It must seem strange to you that people would have hard feelings towards you for a job you obviously found high stress and where you no doubt hated the worst parts of it.
After all, didn't you suffer, too? Do they think you *enjoyed* that job? Didn't many of those kids *need* you---or need someone, anyway---and wouldn't most people have just given up on them? And besides, you're not a shrink--if some of the stuff your employers told you to do was harmful long term, how were you to know?
The difference is you were an adult, and your charges were children. You had a choice about being there, they didn't.
As an adult, it was *your responsibility* to know whether you were qualified to do the things being asked of you or not and to *leave the job* if they were having you do things you weren't qualified for.
The things you were doing that were harmful---you, as an adult, had a responsibility to know, and a positive "duty of care" to report to the child welfare authorities---and if you weren't willing to know enough to do the job without doing harm, you had the responsibility to choose not to work there.
It doesn't matter if you hated the job, it doesn't matter if you were trying to help.
If someone's in a car wreck, and you happen along as a bystander and take them out of the car, and they have a back injury and you make it worse---they can sue you and they'll win in court, because you have a responsibility to know that you aren't qualified to move someone safely.
Well meaning people who are "just trying to help"---often at great personal sacrifice and inconvenience---do some of the worst harms in the world.
One thing you can do to start atoning is go public and go where the survivors are and publicly, openly, and sincerely apologize to them for your choice to participate in an organization that was doing them harm when you should have known you weren't qualified for what you were trying to do.
An apology doesn't fix things, but it's something. It's some sort of closure for the survivors.
Another thing you can do is write letters to legislators and newspapers admitting the problems and asking that they provide the increased regulation and oversight the "teen help" industry so badly needs.
We can easily forgive a child who is afraid
of the dark. The real tragedy of life is
when men are afraid of the light.
--Plato