|
|
JINA MAHSA AMINI
The face of Iran's protests. Her life, her dreams
and her death.
In memory of Jina 'Mahsa' Amini, the cornerstone of the 'Zan.
Zendagi. Azadi revolution.
16 February 2023 | By Gino d'Artali
And also
Read all about the assasination of the 22 year young Jhina Mahsa
Amini or Zhina Mahsa Amini (Kurdistan-Iran) and the start of the Zan,
Zendagi, Azadi (Women, life, freedom) revolution in Iran
2022-'23
and the latest news about the 'Women Live Freedom' Revolution per month in 2023: November 13 - 4
--
November 5 - October 31
--
October 31 - 16 --
October
15 - 1
--
September 30 - 16
--
September 17 - 1
--
August 31
- 18 --
August 15
- 1--
July 31 - 16
--July
15 -1--June
30 - 15--June 15-1--May 31 -16--
May 15-1--April--March--Feb--Jan
And
For all topics below that may hopefully interest you click on the
image:
all updates October 20, 2023
'BIOLOGICAL |
'BLINDING |
BIOLOGICAL TERROR ATTACKS
June 27, 2023 |
BLINDING AS A WEAPON |
<Persian social media is full of young people who say they were shot in the eye
by security forces>
Iranwire - 2 Nov 2023 - by KATHERINE
HIGNETT
<< <Act of Moral Courage:> Assessing the Psychological Consequences of Blinding
in Iran
IranWire interviewed Professor Anthony Feinstein about the psychological impact
of eye injuries and other wounds sustained by anti-establishment protesters in
Iran. A psychiatrist at the University of Toronto, Prof. Feinstein has ample
experience in studying the effects of trauma on mental health. He previously
worked with IranWire to research the impact of trauma on Iranian journalists who
face the threat of persecution and even torture in their line of work. In this
latest study, he investigated how symptoms of depression and post-traumatic
stress affected protestors injured in demonstrations, as well as non-protestors
and those who were not physically harmed. He initially expected eye wounds -
profoundly grievous injuries which can fundamentally change how a person
interacts with the world - to result in the greatest levels of trauma. But,
perhaps because of the moral courage these wounds have come to represent, he
found the opposite.
***
It's been more than a year since the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in police
custody ignited protests across Iran. Demonstrators still chant <Woman, Life,
Freedom> at rallies against a brutal government that continues to maim and
persecute its citizens. Countless Iranians were injured and even killed by
security forces as they were speaking out against the Islamic Republic. Eye
injuries caused by metal pellets, shrapnel and beatings have become a hallmark
of this state violence, a systematic means of repression IranWire has been
documenting for months. These wounds are especially cruel, inflicting pain long
after the initial injury and, in many cases, completely changing the way a
person interacts with the world around them. Although individuals can develop
powerful coping methods, losing sight in one eye can have a greater
psychological impact than losing a limb. And losing sight in both eyes can be
devastating, as ophthalmologists told IranWire earlier this year. Anthony
Feinstein, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Toronto, has been
studying the psychological impact of injuries among Iranian citizens to better
understand the ways this trauma continues to bleed into their lives. Before he
began, he thought those who sustained grievous injuries would have experienced
the greatest psychological consequences. But he found the opposite while
conducting his research. Protesters with eye wounds, he told IranWire, had
markedly lower rates of negative psychiatric symptoms than those with other
types of injury.
Quantifying Psychological Injury
Prof. Feinstein surveyed 94 Iranian citizens, many of whom had been injured in
protests. He used validated questionnaires to quantify symptoms of depression
and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). He also asked participants how they
felt now about their role in the anti-establishment protests. His surveys scored
participants according to these psychiatric symptoms and asked how individuals
felt about their involvement in the protests and whether they felt they were
being surveilled by the state, for example. The purpose of the survey was not to
diagnose depression or PTSD, but to understand how common and how severe the
symptoms of these illnesses were among the cohort. Among the participants, 63
had been involved in protests while 31 had not. Just over a third of the
protesters had been wounded (36), and 14 of these had serious eye injuries.
Thirteen had lost sight in one eye and one had tragically been fully blinded. Of
the non-protesters, nine were wounded, with two having experienced eye injuries.
Several participants in both groups reported having friends and family members
injured, in the eyes and elsewhere, or even killed in the monthslong, largely
peaceful protests. Symptoms of depression can include things like a sad mood,
irritability, an inability to enjoy things, disturbances in sleep, changes in
appetite, reduced energy, feelings of despondency, low self-esteem, fatigue,
inability to concentrate and, in severe forms, suicidal thinking. PTSD, he
explained to IranWire, is a condition that can arise in response to extremely
stressful events. <An overwhelming stress,> he said, <or a kind of event that
could have killed you or killed other people.> It can result in a range of
symptoms that fall into categories such as intrusion, arousal and avoidance.
