2006年VOA标准英语-Darfur's Refugees Struggle to Recover from Trau(在线收听) |
By Nico Colombant Sudan's war in the Darfur region has been devastating, marked by attacks in which pro-government militias have burned villages, killed people in front of their relatives, and raped young girls. A peace deal was signed recently with a major rebel faction, but for many victims the trauma of war lives on. Some aid groups are trying to help. --------------------------------------------------
The Gaga camp in Chad lies across the border from the Darfurian town of El Geneina. Many barely survived horrific attacks that left them in a state of shock and despair. One Kenyan association is trying to help. It brings together volunteer refugees who go out to every tent in the camp, looking for the traumatized and mentally unstable. . Sam, a 30-year-old Kenyan, is one of the project's counselors. He was a gym teacher, but decided that with so many wars still wracking the continent, it was time he tried to make a difference. Along with two refugee volunteers, and the translator, he pays a first visit to Ousmane and his family.
His sister explains he has been like this since he saw militias execute his father. Sam's method is to befriend such victims, spend time with them, and try to coax them into talking about their horrors, so they can come to grips with their past and try to be able to function a little better with what life has offered them.
Sam is not actually a psychologist by training, but he tries his best. There is just one psychologist on the team. The worst cases are sent to Doctors Without Borders. She says that is the day Amna stopped speaking, stopped being able to walk and stopped being able to feed herself. She can barely keep any food inside her, without throwing up. Sam says he would like to take Amna to another camp where they are gathering children whose development has been completely erased by the war, and try to get them to express themselves through drawing, singing and acting. Many girls like Amna were raped as well, so it is not always easy to reach out to girls, who see all men as evil. An attack during war can be very brief and deadly, even for the living, Sam says, and now it is his work here to counter the savagery and ugliness of war, and give these children some help to start the grueling climb back toward life and sanity. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/5/33100.html |