Popper-Giveon Ariela, Keshet Yael
a Department of Adult Education, David Yellin Academic College , Jerusalem , Israel.
b Sociology and Anthropology Department, Western Galilee Academic College , Akko , Israel.
Health Care Women Int. 2015;36(11):1290-307. doi: 10.1080/07399332.2014.990561. Epub 2015 Feb 10.
Arab-Palestinians in Israel compose a traditional minority population that previously relied on traditional folk medicine and religious healing. Today some among this minority population are adopting imported complementary medicine. We interviewed Arab-Palestinians of the first generation of complementary medicine practitioners. Their decision to study complementary medicine constitutes a path toward empowerment, providing healers with an aura of modernity, enabling integration into the predominantly Jewish Israeli medical establishment to gain professional recognition as experts, and to acquire a sense of belonging. Practicing complementary medicine provides financial independence, liberation, and self-fulfillment and an opportunity to help female patients break through constraining barriers.
以色列的阿拉伯 - 巴勒斯坦人构成了一个传统的少数族裔群体,他们以前依赖传统民间医学和宗教疗法。如今,这个少数族裔群体中的一些人开始采用进口的补充医学。我们采访了第一代补充医学从业者中的阿拉伯 - 巴勒斯坦人。他们学习补充医学的决定构成了一条通往赋权的道路,为治疗师赋予现代性的光环,使其能够融入以犹太人为主体的以色列医疗体系,从而获得作为专家的专业认可,并获得归属感。从事补充医学提供了经济独立、解放和自我实现的机会,也为帮助女性患者突破限制障碍提供了契机。