Intrusive symptoms are those which involuntarily enter a person's consciousness:
nightmares, flashbacks and unwanted recollections of sights, smells and
memories, Prof. Feinstein explained. Avoidant symptoms are a response to these
intrusions. These are attempts an individual might make to avoid reexperiencing
a traumatic event: conscious efforts <to try and distract yourself or to block
out recollections.> Arousal, on the other hand, refers to an overly excitable
nervous system, whereby a person may find it hard to concentrate or to fall
asleep, and may find themselves more irritable. Even when an individual returns
to a safe place, Prof. Feinstein explains, <I'm looking over my shoulder because
I think I'm under threat.> PTSD can also leave people with an exaggerated
startle response that's sustained long after a traumatic event. <In response to
a slight noise, you react excessively,> he added. Prof. Feinstein didn't find
any overall difference in psychiatric symptoms between the protestors and
non-protestors who answered his surveys. But interesting and surprising results
emerged among those who had been wounded, a group that experienced high rates of
both depressive and PTSD symptoms. In contrast to his expectations, those with
eye injuries experienced significantly less depression and fewer intrusive and
arousal-related PTSD symptoms than those with other kinds of wounds.
<Striking> Results despite Limitations
It's important to note that Prof. Feinstein's research has several limitations.
For example, the sample size is relatively small, while many thousands of people
have been involved - and injured - in protests across Iran over the last 12
months. So, it's impossible to know how well these results track against
protesters in general. It's also hard to know how they compare the Iranian
population overall, which may have different baseline levels of psychiatric
symptoms than other, better studied, countries. Prof. Feinstein was also unable
to speak to participants in person - something that could provide much richer
opportunities to assess a person's mental state and understand why they feel the
way they do. And although he asked questions about participants' experiences
outside of protests, the study did not assess what other factors could explain
their psychiatric symptoms.
<Nevertheless,> Prof. Feinstein said, <Even with those disclaimers, what is
striking is that what started out as my a priori hypothesis that a group that
was blinded would be in the greatest psychological difficulty turned out to be
wrong.> The study will leave many readers wondering why these individuals might
be so resilient in the face of life-changing violence? The research was not
designed to offer a causal explanation for such findings, so it's impossible to
know for sure why this group seemed to experience a lower level of psychiatric
injury. But Prof. Feinstein suggests the concept of moral injury - as well as
the way eye injuries are viewed among protestors - may shed light on the matter.
Moral injury, he said, can arise <from witnessing, perpetrating or failing to
prevent> immoral acts. <Had they kept quiet? Had they done nothing? They could
have felt a sense of moral failure by their silence,> he said. <The fact that
they made a stand and spoke out or protested meant that moral injury for them
doesn't enter the equation.> It makes sense that an individual participating in
protests, <even though it came with awful consequences for themselves,> would
view their involvement <as an act of moral courage,> he said. This might
mitigate some of the trauma symptoms they might otherwise experience following
injury. The answer to one of Prof. Feinstein's survey questions - how
individuals feel about their involvement in the protests - may help explain why
those with eye injuries specifically appeared to experience less severe
psychiatric consequences. Every protestor who sustained an eye injury - in
comparison to 77 percent of those who sustained wounds in other parts of the
body - said they viewed their involvement in the protests in a positive light.
Eye injuries are considered by many protesters as a symbol of resistance against
the regime. Eyes are believed to be a deliberate target for security forces so,
despite the grievous nature of these wounds, they may become a particular source
of pride for some victims. Take 34-year-old fitness instructor Mercedeh
Shahinkar, who lost most of her sight in one eye during protests. She described
the injury - which still caused her pain months later - as <a badge of honor.>
Similarly, 29-year-old psychologist Raheleh Amiri, said of her own injured eye:
<These days, when I look in the mirror, my right eye is much smaller than the
left one but, to tell the truth, I am in love with my right eye because it glows
with honor.>
Protesters around the world have held up posters of Elaheh Tavakolian, who lost
an eye during protests, with a white heart over the injury. And as 23-year-old
Ali Zare, who also lost his right eye during protests, stated on social media:
<My eye for a free Iran.> An eye wound may serve as a marker of having <stood up
in protest,> Prof. Feinstein said. <It means you can look yourself in the face
in the morning and say, I never kept quiet.> But for now, he added, this remains
<just a theory> outside the scope of his research project. Surprising results
like this, he added, are <why we do research.> Assumptions can be <completely
overturned by data. And this is what's happened over here.> >>
Source:
https://iranwire.com/en/blinding-as-a-weapon/122136-act-of-moral-courage-assessing-the-psychological-consequences-of-blinding-in-iran/
copyright Womens'
Liberation Front 2019/cryfreedom.net 2023