At a remove of fifty years, the story of
Sylvia Likens is a commingling of fact and myth.
It’s not likely we will ever have a complete
picture of Sylvia and her life before Gertrude Baniszewski. Only a few people who knew her well are still
alive, and she lived in an era before people had the technology to
overzealously document every other moment of their daily lives. Even then first-hand accounts of the weeks
the Likens sisters stayed with the Baniszewskis have a Rashōmon-like quality. Nevertheless
what we do know is sufficient to draw the appropriate conclusions, if not about
Sylvia, then those concerning human nature and the state of society.
It’s significant that the cinematic treatment
of the Sylvia Likens case was titled An
American Crime. The inflicting of
violence cloaked in angry self-righteousness upon people less able to fight
back is quintessentially American though few of us will admit it. It’s our seamy underbelly, the obverse of our
Mom-and-apple-pie self-conception. It’s
difficult to think of a murder whose enactment was so protracted, so over the
top in its cruelty occurring in
another culture. Recall that the chain
of events leading to Sylvia’s death began as simple acts of bullying which
subsequently escalated. Violence and the
threat of it is an institutionalized part of American life. From the playground to the workplace to the
street the whole calculus of American society is predicated upon exploitation
of the weak and vulnerable by the strong and amoral.
But before you have violence you must have
cognition, a definition of the situation on both ends of the transaction. The aggressor’s definition, of himself and
his victim, is most often implicitly and mutually accepted. The victim does not have a definition of his
or her own because understanding is a function of naming. Self-understanding itself is a matter of
framing self-concepts. We don’t
understand what we can’t name. Anything
else is mere intuition, though intuition at its best can motivate discovery. Gertrude
Baniszewski and the denizens of 3850 East New York Street defined Sylvia for
themselves and used that definition to justify ending a young life.
Why Sylvia was so passive in the face of the
violence visited upon her will never be known though the theory she was
protecting her sister Jenny is convincing.
I think Sylvia’s family was her whole world and she would have done
anything for them. If
Sylvia sacrificed herself for her physically vulnerable sister it was from a deeply
ingrained sense of responsibility. Solidarity entails, no, demands sacrifice. Sylvia
would never have broken faith with her sister or any other family member, and I
don’t think that under the circumstances any sacrifice would have been too
great for her.
Having turned the question of why over and
over in my mind for many years, I am no closer to understanding the savagery of
Gertrude Baniszewski and her confederates save to say that every walk of life
contains a small percentage of what I will call “wreckers” for lack of a better
word. These are individuals with a
nihilistic need to break things. Or
people. In more affluent walks of life
their destructive behavior may take the form of white collar crime, fraud,
embezzlement, confidence games, and such.
Among the poor and ignorant it invariably takes the form of violence and
physical destruction. Society tolerates this behavior to a
point. Their misconduct serves a
purpose for those living more gracious lives in that it permits them to indulge
in self-congratulatory self-superiority.
And when their dissoluteness leads to murder? We shake our heads, cluck disapprovingly, and
more often than not do nothing further once the guilty parties are convicted and imprisoned.
There will always be people who will question
Sylvia and Jenny’s failure to report their own abuse. This question is absurd on its face. Even today, with mandated reporter laws and
greater public awareness of child abuse and domestic violence, comparatively
few victims come forward on their own. Sometimes
it’s from fear of retaliation. Sometimes
it’s dependency on the abuser when there is no place else to go. Then as now it isn’t until the police are
involved, most often when the worst has happened and someone is either badly
injured or dead that abuse comes to light.
Together with the common acceptance of corporal punishment of children
in 1965 the greater credibility of adults would have made an attempt to tell on
Gertrude foolhardy and an invitation to even harsher treatment. The sisters were in an untenable situation
from the start.
We will never know for certain why Gertrude
and Paula fixed their hatred upon Sylvia.
Gertrude claimed not to remember many of the events leading to Sylvia’s
death, not that she was ever involved of course. Paula has never offered an explanation
following her statement to the police and she will undoubtedly carry her
reasons to the grave. I can only
substitute my own explanation. Sylvia
was to the Baniszewskis what Noam Chomsky would call the threat of a good
example. She was proof that hard
circumstances do not necessarily create hard, heartless people. She saw the best in others and could not conceive
that she would inspire the rage which was turned upon her. Perhaps her manner was misread, though one
has the impression Sylvia was as guileless as they come. Even so, Marie Baniszewski testified Paula
hated Sylvia because she believed Sylvia thought herself better than Paula.
I find it hard to believe Sylvia ever thought
she was better than anyone else, even an execrable specimen of humanity such as
Paula Baniszewski. Sylvia Likens was one
of nature’s aristocrats. Despite her
poverty, her rough surroundings, she possessed a certain innate grace which was
anathema to her housemates. Each of
them, particularly Gertrude and Paula, was shamed by this. They could not live up to her gentleness, her
quintessential goodness, and so they
had to destroy her. Their crime against
Sylvia was a morality play in which the moral exemplar wound up dead. They killed Sylvia not only because they
could, but because they needed to.
