| issues > healing & recovery > support groups Support groupsLisa Vetten, manager of the Gender Unit at the
Centre for the Study of Violence
and Reconciliation in South Africa, says: 'Not all rape survivors
react in the same way, so group support can be very helpful for
some
women,
it may not necessarily be helpful for all women.
'I think recovering
from something like a rape is a process, so something like this
may not necessarily be appropriate in the immediate aftermath
for some women; it may be something that’s more suitable
further down the line but they can certainly play a role I think
in firstly breaking that sense of isolation, that it’s
only happened to you or that it happened to you because of something
you did. I think we need to discover how often it happens to
so many other women and start to see that it’s not about
what you did wrong, it’s about how some men behave.’
Charlene Smith, a journalist and sexual assault
survivor, spends much of her time helping the survivor’s
of sexual assault, and their families, and organises regular ‘survivor
lunches’ - gatherings for survivors and their families
to talk about what has happened and offer each other support.
It is at one of these lunches that Cathy first met Glory and
her twin daughters. Over the next few years, Cathy and Glory
offer each other mutual support in their attempts to get justice
for those they love; in Cathy’s case her mother and in
Glory’s case, her twin daughters.
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