Cohenca-Shiby Diana, Aviad-Wilchek Yael
Department of Behavioral Sciences, Ariel University, Israel.
Department of Criminology, Ariel University, Israel.
Isr J Psychiatry. 2018;55(2):15-20.
This article examines the attachment characteristics of the offspring as a function of the survival situation of their parents (Holocaust survivors). According to Bowlby's theory (1), proximity to a significant "other" increases the capability to regulate difficult emotions. Therefore, Holocaust survivors who were accompanied by a significant "other" should be less traumatized than a lone survivor who had to be completely self-reliant during the war. Therefore, we hypothesized that the parent's survival situation (alone or accompanied by a significant other) affected the way they bonded with their children. We also assume that an association between age of parent during the Holocaust, survival situation (alone or with a significant other), and avoidance attachment orientation of offspring will be found.
One hundred and eighty adult Holocaust survivor offspring were recruited and supplied with a sociodemographic questionnaire.
The research results show that offspring of mothers who survived the Holocaust alone have a greater orientation to attachment avoidance than those who survived the Holocaust accompanied by a significant other. Also, offspring of fathers who survived the Holocaust alone showed a greater orientation to attachment avoidance than those who survived the Holocaust in the company of a significant other.
The research results highlight the basic argument of Attachment Theory: The need for a significant other to help in engendering in the individual a sense of security, emotional regulation, and the ability to cope with difficult times. That is, the role of the significant other can be pivotal to more than feeling regulation. It can determine the impact and aftershocks of different traumatic events. Along with a host of other variables such as age and gender of trauma survivor, the presence of the significant other may mitigate the traumatic scars that will remain in the future.
本文探讨了大屠杀幸存者后代的依恋特征与其父母生存状况之间的关系。根据鲍尔比的理论(1),与重要的“他人”亲近能增强调节负面情绪的能力。因此,有重要“他人”陪伴的大屠杀幸存者所受创伤应比战争期间完全自力更生的孤独幸存者要小。所以,我们假设父母的生存状况(独自或有重要他人陪伴)会影响他们与子女的情感联结方式。我们还假定会发现大屠杀期间父母的年龄、生存状况(独自或有重要他人陪伴)与后代的回避型依恋取向之间存在关联。
招募了180名成年大屠杀幸存者的后代,并向他们发放了一份社会人口学调查问卷。
研究结果表明,大屠杀期间独自幸存的母亲的后代比有重要他人陪伴幸存的母亲的后代更倾向于回避型依恋。同样,大屠杀期间独自幸存的父亲的后代比有重要他人陪伴幸存的父亲的后代更倾向于回避型依恋。
研究结果突出了依恋理论的基本观点:需要有重要他人来帮助个体产生安全感、情绪调节能力以及应对困难时期的能力。也就是说,重要他人的作用不仅对情绪调节至关重要。它还能决定不同创伤事件的影响和余波。与创伤幸存者的年龄和性别等许多其他变量一样,重要他人的存在可能会减轻未来留下的创伤疤痕。