Hi everyone, and welcome to this podcast , coming to you from the Canary Islands to listeners around the globe.
Stories of struggle, resilience, and hope from migrants seeking a better future, facing cultural, legal, and personal challenges in new horizons.
Today I'm going to show you that there are no first-class or second-class victims. Suffering is universal. You can watch the drawings by clicking on the link in the description of this episode.
The post-traumatic stress suffered by David Olère, a Polish-born French Jew, was so great that he was unable to express the pain he experienced at Auschwitz. It must be taken into account that Davis was one of the Sonderkommando, Jewish helpers, forced to collaborate in various activities in the extermination camps during the Holocaust. Only through drawing and painting was he able to narrate the atrocities perpetrated by the Nazis in the extermination camps.Indeed, there is a therapy , created by Dr. Viktor Frankl, that uses the speach as way of leaving pain that provokes tragedires. Dr. Frankl was a prisioner in Auschwitz.
But history insists on repeating itself, and Gazan children are its victims. What David suffered is already being suffered by young Gazans.
Children and young people, in particular, are deeply affected and face acute anxiety, post-traumatic stress, behavioral problems, and emotional turmoil. Of particular concern is the future of the approximately 17,000 children who, tragically, are now alone or separated from their parents. And overall, up to 70% of the nearly 1 million children and adolescents in the Gaza Strip suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder.
And with that, I conclude today's episode. See you in the next one!
If you have any comments or suggestions for future episodes, please leave me a comment.
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