Sounds of SAND

"If I Must Die": Samah Jabr & Mays Imad

Feb 19, 2026
Samah Jabr, Palestinian psychiatrist and author focused on mental health under occupation. She explores how political violence shapes symptoms and memory. Short talks cover colonial language, community-led healing in Gaza, the concept of iptila as agency in tribulation, reframing sumud as gritty relational practice, and practical ways to sustain care and testimony.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Context Shapes Clinical Symptoms

  • Western psychiatric categories often misfit Palestinian experiences because symptoms reflect political and collective realities rather than isolated individual pathology.
  • Samah Jabr argues context and power shape presentations, so the problem often lies in the environment, not the person.
INSIGHT

Therapy Shouldn't Teach Compliance

  • Dominant Western theories assume universal homeostasis and inward-focused therapy, which can pathologize resistance in oppressed contexts.
  • Jabr highlights that Palestinians often seek structural change, so therapy must address agency and power, not only adaptation.
ANECDOTE

Fear Of Dogs: A Layered Memory

  • Jabr tells the layered 'fear of dogs' story showing how history, settler violence, corpses, and detention abuses inform a child's phobia.
  • She traces dogs' use as a military proxy across histories to explain the clinical fear.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app