Wellbeing and national identity in three generations of Czech and Slovak Holocaust survivors

. 2022 ; 16 () : 919217. [epub] 20220905

Status PubMed-not-MEDLINE Jazyk angličtina Země Švýcarsko Médium electronic-ecollection

Typ dokumentu časopisecké články

Perzistentní odkaz   https://www.medvik.cz/link/pmid36133931

Subjective wellbeing (SWB) is an important factor of global adjustment. Intergenerational satisfaction in seriously traumatized people has not been studied so far in homogenous populations of Central and Eastern Europe. This study focuses on the SWB in three generations of survivors living in the Czech Republic and Slovakia after World War II (WWII). The focal groups were Holocaust survivors (ages 71-95, n = 47), Holocaust survivors' children (ages 30-73, n = 86), and their grandchildren (ages 15-48, n = 88), and they were compared to aged-matched groups without Holocaust history. The first and second generation of Holocaust survivors scored significantly lower than the comparison groups in wellbeing, as measured using the Schwartz Outcome Scale-10 (SOS-10). There was no significant difference in life satisfaction in any of the three generations. Within the focal group, identification as Jewish or as also Jewish was comparable in all three generations of Holocaust survivors (74% in the first, 79% in the second, and 66% in the third generation). Holocaust survivors declaring Jewish identity reported lower SWB compared to survivors declaring other than Jewish identity. The focal group generated more national identities than comparisons. The outcomes are discussed in the context of the history of Central and Eastern Europe.

Zobrazit více v PubMed

Amir M., Lev-Wiesel R. (2001). Does everyone have a name? Psychological distress and quality of life among child Holocaust survivors with lost identity. J. Trauma. Stress 14 859–869. 10.1023/A:1013010709789 PubMed DOI

Anderson B. R. O. G. (1991). Imagined Communities: Reflections On the Origin and Spread of Nationalism. London: Verso.

Barel E., Van IJzendoorn M. H., Sagi-Schwartz A., Bakermans-Kranenburg M. J. (2010). Surviving the holocaust: A meta-analysis of the long-term sequelae of a genocide. Psychol. Bull. 136 677–698. 10.1037/a0020339 PubMed DOI

Berger A. L. (2010). Unclaimed Experience: Trauma and identity in third generation writing about the Holocaust. Shofar 28 149–158. 10.1353/sho.0.0453 PubMed DOI

Berntsen D., Rubin D. C. (2006). The centrality of event scale: A measure of integrating a trauma into one’s identity and its relation to post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms. Behav Res Ther. 44 219–231. 10.1016/j.brat.2005.01.009 PubMed DOI PMC

Biale D. (2002). Culture of the Jews: A New History. New York: Shocken Books.

Blais M. A., Lenderking W. R., Baer L., deLorell A., Peets K., Leahy L., et al. (1999). Development and initial validation of a brief mental health outcome measure. J. Pers. Assess. 73 359–373. 10.1207/S15327752JPA7303_5 PubMed DOI

Bornstein M. H., Davidson L., Keyes C. L. M., Moore K. A. (eds) (2003). Crosscurrents in Contemporary Psychology. Well-Being: Positive Development Across the Life Course. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Publishers. 10.4324/9781410607171 DOI

Čapková K. (2014). Czechs, Germans, Jews? National identity and the Jews of Bohemia. New York, NY: Berghahn Books.

Carmel S., King D. B., O’Rourke N., Bachner Y. G. (2017). Subjective well-being: Gender differences in Holocaust survivors-specific and cross-national effects. Aging Ment. Health 21 668–675. 10.1080/13607863.2016.1148660 PubMed DOI

Cohn I. G., Morrison N. M. V. (2017). Echoes of transgenerational trauma in the lived experiences of Jewish Australian grandchildren of Holocaust survivors. Aust. J. Psychol. 70 199–207. 10.1111/ajpy.12194 DOI

Danieli Y., Norris F. H., Engdahl B. (2016). Multigenerational legacies of trauma: Modeling the what and how of transmission. Am. J. Orthopsychiatry 86 639–651. 10.1037/ort0000145 PubMed DOI

Diener E., Emmons R. A., Larsen R. J., Griffin S. (1985). The satisfaction with life scale. J. Pers. Assess. 49 71–75. 10.1207/s15327752jpa4901_13 PubMed DOI