This last point may explain their lack of
remorse. Sylvia’s murder is
unforgiveable on this basis alone though it’s hard to imagine anyone directly
affected by her death would be disposed to forgive. The injured are under no obligation to
forgive, and sincere expressions of remorse are rare anyway. People generally apologize not because they
are truly sorry but rather to avoid or mitigate consequences. For the victim, forgiveness can be an
invitation for further abuse. Would
Sylvia have forgiven her tormentors?
Only those who knew her well could say.
I can certainly understand why Jenny and other Likens family members were
unforgiving. Had I been in their place I
would not forgive either.
There was an abject failure of consequences
in the Likens case. I do not support the
death penalty, but I do believe Gertrude Baniszewski should never have drawn
another breath as a free woman once she was led out of 3850 East New York
Street in handcuffs. The others should
have served their full sentences before being released rather than the minimum
they actually spent behind bars.
Perhaps the lesson of Sylvia Likens’ death is
simply that it happened. It was an
illustration of both human indifference and the godawful baseness and brutality
of human nature. The village was not
there for the child, and so she perished due to an absence of community
accountability. The inaction of moral simpletons like Phyllis
Vermillion exemplify the inherent dangers of turning away and telling yourself
it’s none of your business. Sylvia and Jenny needed and deserved the love
and protection of the people around them.
We did not care enough to save them from the tragedy which befell them. We only cared about them after the fact,
after the damage was done.
The private nature of the family in our
society is also to blame. Our popular
ideology extolls the family, and our laws safeguard its sanctity. Combine that with our reflexive deference to
authority and the relative absence of accountability of parents and caregivers
and the nuclear family is rife with potential for physical and emotional abuse. For every “normal,” nurturing family there
must be several more where dysfunction reigns.
Absent greater transparency in the family child abuse and neglect will
persist as one of our greatest social ills.
The passage of a half century has not
lessened the emotional impact of Sylvia Likens’ death. Much has been done since to increase awareness
of child abuse but still not enough. The
ever-evolving concept of children’s rights has included protection from its
beginning. The legal dependency of
children obliges not only their parents but their communities to ensure their
physical and emotional wellbeing. Every
child has a basic human right to physical integrity which precludes the
barbaric practice of corporal punishment.
Domestic corporal punishment has been banned outright by nearly fifty
countries, and over the past twenty-five years strides have been made
internationally to protect children. The
Convention on the Rights of the Child, though signed by the United States, does
not carry the status of law as it remains unratified by the U. S. Senate. Once Somalia completes the ratification
process, the U.S. will be the only member of the United Nations which is not a
party to the Convention.
Old standards die hard. Ratification of the Convention in this
country has been stalled by opposition from the Religious Right which opposes
family transparency and whose policy preferences are to scale back or eliminate
many of the social services which protect children. Religious conservatism does not cause child abuse and neglect but the
social climate it fosters makes it easier to conceal. And to justify: The Baniszewskis loudly
proclaimed their faith and virtue even as they tortured and killed Sylvia
Likens and long after their convictions for the crime.
Awareness is the first step on a long
journey. So much more must be done. Will we have to wait another fifty years
before we have measures in place that can decisively avert the death of another
Sylvia Likens?
© 2015 The Unassuming Scholar
I just stumbled on your blog. I was born a few months before Sylvia died, in another Indy: Independence, Missouri. I never knew about her until I was a senior in high school, in the fall of 1982, when I picked up Kate Millett's book "The Basement" as you did, in the public library. I was just beginning to develop an interest in true crime, which was a lot smaller section of the stacks in those days. Sylvia has haunted me now for nearly forty years.
ReplyDeleteTo me, her story isn't just about child abuse. It's about classism, and the willingness of those from more fortunate backgrounds to dismiss people like the Likens family as "carnies" or "trash." That set the ball rolling in this case as surely as it was kept rolling by the neighbors and bystanders who knew what was going on in the Baniszewski house but did nothing to intervene.
I have never met anybody connected with this story, but I wanted you to know that I appreciate what you have written here. It's good to find a kindred spirit.
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ReplyDeleteEverybody failed Sylvia when she needed help the most but they all turned their backs on her and waited until it was too late, I don't care for them, I only care for Sylvia because she was the real victim and was a sweet kind girl who did nothing to anyone but all the things she wanted to be in life was taken away from her, all because of a woman who thought that she was better than everybody else and also because of the irresponsibility of the parents, if they dropped her off at a relative's home, none of this tragedy would have happened, I will not visit the graves of anybody involved in her murder, even her family members but hopefully someday I will visit Sylvia's grave and memorial and pay my respects to her and tell her how much we all love her and miss her, I only care about her because she was the real victim and I hope she forgives life and society for failing her and denying her all the love that she deserved during her short life.
ReplyDelete