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Beyond Buna and Popcorn: Using personal narratives to explore the relationship between the Ethiopian coffee (Buna) ceremony and mental and social well-being among Ethiopian forced migrants in London, UK

Beyond Buna and Popcorn: Using personal narratives to explore the relationship between the... AbstractThis paper reports on oral history interviews undertaken with Ethiopian forced migrants in London and focuses on the significance that the traditional coffee (Buna) ceremony has on mental well-being among participants. It was evident from participants that the Buna ceremony provides opportunities to preserve cultural heritage as a strategy for overcoming forms of social isolation and disadvantage. The ceremony enables participants to meet, talk, support; and especially where mental distress is associated with loss of social support, the Buna ceremony can be viewed as a mutual self help group, where individuals are involved in the maintenance of well-being. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Advances in Mental Health Taylor & Francis

Beyond Buna and Popcorn: Using personal narratives to explore the relationship between the Ethiopian coffee (Buna) ceremony and mental and social well-being among Ethiopian forced migrants in London, UK

Advances in Mental Health , Volume 9 (3): 14 – Dec 1, 2010
14 pages

Beyond Buna and Popcorn: Using personal narratives to explore the relationship between the Ethiopian coffee (Buna) ceremony and mental and social well-being among Ethiopian forced migrants in London, UK

Abstract

AbstractThis paper reports on oral history interviews undertaken with Ethiopian forced migrants in London and focuses on the significance that the traditional coffee (Buna) ceremony has on mental well-being among participants. It was evident from participants that the Buna ceremony provides opportunities to preserve cultural heritage as a strategy for overcoming forms of social isolation and disadvantage. The ceremony enables participants to meet, talk, support; and especially where mental...
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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2010 eContent Management Pty Ltd
ISSN
1837-4905
eISSN
1838-7357
DOI
10.5172/jamh.9.3.263
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

AbstractThis paper reports on oral history interviews undertaken with Ethiopian forced migrants in London and focuses on the significance that the traditional coffee (Buna) ceremony has on mental well-being among participants. It was evident from participants that the Buna ceremony provides opportunities to preserve cultural heritage as a strategy for overcoming forms of social isolation and disadvantage. The ceremony enables participants to meet, talk, support; and especially where mental distress is associated with loss of social support, the Buna ceremony can be viewed as a mutual self help group, where individuals are involved in the maintenance of well-being.

Journal

Advances in Mental HealthTaylor & Francis

Published: Dec 1, 2010

Keywords: Buna; coffee; well-being; mental health; self help; oral history; Ethiopians

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