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Collective Trauma From the Lab to the Real World: The Effects of the Holocaust on Contemporary Israeli Political Cognitions
Authors:Daphna Canetti  Gilad Hirschberger  Carmit Rapaport  Julia Elad‐Strenger  Tsachi Ein‐Dor  Shifra Rosenzveig  Tom Pyszczynski  Stevan E. Hobfoll
Affiliation:1. University of Haifa;2. Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) Herzliya;3. Ben‐Gurion University;4. Bar‐Ilan University;5. University of Colorado;6. Rush University Medical Center
Abstract:This research tested whether chronic or contextually activated Holocaust exposure is associated with more extreme political attitudes among Israeli Jews. Study 1 (N = 57), and Study 2 (N = 61) found that Holocaust primes increased support for aggressive policies against a current adversary and decreased support for political compromise via an amplified sense of identification with Zionist ideology. These effects, however, were obtained only under an exclusive but not an inclusive framing of the Holocaust. Study 3 (N = 152) replicated these findings in a field study conducted around Holocaust Remembrance Day and showed that the link between Holocaust exposure, ideological identification, and militancy also occurs in real‐life settings. Study 4 (N = 867) demonstrated in a nationally representative survey that Holocaust survivors and their descendants exhibited amplified existential threat responses to contemporary political violence, which were associated with militancy and opposition to peaceful compromises. Together, these studies illustrate the Holocaustization of Israeli political cognitions 70 years later.
Keywords:collective trauma  exposure to political violence  existential threat  political conflict  political radicalization  intergroup relations
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