When
Rachel Denhollander stood during Dr. Larry Nassar's sentencing hearing
in January 2018 and spoke of his abuse, its effects on her and on his
hundreds of other victims, she included notes of her pity for him and
hopes he would seek forgiveness for his wrong, because she knew that God
would accept his genuine repentance as he accepts any who repent. Many
Christian writers highlighted her words, even though they had to squirm a
little uncomfortably later when Denhollander described how her own
church did not support her stands on dealing with the reality of abusers
in their midst.
Both aspects of this story are laid out in her 2019 memoir, What Is a Girl Worth?
which she titled based on a phrase and idea from her victim impact
statement. She asked the judge in the case to impose the maximum
sentence possible on Nassar as a sign to other abused and assaulted
women and girls that they were not worthless, despite their treatment by
those who exploited and manipulated them.
Denhollander doesn't
limit her book to just the time she spent competing in gymnastics and
was Nassar's victim, and then the later years of the trial and its
impact on Nassar's employer, Michigan State University and the United
States Gymnastics Association which used him as a staff physician. She
offers a brief sketch of her career as a gymnast, including the nagging
injuries that developed for which she was sent to Nassar for treatment.
She also outlines how she met and then developed a relationship with her
husband, trying to describe how the abuse she suffered at 15 affected
her ability to trust and relate to him. She notes that the long-distance
quality of their relationship may have actually helped them because
they could advance in levels of intimacy at a distance that didn't set
off as many of her alarms and flight responses.
When the story
gets to the initial newspaper account about Nassar that began to uncover
the depth of his crimes and the complicity of supposedly controlling
organizations in covering up the abuse, Denhollander moves to more of a
diary format, walking through the phases that moved from news story to
accusation to trial to testimony and then to her sentencing speech. Here her
voice is that of a strong adult rather than a victimized child; her
abuse affected who she is and left her with scars that may not disappear
for a long time but it does not define her. She can note the irony her
discovery that her research on the therapy Nassar claimed he was using
meant that she knows more about it than he ever did, since nothing of
how he abused his victims is a part of that technique.
The story
may seem a little unfocused to some readers, but Denhollander wants to
try to answer people who legitimately wonder how abuse victims such as
herself don't go to authorities and how the abusers might get away with
their crimes in full view of parents, guardians or chaperones. She
offers a powerful story of how predators such as Nassar capitalize on
the trust of their positions and the desire of good people to believe
that no one could really be that kind of a monster. She also highlights
how his enablers, even though they might have been deceived themselves,
can effectively render the powerlessness victims feel permanent by not
fulfilling their roles of governance and protection.
Her book is
something of a hybrid of reporting and memoir, an attempt to show the
impact of these events on a larger public scale and on her own personal
history. It includes the significant role played by her faith, both as a
place of unfortunate human failing and the eventual source of the true
answer to her title question: Everything.
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