• Psychiatry · Jan 2001

    Transmission of Holocaust trauma--an integrative view.

    • N P Kellermann.
    • AMCHA, National Israeli Center for Psychosocial Support of the Holocaust and the Second Generation, PO Box 2930, 91029 Jerusalem, Israel. natank@netmedia.net.il
    • Psychiatry. 2001 Jan 1; 64 (3): 256-67.

    AbstractMuch has been written about how children of Holocaust survivors tend to absorb the psychological burdens of their parents. But questions remain regarding such parental transmission of Holocaust trauma. What was in fact passed on from parent to child? How does the transmission occur? Do parents invariably transmit and are children equally susceptible? The purpose of this article is to discuss these issues and present a model in which the process of trauma transmission can be understood more consistently. After a brief description of that which was transmitted, four prevalent theories of trauma transmission are described, including the psychodynamic, sociocultural, family system, and biological points of view. Thereafter, some of the mitigating and aggravating factors are presented that are assumed to decrease or increase the risk of children to absorb the trauma of their parents and to develop specific second-generation psychopathology as a result. In conclusion, an integrative view is suggested that attempts to define the possible influence of biological predisposition, individual developmental history, family system and social situation on transgenerational influence of Holocaust trauma.

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