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Chapter 17 - Role of Society and Media

Child abuse is not just a private issue—it is a public crisis that requires collective responsibility. While families play a central role in prevention, society at large must also be involved. Communities, institutions, and the media all shape the environment in which abuse is either challenged—or allowed to continue.

The silence or complicity of society gives abusers power. The awareness and action of society can take it away.

1. Society's Role in Prevention

Every community must foster a culture where:

Children are believed when they speak

Abuse is not minimized or hidden

Victims are supported, not shamed

Education about safety is promoted in schools and religious settings

Reporting systems are accessible and confidential

Ignoring abuse because "it's not our child" is not neutrality—it's neglect of duty.

2. Challenging Harmful Norms

Many cultural beliefs contribute to the silence around child abuse:

Honor over truth – Protecting the family name instead of the child

Gender bias – Believing girls are always victims and boys are always safe

Victim-blaming – Questioning a child's behavior rather than the abuser's actions

Misinterpretation of religion – Using faith to discourage speaking out

Society must break free from these harmful traditions. True honor lies in standing up for what is right, not covering what is wrong.

3. Empowering Schools, Teachers, and Faith Leaders

Trusted figures in a child's life have an essential role in prevention:

Schools should include age-appropriate body safety education

Teachers must be trained to recognize signs of abuse and how to respond

Faith leaders must use their platforms to condemn abuse and encourage justice

Counselors and social workers should be accessible and well-resourced

Institutions that work with children must be equipped and accountable—not just well-intentioned.

4. Media's Role: Power and Responsibility

Media has the potential to:

Expose abusers and spark social action

Educate the public about warning signs and support systems

Break taboos by telling survivor stories with dignity and care

Hold institutions accountable through investigative reporting

But media must also avoid:

Sensationalism that disrespects victims

Sharing unverified or harmful details

Blaming survivors or portraying abuse as entertainment

Responsible storytelling can shift mindsets and save lives.

5. Encouraging Community Action

Communities can take practical steps:

Organize child protection workshops and awareness events

Offer parenting classes or peer support groups

Create anonymous reporting channels through local organizations

Ensure children in need—orphans, street children, displaced youth—are not forgotten

When communities come together, abuse loses its power to hide.

6. Celebrate and Support Survivors

It's important to highlight stories not just of trauma—but of resilience and healing.

Uplift survivor voices

Support those who come forward

Praise families, teachers, or individuals who protected a child

Show that justice, recovery, and empowerment are possible

Conclusion

Abuse thrives in silence—but so does change.

Society and media are not bystanders. They are either part of the problem or part of the solution. Every article shared, conversation started, or action taken can protect a child or encourage a survivor to speak.

We must become a culture that not only hears the cries of the harmed—but refuses to be silent about them.

> "When a society listens to its children, it shapes a safer tomorrow."

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