and psychotherapy
professionals

Simplistic view of complexity |
| "I am the director of PeaceInsight. This is a charity that brings together Israeli and Palestinian teenagers to learn how to dialogue during two weeks in the summer in England" |
Simplistic view of complexity |
| "I am the director of PeaceInsight. This is a charity that brings together Israeli and Palestinian teenagers to learn how to dialogue during two weeks in the summer in England" |
To resist is to exist: authors’ response to criticism |
| "In writing ‘To resist is to exist’,1 we were motivated by the conviction that what is happening in Palestine can only be sustained in the dark. Reactions to the article seem to bear this out. Much hostility was directed at the editors for having allowed the material to appear, and there was pressure to withdraw it from the website." |
A response to ‘To resist is to exist’ by Martin Kemp and Eliana Pinto |
| "The recent spate of correspondence over the publication in Therapy Today of ‘To resist is to exist’ by Martin Kemp and Eliana Pinto (March 2009) has raised the ire of many readers, despite the BACP statement that BACP ‘has no position or policy with regard to Middle East politics’" |
Editorial |
| "This weekend brought more bad news about men: girls are outperforming boys not only in school but also at university. One commentator is concerned at the implications for society of an army of under-educated and alienated males. Whether or not you dismiss this as moral panic, concern about men, it seems, is growing" |
‘Not the place for politics’ |
| "As longstanding members of the BACP, we are writing to you concerning the recent, quite shocking article ‘To resist is to exist” in the March issue of Therapy Today" |
Failure of empathy |
| "I am sure there will be those who are upset by the article ‘To resist is to exist’ (Therapy Today, March 2009) because it explores the psychological stress on Palestinians and does not equally look at what Israelis are coping with" |
Brave step |
| "I am very proud to be a member of an organisation (BACP) which took the brave step of publishing the moving account of the situation in Palestine (Therapy Today, March 2009)" |
Palestine: to resist is to exist |
| "We have received an unprecedented amount of correspondence, both negative and positive, in reponse to last month's article 'To resist is to exist'. More of this can be read here (see 'related articles, right)" |
One-sided debate |
| "I’m sure I am not the only reader to comment on the 'Palestine: to resist is to exist' piece, March Therapy Today. I will confine myself to a few brief points." |
No monopoly on suffering |
| "Your article ‘To resist is to exist’ (March 2009) is a disturbing one that demands attention in that it presents an emotive picture calculated to shock and is viewed almost exclusively from the Palestinian perspective" |
A legitimate topic for discussion |
| "Your article ‘To resist is to exist’ by Martin Kemp and Eliana Pinto discusses the psychological impact of military occupation on the Palestinian people. If this is a legitimate topic for discussion in your journal – and surely it is – then description of the causative factors has to be part of that discussion" |
Treat assertions about sight loss with caution |
| "In their paper ‘To resist is to exist’ (Therapy Today, March 2009), Kemp and Pinto cite a case of a child becoming blind due to the psychological trauma attributed to reported demolition of her house. I note that her mother reportedly became ‘mute’. As an optometrist I am not in a position to comment on the psychoanalytical diagnoses regarding causes but I would ask that I be allowed to make some observations." |
Great shame of our time |
| "I have just read the article concerning Palestine and would applaud the writers who have described the situations they encountered" |
Authors’ response to criticism |
| "In our article (To resist is to exist, March Therapy Today) we argued that the Occupation has a direct and destructive impact on the mental health of Palestinians (and perhaps of Israelis too); and, in addition, we briefly intimated that our discipline might contribute to understanding the unconscious dynamics behind the conflict" |
Disturbed by hostile response |
| "I commend Therapy Today and Eliana Pinto and Martin Kemp for publishing the article ‘To resist is to exist’. I am disturbed however by such a hostile response to a straightforward and honest recording of the current facts in Palestine. Indeed I think the response sheds light on why this problem seems so intractable." |
Concern at shocking article |
| "As longstanding members of the BACP, we are writing to you concerning the recent, quite shocking article ‘To resist is to exist” in this month’s Therapy Today" |
Failure of judgement |
| "We are writing to register our concern and dismay at the article 'To resist is to exist' in the March issue of Therapy Today. The official BACP journal is no place for a political article." |
Blatant bias |
| "Has Therapy Today entered politics? This blatantly bias article is nothing more than five pages of pro-Palestinian propaganda with the occasional psychological sentence thrown in." |
Suffering on both sides |
| "Many thanks to you for your courage in publishing the article on Palestine.I write as a long experienced counsellor and social worker who has visited some of the places mentioned in the article, and know some of the people visited" |
Inaccurate article |
| "My heart sank when I saw the cover of your March Vol. 20 Issue 2 edition. It sank further when I read the article. First of all, it is inaccurate. As yet, there is no such state as Palestine." |
Consider casualties from all sides |
