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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1994-03-25
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<text id=93TT2345>
<title>
Jan. 18, 1993: From The Publisher
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Jan. 18, 1993 Fighting Back: Spouse Abuse
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 12
</hdr>
<body>
<p> When we set out to illustrate a piece on domestic violence,
our picture editors immediately turned to photographer Donna
Ferrato. For the past decade, she has focused her energy and
camera on the intimate brutalities that shatter the lives of so
many American women and children. Says senior editor Nancy
Gibbs, who wrote this week's cover story: "It may be that her
wrenching photographs have done more to raise awareness than any
legal or political debate ever could."
</p>
<p> It's no surprise that Ferrato ended up combining camera
and caring. She grew up in Lorain, Ohio, the daughter of a
surgical-nurse mother and a doctor father, who was also a
dedicated shutterbug obsessed with documenting the everyday life
of Donna and her two brothers. Donna's early photographs
reflected that peaceful, loving experience, as she concentrated
on recording the gentle moments of private lives--Parisians
buying loaves of bread, Colorado cowboys and their dogs tooling
around in pickup trucks. "I've always been attracted to the good
things in people," says Ferrato, 43, "the funny, the quirky and
most of all the love."
</p>
<p> Ironically, she was doing a pictorial essay on love when
she encountered a terrifying scene. "I was living with a
wealthy Westchester couple, and one night I was awakened by
noise," recalls Ferrato. "I grabbed my camera and ran down the
hall to find them arguing in their bathroom." As she snapped
off a picture, the husband struck his wife. When Ferrato
grabbed his arm, he shook her off. " `She's my wife,' he said,
`and I'm going to teach her a lesson.' He wasn't concerned that
I was there. That's true of a lot of these men. They're not
ashamed of what they're doing. They feel above the law." Shocked
and confused, Donna threw the roll of film into a drawer,
trying to deny that the beating had occurred. When she finally
developed the film months later and looked at the pictures, she
resolved never to be silent again. "I realized I couldn't be an
accomplice."
</p>
<p> Instead, Ferrato has become a determined witness, riding
in police cars, visiting hospital emergency rooms, living in
women's shelters and prisons. Her book, Living with the Enemy
(Aperture; 1991), is a chilling dispatch from the front lines
of domestic warfare. Ferrato is battling abuse in other ways as
well. She founded the Domestic Abuse Awareness Project to
educate the public and raise funds for shelters. "I won't stop
until women and children feel safe," says Ferrato. Another
measure of her dedication: she paid $4,000 at a recent charity
auction for the opportunity to have tea later this month with
a woman she hopes will support the cause: Hillary Clinton.
</p>
<p> Elizabeth P. Valk
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>