'Stripped of all humanity': Ex-IDF mental health chief on the trauma of Hamas's hostages [View all]
Mental health professionals in Israel faced the difficult task of helping hostages freed or released from Gaza in recovering from their trauma, and is akin to getting someone stripped of their humanity and rebuilding them from the ground up, Lucian Tatsa-Laur, the former head of the IDF mental health department, told Tamar Uriel-Beeri on The Jerusalem Post Podcast.
Tatsa-Laur described how the IDF didn't have much experience in treating hostages before November 2023, when around 100 hostages were freed from Gaza as part of a ceasefire deal. What they did know did not adequately prepare them for the mental state the freed hostages would be in when they returned, shaped by the traumatic experiences they suffered since October 7.
"It's very, very difficult, but I will try to be a descriptive about what the state of mind of somebody who has been held hostage is," Tatsa-Laur explained. "He is stripped of all his humanity and all of his being. You need to try to imagine that from somebody who [feels they are] worth something and has meaning life, you are reduced to somebody whose life could end in a flinch. You could say something, you could do something - actually, you could do anything, and your life is over. It's worth nothing. And if you add to that that you are detached from all the people that that you know, and you are starved, and you are also manipulated psychologically and physically... You're in very, very deprived state, which I don't think we can really understand.
"It's like being reduced to nothing at all. And I think that one of the most difficult challenges as a psychiatrist or a psychologist, is to get somebody who was reduced to nothing and all and making him human again."
https://www.jpost.com/podcast/jpost-podcast/article-835996
I've seen a few posts here on DU excusing hostage taking, but only in the context of the Gaza war.