BMCC 2019 Brings Advocates Together for #WeToo: Connecting the Protective Mothers Movement to the #MeToo Movement
The 14th Battered Mothers Custody Conference, BMCC XIV, was held this past weekend at a new, elegant venue, The Desmond Hotel in Albany, New York, where attendees and presenters commingled around a huge koi pond surrounded by plants and flowers--a cheerful setting for a topic that is far from cheerful.
The conference started on Friday April 26th with a live streamed video greeting by Ruth Glenn, the Executive Director of the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence, which has repeatedly provided financial support and cosponsorship of the conference. Ruth personally has offered encouragement and endorsement of the conference for many years. Her opening was followed by several hours of main session presentations, all of them following along this year's conference theme: #WeToo: Connecting the Protective Mothers Movement to the #MeToo Movement.
We heard from Lisa Fishel-Wolovick, the author of Traumatic Divorce and Separation and a long-time legal advocate for battered women, followed by media expert and communications professor Garland Waller's talk, 5 Ways to Tell if You’re Being Gaslighted by the Media. Other presenters included Jennifer Collins, a Courageous Kid (now grown-up) par excellence, and Barry Goldstein, who discussed how to use his book, with Elizabeth Liu, Representing the Domestic Violence Survivor.
Friday afternoon saw two sets of concurrent workshops totaling ten workshops on compelling topics specifically aimed to meet the needs of protective mothers. One of these was a session led by Garland Waller to help mothers who wished to tell their stories how to do so within a four-minute time frame. A number of these moms opted to provide testimony of their experiences in the family court system to the entire conference audience at the Sunday morning Battered Mothers Testimony Session. Other topics included healing from trauma, the failures of batterer programs, and the criminalization and incarceration of protective moms. The Friday evening session consisted of a showing of “What Doesn’t Kill Me,” Rachel Meyrick’s fantastic expose that gives voice to the experiences of a large contingent of protective mothers who have lost custody of their children. A number of those mothers featured in the film attended this year’s conference.
Saturday opened with a colorful and moving retrospective, produced by Kathy Lee Scholpp, on the activities of Mothers of Lost Children and the California Protective Parents Association. Dara Carlin, one of the BMCC Lifetime Achievement Award recipients this year, along with Heather Boltz and Vicki M., talked about homecomings--a preview of what your mother and child reunion may be and what it could entail. Next was a powerful keynote address by the noted psychologist Paula Caplan, who was amply qualified to speak on her topic: how psychiatric diagnoses are used against protective mothers as a weapon—this, when the diagnostic system itself is invalid and scientifically unsupported. As Dr. Caplan put it, over the decades, she became aware of thousands of stories of people whose lives were destroyed, including through loss of a vast array of their human rights, by events that began with and were “justified” by their being diagnosed. One of the most pernicious consequences is the psychiatrization of mothers who report that their children are being molested by their fathers.
Dr. Caplan’s engaging discussion was followed by a much more sobering panel presentation by Barry Goldstein, Andrew Willis, Kathy Giglio, and Leigh Block—the latter two being protective mothers who went through the worst of the worst—experiencing having their precious children murdered by their abusive ex. The remedy is the Safe Child Act, promoted by Barry and the rest of the BMCC community, as a means of avoiding the horrendous outcomes experienced by Kathy and Leigh.
On Saturday afternoon, we heard Camille Cooper talk about best practices in parenting children traumatized by DV and custody litigation. We then were treated to Phyllis Chesler’s keynote, Custody Battles, Pedophile Fathers, and the #MeToo Movement, followed by Nancy Erickson’s keynote address on Parental Alienation and how to fight it. Wendy Murphy then discussed how #MeToo can be used to raise the profile of the protective mothers movement. After this, ten more concurrent workshops covered issues like the history of the DV movement, dealing with young adult children who are estranged from their protective mother, betrayal trauma, and tips for surviving family court. Rita Smith, another BMCC XIV Lifetime Achievement Award winner,
Described the partnerships she developed while at NCADV and what she is doing presently to increase the number of people actively aware of battered mothers’ issues and ways people can work together to combat these problems.
The Saturday working sessions were capped off by an elegant social evening at The Hangar, located (literally) on the runway of the Albany International Airport, about five minutes away from the conference venue. There, protective moms and presenters held a candlelight vigil for Wendi Miller, a protective mom found murdered approximately a week ago, on Easter Sunday, to whom this year’s conference was dedicated. They also enjoyed music, wine, food, and networking.
Sunday’s main session started off with a powerful and moving 90 minute session during which approximately a dozen protective moms told their story in brief, having been coached to do so by Garland Waller. This session was difficult to witness, but the sense of love and support that filled the room as the testimony was going on made up for the heaviness of the topic. We were finally uplifted, however, by the report from Joan Meier that followed. Her talk, Powerful Data and Powerful Voices Bring Real Progress: NIJ Family Courts Study and Congressional Resolution, was filled with good news, including the fact that her years-long research has yielded findings that affirm everything protective mothers have been claiming for years.
The last presentation was given by Renee Beeker and Paul Holdorf, who described findings from the National Family Court Watch Project. The final session was a luncheon at which four prominent leaders and long-time faculty members of the BMCC were honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award: Rita Smith, Dara Carlin, Garland Waller, and Joan Meier. Kristen Hofheimer, the beloved daughter of battered mothers legal advocates Charlie and Diane Hofheimer, received a posthumous award for her lifetime of doing legal representation for protective mothers.
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