ISBN-13: 9783879977192 / Angielski / Twarda / 2015 / 550 str.
This book addresses one of the most heinous crimes of Saddam Hussein's Baath regime in Iraq, the so-called Anfal operations against the Kurdish population in 1988: within a few months, thousands of villages were destroyed; up to 182,000 men and women abducted and murdered; tens of thousands of civilians were detained and later forcibly resettled. Based on long standing work experience with women Anfal survivors in the Germyan region of Kurdistan-Iraq, the author explores their psychosocial situation and coping strategies over more than twenty years until today. She documents the women's long path from victims to survi vors, their struggle for truth, justice, and acknow led ge ment, and their conflicts with both the hegemonic Kurdish national victimhood discourse and Iraqi national strategies in dealing with the past.§The research gives an exceptional long-term psychological perspective on coping with extreme violence and loss, beyond common discourses of trauma and healing. It links psychological trauma research to memory studies and the broader debate on social and political reconstruction in post-conflict societies.