The New Zealand Herald

Singer says she is ready to take back her life after spending years in a violent relationsh­ip

- Simon Collins

To the outside world, Katrina*, her partner and their child were a “good churchgoin­g family”. Katrina sang in a gospel band.

“He’d be proud of me when I did that,” she says. “When we went out, he forced me to present to the world that everything was fine.”

But at home, Katrina endured a nightmare that lasted over a decade. At her lowest point she was bedridden, dangerousl­y underweigh­t and her memory and ability to concentrat­e had been broken by years of brain injuries and violence-induced illness.

“I can remember in the doctor’s rooms when he pulled up my jumper and saw probably 40 or 50 bite marks and bruises, I thought how could I fall from grace so far — having chronic blood loss and needing a blood transfusio­n, emaciated, covered in his bite marks?” she said. “What it did to me psychologi­cally was to break me down. I had no value. I felt less valuable than a garden slug.”

For years afterwards, she couldn’t sing, or even go to church because it reminded her of her abuser.

But she wrote songs — dark songs, like Evil in his Head: You always have to win, I always have to lose, That’s the way you choose to live your life, It’s the way to force me too. She will finally sing some of those songs at the end of a White Ribbon Day parade in Myers Park tomorrow, symbolical­ly taking back power over her own life.

White Ribbon Day, started by Canadian men who wore white ribbons to honour 14 female students shot dead in 1991, starts from midday today, when murdered Kiwi student Emily Longley’s father Mark Longley will lead a group planting stakes in the shape of a giant white ribbon in Takutai Square near Britomart Station.

Katrina said her partner had a “bizarre upbringing” with a mother who encouraged him to be cruel.

“He was a real Jekyll and Hyde,” she said. After she escaped he kept stalking her. He fought her protection order in court until a judge finally cancelled it, forcing Katrina to change her name and go into hiding. Now she belongs to the Domestic Violence and Disability working group and has started a new group, Say No!

*Not her real name.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand