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'I Harbor No Hate': A Study of Political Tolerance and Intolerance in Holocaust Survivors

Title: 'I Harbor No Hate': A Study of Political Tolerance and Intolerance in Holocaust Survivors
Authors: Isserman, Nancy
Source: Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects
Publisher Information: CUNY Academic Works
Publication Year: 2005
Collection: City University of New York: CUNY Academic Works
Subject Terms: Political Science
Description: The political attitudes of tolerance or intolerance of victims towards their former perpetrators have not been thoroughly researched prior to this study. Through the data collected by the Transcending Trauma Project, a study looking at three generations of Holocaust survivor families, " I Harbor No Hate: A Study of Tolerance and Intolerance in Holocaust Survivors " examined this question. One expects that survivors will until their dying days hate the Germans and the Poles who destroyed their families, their livelihoods, their homes, and their communities. Yet, to a significant group of survivors interviewed for the Transcending Trauma project, this response is the complete opposite of what they believe and how they behave. One can understand the intolerant survivors, the "natural" response to what has happened to them, but have trouble accepting or understanding the response of the tolerant survivor. Through grounded research methodology and the secondary analysis of eighteen in-depth life narratives this study examined what factors contributed to tolerance versus what factors contributed to intolerance in their lives after the war. The study found that a history of persecution changes the factors that contribute to tolerant and intolerant attitudes. Threat and one aspect of worldview are important but are affected by the experience of persecution. Gender is also an important factor, with males predominantly in the intolerant group. In addition, religiosity, defined as a change in beliefs about God and change in levels of observance between the survivor's pre-war years and the post-war years showed a relationship to both intolerance and tolerance. Finally, this study studied psychological insecurity and intolerance through attachment theory, which analyzed family of origin relationships. By utilizing attachment theory, this study has offered a meaningful way to assess psychological insecurity. The strong relationship between quality of family relationships, psychological insecurity, and intolerance provides a ...
Document Type: doctoral or postdoctoral thesis
File Description: application/pdf
Language: English
Relation: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/1637; https://academicworks.cuny.edu/context/gc_etds/article/2659/viewcontent/isserman_0d43d6d9dd33eba51d6001d88ee425e4_Redacted.pdf
Availability: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/1637; https://academicworks.cuny.edu/context/gc_etds/article/2659/viewcontent/isserman_0d43d6d9dd33eba51d6001d88ee425e4_Redacted.pdf
Accession Number: edsbas.ED43750
Database: BASE