Paradoxical resilience
Several post-disaster studies (Cénat & Derivois, Reference Cénat and Derivois2014a, Reference Cénat and Derivois2014b; Derivois et al, Reference Derivois, Cénat and Mérisier2014b) found that there was a marked prevalence (varying between 30 and 50%) of post-traumatic stress disorder and depression symptoms in the population. These studies show that these traumas are complex and not just related to natural disasters (Derivois et al, Reference Derivois, Cénat and Mérisier2014a). Furthermore, the research showed that the resilience levels of survivors in Haiti were superior to those of other countries with experience of similar natural disasters such as China, Armenia, Japan, Italy and Taiwan (Cénat & Derivois, Reference Cénat and Derivois2014b; Derivois et al, Reference Derivois, Cénat and Mérisier2014a, Reference Derivois, Mérisier and Cénat2014b). The same studies also highlight a paradox: the most vulnerable populations in Haiti have the highest resilience scores. Children living in the street with no schooling have higher resilience levels than children who go to school and have a house in which to live. A more recent study (Cadichon & Derivois, Reference Cadichon and Derivois2016) conducted 6 years after the seismic event has revealed that resilience levels are higher among: (a) children and adolescents whose parents do not work (compared with those of working parents), and (b) people with disabilities following the earthquake (compared with those with no disability). Although a high level of resilience does not imply an absence of trauma (as emphasised by Almedom & Glandon, Reference Almedom and Glandon2007), it is surprising that children and adolescents who live in the street, do not go to school, have a disability or whose parents are unemployed have more resources to cope with adversity.
Halfway resiliency or a pathological resilience?
How can we make sense of these findings, is resilience the central issue? Various studies (Cénat & Derivois, Reference Cénat and Derivois2014a, Reference Cénat and Derivois2014b) have postulated that resilience goes beyond dealing with and adapting to traumatic experiences, i.e. being able to absorb or resist them. Resilience is, above all, the capacity to bounce back and develop in a positive way following traumatic events and adversities. But does this definition remain valid in light of the outcomes of sociological studies that reported day-to-day life in post-earthquake Haiti (Farmer, Reference Farmer2012)? Although these studies reported that people were able to cope with the quake's aftermath, they have not experienced a ‘positive development’. Indeed, they did not collapse psychologically, but they did not rebound either. The data from studies cited above indicate that the more difficult the conditions are, the more likely people are to invent paradoxical coping strategies. They were not more ready, however, for new natural disasters.
Hurricane Matthew, which left hundreds dead in Haiti, has recently shown that although the population was completely unprepared to tackle a natural disaster, it resulted in paradoxical indicators of resilience. For example, while the south was cut off from the rest of the country and thousands of deaths were feared, the inhabitants of Port-au-Prince took to the streets to dance the rara (traditional music band) in the rain. Given these circumstances, is it appropriate to talk about ‘pathological resilience’ (Derivois, Reference Derivois2012)? That is, a form of resilience that sublimates setbacks and makes it possible to ‘roll with the punches’ without the ability to bounce back in the long term? There are two possible hypotheses: The Haitian people are genuinely resilient and exploit this memory of resilience, which is inherited and has developed progressively in response to traumatic events (particularly in the country's cultural, colonial and traumatic history). The development of this resilience could also be explained by the Haitian social configuration where there is an interconnection between social supports and resources such as family, school, religion, collective spirituality, community networks and personal resources developed by individuals to deal with adverse living conditions (Cénat et al, Reference Cénat, Derivois and Mérisier2013; Clermont-Mathieu et al, Reference Clermont-Mathieu, Jean-Jacques and Derivois2016). Alternatively, the people turn to ‘marronnage’ (see below), i.e. they evade the methodological and conceptual tools used to study their fragility and resilience, and – in more general terms – they ‘run away’ when faced with the international, humanitarian and scientific community that claims to understand and assist them or help them grow. Historically, marronnage was a technique used by slaves in the plantations to escape the watchful eye of their colonial masters (Fouchard, Reference Fouchard1988). Is it possible that the legacy of marronnage might induce the Haitian people to organise themselves to escape the theoretical tools employed to assess their trauma and resilience? In both of the above cases, the hypothesis of pathological resilience should prompt us not only to question the tools we use but also to seek out the hidden sense of the outcomes. Unless, that is, the concept of ‘resistance’ that resonates more profoundly with the collective history and psyche of Haiti would be a more effective way of thinking about this hidden meaning. The culture could then be a profitable means of analysing the paradoxes of resilience.
The ideas outlined above should help researchers and practitioners work towards a better assessment of the risk factors, defence strategies and traumatic consequences arising from natural disasters in Haiti and other low- and middle-income countries. They should then be in a position to improve the assistance offered to surviving populations by using their own cultural heritage as a therapeutic tool and to potentially reinforce resilience.
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