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Monday, January 22, 2024

The Second Exodus

 



The Greater Exodus


 What do Holocaust survivors, African Americans, and Native Americans, along with many other people groups have in common? Intergenerational trauma. Research from various universities and other privately funded studies have all arrived at the same outcome; Intergenerational trauma, which is also known as collective trauma. 

As we explore this topic, keep in mind some of the interactions Moshe and Aaron had with the Israelites fleeing Pharaoh along with their journey through the wilderness to the Promised Land. I would like you, the reader, to also keep in the back of your mind the possibility of a repeat of these behaviors and attitudes during the Greater Exodus.

WebMD Medically Reviewed by Neha Pathak, MD, FACP, DipABLM on September 09, 2022 Written by Evan Starkman

What Is Intergenerational Trauma?

If you have ancestors or older relatives who went through a very distressing or oppressive event, their emotional and behavioral reactions could ripple through the generations of your family and affect you. This is called intergenerational trauma. You might also hear it called generational trauma, historical trauma, or multigenerational trauma.

It may stem from personal trauma, such as child or domestic abuse, or from trauma that a specific cultural, racial, or ethnic group endured. It’s been tied to major events like wars, slavery, the Holocaust, and colonial violence against Native Americans. It might even result from natural disasters like a flood, earthquake, or pandemic.

What Are the Long-Term Effects?

Intergenerational trauma could take a toll on your health in a number of ways. The reactions can be different for each generation, but they could include:

  • Shame

  • Anxiety and guilt

  • Feeling helpless or vulnerable

  • Low self-esteem

  • Depression

  • Higher chances of suicide

  • High rates of heart disease

  • Substance abuse

  • Relationship troubles

  • A hard time controlling aggressive feelings

  • Extreme reactions to stress

  • Damaged cultural identity (the sense of belonging to a larger group)

Still, many people have no obvious effects from trauma that past generations of their family went through.

What Causes Intergenerational Trauma?

The exact causes aren’t clear. But some experts think the original traumatic event could affect your relatives’ relationship skills, personal behavior, and attitudes and beliefs in ways that affect future generations of your family.

How your parents talk with you about the traumatic event (or fail to talk about it) and the way your family functions seem to play important roles in whether trauma gets passed down. For example, a parent’s experience of trauma might affect their parenting skills and play a role in their children’s behavior problems.

Researchers are also looking into the possible role of “epigenetic changes.” The idea is that your environment could cause changes that affect the way your genes work, and these changes could be passed on to younger generations.

Epigenetic changes can affect how your body reads a DNA sequence. But they’re reversible and don’t change DNA sequences like gene mutations do.


Who Does Intergenerational Trauma Affect?

Most studies of intergenerational trauma have focused on descendants of people who endured a historical traumatic event. That includes:

  • Holocaust survivors who survived concentration camps

  • African American people who lived through years of slavery, segregation, or systemic racism

  • Native Americans who endured colonial massacres or had their children taken from them and placed in boarding schools due to federal policies

  • Japanese Americans who were forced to live in internment (detention) camps during World War II

  • Veterans of the Vietnam War


Some experts say we need more research into transgenerational trauma among relatives of people with disabilities. Through history, some groups of disabled people have gone through trauma due to things like groundless biases, discrimination, forced sterilization or psychiatric treatment, and more.

It’s also thought that intergenerational trauma can also affect family members of people who’ve endured traumas such as:

  • Murder or rape

  • Natural disasters

  • Physical, sexual, or mental abuse

  • Substance abuse

  • Abandonment or neglect

  • Serious injury, illness, or untreated mental illness

  • Poverty and food insecurity

How Is It Treated?

We need more research to figure out which treatments work best for taking charge of intergenerational trauma.

If you think you or a loved one might have symptoms, start by talking to your doctor. They may be able to treat mental health conditions or other medical problems that might be tied to intergenerational trauma.

They may also refer you to an experienced mental health professional (like a psychologist or a licensed therapist) who could help you:

  • Trace your family’s history of trauma

  • Manage anger, stress, or numbness that might be tied to your family history

  • Discuss current-day traumas, like racism, that might be linked to the original trauma

  • Practice self-care techniques like mindfulness and exercise

  • Spot things that might trigger the effects of trauma for you and show you how to limit them

Choose a doctor or therapist who’s respectful of your culture, race, or ethnicity.

Depending on your background and your goals for treatment, you may be able to find a professional who helps you reconnect with your ancestors’ culture and traditions to help you work through the grief of old traumas. Some treatment methods involve traditional healing methods and ceremonial practices.





As we face these very stressful endtime events, it behooves us as individuals, families, and communities to begin discussing how this may manifest in our own lives that that of our families. Could it be that untreated trauma is the undercurrent of martial difficulties? How may it be impacting our communities?


Finding tools that heal, empowering us to overcome is crucial. Creating safe spaces for people to come and be a part of a safe community is also crucial. Shame does not heal in isolation; it heals in the safety of nonjudgmental embracing groups of others on this journey. 


As we read the account of the first Exodus, may we ask the Father what He would have us learn, preventing the same mistakes of our predecessors .

Where are we resistant to obey orders from someone He put in a leadership role? Where are we not trusting Him to provide? Where are we craving the leeks, the cucumbers, and the quail? Where are we dependent on something that can only be gotten from Egypt?

What relationships are we clinging to that are trauma bonds created by domestic abuse?


I wanted to share some resources with you. I encourage you, dear reader, to ask the Father to lead you in what He wants you to understand concerning this information.

Our next blog, we will explore this topic further.

antoldFebruary 24, 202



For a study on generational trauma and people groups:

https://www.colorado.edu/today/2023/01/26/holocaust-remembrance-day-how-trauma-persists

https://store.samhsa.gov/sites/default/files/pep22-01-01-005.pdf

For a study on the topic of the Four F's

http://northstarcounselingcenter.com/trauma-and-stress-responses-the-four-4s

https://preachitteachit.org/articles/4-trauma-responses-and-how-you-heal-them/

https://www.gaftr.org/the-four-fs-of-trauma/


Videos on Trauma

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vKX9rNFOT4

https://www.youtube.com/@TimFletcher


For a study on the topic of The Second Exodus:

https://images.app.goo.gl/qS2LuavVWdSM9iEQ8https://hoshanarabbah.org/blog/2014/04/19/the-second-exodus/


2 comments:

  1. This just brings so many things to mind! So much to think about! Thank you for sharing all that Yah is showing you about trauma: it seems to be a much larger problem in society than most know. May Yah continue to bless the work of your hands, Lauralee!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Laura Lee, this is such important words for us! I see how this blog is important to help heal! I love you and your work for Yahuah!

    ReplyDelete

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