and not out loud as one normally speaks to children.
These are lost children, who don’t know to whom they belong.”
The father of Ricki’s children tells, that
when the children came home, one of them ran around their neighborhood
and yelled: “I’m free, I’m free!” The child, now 12, remembers how he
tried to escape from the contact center during one of the visits in his
uncle’s car, who had joined them for that visit. “I remember that at the
beginning I would cry every day in bed, for at least two weeks,” he
says. “When the social worker at the contact center would tell us it’s
over, I would always ask a bit longer, a bit longer with mother. Then
mom would buy me a chocolate egg so I would be really happy. I always
asked mom when we would come home, and why I can’t come back. But I
can’t remember her reply.”
Professor Vered Slonim Nevo, from the
Department of Social Work at Ben-Gurion University stood in 2008 at the
head of the Salonim-Nevo committee for the evaluation of court appointed
parental evaluation welfare officers – the very ones in charge of
divorce conflicts. One of her significant recommendations was the
appointment of an ombudsman – an objective commissioner. We found that
people remain powerless and don’t know to whom to go in the tangle of
welfare services,” she says. “There were many parents who claimed to us
that we had not heard them; and many claims that welfare does not fulfil
many regulations. It is unconscionable that in such critical matters
there would be no one to complain to; or to appeal to.”
Her recommendation was rejected immediately by
the Ministry of Welfare and the current minister, Isaac Herzog. “As
Minister of Welfare I supported most of Professor Salonim-Nevo’s
recommendations; and some of them were applied,” said Herzog this week.
“I am aware of the criticism; but the appointment of an external
ombudsman might have opened loopholes; endangered welfare and social
employees’ freedom to work; and created an additional layer of empty
appeals and threats – when in reality there are enough critical
mechanisms such as the courts, internal consultations, and various
committees. This has to do with state employees who deal with very
difficult cases.”
“IT’S FORBIDDEN TO RECORD”
Professor Israel Zvi Gilat from the School of
Law in Netanya is also outraged by the lack of oversight and
transparency. In 2002, Gilat stood at the head of an advisory committee
to determine the authorities of “decision committees” (that decide
whether to remove children from their homes) and their mode of operation
(modus operandi). The committee was appointed by the Minister of
Welfare at the time, Solomon Benizri.
“Members of the committee requested that
procedures be transparent and fair,” says Professor Gilat, “and then
there would be no problem to remove children from the home, to send them
to boarding schools, and to send families to contact centres. But I am
certain that if everything were transparent and open to critique, these
things would not happen. The problem is that this system is not open to
critique. If somebody would like, for example, to record what is said,
to receive the minutes of a decision committee meeting or surveillance
committee — and he does not receive permission, what does this teach us?
These are meetings in which sharp criticism is
thrown at parents; and they on their part are supposed to respond – so
why can’t they record? Or allow an additional person to accompany or
represent them? Child welfare is not a psychological principle; but a
moral one. Parents ought to be regarded as partners rather than as
potential criminals,” adds Vered Salonim-Nevo. “I would not close down”
contact centres; but they ought only serve in case of emergency and
protection, in cases of real danger and violence. The situation ought to
be strictly examined in partnership with the parents and family. We
must honestly ask whether this difficult and unnatural environment is
really needed.
“International research shows that when many
and varied treatment programmes are invested in; and the family is taken
as a partner in the process, the results are fantastic – and lead to a
reduction of cases requiring the removal of children from the home to
the contact centres. Therefore, in my opinion, we must invest in greatly
developing therapeutic and rehabilitative tools that exist today.”
Doctor Elisheva Zohar Reich (67), manager
“Yahassim” centre for therapy of couples, families and individuals; and
until six months ago a court appointed expert, agrees with this
approach. Increasing rates of divorce and family conflict, increasing
rates of false complaints, and various trauma that people face – all
need professional treatment that does not exist today,” she says.
“Contact centres should be merely a stepping stone, until accusations
against the parent are investigated. Unfortunately in the current
format, contact centres cannot offer a solution for normative relations.
What is offered is one weekly visit of one to two hours – while in the
meantime disconnections are formed between the parent and child; and no
contact is made with the extended family of that parent. The parent that
comes to meet his child at a contact centre is looked upon by the child
as unfit, problematic, neglectful – a person one must be careful of and
who needs supervision.
This disconnection causes the child to
experience abandonment by a central figure in her life; and the child
grows ever more attached to the custodial parent, because she is afraid
to lose that parent as well. Employees of contact centres work hard to
prevent the last fragment of contact between parent and child from
disappearing; but in order to construct a meaningful relationship, they
admit a large number of families concurrently. As long as they are the
only tool that holds the relationship together, they cannot create the
revolution that will lead to healing. I believe the contact centre
should employ family counsellors who can offer therapy.”
