From the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association, Washington, D.C., May 5, 2008.
Ishmael Beah knows that former child soldiers in war-ravaged
African countries can reclaim their lives because that’s just what he did. In
1993, rebels in Sierra Leone
killed 13-year-old Beah’s parents and two brothers, forcing him to join their
bloody campaign for two years. Upon his release, he stayed at a rehabilitation
center for six months with other formerly abducted children. Beah now lives in
the United States,
and he wrote a 2007 book about his transition from child soldier to college
graduate.
His inspiring story illustrates the resilience of children
forced into committing unthinkable acts, especially if they receive treatment that
blends with their cultures, as well as acceptance back into their home
communities.
New studies challenge the popular view that children forced to
commit war atrocities end up as “lost boys,” incapable of ever leading
constructive lives. “Declaring child soldiers to be ‘lost boys’ is simply
unacceptable,” Beah says.
Beah spoke on May 5 at the annual meeting in Washington, D.C.
of the American Psychiatric Association, along with researchers who study
former child soldiers.
“Emotional resilience is the norm,” says psychologist Jeannie
Annan of New York University, who recently studied former child
soldiers in Uganda.
“Family rejection and emotional distress are the exception.”
Consider 40 boys abducted into a rebel army in the East
African nation of Mozambique
more than 20 years ago. By 2004, 37 of them had returned to their home
communities and displayed good social and psychological functioning as adults, according
to Neil Boothby, an education professor at Columbia University.
“These are wonderful young men,” Boothby says. “They had
done bad things in their home villages as child soldiers, but the villagers
wanted them back.”
Psychiatrist Jon Shaw of the University
of Miami in Florida first contacted the boys in 1988. Government
forces had freed the youngsters from the rebel group and the government endorsed
an effort to rehabilitate them and return them to their families. Shaw
converted a Catholic school into a rehabilitation center that offered group
activities, including sports, art and music. Boys stayed there for six months
before going home to rural villages.
At that point, they participated in cleansing rituals run by
local healers. These ceremonies allowed villagers to forgive the boys for having
committed violent acts and to acknowledge that such behavior had been
involuntary.
Abducted child soldiers serve many roles, Shaw notes, such
as porters, cooks, human shields, spotters, spies, minefield sweepers and
participants in suicide missions. About one-third of child soldiers are girls,
who rebel leaders also use as sex slaves.
Boothby directed evaluations of each boy in 1988, 1989, 1990
and 2004. His team examined each young man’s ability to assist his neighbors in
times of need, a cardinal sign of maturity in Mozambique. He also evaluated their
psychological adjustment.
All the boys had recurrent thoughts or memories of traumatic
wartime events, even as adults. Over the course of the study, the number of
those who avoided places or activities that reminded them of past atrocities
increased from 15 to 26. That tactic apparently aided emotional healing,
Boothby says.
Despite their disturbing memories, 37 boys grew up to own
their own homes. They primarily worked as farmers. Most married and had
children.
In 2004, a large majority of the former child soldiers cited
examples of having helped neighbors in the past year. Interviews with those
neighbors confirmed the young men’s reports.
Three former child soldiers did poorly after returning to
their villages. One repeatedly got into trouble and died in a police shooting. Another
was ostracized for alcoholism. A third young man struggled with emotional problems
and an inability to relate to others. He had been abducted by rebels at age 6 after
seeing his parents brutally murdered and his house burned down. “This was the
worst case of trauma that I’ve ever seen,” Shaw says.
Boothby plans to track the young men for at least another 10
years.
Ugandan communities have also welcomed back former child
soldiers, NYU’s Annan says. Although these kids often avoid town-run “reception
centers” that offer group support and activities for ex-combatants, they still
do well upon rejoining their families
From 2005 to 2007, Annan and her colleagues interviewed a
random sample of 1,000 families in parts of Uganda that had been exposed to 20
years of conflict between government forces and a rebel group called the Lord’s
Resistance Army. About half of 741 males, ages 14 to 30, and 619 females, ages
14 to 35, reported having been abducted for various periods by the LRA.
Participants often described trauma and depression symptoms
that lasted for years after their release. Yet they had largely reintegrated
themselves into civilian life. Almost all the boys and 80 percent of the girls were
accepted by their families without problem after leaving the LRA. These kids
typically regarded their time with the rebels as what God had willed for them.
Family difficulties emerged for a minority who had spent many
years as soldiers, who blamed themselves for what had happened and who felt
haunted by spirits of those they had harmed or killed.
Psychological treatment for former child soldiers in Uganda shows promise as a way to ease lingering feelings
of depression, adds Judith Bass of Johns
Hopkins University
in Baltimore. In
a 2007 study, her team adapted a form of group therapy for use in Uganda.
Trained, local counselors delivered this therapy to 105 teenagers living in either
of two camps for displaced persons. The youngsters had been abducted by rebels,
had witnessed murders or had experienced other war-related traumas.
Constant worrying, social withdrawal and other signs of
depression substantially declined after four months of weekly therapy sessions.
Other teens in the same camps who received no treatment showed much smaller depression
drops, even if they had participated in sports and art programs.
Definitive treatment
and outcome studies of former child soldiers have yet to be conducted, cautions
psychiatrist Myron Belfer of Harvard Medical School
in Boston. As
Ishmael Beah emphasizes, recovery takes many years. “I couldn’t sleep much as a
child soldier, and I still don’t sleep more than three or four hours a night,”
he says.
Found in: Behavior