Diener E., Suh E. M., Lucas R. E., Smith H. L. (1999). Subjective well-being: Three decades of progress. Psychol. Bull. 125 276–302. 10.1037/0033-2909.125.2.276 DOI

Dimitrova R., van de Vijver F. J. R., Taušová J., Chasiotis A., Bender M., Buzea C., et al. (2017). Ethnic, familial, and religious identity of Roma adolescents in Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Kosovo, and Romania in relation to their level of well-being. Child Dev. 88 693–709. 10.1111/cdev.12786 PubMed DOI

Dragomirecka E., Lenderking W. R., Motlova L., Goppoldova E., Selepova P. (2006). A brief mental health outcomes measure: Translation and validation of the Czech version of the Schwartz Outcomes Scale-10. Qual Life Res. 15 307–312. 10.1007/s11136-005-1389-y PubMed DOI

Fitts W. H. (1965). Tennessee Self-Concept Scale manual. Nashville, TN: Mental Health Center.

Fitts W. H. (1971). The Self-Concept and Self-Actualization. Nashville, TN: Dede Wallace Center.

Fridman A., Bakermans-Kranenburg M. J., Sagi-Schwartz A., Van IJzendoorn M. H. (2011). Coping in old age with extreme childhood trauma: Aging Holocaust survivors and their offspring facing new challenges. Aging Ment. Health 15 232–242. 10.1080/13607863.2010.505232 PubMed DOI

Greenblatt-Kimron L., Shrira A., Rubinstein T., Palgi Y. (2021). Event centrality and secondary traumatization among Holocaust survivors’ offspring and grandchildren: A three-generation study. J. Anxiety Disord. 81:102401. 10.1016/j.janxdis.2021.102401 PubMed DOI

Greenfeld D., Reupert A., Harris N., Jacobs N. (2022). Between fear and hope: The lived experiences of grandchildren of holocaust survivors: A qualitative systematic literature review. J. Loss Trauma 27, 120–136.

Gunderson E. K., Arthur R. J. (1969). Brief mental health index. J. Abnorm. Psychol. 74 100–104. 10.1037/h0027067 PubMed DOI

Harel Z., Kahana B., Kahana E. (1988). Psychological well-being among Holocaust survivors and immigrants in Israel. J. Trauma. Stress 1 413–429. 10.1002/jts.2490010404 DOI

Heitlinger A. (2006). In the Shadow of the Holocaust and Communism. Piscataway, NJ: Transaction Publishers.

Hlavac M. (2018). Stargazer: Well-formatted regression and summary statistics tables [Software]. Available online at: https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=stargazer

Inglehart R., Klingemann H. D. (2000). “Genes, culture, democracy, and happiness,” in Culture and Subjective Well-Being, eds Diener E., Suh E. M. (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press; ), 166–183.

Hubertová L. (2016). Jak uvažují nad svou identitou mladé Vietnamky 1,5. a 2. generace žijící v České republice? E-psychologie [online], 10, 1–17. Dostupné z http://e-psycholog.eu/pdf/hubertova2.pdf

Jaspal R., Yampolsky M. A. (2011). Social representations of the Holocaust and Jewish Israeli identity construction: Insights from identity process theory. Soc. Identities 17 201–224. 10.1080/13504630.2011.558374 DOI

Jenkins R. (2008). Social Identity. Milton Park: Routledge.

Kahana E., Kahana B., Lee J. E., Bhatta T., Wolf J. K. (2015). Trauma and the life course in a cross national perspective: Focus on holocaust survivors living in hungary. Traumatology 21 311–321. 10.1037/trm0000051 DOI

Karady V. (1993). Beyond assimilation: Dilemmas of Jewish identity in contemporary Hungary. Discussion papers, No. 2. Budapest: Collegium Budapest.

Kebza V. (2005). Psychosocial Determinants of Health. Prague: Academia.

