Northern Mozambique has been absorbing what humanitarian groups call “multiple shocks” for years. Conflict, cyclones, cholera, displacement; each arriving before the last has been processed, each landing on a health system already buckling. What happens to people's minds in conditions like these? An
While the world debates mental health awareness campaigns, northern Mozambique's people are living through a masterclass in resilience that Western psychology textbooks could never capture. The compound trauma of conflict, climate disaster, and displacement isn't just breaking minds—it's forcing communities to innovate healing practices that blend ancestral wisdom with brutal pragmatism. This is what survival looks like when the luxury of processing trauma is a privilege you can't afford.
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