Meadowsweet
Diamond Member
I just watched a TV program about this. It is where a meeting is arranged between the victim and the perpetrator of a crime.
It is when the perpetrator is in prison and is arranged in a safe environment, and there is preparation counseling before and after.
The victims reported that it was empowering - some because they got to say all the things they wanted to say and explain the wider implications of the crime and how it hurt them, others because they saw an attacker (who had seemed terrifying at the time) as scared, sorry and more vulnerable and human.
Something that eats away at me from the last attack, is that the attacker got away with it completely. He didn't just get away with it from a legal view, but he is still friends with some of the people we both knew, whereas I;ve had to leave because I can't cope. It hurts so much that he has been unaffected by his actions, when I seem to have lost everything there was to lose.
And I do feel that it would make a difference to my life to be able to confront him, and the people who have covered it up and tell them the effects that it has had.
I don't have the support to do that, so it's not a possibility. But I can understand how beneficial restoritive justice can be.
Any thoughts? Would you like to have a controlled meeting with a perpetrator?
It is when the perpetrator is in prison and is arranged in a safe environment, and there is preparation counseling before and after.
The victims reported that it was empowering - some because they got to say all the things they wanted to say and explain the wider implications of the crime and how it hurt them, others because they saw an attacker (who had seemed terrifying at the time) as scared, sorry and more vulnerable and human.
Something that eats away at me from the last attack, is that the attacker got away with it completely. He didn't just get away with it from a legal view, but he is still friends with some of the people we both knew, whereas I;ve had to leave because I can't cope. It hurts so much that he has been unaffected by his actions, when I seem to have lost everything there was to lose.
And I do feel that it would make a difference to my life to be able to confront him, and the people who have covered it up and tell them the effects that it has had.
I don't have the support to do that, so it's not a possibility. But I can understand how beneficial restoritive justice can be.
Any thoughts? Would you like to have a controlled meeting with a perpetrator?