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Pesach Safety: Protecting Children from Abuse #shorts
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Pesach is a beautiful time, but also a dangerous one for children. Unfamiliar spaces and distracted parents can create conditions for abuse. Awareness is protection. Teach your children about healthy boundaries—it's never snitching, it's saving. #PesachSafety #ChildProtection #HealthyBoundaries #ParentingTips #JewishTradition
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It's really important that we all
understand that Pesach is a most
beautiful time of year.
But statistically, it can also be a very
dangerous time for children.
Large gatherings, unfamiliar spaces,
disrupted routines, and distracted
parents can create a perfect condition
for abuse to occur
and go unnoticed.
Awareness isn't being paranoid. It's
protection.
>> Just to echo some of what Rabbi Harwood
was saying,
I think there's never a wrong time to
have what we like to call a healthy
boundaries conversation with our
children.
Those can be obviously different at
different ages, always age-appropriate.
Even a five- or seven-year-old can be
spoken to about healthy boundaries, as
well as 13- and 15-year-old and an
18-year-old. And these are things that
we need to be talking to our children
about every so often.
You know, the the common times that
people perk up and think about this is
when their children are going to be away
from home for extended periods of time,
like before they go off to Yeshiva, a
Mesivta, to a school, or before they go
to sleepaway camp. But really before Yom
Tov, it's a great time as well. It can
be a short conversation one-on-one with
each child, I would recommend, because
each child's at a different stage and
age, where you just set speak about at
an age-appropriate way the idea that
it's never okay for somebody else to be
trying to look, show, or touch at
different private parts of the body, uh
parts that are normally covered by
bathing suits, uh acting in certain ways
that make you feel weird or just feels
off. Anything that has that kind of
feeling to it, you need to come and tell
you need to get out of there and tell us
right away. Tell the parents right away.
It's never snitching. I like to always
just say the phrase, it's not snitching,
it's saving. That means, you know,
snitching is the rebbe told the class,
don't eat don't eat any snacks now. And
some kid is sneaking a little snack in
the back of the class, and you raise
your hand and say, "Oh, rebbe, he's
eating in class." We could call that
snitching. But anytime it's something
dangerous or unhealthy, it's not
snitching, it's saving. And so, once we
understand those two points, you always,
even if you just have a doubt, maybe
this was a little weird, you come and
talk to us about it. Worst-case
scenario, we have a nice conversation
and it's okay, and we move forward. But
it's really important to always tell us
about anything that's going on. That's
the first idea that I think I would just
put out there in terms of making sure
our children are prepared in and of
themselves, regardless of what we can do
proactively, but preventatively what we
can do to help our children be careful
as we go into the wonderful Yom Tov.