Why I Wrote
Looking for JJ
Why do children kill? As a writer
this was a question I wanted to explore.
When
a child is killed or murdered there is a collective
gasp among all parents. We simply cannot bear it. We
cling to the television news and search out the details
in the newspaper. We empathize with the mother and father,
holding our breath as they appear on the television
screen in our living room. They are there, in front
of us, unwelcome guests; our worst nightmare. They sit
whey faced and blink at the cameras while stuttering
out an appeal that is most probably falling on dead
ears. If the killer is caught then we have someone to
hate. There is a sense of grim resignation. We know
that such people exist. They are monsters in disguise
who live among us.
But when the killer of a child is another child then
we are thrown into turmoil. How can this be? Who can
explain it? Children are innocent. They are the victims
not the predators.
Even now the names of Mary Bell and the boys who killed
James Bulger, Robert Thomson and Jon Venables, are regularly
in the news. Whether it is in reference to their original
crimes or reporting the fact that they, all three, are
now free, living a normal life, under
assumed names. Maybe one of them lives next door to
me, or works in the petrol station up the road; possibly
one of them has served me in a shop or brushed past
me on Oxford Street.
Their crimes were dark and incomprehensible. They
inflicted pain and took life away with astounding casualness.
They covered up and lied about what they’d done
often pointing the finger at others. At the same time
they were children just like those they’d killed.
I wanted to hate them for what they’d done but
it was hard to see evil in their chubby faces, their
neat fringes and glowing eyes.
Why did they do it? There have been articles about
them hypothesizing on what might have led to their crimes.
Gitta Sereny’s excellent book, ‘Cries Unheard’
digs deep and has Mary Bell’s own words attempting
to explain her actions.
There is no neat cause and effect though. Family problems,
low self esteem, learning difficulties, possible abuse.
These things are all offered as possible solutions and
yet what of the many other children who suffer these
things day by day in appalling conditions? They do not
kill. They struggle through and some of them make a
decent sort of life for themselves.
But these children and others do kill. Why?
I can’t give a true answer. Only the children
themselves could do that. And what if they were articulate
and rational enough to provide us with an exposition
of the circumstances which led them to do what they
did? Wouldn’t that mean that weren’t the
sort of people to be drawn into that situation in the
first place? Mary Bell’s own account is wandering
and confused and gives the impression of a woman who
doesn’t really know why she acted
in the way she did. Why would she know? How many of
us can fully explain the mistakes we have made in our
lives? Infidelity? Alcoholism? Desertion? Poor Parenting?
Bankruptcy?
These explanations are often the stuff of fiction.
Writers can imagine what led to these situations. This
is our job. We imagine people and the things that happen
to them. Sometimes by doing this we can offer an explanation
of sorts ourselves.
This is why I wrote Looking for JJ.
I wanted to imagine a child killing another child. Through
that I wanted to try and find reasons.
I can’t answer for Mary Bell or the boys who
killed James Bulger. I can only speak for my own character.
Jennifer Jones carries many ghosts around with her and
no matter how many times she changes her name or starts
her life afresh she will never forget what she did.
Neither will a lot of other people. They will always
be Looking for JJ.
April 2005 |