King J. (2001). “The nationalization of East Central Europe: Ethnicism, ethnicity, and beyond,” in Staging the Past: The Politics of Commemoration in Habsburg Central Europe, 1848 to the Present, eds Bucur M., Wingfield N. M. (West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press; ). 10.2307/j.ctt9qh12m.9 DOI

Lehrner A., Yehuda R. (2018). Trauma across generations and paths to adaptation and resilience. Psychol. Trauma 10 22–29. 10.1037/tra0000302 PubMed DOI

Letzter-Pouw S. E., Werner P. (2013). The relationship between female Holocaust child survivors’ unresolved losses and their offspring’s emotional well-being. J. Loss Trauma 18 396–408. 10.1080/15325024.2012.701126 DOI

Morrison M., Tay L., Diener E. (2011). Subjective well-being and national satisfaction: Findings from a worldwide survey. Psychol. Sci. 22 166–171. 10.1177/0956797610396224 PubMed DOI

Pettersson M. E., Bergbom I. (2019). Life is about so much more: Patients’ experiences of health, well-being, and recovery after operation of abdominal aortic aneurysm with open and endovascular treatment: A prospective study. J. Vasc. Nurs. 37 160–168. 10.1016/j.jvn.2019.06.002 PubMed DOI

Prot K. (2008). Broken identity: The impact of the Holocaust on identity in Romanian and Polish Jews. Isr. J Psychiatry Relat. Sci. 45 239–246. PubMed

Rivas-Drake D., Syed M., Umaña-Taylor A., Markstrom C., French S., Schwartz S. J., et al. (2014). Feeling good, happy, and proud: A meta-analysis of positive ethnic-racial affect and adjustment. Child Dev. 85 77–102. 10.1111/cdev.12175 PubMed DOI

Sagi-Schwartz A., van Ijzendoorn M. H., Grossmann K. E., Joels T., Scharf M., Koren-Karie N., et al. (2003). Attachment and traumatic stress in female Holocaust child survivors and their daughters. Am. J. Psychiatry 160 1086–1092. 10.1176/appi.ajp.160.6.1086 PubMed DOI

Schwartzman R. (2015). Sutured identities in Jewish Holocaust survivor testimonies. J. Soc. Issues 71 279–293. 10.1111/josi.12110 DOI

Shmotkin D., Berkovich M., Cohen K. (2006). Combining happiness and suffering in a retrospective view of anchor periods in life: A differential approach to subjective well-being. Soc. Indic. Res. 77 139–169. 10.1007/s11205-006-8388-4 DOI

Shrira A., Palgi Y., Ben-Ezra M., Shmotkin D. (2011). Transgenerational effects of trauma in midlife: Evidence for resilience and vulnerability in offspring of Holocaust survivors. Psychol. Trauma? 3 394–402. 10.1037/a0020608 PubMed DOI PMC

Smith T. B., Silva L. (2011). Ethnic identity and personal well-being of people of color: A meta-analysis. J. Couns. Psychol. 58 42–60. 10.1037/a0021528 PubMed DOI

Soloman S. R., Sawilowsky S. S. (2009). Impact of rank-based normalizing transformations on the accuracy of test scores. J. Mod. Appl. Stat. Methods 8 448–462. 10.22237/jmasm/1257034080 DOI

Stejskalová M. (2012). Vyluèujúca povaha utvárania èeskej národnej identity v súvislosti s rómskym obyvatel’stvom [Exclusive nature of the formation of the Czech national identity in connection with the Roma population]. Soc. Stud. 9 45–65. 10.5817/SOC2012-4-45 DOI

Triandis H. C. (2000). “Cultural syndromes and subjective well-being,” in Culture and Subjective Well-Being, eds Diener E., Suh E. M. (New York, NY: MIT Press; ), 13–36.

van IJzendoorn M. H., Bakermans-Kranenburg M. J., Sagi-Schwartz A. (2003). Are children of Holocaust survivors less well-adapted? A meta-analytic investigation of secondary traumatization. J. Trauma. Stress 16 459–469. 10.1023/A:1025706427300 PubMed DOI

Watson D., Pichler F. F., Wallace C. D. (2010). European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions. Second European Quality of Life Survey: Subjective Well-Being in Europe. Luxembourg: Office for Official Publications of the European Communities.

Weinberg M. K., Cummins R. A. (2013). Intergenerational effects of the holocaust: subjective well-being in the offspring of survivors. J. Int. Relationsh. 11 148–161. 10.1080/15350770.2013.782745 DOI

Najít záznam

Citační ukazatele

Nahrávání dat ...

Možnosti archivace

Nahrávání dat ...