The Gory Details: Asylum, Sexual Assault, and Traumatic Memory
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Paulina: It’s him.
- Geraldo: Who?
- Paulina: It’s the doctor.
- Geraldo: What doctor?
- Paulina: The doctor who played Schubert.
- Geraldo: The doctor who played Schubert.
- Paulina: That doctor.
- Geraldo: How do you know?
- Paulina: The voice [1].
1.1. Gender-Based Asylum in the United States
1.2. Rape as a Form of Persecution
1.3. Credibility and Traumatic Memory
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Rape: A Questionable Form of Persecution
Around 4:00 p.m., an officer, a tall heavy-set man, came into the room where I was waiting. He pushed me onto a table, tore off my pants, and raped me. After the officer raped me, three or four other soldiers came in and held me down. I was screaming, so one of the men held his hand over my mouth. Some Burmese men heard me screaming and came to intervene. The officer who had raped me ordered me to get dressed and let me go. I believe that if the Burmese men had not intervened to help me, I would have been killed after I was raped.[115]
- ADC: Why did they rape you?
- Asylum Seeker: Because of my involvement in the organization.
- ADC: Did you scream? Did you shout out?
- Asylum Seeker: No.
- ADC: Why not?
- Asylum Seeker: They were closing my mouth.
- ADC: Did anyone hear what was happening?
- Asylum Seeker: I don’t know.
- ADC: After they left, what happened?
- Asylum Seeker: I left.
- ADC: Did you go to a Doctor?
- Asylum Seeker: No, I was ashamed.
- ADC: Were any other women in the organization raped?
- Asylum Seeker: I don’t know.
- ADC: Did you go to any more meetings?
- Asylum Seeker: No.
- ADC: When did you go back to work?
- Asylum Seeker: Soon. But I could only work a few hours a day and was told not to come back to work because I had trouble concentrating.
- ADC: How would you know if you were examining someone with FGM?
- Physician: There are three stages of FGM [Female Genital Mutilation] and Mariatu has stage two which includes the removal of the labia minora. I have done thousands of pelvic exams in my career and have seen enough women without it to know the difference.
- ADC: What did you find when you examined her?
- Physician: She told me she had been raped.
- ADC: What evidence was there of sexual assault?
- Physician: The barrier between her vagina and rectum was crudely violated. Her vagina and urethra were exposed because the tissue was torn and stretched. This is consistent with trauma.
- ADC: Why did you leave Sierra Leone?
- Mariatu: The rebels came to my house looking for my father. He was not there. They beat my mother. They cut off my brother’s leg. They raped my sister.
- ADC: Did anything happen to you?
- Mariatu: They raped me. If they had killed me it would have been better than what’s happened to me.
- ADC: Why didn’t your family take you to the hospital?
- Mariatu: Because of my brother’s leg.
I remember trying to educate one of my very good officers—very good—why rape was persecution. This was a very good officer and a female officer mind you. And she gave me a case very well written, that had a finding on it where the woman had been raped and she found no past persecution. Here’s a woman, you know, who could not perceive this as persecution. But that shows you the challenge of it. And also, just seeing rape as a crime. The problem was the rape wasn’t considered persecution, and that’s scary.[121]
3.2. Talking about Rape
In my country, they believe that if you are a virgin and are being executed that you will go straight to heaven. They [the guards] don’t want this to happen, so they rape those girls the night before the execution. I don’t know how anybody can be silent.
There was a Salvadoran woman who told me she had been raped a day or two before we went into court. And that’s damning because we’ve already filed our asylum application and there’s no mention of it, and now she’s saying she was raped. What do you do? Do you say, let’s not talk about it, do you say lie about it if they ask you what happened, do you admit it? It’s a horrible position to be in [125].
