Multilevel Connection as a Pathway to Healing in a Low-income South African Community

Pub Date : 2018-02-05 DOI:10.1177/0971333617747349
A. Benjamin
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Combined forces of colonialism, tribalism and apartheid were influential, powerful and controlling legislators behind the continued cycle of violence in South Africa. The capacity for healing in the face of ongoing adversity has received growing attention in contexts of historical trauma and the developing world where an understanding of the cultural and historical past is crucial to healing. Notwithstanding, the parallel significance of multilevel and multidimensional connection as central to the process of healing trauma individually and collectively within the context of ongoing violence requires further exploration. This qualitative narrative study consisted of 18 in-depth individual interviews and two follow-up focus groups with women lay counsellors. Women’s narratives were subjected to narrative analysis. Themes reflect counsellors’ healing journeys in the context of historical and continuous trauma and demonstrate elements of connection which facilitate or hinder the process of healing in this community. Findings suggest that participants viewed the worth of multilevel connection to their internal worlds and the world around them as critical to their healing—without the element of connection, healing does not occur and the cycle of disconnection and violence continues.
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多层次联系:南非低收入社区的治愈之路
殖民主义、部落主义和种族隔离的联合力量是南非暴力持续循环背后有影响力、强大和控制的立法者。在历史创伤背景下和发展中世界,面对持续逆境的治愈能力受到越来越多的关注,在这些背景下,对文化和历史过去的理解对治愈至关重要。尽管如此,在持续暴力的背景下,作为个体和集体创伤愈合过程的核心,多层次和多维联系的同等重要性需要进一步探索。这项定性叙述研究包括18个深入的个人访谈和两个对女性非专业咨询师的随访焦点小组。对女性的叙事进行了叙事分析。主题反映了辅导员在历史和持续创伤的背景下的治疗之旅,并展示了促进或阻碍这个社区治疗过程的联系元素。研究结果表明,参与者认为与他们的内心世界和周围世界建立多层次联系的价值对他们的康复至关重要——没有联系的元素,康复就不会发生,而断开联系和暴力的循环还在继续。
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