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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Syrian refugee challenges therapy stigma

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BEKAA VALLEY, Lebanon: Hana al Ali broke a stigma when she opened up to a therapist about the strains she faced as a Syrian refugee in Lebanon. Now, she is encouraging other refugees to talk through their problems.


Pregnant with her second child, Ali escaped the Syrian city of Raqqa some six years ago to neighbouring Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley where she currently lives with her husband, two boys and one daughter in a refugee camp. “When I first came here, I was very weak, I couldn’t understand what happened. It was like a dream, every once in a while I would ask myself ‘Oh God, I didn’t wake up from this dream yet?’” said Ali, 30.


“But it was not a period of weakness, it wasn’t weakness, it was a lack of understanding, I was going through a crisis and suddenly came here, so I felt life became suffocating,” she said, surrounded by her children as she spoke.


Help came some two years ago when she met a psychologist with the International Committee of Red Cross (ICRC). “There was someone there who understood what I needed, I felt better little by little. I felt that the injustice we lived has become a source of strength — it did not break me.”


Lebanon is hosting nearly one million registered Syrian refugees who fled the conflict that began in 2011 — equivalent to a quarter of Lebanon’s population. More than half of them live in extreme poverty, and three quarters live below the poverty line, UN agencies said in January.


Sarah Joe Chamate, the ICRC psychologist who helped Ali, said talking about mental health was often seen as a taboo.


“The stigma is a big problem and it still exists in our society, as well as Western society,” she said. — Reuters


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