The attorney that I got the case from had already filed the asylum application. She told me she was raped, even though it was not in there [the application]. The woman did not tell the INS that she was raped. I said if there’s anything else you’re not talking about, you know, this is your last chance. So it came out in bits and pieces. And when I prepped her, to talk about the rape, she would break down. She wouldn’t be able to talk about it. And in court, we had to stop the hearing for forty-five minutes. Unfortunately, we had a trial attorney [ADC] who thought my client was lying. I actually prefer the rape cases with the men. She [the ADC] was like really cold. Luckily, we had a good judge, but the trial attorney was not believing her.[126]
I had one client who I found out she was raped a couple of days before our hearing, and I said, we have to tell the judge and she didn’t want to. And I said, you know, it could help your case. I asked her why didn’t you tell me before? When she was applying for asylum, her brother was the translator and she didn’t want him to know.[126]
It’s always better—in any torture case—to have a person not be a relative because people don’t want to disclose rape or any kind of violence. They want to protect their family from the knowledge of how horrible it was or the humiliation of revealing what’s been done to them because there’s always so much shame involved. And that’s the other thing that I tell the women over and over again that this is not their shame: it’s the shame of the person who did this to them.[128]
She’s describing the rape and saying that while all of this was happening, that he [the assailant] said terrible things to her, and the judge said: ‘what did he say?’ She started to cry and said ‘I don’t want to repeat the words he said to me as he was raping me.’ ‘I want to know exactly what he said, tell me what the words were.’ And you just have this focus from him, which I think was gross voyeurism. He also wanted to know what she was wearing.[125]
I’ve seen judges, particularly with rape cases, do the right thing. The judge comes out and says to the client ‘I’ve marked a little piece of your declaration, I want you to read it right now to yourself. Councils—do you all notice the section that I’ve pointed to? This is very sensitive material. Now I want to ask you a question, a very important question, is that what really happened to you? [The applicant then states ‘Yes, your honor, yes, that’s what happened to me. I’m going to give instructions to council for no further questions on these points. I’m going to issue my finding right now, that this person has credibly suffered what is indicated in paragraph three.’ Now there’s a judge who gave that client some of her dignity. I wish we could see more of that [129].
3.3. The Gory Details: Credibility and Traumatic Memory
In some cultures, there were idiomatic expressions like ‘my dignity was taken’ for horrible unspeakable sexual violence. It was so uncomfortable for the applicant, as well as for me. I would just try to get more information about other parts of the claim and put in that the applicant felt that her dignity was not respected and get the details about other things that happened in detention or whatever was happening.[133]
We had a case involving a woman from the former Soviet Union who said that her political opponents cornered her in a valley or a building somewhere and she says they threatened her and began to fondle her. At her asylum hearing before the INS, according to what was noted on the asylum application, she claimed she was raped by them. Now molestation is nothing to smile at, but molest and rape are different—both disgusting but different. I found the Russian language interpreter who had translated for this woman at her INS interview. She testified that in the Russian language the verb for rape and the verb for molest is the same verb and it depends on inflection and tone. And she says, ‘I could well have been wrong; it could have been molest. I was just so horrified I said rape.’ Well, that ended the problem of credibility and I granted the woman asylum.[134]
The soldiers grabbed me, and I began to scream. One of them put his hand on my mouth. I tried to stand but he pulled me down. He raped me. I heard other soldiers come into the room. At some point, these other soldiers raped me. I don’t remember how many soldiers raped me. It was a long time. I felt dead. I am afraid to return to Ethiopia. I fear I will be returned to prison for my involvement in the AAPO. The memories of my horrendous imprisonment and rape still remain with me. I can never forget what I have suffered.[135]
- Attorney: Why did you leave Sierra Leonne?
- Asylum Seeker: The rebels were killing everyone. They caught me and took me.
- Attorney: What did they do?
- Asylum Seeker: They tied me up and beat up.
- Attorney: Anything else?
- Asylum Seeker: They raped me.
- Attorney: How many times?
- Asylum Seeker: Every day.
- Attorney: How were you able to leave?
- Asylum Seeker: Some of the girls agreed to run out.
- Attorney: Where did you go?
- Asylum Seeker: To Freetown to find my family.
- ADC: Is the problem with dates due to your lack of education?
- Asylum Seeker: I don’t know [136].
When a person is telling you something that is credible, they’ll start off very normal like you and me talking here today. All of a sudden when they talk about the harm, they start crying, sobbing—it’s like a waterfall. They were just perfectly normal—and that’s very credible testimony. To cry with real tears is very credible.[137]
I think more of what we see are people embellishing and thinking they have to say that they have been raped, but have never been raped. Maybe they have been close to, maybe they have been fondled. But that has not been enough. With a male officer, there are always tears involved. To me, that isn’t genuine. I have dealt with too many rape victims and the thing that they don’t do is burst into tears. At this point, six months after, there is usually never a breakdown.[138]
- ADC: How did your family suffer?
- Asylum Seeker: They beat my husband.
- ADC: Can you describe specific incidences?
- Asylum Seeker: I was pulled out of our van and pushed down by the police. I was pregnant. I went to the doctor, and they said the baby was dead.
- ADC: Anything else?
- Asylum seeker: They called me a prostitute (starts crying).
- ADC: Were there any other incidences?
