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Decolonizing Trauma Work

  • Writer: Rae Sabine
    Rae Sabine
  • Jul 29
  • 1 min read

This book examines how colonialism has profoundly affected Indigenous mental, emotional, and spiritual health, highlighting that trauma is collective and intergenerational, stemming from residential schools, displacement, and systemic oppression.


Renee Linklater critiques Western mental health models for being too clinical and disconnected from Indigenous realities. She emphasises the importance of community, ceremony, land-based practices, and ancestral knowledge in true healing.


The book includes interviews with Indigenous mental health practitioners who are already using culturally grounded approaches. Their stories show that healing is possible when Indigenous-led practices are honoured and supported.


Overall, the book is a call for change in how trauma work is done. Linklater urges practitioners and systems to decolonise their approaches by centring Indigenous voices, knowledge, and leadership in all healing processes.



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I acknowledge the traditional custodians of this land where I live and work, the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nations. I acknowledge that this land was never ceded and always was, always will be Aboriginal land. I pay my respects to Elders past, present and emerging.

I celebrate, value and include people of all backgrounds, genders, sexualities, cultures, age groups, spiritual beliefs, physical abilities and disabilities.

 

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