University of Michigan.
Transcult Psychiatry. 2013 Oct;50(5):683-706. doi: 10.1177/1363461513487669. Epub 2013 May 28.
Indigenous "First Nations" communities have consistently associated their disproportionate rates of psychiatric distress with historical experiences of European colonization. This emphasis on the socio-psychological legacy of colonization within tribal communities has occasioned increasingly widespread consideration of what has been termed historical trauma within First Nations contexts. In contrast to personal experiences of a traumatic nature, the concept of historical trauma calls attention to the complex, collective, cumulative, and intergenerational psychosocial impacts that resulted from the depredations of past colonial subjugation. One oft-cited exemplar of this subjugation--particularly in Canada--is the Indian residential school. Such schools were overtly designed to "kill the Indian and save the man." This was institutionally achieved by sequestering First Nations children from family and community while forbidding participation in Native cultural practices in order to assimilate them into the lower strata of mainstream society. The case of a residential school "survivor" from an indigenous community treatment program on a Manitoba First Nations reserve is presented to illustrate the significance of participation in traditional cultural practices for therapeutic recovery from historical trauma. An indigenous rationale for the postulated efficacy of "culture as treatment" is explored with attention to plausible therapeutic mechanisms that might account for such recovery. To the degree that a return to indigenous tradition might benefit distressed First Nations clients, redressing the socio-psychological ravages of colonization in this manner seems a promising approach worthy of further research investigation.
土着“第一民族”社区一直将其不成比例的精神困扰率与欧洲殖民化的历史经历联系在一起。这种在部落社区中强调殖民化的社会心理遗留问题,引起了越来越广泛的关注,即所谓的第一民族背景下的历史创伤。与创伤性质的个人经历不同,历史创伤的概念引起了人们对过去殖民统治的掠夺所带来的复杂、集体、累积和代际社会心理影响的关注。这种屈从的一个经常被引用的例子——特别是在加拿大——是印第安人寄宿学校。这些学校的目的很明确,就是要“消灭印第安人,拯救白人”。为了同化他们到主流社会的底层,学校将第一民族的孩子与家庭和社区隔离开来,并禁止他们参与本土文化习俗,从而达到了这一目的。本文介绍了曼尼托巴省一个原住民保留地社区治疗项目中一个寄宿学校“幸存者”的案例,来说明参与传统文化习俗对从历史创伤中康复的重要性。本文探讨了以文化为治疗手段的土著理论基础,并关注可能解释这种康复的合理治疗机制。如果回归本土传统能使受困扰的第一民族客户受益,那么以这种方式纠正殖民化的社会心理创伤似乎是一种很有前途的方法,值得进一步研究。