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Growing Up in Jesus Land

By Jennifer Liss, WireTap. Posted October 27, 2005.


Julia Scheeres' new memoir is a riveting story of a 16-year-old girl and her adopted brothers growing up in Indiana with their violent father and religious mother.
Jesus Land
Jesus Land
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When I worked at a domestic violence shelter in Chicago, a client told me that her husband had tied her arms around the base of the toilet and broke a broomstick across her legs. But, she said, that wasn't the worse part. The worst part started the next morning when she began to fear when he would beat her again.

In her memoir "Jesus Land," Julia Scheeres unlocks the door to her childhood home plagued with domestic abuse. And she skillfully captures a whole picture of children living in fear -- from the beatings and humiliation, to the expectant, when-next moments in between.

The on-going abuse in “Jesus Land” is devastating. Scheeres' father, who was a surgeon, beat her brother David with a 2-by-4, broke a bone, and then sent him to the very hospital where he worked. And shortly after the beating, when Scheeres' mother learned that young David had slit his wrists, she coldly responded: "Why can't I just have one day of peace?"(After she inspected his wounds: "They're surface cuts ... if you want to kill yourself, you slice down, not sideways.")

But "Jesus Land" truly rattled me as I read about the Scheeres family eating dinner -- Christian radio blaring through the intercom -- and no one saying anything.

"Jesus Land" is a horrific story honestly and beautifully told, and I read it with one hand over my eyes, afraid of what was unfolding. I didn't take a decent breath until I reached the last page, and even then, I first had to cry.

Set in the 1980s, Scheeres' first book bravely recounts her adolescence in a fundamentalist Christian household in rural Indiana with her two adopted black brothers. (Scheeres is white.) Her older brother, Jerome, frequently rapes Julia. Her younger brother, David, is her soft-spoken best friend and an optimist. Scheeres writes: "Despite everything, (David) still believes in the goodness of humankind, that our parents will someday welcome him home with open arms, that his friends will not betray him. That's the fundamental difference between us."

Julia and David fight both the harsh, racist outside world and their volatile home life. As David and Julia fend off the n-word taunts (and worse) at school and carefully sidestep their father's wrath at home, their mother methodically stuffs quackery Christian propaganda down their throats, exploiting the doctrine by using it to justify domestic abuse.

Life off of Country Road 50 soon ends for Julia and David, who are sent to Escuela Caribe, a Christian reform school in the Dominican Republic. They continue to suffer in the jungle. The reform school is a sort of torture camp for "problem" children. Teachers sucker-punch children for punishment. Housefathers demand pushups at 3 a.m. from teenage girls in their nightgowns. The students must ask permission to do everything, from sitting down to raising a fork. In a closed-door meeting, a founder of the program tells Julia that he once punished a 15-year-old "whore" by stripping her naked and beating her "black and blue." "And believe me," he says to Julia. "I would not hesitate to do it again." (After reading "Jesus Land," a friend of mine phoned Human Rights Watch. "Do you monitor Christian reform schools?" she asked.)


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Jennifer Liss is a writer living in San Francisco.

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This must be a truly moving book
Posted by: ShaSpirit on Oct 27, 2005 1:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I can feel the pain of the abuse, religion and race (color) coming out just in this description of the book. It made my gut twist, though my family was not church oriented; there was lots of racism and abuse. Funny my adopted abuser was a doctor too. It was over 50 years ago and it still twists me inside. At 3:30 am when my brain is dead, I cannot think of anything else to call this but a book report. LOL

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Hell is for Children
Posted by: TerranceDC on Oct 27, 2005 7:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I read Jesus Land, and reviewed it on my blog. Growing up in a black, souther, deeply religious family, much of what Scheeres wrote resonated deeply with me.

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This what happens when you turn Indiana into
Posted by: maxpayne on Oct 28, 2005 8:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
an unemployment hurtlocker by killing fair labor and wages. No wonder Al Quaida and other terrorists cash on this kind of weakness in "Jesus Land".

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"The Truth About New Horizons Youth Ministries" has moved
Posted by: nhym-alumni on Dec 21, 2005 11:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"The Truth About New Horizons Youth Ministries" has moved. It is now located at http://nhym-alumni.org/ (formerly .com).

Please update your bookmarks

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