As a former JW, my heart breaks for this 16 year old girl. The best thing she can do is excape this cult the minute she turns 18. It took me until I turned 24 and I regret that I did not do it sooner.
So oppressive and so controlling. No human should have to endure the childhood that I did. I missed out on so much and will never forgive my parents for what they did to me by forcing me to be a JW.
Hug that child. Hug her tight.
But, DON'T give her gifts or throw a party. I am crying as I type that, because she deserves to be happy and celebrate milestones and holidays. But the grief that she and you will receive from her brainwashed parents will be horrible. Tell her when she turns into an adult, you will give her whatever she wants.
Once she turns 18, throw her a MASSIVE celebration if she wants it. Hopefully, she will fly free from The Cult

I have been there too, except I rebelled and ran away when I was 15. Long story there, but I am now happy to be out and leading my own life without the heavy feelings of guilt from the brainwashing. Those feelings of guilt followed me well into my adult life but I now realize that I truly don't believe in what they teach, and coming to that realization finally set me free.
She *may* be telling the truth as to her own childhood experiences, but that is absolutely NOT representative of any Jehovah's Witnesses that I have known for the last 40 years.
She is no "expert" on the religion itself. But since I don't know this person (who just happened to join a Disney message board yesterday and who has yet to post a thing about Disney), I do not give much creedence to what they have to say on this thread.
The fact that your experience was not the same as hers is not a legitimate reason to suggest that she *may* not be telling the truth or that what she has to say should not be given much creedence. I lived a life that sounds very similar to hers, so I know with 100% certainty that everything she says is probably true. I believe you also said you became a JW as an adult, correct? If so, then you didn't grow up in the religion as a child. You don't know the feeling of having *all* of your choices taken away from you and being told it's for your own good.
Contrary to what you said earlier, there most definitely *are* different "levels" of dedication and extremist behavior within the JW religion. My dad was an elder in our congregation, and you are fooling yourself if you think an elder's family isn't held to a higher standard.
Many things are left for individuals to decide - let their conscience be their guide. Some people will do things that others in the congregation would not ever do,
including associating with others outside the congregation and allowing their children to celebrate holidays - especially if they have a non-witness parent (try having one unbelieving parent that despises everything about the religion and one elder parent that despises everything outside the religion. Now imagine that they both want you to side with them and do only what they want you to do, and you will know what a hard childhood is).
There was also abuse in the name of religion - at least in my house. You know the scripture, "spare the rod and spoil the child" - well my parents, especially my step-mom, took this seriously and literally, and did NOT spare the rod.
I totally agree with this. I am not a JW but I married into it! DH has been out now for several years, but most people do not understand how seriously the JWs take the no holidays thing. It would hugely offensive to them to go against their wishes on this, and honestly, disrespectful.
It is not correct to assume either that once she turns 18 she can magically declare that she's not into the faith anymore. If she chose to be baptized (as DH did when he was 15) then she will be disfellowshipped from the organization and her family will shun her (as DH's family now does to him).
Think about it this way, if these people take their religion so seriously that they would deny their child a life saving blood transfusion, how do you think they'd feel about a covert birthday party?
Sadly, this is what happened to my brother. Out of the three children, one was baptized. All three of us left the religion as teen-agers or young adults, and my parents will now only talk to two of us and shun the third (not that they will talk to us a whole lot, because even though we are not disfellowshipped, we are still considered "bad association" - yes, they do like to keep a close-knit group!). It is so heartbreaking to see my family torn apart in the name of religion. It definitely is always there in my mind and definitely has a negative effect on my relationship with my dad and step-mother.
However, in this case, it seems she has been struggling against this religion for quite some time, so my thoughts are that it's pretty unlikely that she's baptized.