Overcoming the soul wound: Reflecting on experiences and resilience of intergenerational residential school survivors
Between 1883 and 1996, thousands of Indigenous children were apprehended into Canada's Residential School System. Survivors and their descendants have testified to genocidal harms caused across generations. Yet, Indigenous Peoples continue to exist and resist through inherent resilience describ...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Child abuse & neglect 2023-09, Vol.143, p.106242-106242, Article 106242 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Between 1883 and 1996, thousands of Indigenous children were apprehended into Canada's Residential School System. Survivors and their descendants have testified to genocidal harms caused across generations. Yet, Indigenous Peoples continue to exist and resist through inherent resilience described by intergenerational survivors in this paper.
This article focuses on stories demonstrating the strength, power, and resilience of intergenerational residential school survivors.
Cedar Project is an Indigenous-led cohort study that began as a HIV/AIDS response and contributes to healing among young Indigenous people who use drugs in British Columbia, Canada. It is governed by the Cedar Project Partnership, an Indigenous body of Elders, leaders, and health/social services experts.
We present qualitative research involving in-depth interviews carried out with Cedar participants who have experienced significant and complex adversities including childhood maltreatment and illicit drug use. Woven throughout, Indigenous scholars who are themselves intergenerational (children and grandchildren) of residential school survivors provide first-person reflections on the findings.
Analysis focused on narratives of resilience and resistance to stresses of intergenerational traumas across three broad themes: working to break cycles of intergenerational trauma; foundations of resilience and making positive changes and; hopes and dreams.
Findings establish deeper understanding of processes that enable young people to cope with stresses of intergenerational traumas while facing institutional and structural barriers to wellness. Reflections provide context about how intergenerational experiences intersect with challenges that young intergenerational survivors continue to face. We highlight pathways to healing and sources of strength that inform recommendations for wellness. |
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ISSN: | 0145-2134 1873-7757 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.chiabu.2023.106242 |