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Treating holocaust survivors

Contemporary Family Therapy, 1990
There has been a substantial body of literature on the political, economic and emotional legacy of the holocaust on the victims who survived and their families. It has been tragic and debilitating. Some have emerged through deprivation and heroism to rebuild lives of value and valor.
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Strength of Holocaust Survivors

Journal of Loss and Trauma, 2012
An important problem in trauma research concerns the resources enabling survival after traumatic events and subsequent adaptation. The aim of this study was to describe psychological factors allowing Holocaust survivors to stay alive during the war and to adapt in the postwar period. Participants in the study were 89 Jews who had survived the Holocaust
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Holocaust Survivor Testimony

2001
The last fifteen years have seen an explosion of videotaped interviews and public speaking engagements by Holocaust survivors. Numerous organizations and Holocaust study centres, most prominent among them the Spielberg Shoah Foundation Oral History Project, which recorded the testimony of 50,000 Holocaust survivors around the world, have afforded a ...
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Serving Holocaust Survivors and Survivor Families

Marriage & Family Review, 1995
This article reviews and discusses the characteristics and needs of aging survivors of the Holocaust. Journalistic and historic accounts have documented the gruesome details of the Holocaust and, to a lesser extent, the consequences of these harrowing experiences.
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Holocaust Survivors

Journal of Gerontological Social Work, 2002
This study presents the results of qualitative interviews with thirteen Holocaust survivors who described their stories of purpose and hope. It recounts how each survivor met untoward circumstances during this time of crisis. Suggestions are made for how social workers can use this knowledge to promote client resilience and coping strategies.
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War and Peace: Psychotherapy With a Holocaust Survivor

American Journal of Psychiatry, 2006
More than 60 years after the end of World War II, it remains difficult to fathom the experiences of Holocaust victims. Atrocities and dehumanizing conditions, loss of bodily integrity and lives, families broken apart, destruction, and death were common occurrences. Survivors were few, enclosing within their hearts endless pain and suffering.
Glen O. Gabbard   +2 more
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Resettling the Survivors of the Holocaust in Australia

Holocaust Studies, 2010
In 1945, the majority of the surviving remnant of European Jewry wished to leave the European continent. For some, distant Australia seemed a hopeful refuge.
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Holocaust Survivors' Mental Health

JAMA, 1995
ABSTRACT It would be a mistake to think that, simply because the oven fires have long been extinguished and their grisly remains have been interred, the aftermath of the Holocaust is still not an active element in the lives of many people. The box office success of Schindler's List, a penetrating and welcome portrayal of the plight of a small group of ...
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The Survivor Syndrome and the Effects of the Holocaust on Survivor Families

2009
Holocaust survivors admit that luck was a major factor in whether they remained alive, while having a social support system in the extermination camps certainly also helped, for loners often perished. However, the most important concerted effort that enabled the victims to survive was the will to bear witness to the atrocities.
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Child Survivors of the Holocaust — Strategies of Adaptation

The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 1993
Child survivors have only recently been recognized as a developmentally distinct group with psychological experiences different from older survivors. The wartime circumstances of Nazi persecution caused enforced separation from family and friends, and all the survivors experienced persecution in the form of physical and emotional abuse, starvation and
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