Women, Biblical Texts and COVID-19 in Zimbabwe: Navigating the Mental Health Terrain

Q2 Arts and Humanities
Molly Manyonganise
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Abstract

From its onset in Zimbabwe, COVID-19 disrupted the mental health of many Zimbabweans. Its quick transmission and viciousness caused fear and panic as people tried to ensure their safety from infection. When lockdown was first declared as the death toll slowly climbed up, it became clear that a number of people would suffer from mental health problems mainly because of isolation, failure to take care of the sick loved ones as well as stigmatization of those who got infected and recovered. In most cases, name calling resulted from ignorance of how to treat those who had recovered from the disease. While recovery was celebrated, the recovered patients were labelled as ‘vaya vakamborwara neCOVID’ (those ones who once suffered from COVID) or ‘pamba peveCOVID-19’ (the home of the COVID-19 sufferers, sic). As infection cases soared and hope seemed to be lost, many people turned to religion. The genderedness of the pandemic became clear as women suffered the most, both as carergivers for the sick as well as from Gender-based Violence (GBV). In such cases, the deployment of biblical texts took centre-stage in most Zimbabwean societies and beyond as women tried to make meaning of their situation. The purpose of this article, therefore, is to investigate how biblical texts were deployed by women for the sake of taking care of their mental health in a threatening environment. The intention is to establish the many ways that religion becomes a useful resource in pandemic contexts particularly for the mental wellbeing of women in Zimbabwe. This is largely a qualitative paper which utilizes in-depth interviews of women in Harare’s Central Business District (CBD). The African Womanist Approach informs the study.
津巴布韦妇女、《圣经》文本和 COVID-19:在心理健康的道路上前行
COVID-19 在津巴布韦一开始就破坏了许多津巴布韦人的心理健康。它的快速传播和凶残性造成了恐惧和恐慌,人们试图确保自己的安全不受感染。随着死亡人数的缓慢攀升,在首次宣布封锁时,很明显,许多人将遭受精神健康问题的困扰,主要原因是与世隔绝、无法照顾生病的亲人以及对感染者和康复者的污名化。在大多数情况下,由于不知道如何对待那些已经康复的患者,人们对他们进行辱骂。在庆祝康复的同时,康复者却被贴上了 "vaya vakamborwara neCOVID"(那些曾经患有 COVID 的人)或 "pamba peveCOVID-19"(COVID-19 患者的家,原文如此)的标签。由于感染病例激增,希望似乎破灭,许多人转向宗教。这种流行病的性别特征非常明显,因为妇女遭受的痛苦最大,她们既要照顾病人,又要忍受基于性别的暴力(GBV)。在这种情况下,《圣经》文本的应用在大多数津巴布韦社会内外占据了中心位置,因为妇女们试图让自己的处境变得有意义。因此,本文的目的是调查妇女是如何利用《圣经》中的经文来保护她们在受威胁环境中的心理健康的。本文旨在确定宗教在大流行病环境中成为有用资源的多种方式,尤其是对津巴布韦妇女的心理健康而言。本文主要采用定性研究方法,对哈拉雷中央商务区(CBD)的妇女进行了深入访谈。非洲妇女主义方法为本研究提供了参考。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Pharos Journal of Theology
Pharos Journal of Theology Arts and Humanities-Religious Studies
CiteScore
0.50
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0.00%
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0
审稿时长
6 weeks
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