| "I am a child and young person’s counsellor and a member of BACP. At present I am working towards accreditation. It is a long and arduous task, but I am working with determination and am actually enjoying it." |
Political polemic |
| "The article ‘To resist is to exist’ is a most blatantly one-sided piece of political polemic. It has no place in what is supposed to be a professional journal." |
Misleading without another viewpoint |
| "We were very disappointed to read your article ‘To Resist is to Exist’. The article contained several factual errors and omissions which led to conclusions that we dispute." |
Flawed background research |
| "An unfortunate outcome for a professional journal that offers a forum for the expression of views is that the opportunity can arise for the presentation of mere opinion as fact, no matter how biased or erroneous" |
Highlighting long-term consequences |
| "I am a member of BACP and was very pleased to see the timely article on Palestine in the March issue" |
Excellent article |
| "I just want to say what an excellent article Martin Kemp and Eliana Pinto have written about the occupation of Palestine in the most recent copy of Therapy Today" |
Biased and political |
| "Your magazine is packed with excellent relevant articles – so why the totally biased and political one on the Palestinians?" |
More balance needed |
| "In printing the article about Israel and the Palestinians by Kemp and Pinto, you have published a piece of unashamed one-sided political propaganda thinly disguised as professional analysis." |
No mention of suicide bombers |
| "I was concerned at the editorial and the article ‘To resist is to exist’. The whole tone is closer to a political campaign than anything to do with counselling and psychotherapy and politics clearly is not the function of BACP or its monthly journal." |
No mention of suicide bombers |
| "I was concerned at the editorial and the article ‘To resist is to exist’. The whole tone is closer to a political campaign than anything to do with counselling and psychotherapy and politics clearly is not the function of BACP or its monthly journal." |
Non-political ethos |
| "I have been a member of BACP for over 20 years and accredited for 13 years. I have always understood the ethos of counselling to be non-political" |
To resist is to exist |
| "Notes on the psychological impact of military occupation in Palestine" |
To resist is to exist |
| "Notes on the psychological impact of military occupation in Palestine" |
In the March issue of this journal, two psychotherapists wrote about the psychological impact of military occupation on the Palestinian people. In response, David Bedein reports from Sderot on the effects of Palestinian rocket fire on the city's residents
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by
In January during the Israeli military incursion into Gaza which followed continuous shelling of Sderot and the Western Negev from Gaza, a BBC correspondent stood on a lookout point where she could see both Sderot and Gaza, and reported that more than 1,000 people had been killed in Gaza, while 13 people had been killed in Sderot and the Western Negev. ‘The numbers speak for themselves,’ she said.
If this were a sporting event tabulating the number of fatalities on each side, the BBC reporter would have a point. However, while newscasts from southern Israel do report the torrent of missiles from Gaza, these soundbites are often followed by a laconic news announcement of ‘No damage and injuries’, suggesting that there is no news story of any human interest for the public to be concerned about.
Nothing to be concerned about? In a story that has repeated itself hundreds of times, a shaken Sderot woman who had witnessed a missile explode in her yard and miss her home and family by a few metres, stared with disbelief at a reporter who congratulated her that she had suffered ‘No damage and injuries’. Looking at the reporter, with her whole body quivering uncontrollably, she said to her that ‘It’s easier to photograph blood than to photograph the soul’.
Indeed, in a world of fast-moving images on the screen and even on the net, it is nearly impossible to portray this woman’s psychological situation. The sight of blood is easier to report than an entire population living in fear and helplessness, with no ordinary life. Shrapnel injures the body; the body receives treatments and heals. The mental issue is more complicated to relate.
Indeed, the attacks from Gaza on southern Israel are not necessarily waged to inflict fatalities. These attacks, described in military jargon as ‘low intensity conflict’, destabilise the other side, and instil fear into the daily lives of the people. So when a siren goes off to warn of an incoming missile, an entire population knows that it has 15 seconds to scamper for shelter. Israel’s southern region has endured more than 12,000 mortar, Kassam and Grad missile attacks over a period of eight years. That means that on 12,000 occasions, an entire population has run for cover.
Post-traumatic effects
In a recent study conducted by Natal (Israel Trauma Center for Victims of Terror and War), researchers discovered that close to 56 per cent of Sderot residents have suffered in some way from Palestinian rocket attacks. According to a report presented by Natal Community Staff Director, Dr Roni Berger in Beersheva on November 24, nearly half of Sderot’s population has been either physically or emotionally damaged by Palestinian rocket fire. Over 4,000 Sderot residents now suffer from symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), while one third of Sderot teenagers aged 13 to 18, have been diagnosed with trauma-related learning disorders.
