My brother, Mamoun, was murdered in Khartoum. I write as a Sudanese psychotherapist, sister, and witness, carrying a grief that lives in my bones. This war has ruptured not only bodies and homes but our sense of self and belonging. To write is an act of refusal—a way to remember, to mourn, and to insist on life amid death. The post The Unseen Scars: Navigating the Psychological Landscape of Sudan’s War by Eiman Hussein appeared first on ROOM A Sketchbook for Analytic Action.| ROOM A Sketchbook for Analytic Action
As suggested previously, the acts of carrying, bearing and bringing-to-bear are crucial to the process of witnessing. The kind of carrying I am thinking of can be heard in a fado written by Amália …| The Place of Longing