“In real time, treatment ought from time to
time to include both parents, so that they are both involved in creating
and developing the relationship, which will in turn assist in
constructing ideal relationships outside the centre as well. “
Zohar Reich criticizes the system that does
nothing to combat the phenomenon of false complaints; and no less the
lawyers who choose to feed the conflict between the parents. “In order
to prevent disconnections and unnecessary referrals to the contact
centre, the system must respond quickly and in real time. I think that
most of the problems would be solved if the court system would use heavy
sanctions against inciting, alienating parents, who use their children
to prevent contact and regular visitation.”
According to Eliezer Kopel, the first step
that must be taken in the contact centres is to open them to public
scrutiny.
“Contact centres must be normalized. In the situation that has
been created in the contact centres as they are today, there is nothing
normal. Given the current budgets which flow to the contact centres,
they certainly can be transformed into therapeutic, educational and
experiential centres for the whole family. Instead of social workers and
National Service volunteers, who are there to supervise
visitors to the centre, I would appoint a therapeutic team of clinical
psychologists, clinical social workers, and psychotherapists.”
A SAD BIRTHDAY IN THE CENTER
Gili celebrated his
daughter’s seventh birthday at the contact centre. The two of them were
all alone. By way of exception the social workers allowed him to
videotape and document the birthday. Today she is twelve – Gili has not
watched the video of that day for five years; and watching it today
shatters him. This is the saddest party we have ever seen. Colourful
balloons are scattered on the floor of the contact centre; and plates
full of the girl’s favourite sweets are arranged on the little table,
alongside several birthday cakes. None of Gili’s family members was
allowed to attend let alone friends from the girl’s class. A burst of
love moves Gili to hug her. A small hug. A hug that curtails abruptly
due to the penetrating glare of the supervising social worker.
Following that birthday party I did not see my
daughter for three weeks,” he recounts. “The social workers claimed
that it had flooded her emotionally; and that she needs the time to calm
down. I felt I was going to die. At some point I decided to sit by the
contact centre and not to budge until they permitted renewed meetings.
After several days, that happened.”
Gili continued to meet with his daughter at
the contact centre for six months, “until the meetings were halted, when
they had no more excuses to keep me there; and when the mother had
trouble bringing the girl every week. Suddenly, after almost two years,
the nightmare ended. All at once, without support, without redress for
the damages caused, just so on one sunny day. They hit and ran; and left
me to deal with the damage.”
“The state inserted me into the contact centre
for no reason; and it should pay for what it did to me and my daughter.
I am sometimes still afraid to hug her, so they don’t say I am touching
her inappropriately. And she shrinks from hugging other relatives as
well, such as her grandparents.
Luckily, our relationship today is
strong and wonderful. No one will ever be able to separate us again. But
after all that I have been through, I feel I’ve been left handicapped.”
RESPONSE FROM THE MINISTRY OF WELFARE: “THE SOCIAL WORKERS’ ONLY PRIORITY IS THE CHILDREN’S WELL-BEING”
“Contact centres are not the problem but the
solution – an important solution to the problem of being able to lead a
normative family life as much as possible and in a limited capacity, for
the good of the children whose parents are in the process of a nasty
divorce – a battle often conducted at the expense of the children’s
wellbeing.
“The Ministry of Welfare, through the social
workers in general, and those at the centres in particular, will
continue to act on behalf of families in the midst of difficult and
bitter conflict, and to be the ones at the forefront of this battle,
keeping the well-being and security of children at top priority.
“The feeling conveyed in your letter is that
your only purpose is to criticise and attack the entire system, in the
name of those few parents. The Ministry of Welfare is not afraid of
criticism; and it is natural that in all it does some errors are
committed; but we pay attention to them and take action to resolve
them.”
RESPONSE FROM THE ISRAEL COURT ADMINISTRATION
“Family Court decisions on the topic of
visitation between parents involved in a divorce procedure are based on
consideration of all evidence and circumstances relevant to the case.
Most often the family courts are aided by a survey conducted by a
welfare officer, which includes facts, professional impressions, expert
opinions and recommendations. The court may accept the welfare officer’s
recommendation fully or partially, request additional investigation, or
reject the recommendations entirely. In addition, the court may
instruct the welfare officer to continue involvement through social
workers, professional support workers and others, in order to assist in
resolution and continued parental contact for the children. The purpose
of the Contact centers is to allow visitation in a protected and
supervised environment between the parent and his child. In any instance
when a court order is not observed, the injured side may address the
court which issued the order.”
Michal Jacob Yitzhaki, michali100@gmail.com
Naama Lanski, naamal@israelhayom.co.il
Read more: The Trauma of Israel's Notorious "Contact Centers" | Eli Daniel | Ops & Blogs | The Times of Israel http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/the-trauma-of-israels-notorious-contact-centers/#ixzz2yaUoN09t
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