Centrepoint survivors want justice for the children who suffered abuse, writes Anke Richter.
Three survivors from an infamous New Zealand sex cult are breaking their silence to call for restorative justice for the children who were abused.
Twenty-one years have passed since Centrepoint was shut down; nine years since its guru Bert Potter died. It has taken that long for more of his victims to speak out about the Albany cult and the leader and nine people who were eventually jailed.
In an unprecedented #MeToo moment for New Zealand, survivors have made a collective plea for intergenerational restorative justice. Nearly 40 people out of the hundreds who lived at Centrepoint from 1977 to 2000 have signed an open letter, which went public on Thursday night, asking former members to acknowledge their trauma and pain, including child sexual abuse.
The trio ask in their letter that former Centrepoint members consider "their obligations towards the children of the community" and acknowledge the resulting social, emotional and psychological difficulties many still experience as adults.
"We ask you to hear our voices. We ask you to set aside your complex feelings surrounding this issue and acknowledge our realities. We ask that you work with us to find ways to enable healing and restoration of the history."
The letter has been published on the Centrepoint Restoration Project website and is addressed to "all former Centrepoint adults who have an interest in open dialogue about the negative impacts of Centrepoint on many of the former children of the community".
A 2010 Massey University study revealed that one in three children at Centrepoint were sexually abused.
Drugs like LSD and ecstasy were manufactured on the property and taken in group experiments that involved youngsters.
"This potent mix of social control, parental child neglect, drug use and hyper-sexuality set the scene for child abuse to occur," the letter states.
Ansley said, as a doctor, she often heard stories that her patients have never told before about their abuse histories. She also understands why it's hard to spur people into action who've had to deal with their own guilt and shame.
"They're stuck at inaction and inertia, confused or helpless", she says. "There are protective shutdown mechanisms at play. Some may feel that they've done their bit because they said or wrote something 20 years ago."
The signatories, some of them anonymous but known to the authors, include Louise Winn. She was only 11 when she was brought to Bert Potter's hut by his wife Margie. She was later also sexually abused by his son John Potter and other men.
To keep predators away at night, the girl barricaded herself with junk in her caravan on the property or escaped into the bush.
No formal or individual restorative justice process between the first and the second generation has taken place yet.
For former member Simon Horrocks it is overdue.
"We're getting older, we better sort it out before we go," said the 73-year-old paraplegic.
"The experiment that we set up as a community resulted in some terrible events that hurt people. And I'm deeply sorry for those who feel that hurt."
Horrocks is one of the few Centrepoint adults who put his name under the letter.
"While I wasn't directly responsible for the abuse, I was responsible for the environment where that took place. So I have some responsibility to own."
The commune was shut down in 2000 after some leaders, including Potter, were convicted of sexual abuse and drugs crimes.
Potter was convicted and sentenced in 1990 to 3-1/2 years in jail on drug charges, and in 1992 to 7-1/2 years for indecent assaults on five children, some as young as three and a half.
Five other men were convicted of indecently assaulting minors, sexually assaulting minors and attempted rape of a minor.
If it's an emergency and you feel that you or someone else is at risk, call 111. If you've ever experienced sexual assault or abuse and need to talk to someone contact the Safe to Talk confidential crisis helpline on: • Text 4334 and they will respond • Email support@safetotalk.nz • Visit https://safetotalk.nz/contact-us/ for an online chat Alternatively contact your local police station - click here for a list. If you have been abused, remember it's not your fault.