As readers of this journal will know, PTSD is a severe and ongoing reaction to a terrifying ordeal that involves physical harm or the threat of physical harm to the person, according to The National Institute for Mental Health. People who develop PTSD may have witnessed a loved one who was harmed in a traumatic event or were victims themselves. Symptoms of PTSD usually begin three months after the ordeal but can also emerge years afterwards. Some people can recover within six months while others have symptoms that last for much longer. For some people, the condition becomes chronic. ‘The initial symptoms of shock include an accelerated heart rate, dry mouth, limbs falling asleep, a sense of fainting, or seeming paralysed or emotionally detached,’ says Professor Gabi Schreiber, Chief of Psychiatry at Ashkelon’s Barzilai hospital.
Dr Adrianna Katz, head of the Sderot Mental Health Center, says that the shock impacts the victim’s ability to function for months after experiencing a Palestinian rocket explosion. ‘Many rocket terror victims suffer from depression, sleepless nights, severe anxiety, and have trouble going back to a regular routine,’ she says. The Natal study showed that almost 50 per cent of Sderot residents know someone who has been killed in a Palestinian rocket attack, while 65 per cent personally know someone wounded in an attack. Over 90 per cent of Sderot residents have experienced a Palestinian Kassam explosion at some point – whether it be in a neighbourhood, home, school, business or other residential setting.
Dr Mina Zemach and the Dahaf Polling Institute conducted the research in order to compare Sderot to other communities who live outside of Palestinian missile range. Sderot residents made up the test group, while residents of Ofakim, a town of similar socio-economic make-up to Sderot but not under rocket attack, served as the control group. The study revealed that three times as many Sderot residents had gone to a spiritual counsellor (such as a rabbi), and a family doctor than did Ofakim residents.
Dr Berger explains that there were several reasons why Sderot residents suffered from higher degrees of trauma than residents of other Israeli communities within rocket range. ‘The fortifications in Sderot are poorer, and the population is weaker as well. The social unity is smaller. It’s a population who felt, and still feels, abandoned,’ he says. In addition, 45 per cent of the shells fired from the Gaza Strip target Sderot according to IDF (Israeli Defense Forces) intelligence.
Although adults in Sderot showed significantly higher levels of trauma and stress in the study than adults living in other Gaza vicinity communities, children of Gaza vicinity communities did not fare so differently from Sderot children. Close to 75 per cent of children aged 12 to 14 living in Gaza vicinity communities, suffer from symptoms of PTSD compared to 86.6 per cent of Sderot children. ‘Only a minority of those suffering from PTSD actually seek help,’ Dr Berger says.
The Impact of Palestinian rocket terror on Israeli children
Periodically schools in Sderot and the Western Negev have been forced to close during periods of intensive rocket attacks. According to research done by Sderot’s Resilience Center, a treatment centre that offers support and counselling to Sderot residents during times of emergency, there is a major problem manifesting itself in young Sderot children.
Clinical psychologists working at the centre discovered that many Sderot children are not developing speaking skills at a rate appropriate to their age. A normal child learns to speak around the age of one. But many children in Sderot have not begun to speak by the age of three or even four. Those who are capable of speaking, stutter and cannot complete words. Dr Dalia Yosef, Director of the Sderot Resilience Center, explains that the constant rocket fire upon Sderot has created a state of stress and panic that has dramatically impacted the development of young Sderot children. Dr Yosef and the clinical psychologists who work with her, counsel Sderot children from the ages of one to 18, offering treatment for a wide variety of issues.
‘It is important to note,’ says Dr Yosef, ‘that these Sderot children have been born into a reality of constant rocket fire. The world, as it appears to them, is unsafe and scary, full of insecurity and chaos. Their sense of security has been shattered by the continuous attacks. These children develop symptoms of PTSD early on, suffering from sleeping disorders, nightmares and anxiety attacks. Many experience regression, going back to wetting their beds.’
Those children whose parents suffer from signs of PTSD have even more complicated issues. According to Dr Yosef, children of parents diagnosed with PTSD sense that their parents cannot protect them. ‘These kids’ problems are even more severe than kids whose parents are more psychologically stable,’ says Dr Yosef, who explains that a young child hears the rapid breathing of his parent, when the Tzeva Adom (the early warning radar system) sounds and understands that his parent is frightened. ‘Once the child understands this, then he perceives that the world is unsafe and that his parent is unable to properly protect him,’ she adds. ‘The parent feels threatened and so does the child. Later on, this feeling of insecurity and stress affects the child in areas like speech, hindering normal speech development.’
