Ratings1
Average rating4.5
THE BOOK THAT TELLS THE FIRST-HAND STORY OF THE GISÈLE PELICOT TRIAL AND GIVES A VOICE TO WOMEN WHO HAVE BEEN SILENCED The trial of Dominique Pelicot has captured the world's attention. Behind Pelicot's unthinkable crimes are a mother, Gisèle Pelicot, and her daughter, Caroline Darian, who were forced to rebuild their lives. This is their story. In November 2020, Caroline Darian received a call from the police. Her father was in custody. The seizure of his computer equipment revealed the unimaginable: since 2013, he had drugged his wife before handing her over, in a state of unconsciousness, to dozens of men from all ages and stages of life. With exceptional courage, Darian recounts the earth-shattering discovery that a loved one, her own father, is capable of the worst. But more importantly, she shares the remarkable story of her mother, Gisèle, and how she carried on living, without self-pity, while learning to manage all of the things her husband once took care of. She shares how her mother managed to maintain her joie de vivre in circumstances none of us could imagine. Gisèle has won acclaim around the world after she opted for a public trial, one in which Caroline herself has testified, turning the tables; the shame is no longer borne by the victims in silence but directed, at last, to the abusers. Caroline has set up her own campaign, #MendorsPas: Stop Chemical Submission: Don't Put Me Under, to address the issue of chemical submission in the home. Together, mother and daughter reveal another side to the violence committed against women, as they bravely transform their private trauma into a collective fight.
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By default, this book gets a 4.5-star rating as this is a deeply personal trauma that the author has chosen to share to the world. Thanks to Caroline Darian for letting readers have a glimpse into what went on behind what was reported in the news, and I pray for healing, reconciliation, justice and truth to prevail. It makes me so mad to know how Dominic Pelicot continues to attempt to emotionally manipulate Gisele from behind bars but this is the insidious reality of relational abuse that many victims is difficult to escape from. I'm glad Caroline gets to tell her story as well, as she is also a victim that was never able to go to trial for.
Aside from the story, the author wants to advocate for awareness and structural changes to apprehend abusers of chemical submission and for this I hope more people read this book. Recommended.