Transcultural Psychiatry
Volume 54, Issue 3, 2017, Pages 357-383

A community-based qualitative study of intergenerational resilience with Palestinian refugee families facing structural violence and historical trauma (Review)

Atallah D.G.*
  • a National Research Center for Integrated Natural Disaster Management (CIGIDEN), Pontifical Catholic University of Chile, Campus San Joaquin, Av. Vicuna Mackenna 4860, Macul Santiago, Chile, Harvard Medical School, United States

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to explore resilience processes in Palestinian refugee families living under Israeli occupation for multiple generations. Qualitative methods, critical postcolonial theories, and community-based research approaches were used to examine intergenerational protective practices and to contribute to reconceptualizations of resilience from indigenous perspectives. First, the researcher developed a collaborative partnership with a nongovernmental organization (NGO) in a UN refugee camp in the occupied West Bank. Then, with the support of this NGO, semistructured group and individual interviews were completed with a total of 30 participants (N = 30) ranging in age from 18 to 90 years old coming from 5 distinct extended family networks. Using grounded theory situational analysis, the findings were organized in a representation entitled Palestinian Refugee Family Trees of Resilience (PRFTR). These findings explain resilience in terms of three interrelated themes: (a) Muqawama/resistance to military siege and occupation; (b) Awda/return to cultural roots despite historical and ongoing settler colonialism; and (c) Sumoud/perseverance through daily adversities and accumulation of trauma. The study findings shed light on how Palestinian families cultivate positive adaptation across generations and highlight how incorporating community-based perspectives on the historical trauma and violent social conditions of everyday life under occupation may be critical for promoting resilience. Results may be relevant to understanding the transgenerational transmission of trauma and resilience within other displaced communities internationally. © The Author(s) 2017.

Author Keywords

Structural violence Community-based research Palestinian refugees qualitative methods family resilience historical trauma transgenerational transmission

Index Keywords

refugee Israel health promotion community care human sex difference Refugees middle aged violence controlled study Aged ethnology colonialism qualitative research human relation Young Adult Humans family psychology Adolescent male female Aged, 80 and over very elderly environmental exposure Review qualitative analysis cultural factor psychological resilience thematic analysis adult emotionality human experiment Palestinian age distribution normal human Psychological Trauma psychotrauma non profit organization

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85019766920&doi=10.1177%2f1363461517706287&partnerID=40&md5=a298d1dad49c7831611e0e8f56a3dec1

DOI: 10.1177/1363461517706287
ISSN: 13634615
Cited by: 9
Original Language: English