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{"title":"Community reintegration for widows suffering religious minority violence: personalism as therapy","authors":"A. Gini, R. Vaz, F. Kujur, C. D'Alessio, R. Saldanha, D. Larrivee","doi":"10.15527/EJRE.201426259","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Each year around the globe millions of people experience religiously motivated, traumatic violence. In the absence of assisted care those affected often suffer permanent psychological impairment, failing to reintegrate successfully into stable self-subsistent communities. We report here on the success of a personalistic therapy used to assist community recovery in a dispersed widow population suffering religiously motivated violence. In 2008, Orissa Hindu nationalists blamed local Christians for their leader’s assassination; the subsequent retaliation led to murders, destruction of churches, schools, homes, and physical assaults. Subsequent recovery efforts were premised upon a psychotherapeutic restoration keyed to a personalistic, Catholic/Christian psychological framework (Vitz, 2011) as a necessary contingent for community reintegration and economic self-sufficiency. Assaultive trauma, personal valuation, interpersonal psychosocial functioning, agency, and sense of trust in committed care were monitored. Our results indicate, among others, that self-valuation generally paralleled growth in trust commitment, but the latter depended on the perception of the caregiver’s commitment to faith values. Therefore, we propose an assault recovery model in which self-esteem and trust in committed care are constructed through the perception of a personalistic commitment grounded on faith values. ©2014 European Journal of Research on Education by IASSR.","PeriodicalId":43604,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Research in Education Sciences","volume":"31 1","pages":"154-154"},"PeriodicalIF":0.5000,"publicationDate":"2014-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Research in Education Sciences","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.15527/EJRE.201426259","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH","Score":null,"Total":0}
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使遭受宗教少数群体暴力的寡妇重新融入社区:作为治疗的人格主义
每年,全球有数百万人遭受宗教动机的创伤性暴力。在缺乏辅助护理的情况下,受影响的人往往遭受永久性的心理损害,无法成功地重新融入稳定的自给自足的社区。我们在这里报告了一种成功的个人治疗方法,用于帮助分散的寡妇群体在遭受宗教暴力的情况下社区恢复。2008年,奥里萨邦的印度教民族主义者指责当地基督徒暗杀了他们的领导人;随后的报复导致了谋杀、教堂、学校、住宅的破坏和人身攻击。随后的恢复工作以个人主义、天主教/基督教心理框架(Vitz, 2011)的心理治疗恢复为前提,作为社区重新融入和经济自给自足的必要条件。对攻击性创伤、个人评价、人际心理功能、代理和对承诺护理的信任感进行监测。我们的研究结果表明,自我评价通常与信任承诺的增长平行,但后者取决于照顾者对信仰价值观承诺的感知。因此,我们提出了一个攻击恢复模型,其中自尊和信任承诺照顾是通过基于信仰价值观的个人承诺的感知来构建的。©2014《欧洲教育研究杂志》,IASSR出版。
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