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From victim to human rights defender
6. juni 2008
Good news from a training programme in testimonial therapy in Varanasi, India.

The training programme was concluded by a ceremony in front of government head 
quarters where survivors of police torture were honoured after their 
testimonies had been read out to the public. The training programme is part of 
an RCT pilot study where brief therapy methods for use by community workers and 
non-professionals are tested. The process from theory to practice to political 
manifestation experienced in this training programme illustrates one of the 
major objectives of testimonial therapy: to empower the victim and support his 
or her development from victim to survivor to human rights defender.
 
The struggle against police torture and other organized types of violence in 
India is mostly centred around political and lawful initiatives. In the human 
rights organizations of India resources have been scant for providing 
short-term psychosocial assistance to survivors suffering from psychological 
problems. This type of assistance has mostly been provided by trained 
psychologists or psychiatrists in medical centres, which have been difficult to 
access for most of the survivors of torture. It is, therefore, necessary for 
the organizations working at the grass-roots level to develop their capacity 
for brief therapy assistance, which can be carried out by non-professional 
staff and offered to people all over the country and not only in the urban 
districts. 
 

A healing down-to-earth approach
Dr. Inger Agger, Psychologist and RCT consultant here explains the approach 
being tested by community workers and human rights defenders from the People's 
Vigilance Committee on Human Rights (PVCHR) in Varanasi.
 

"Testimonial therapy has been used for survivors of human rights violations in 
different parts of the world during the last 25 years starting in Chile. By 
giving testimony about the torture, telling "the self suffering story"as they 
say in India, to an empathic listener who records the story, the survivor can 
heal his or her trauma and also use the testimony document in the struggle for 
justice". 
 

First workshop
In May 2008 a workshop on testimonial therapy was organized with the joint 
collaboration of the RCT and PVCHR. In the workshop 12 human rights defenders 
from PVCHR were trained by Dr. Inger Agger and the participants thereafter took 
the testimonies of 23 survivors under supervision. 
 

"During two sessions, one community worker acts as the interviewer while 
another community worker acts as the note-taker. Together with the survivor 
they create a coherent story about the human rights violations suffered by the 
survivor. They help the survivor remember the suffering and feel the emotions 
at that time and in the present. Corrections might be made before the testimony 
is prepared in elegant paper and signed by the survivor and the interviewer.As 
a new element in the testimonial method, each session was concluded by ten 
minutes of mindfulness meditation", says Agger. 
 

At the third session, an honour ceremony is organized where the testimony is 
handed over to the survivor. If the survivor agrees this ceremony can be public 
and the testimonies of several survivors might be handed over on the same 
occasion. This happened in Varanasi where the PVCHR arranged for the survivors 
to gather in a ceremony in front of the District Government Head Quarters of 
Varanasi. The ceremony was widely covered by the local and national media.
 

The private becomes political
"I am very satisfied with the process. It has been an extremely creative 
experience to work together with PVCHR and develop an Indian version of the 
testimonial method. It was also very moving for me to attend the ceremony where 
the results of the training and the therapy were developed into social action", 
says Agger.
 

A copy of the testimony will be used for further advocacy with the acceptance 
of the survivor. The testimonies of survivors can also be used in folk school 
meetings, community meetings, programs related to human rights, as part of a 
people's movement and in workshops for the police to prevent torture. 
 

Giving Voice
During the workshop a special manual for the use of Testimony Therapy in India 
was created. The title of this manual is "Giving Voice". The manual will be 
translated into Hindi. 

The pilot study will be evaluated in order to see whether this method could be 
beneficial in other regions and other organisations.









« Back to 2008
http://www.rct.dk/sitecore/content/Root/Home/Link_menu/News/2008/India_testimony0608.aspx
-- 
Dr. Lenin (Ashoka Fellow)
  Mobile:+91-9935599333
  Please visit:
  http://www.universalrights.net/heroes/display.php3?id=101
  www.pvchr.org
  www.youtube.com/pvchrindia
  www.pvchr.blogspot.com
  www.sapf.blogspot.com
  www.antiwto.blogspot.com
  www.rtfcup.blogspot.com
www.dalitwomen.blogspot.com
www.lenin-shruti.blogspot.com
http://www.orkut.com/Community.aspx?cmm=51624734

My final words of advice to you are educate, agitate and organize; have faith 
in yourself. With justice on our side I do not see how we can loose our 
battle.. The battle to me is a matter of joy. The battle is in the fullest 
sense spiritual. There is nothing material or social in it. For ours is a 
battle not for wealth or for power. It is battle for freedom. It is the battle 
of reclamation of human personality…. 
Dr. B.R.Ambedkar 


      
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