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Croatian Wives Contend
With War's After Shocks
September 14, 2008 – (WOMENSENEWS) Croatia's
war ended in 1995 but soldiers who returned home with post-traumatic
stress never received adequate assistance. One group of veterans'
wives took it upon themselves to help form 11 centers to help families
cope.
ZAGREB, Croatia,The sound of gunshots, a bomb, screams--anything
that evokes war--is Sanja Mrva's worst fear. Whenever war comes
up on television in a documentary or the latest Matt Damon movie,
Mrva stops whatever she is doing and turns off the box.
"War is a topic that's out of the question," says Mrva,
who has been seeing a psychiatrist since 1998, about three years
after the conflict in Croatia ended.
Any allusions to war threaten the fragile balance she's built with
her two sons and her husband, Damir. He came back in 1996 from the
battlefield of wars that cut up Yugoslavia along ethnic lines. Diagnosed
with post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, he suffered sleepless
nights peppered with nightmares. By his own admission, he almost
killed his mother when she woke him up and he confused her for an
enemy.
Of about 450,000 Croatian veterans from the 1990s wars, nongovernmental
organizations estimate 55,000 have PTSD.
The conflict that resulted in 100,000 deaths and 2.5 million internally
displaced people is over. It echoes only in the headlines through
the high-profile war crimes cases of Croatian general Ante Gotovina
and Radovan Karadzic, the former Serb leader, at the Hague's International
Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.
The public, worn out with war and keen to forget, is apathetic about
PTSD; the government follows in step. Funding is low and there are
very few awareness campaigns.
But many families still fight on at home. Demobilized and disillusioned
soldiers often turn to drugs and alcohol for relief. Their wives
and children often suffer depression and stress-related problems.
Sometimes the story is woven with abuse. The children turn asocial.
Suicides occur. Families break up.
So some women have taken matters into their own hands.
Veterans' Wives Joined Together
The push began a decade ago when Marija Markotic formed an unofficial
group with the wives of veterans in their club in Zagreb. In 2006
they became the first registered Center for Families of Veterans
with PTSD with about 3,000 members. Since then, they helped create
11 other centers around Croatia to provide psychological support
and legal advice.
The center is scantily furnished. On the walls are pictures of their
heroes--including Gotovina--and two posters: "Dad, what is
PTSD?" and "Stop suicide. Not all wounds are visible."
Although the center is open every day, the group meets once a week
during the psychologist's visit, their refuge between work shifts,
children and chores. The room fills with chatter over drinks and
snacks. One woman announces that a friend is in the hospital, attempted
suicide. A flash of understanding, quick plans; all the women have
had their share of rough times.
"We were not allowed to be sick or show we had problems because
otherwise the whole family would fall apart," says Markotic,
the organization's volunteer staffer.
Home was just one frontline, the government another. Markotic waited
for over a year to have a meeting with Jadranka Kosor, the minister
of veteran and family affairs, and warned about the long-term effects
of PTSD on families. The warning fell on near-deaf ears, she says,
and produced a mere $6,000 in funding, about 30 percent of the center's
annual costs.
"If we don't put resources now into our families, in 20 years
time we will have more PTSD with our kids," Markotic says.
Combating violence toward the children was the main impetus behind
creating the center, she says.
Scared Talking to Father
Before coming to the center four years ago, Roberta Durbic, 13,
spent most of her time alone. Now she has friends, family communication
is better and laughter more frequent. But she is still afraid of
her father, a veteran. "He is too rough for me. I'm scared
when I'm talking to him."
Veterans in Croatia are revered as heroes. It's hard for many to
admit to psychological problems and face society's stigma toward
PTSD. As a result, the women bear the brunt at home.
Dubravka, who reveals only her first name, sits small and frail
on a rare outing from the Autonomous Women's House Zagreb, a shelter
for women.
She hasn't seen her three children since she ran away from her abusive
husband in 2002. Before the war, he was in prison for murder but
was released to join the army when combat started. After a few years
his growing aggression turned on her.
Once, she discovered a hidden deposit of hand grenades and guns
under their bed. She called the police, who took it away. When asked
how he reacted, she forms one fist with her hand and hits the other
one hard. No words. She lights a cigarette.
"If the rain falls, I'm guilty," she says.
She stayed with him because of the children and out of duty to her
veteran husband.
"I thought I had to be with him because he was wounded, he
could get better, that he would agree to medical assistance."
They have since divorced, but he has refused examinations for PTSD,
knowing he would lose custody of the children.
Mended Marriage
Mrva also considered leaving her husband, Damir. But the psychiatrist
she and her husband see in rural Virovitica convinced her to stay.
Elvira Koic, the psychiatrist, was overwhelmed with the soldiers
coming off the battlefield in the mid-1990s with invisible wounds.
Many committed suicide. She turned to the women for help.
She urged them not to leave them until they get better, "Alone
I couldn't do anything for these young men."
Koic helps both her veteran clients and their families by organizing
socializing events and support groups for the women.
Both Koic and Markotic get little financial support from the government.
They volunteer many hours and most of the funding is private.
The government is too busy dealing with veterans to focus more on
the families, says Ivan Tolic, a veteran with PTSD from Markotic's
center.
But, he says, "We have people who are sick. Just waiting makes
it worse."
Cyrille Cartier was working at Reuters in Washington, D.C., before
she began freelancing in Iraq and is now living in Croatia covering
the Balkans.
From:http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/3739/context/cover/
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