Home | Magazine | Archives | Directory | Events | Testimonies | Prayerline | Links | Contact Us | Subscribe

... From the Goodnews archives, January/February 2002


 

Forgiving the Unforgivable

Janice Raeder Machado, a 35 year old Brazilian woman, who is suffering from AIDS as a result of being gang raped some years ago, shares how her faith has helped her to come to terms with what happened

I have been part of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal since 1986 and since my conversion to Christ I have always longed to be holy and felt a call to poverty. I realised this path to sanctity would involve suffering but looking back at my life at that time I experienced only the normal simple little difficulties.

I had some problems with my family and I realised that key to everything was forgiveness. I had to learn to forgive myself, my parents and those around me if I wanted to experience inner healing and grow in my friendship with Jesus. Without forgiveness any sanctity is phoney.

Then in 1993 I had a terrible experience which I could never have imagined would happen to me. I was gang raped by three men as an act of revenge by a former colleague, whose misdemeanours I had exposed. The violence and suffering you experience in rape and what it does to you is hard to put in words. The police told me that they had planned to kill me but as it was not God's time for me to die I managed to get away and I survived, although I was totally traumatised.

The physical recovery took a couple of days but the emotional recovery was a lot longer and a very painful and hard process. I have an outgoing temperament and I told myself that I had forgiven the three men. But one day the Lord showed me that I hadn't and his work was only half done.

One Sunday, during Mass, right after Holy Communion, while bowing my head and giving thanks, the Lord spoke clearly to my heart. "Look at the queue of people walking down the aisle to receive communion and imagine those three men there." My heart closed like iron and through tears of bitterness and pain, I cried "Not them Lord, they don't have a right to be here, to receive you. Not them." I realised how superficial had been my apparent forgiveness. I couldn't do it without the Lord's grace and from that moment I began to pray that I really would one day be able to forgive them from the bottom of my heart.

One of the results of the rape Breaking Breadwas that I became more sensitive to the suffering around me. It could be in my family or on the streets, in the community, or the news on TV or the newspapers. Every pain somehow hooked into my personal pain and experience and gave me an opportunity to intercede for others. My favourite words were those of Jesus "Father, forgive them, they don't know what they are doing." Through this I would forgive those three men over and over again. In fact every time their faces came to my mind, even though my feelings resisted, I tried to forgive them with all my heart and will.

About one year later, again after communion, without having thought about it, the Lord spoke to my heart the same sentence as before. "Imagine those men queuing for communion." This time a miracle had happened and my heart was open and filled with love and forgiveness. I knew for certain that this house and this place belonged to them too. The kingdom of God was for those three men. They were not rapists they were my brothers. The tears ran down my face. I was free. The best image I can think of to describe how I felt is from Henri Nowen's book "The Return of the Prodigal". The first time I felt and behaved like the oldest son. The Father was MY father, and this was MY house. I had the right to be loved, not those prodigal sons. Whereas the second time, I wanted to say to those men "Come to the house of my Father, come to His love and embrace, this is not only for me. I am your sister and all this is waiting for us."

A short time afterwards in late 1996, the final consequence of my rape became clear. My blood tests showed I now had AIDS. The Lord, however, slowly had been preparing me for this. I realised some of the dreams for my life had to be put away forever and I started to look at life in a new way with a different perspective. I found that those things that seemed so urgent were after all, only relative, and instead it was the simple, little things of daily life that became really valuable. I started to live far more intensely the present moment, rather than always looking to future, and I became really grateful for what I had.

These last four years have been hard ones with many physical, professional, emotional and financial losses. The Lord, however, has been faithfully present in my struggles and above all he doesn't allow my heart to become bitter or filled with self pity. He has been conquering my heart. I know there is still a lot to be done but I know that in a strange way I have what I wished for at the start of my spiritual journey - that I am poorer and more sanctified than I used to be. My heart is full of Him and I can only say "You know how much I love you. Lord you are everything!"