- Asylum seeker: They took advantage of me for being married to him (no longer crying).
- ADC: Took advantage how?
- Asylum Seeker: They were raping me (no longer crying). Judge interjects: And being called a prostitute was worse [139]?
I had a case of a Salvadoran mother and daughter. The asylum was based on past persecution. When this death squad were looking for her husband they couldn’t find him, they raped the mother while the daughter was in the next room. The mother testifies very credibly. When she starts getting to the rape she starts crying. Her case ends. Daughter comes in. When she starts getting to the point where the mother is raped, she starts crying. The judge goes off on this really rambling opinion about how outrageous it is they both cried at exactly the same place in the testimony when they were talking about a rape. It was just absolutely outrageous—and essentially just told them they were complete liars and abusing the system.[127]
Traumatic memory is processed differently. It is common for there to be difficulty remembering details, to have inconsistencies in recall for details of traumatic events. They may not be able to give a full narrative account of what happened to them.[140]
Bringing in a therapist helps in the sense that there’s documentation of it, and that there’s somebody else that can verify that the story this person is telling is true and accurate. And in one sense it hurts, because then they might not be the best witness, they don’t want to talk about what’s happened to them, because they’re forced to relive the memories. And it’s hard to force them to be retraumatized in a room full of strangers.[116]
At 19 years of age, she witnessed her father’s murder. Her mother was beaten, and her brother disappeared at the hands of the secret police. She was gang raped on two occasions by police which she believes was because her father held a high military position. Suffers from PTSD and post rape syndrome. This woman’s demeanor and reluctance to have the pelvic exam performed were consistent with that of women who have been raped. My findings are consistent with her history. It is my impression that she has been sexually victimized.[128]
In the beginning they can be so guarded and so unemotive because they’re so suspicious that it’s harder to believe at first because they’re not convincing when they first tell you the story. I do about five to ten pelvics in a day so I pretty much know how people respond to a pelvic exam. I tell them [asylum seekers] that the psychologist doesn’t perform the pelvic. They start bawling and shaking all over. I can even talk to women from other cultures who are virgins into having a pelvic—unless they’ve been rape victims.[128]
I was taken into custody and questioned about my activities with the OLF. There were two men, and they tied my hands and feet, they turned me upside down, and beat my feet with electric cables. At some point I lost consciousness. When I woke up, they were pointing a gun at me and said since I wasn’t cooperating, they were going to give me a hard lesson. He took off his lower body clothing. I was resisting and crying, and he raped me. I have been emotionally devastated since then.[141]
One occasion I will never forget; it remains with me until this day. In mid-1992, one early morning, two soldiers entered. I could hear other men talking just outside the house. They reminded me about having to leave. One of the men forcibly put his hand over my mouth. After that, things went blank. When I came to, I was on the floor.[142]
This added to my deep shame of being raped. My pregnancy was a reminder of my rape. With the help of my friend, I obtained an abortion. I cannot return to Georgia. I have strong memories of my rape, and cannot return to the place where I had been raped, and where Georgians want to get rid of me because I am Armenian.[142]
There were some very, very emotional interviews. You are trying to get information and you are trying to learn as much as you can about the situation, but you are walking a tight rope. If you ask too many questions or if you try to elicit too much, you put them at the risk of reliving that experience. Then you open a floodgate that is hard to close back up because it gets very emotional. One officer was interviewing a woman who had been detained and mistreated, somehow it crossed the line, and the applicant went into a real post-traumatic state. She went into a fetal position on the floor and started taking her clothes off, sort of went back into that horrible incident during the interview.[133]
They will lash you every morning and say ‘café.’ Café is coffee and they call it in French café. They say, ‘you are having café’ and they are giving you that every morning and evening. They will lash you under your feet. They will ask you to sit and stretch your legs like that and they’ll lash you under the tops of the leg.[143]
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Oxford, C. The Gory Details: Asylum, Sexual Assault, and Traumatic Memory. Sexes 2023, 4, 188-221. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes4020015
Oxford C. The Gory Details: Asylum, Sexual Assault, and Traumatic Memory. Sexes. 2023; 4(2):188-221. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes4020015
Chicago/Turabian StyleOxford, Connie. 2023. "The Gory Details: Asylum, Sexual Assault, and Traumatic Memory" Sexes 4, no. 2: 188-221. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes4020015
APA StyleOxford, C. (2023). The Gory Details: Asylum, Sexual Assault, and Traumatic Memory. Sexes, 4(2), 188-221. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes4020015