Younger children go back to the bottle, to the pacifier, and have extreme difficulty separating from the parents. ‘Kids are scared to go to the bathroom or to the shower by themselves, because of the fear of a rocket strike,’ says Dr Yosef. ‘The situation has created unhealthy relationships within the family unit.’ Children as old as 12 sleep with their parents. ‘Even during ceasefire days where missiles don’t fall on Sderot, the trauma and stress continue because people continue to anticipate rocket attacks. Only a permanent long-term quiet will help these children and their parents recover,’ says Dr Yosef. ‘The moment there is a siren alert and a rocket explosion, all the progress we have made in the treatment is destroyed.’
Livnat Shaubi, a lifelong resident of Sderot and the oldest in a family of 11 children, relates how she spent an entire day with her younger siblings, helping them find ways to cope with the school closures during the heavy shellings on southern Israel. After spending four days at home, exhausting Lego, board games, and playing balls, the Shaubi boys – Hananel, David and Yehuda, ages 5, 7 and 11, respectively – created Kassam rockets from plastic bottles they found lying in the house. ‘Like other Sderot kids, my mom cannot allow my younger siblings to play outside during these periods of rocket attacks,’ Shaubi says. ‘We stay inside in the bomb shelter, but my brothers are desperate for things to do.’ Shaubi says that the first words her five year-old brother Hananel learned to say, along with Daddy and Mommy, were ‘Tzeva Adom’.
Mental Health Centre overwhelmed
Even when the fire from Gaza significantly decreases, Sderot and Western Negev residents still reel from the impact of the war. The Director of the Sderot Mental Health Center, Dr Adrianna Katz, told Sderot Media Center how area residents are streaming into her clinic, seeking therapy for developing ‘post-war’ trauma symptoms.
‘Many new Sderot patients are coming in for help, even though they have lived with the rocket terror for eight years now,’ says Dr Katz. ‘PTSD symptoms among area residents emerge during periods of “quiet” like now. Many seeking therapy had tried unsuccessfully on their own to suppress these symptoms of trauma during the past rocket escalations.’
Many more do not seek help. People with PTSD often avoid stimuli associated with their trauma. In Sderot, it is often impossible for residents to escape the reality that has brought on the trauma symptoms because of the fragile quiet. Dr Katz explains that recovering patients who hear the Tzeva Adom siren just once – the alarm that sends civilians fleeing to shelters – will go back to experiencing PTSD symptoms.
‘During the war, my staff discovered a new type of anxiety that developed among Sderot residents, which we termed “optimistic anxiety”,’ says Dr Katz. ‘Although residents were fearful of the rocket fire, they also experienced for the first time in years a sense of optimism that the operation would completely end the rocket terror. However, Sderot residents do not believe that the operation brought about a complete nor lasting change as it was finished halfway. In fact, because the rocket attacks have spread as far as Netivot, Ashdod, and Be’er Sheba, Sderot residents feel even less secure. Many families left Sderot during the war and travelled to nearby cities which they believed were safe from rocket attacks, only to find out they were not. This fact, which was revealed during the war, has spurred further anxiety among patients.’
Over 5, 500 patient files have been opened in the Sderot Mental Health Center, which has a staff of four counsellors, since Palestinian rocket fire on the city began in 2002. Out of those files, 2,500 are active, with many patients seeking treatment for the long-term, says Dr Katz. She does not have an exact number on how many new patients have come in for treatment since the war.
Dr Katz believes that there are many more PTSD victims in Sderot who are not seeking help. Most residents who do come to Dr Katz are referred by a doctor or medical expert, while a few arrive of their own initiative. She offers a small smile when I ask her if she has any hope for a lasting peace in the region. ‘Not at this moment,’ she says, as she gets ready to greet her next patient.
‘Optimistic anxiety’
During the heaviest fighting of the Gaza war in January, when Israel’s southern region absorbed as many as 50 attacks a day, Dr Katz noted that patients coming for treatment for shock were actually less anxious and traumatised than at other times. ‘For the first time, the residents felt that someone cares about them and provides them with the protection they’ve been expecting for eight years.’ Dr Katz calls this ‘optimistic anxiety’, and explains that when the Israeli army responds to the ongoing missile fire, the residents have hope that they will see a light at the end of the tunnel, and a qualitative change in their life.
As this story went to press, the Sderot Mental Health Center collapsed under the financial strain of not being able to service almost 5,000 outpatients who suffer the effects of sustained shelling of their community. The future of this vital community service remains unclear. Updates on the situation in Sderot are available at www.SderotMedia.com.
To read a critique by Irwin J Mansdorf PhD of the article ‘Palestine: to resist is to exist’ by Martin Kemp and Eliana Pinto (published in the March 2009 issue of Therapy Today), see www.therapytoday.net
David Bedein MSW is a community organisation mental health practitioner who directs The Center for Near East Policy Research in Jerusalem, Israel. He also advises the Sderot Information Center for The Western Negev in Sderot, Israel. With thanks to Noam Bedein and Anav Silverman from Sderot Media Center for assisting with the research for this article.