Abstract

The aims of the study were to examine intergenerational effects of two cultural contexts of massive genocide: the Holodomor 1932-1933 in Ukraine, and the Holocaust 1939-1944 on the second and third generations of women in Ukraine and Israel. Forty women participants were recruited for four focus groups, two in each country, comprised of 10 participants each, using a snowball method in both countries. The second-generation groups were named as “the mothers’ group”, and the third-generation group (comprised of daughters of the mothers’ groups) were named as “the daughters’ group”. Inclusion criteria for sampling were: (a) being female above 18 years old, and (b) having family experience of the Famine 1932-1933 / Holocaust during 1939-1944. The groups were moderated by two experienced psychologists in each of the countries. The participants were presented with seven semi-structured questions and were asked to share their family narratives and experiences of the genocide. The study applied inductive thematic analyses that progressed from description to interpretation, for key themes that emerged during the groups’ sessions. The results of the study showed the centrality of five emerging themes in both mothers’ and daughters’ narratives, including: “emotions and feelings of experiencing genocide, “attitudes toward food and starvation”, “sense of losses and death”, “transgenerational transmission of trauma in family narratives”, and “ethnic identity”. The cross-cultural perspective of the current research shed light on the similarities and differences between the traumatic narratives constructed by the offspring of the second and the third generations in the two contexts of Ukraine and Israel. The Ukrainian women attributed greater importance of commemoration of Holodomor victims as part of an effective coping strategy with trauma, while the Israeli women put more emphasis on the attitude of asceticism that was inherited from the Holocaust survivors. The cross-cultural clinical and educational implications are discussed.

Highlights

  • The twentieth century witnessed massive genocide that claimed the lives of 262 million victims, among them Jews and Ukrainians who suffered during both the Holocaust and Holodomor (Bemporad & Warren, 2018)

  • Our findings revealed six key themes in the Ukrainian sample: (1) Attitudes toward food and starvation; (2) Emotions and feelings, experienced during the Holodomor; (3) Sense of loss and death; (4) Transgenerational transmission of trauma in family narratives; (5) Coping strategies with trauma; (6) Ethnic identity

  • Our research indicates the intergenerational transmission of trauma and genocide narratives in mother-daughter relationships

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Summary

Introduction

The twentieth century witnessed massive genocide that claimed the lives of 262 million victims, among them Jews and Ukrainians who suffered during both the Holocaust and Holodomor (Bemporad & Warren, 2018). Evidence has suggested that psychotrauma in the context of genocide has been associated with various disorders in intergenerational communication within the survivors’ families and with further disturbances of identity and wellbeing among the second generation (Brom, Kfir, & Dasberg, 2001). Studies focusing on different genocides have shown the importance of transgenerational transmission of the narrative of collective trauma. Data from several studies suggest that there is increased anger, PTSD and experiences of continuous traumatic stress (CTS) in Holocaust survivors’ offspring (Bar-On et al, 1998; Braga et al, 2012). Evidence consistently suggests that Chinese survivors avoid sharing family narratives about the Famine 1959–1961 in China with their offspring (Bianco, 2013; Weigelin-Schwiedrzik, 2006)

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