Providing Mental Health and Psychosocial Support for Gambian Shipwreck Survivors
The Supportive Activists Foundation (SAF) Drama Team presented a drama
emphasizing the mental health challenges faced by returnees, families
and communities
BANJUL, Gambia, February 26, 2020/ -- One survivor watched eight members of his family die. Another said he
counted 20 bodies washed onto the nearby shore. He also says he saw two
fishing boats nearby, close enough to have rescued others. They
did not.
These are some of the memories that haunt three Gambian
communities – Barra, Essau and Medina Serigne Mass – where earlier this
month (19-21 February) the International Organization for Migration
(IOM) led a series of individual and community-based mental health and
psychosocial (MHPSS) activities to support families impacted by a
devastating December shipwreck off Africa’s Mauritanian coast.
Sulayman* is one of the 87 Gambian survivors of a fatal shipwreck
which claimed at least 62 lives. Almost three months after the tragedy,
psychosocial needs continue to emerge in the communities of return.
“I feel better now, but people in the village keep talking about the
shipwreck,” says the 18-year-old survivor. “I don’t feel shy about it.
but it takes my mind back to it,” he added, referring to everything he
experienced trying to reach Europe from Africa’s coast last year.
“There were two fishing boats who saw we were sinking, but they didn’t
help us. They knew the area was deadly and yet, they did not
help,” Sulayman explained. “You don’t forget that.”
“My family is in mental distress,” added Samba*, who lost eight family
members. “Every morning, we wake up and miss our loved ones. It is sad
we were not able to bury them.”
The three communities are in the North Bank Region, where 85 per cent of over 250 returnees – from the December tragedy and a second intercepted boat – originate. The activities were designed to involve survivors,
families, community and religious leaders, as well as health and social
welfare authorities after a needs assessment was conducted in January.
In each community, survivors were encouraged to bond through small group circles. Led by a trained group leader, these discussions encouraged
survivors to share positive and negative experiences, as well as discuss and suggest available coping strategies.
“While in the boat, I said to myself, if I survive this, I will never
allow anyone in my family or community to embark on such journey,”
recounted Modou*. “All we felt in the boat was regret. It was
traumatizing.”
Simultaneously, small group discussions were held with families and
community members. These were aimed at creating space for learning how
best to attend to the needs of survivors who often must destigmatize the experiences of returnees to promote community resilience.
Building on the group discussions, psychodrama was used as a tool for
communities to gain deeper insights. The Supportive Activists Foundation (SAF) Drama Team presented a drama emphasizing the mental health
challenges faced by returnees, families and communities, which inspired
further community dialogue.
Other community-initiated activities, including football matches
and attaya (green tea) sessions, were included in the three-day
initiative.
To promote the sustainability of this support, IOM trained between two
to five volunteers in each community to be 'MHPSS focal
persons', equipping them with the tools to support families in
identifying symptoms of distress, provide basic psychosocial support and recommend necessary referrals.
“Altogether, the activities aimed at facilitating healing among
survivors, enabling durable family support mechanisms, encouraging
community proactiveness to the needs of survivors and promoting positive perceptions of returnees,” explained Evans Binan, IOM’s MHPSS Officer
in The Gambia.
Through this initiative, the foundations for a more resilient community
are being built. “Discussions are ongoing between youth and community
leaders about how we can engage youth in meaningful ways; how they can
contribute to community development,” remarked Mass Kah, Alkalo (village chief) of Medina Serigne Mass.
This initiative was supported through the EU-IOM Joint Initiative for
Migrant Protection and Reintegration, funded by the EU Emergency Trust
Fund for Africa. Covering 26 countries, the Joint Initiative aims to
support the sustainable reintegration of returning migrants and is
the first comprehensive programme to save lives, protect and assist
migrants along key migration routes in Africa.
*Real names withheld.
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