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Perspectives in Global Mental HealthFull Access

A Muslim Graduate Student From Sudan Trapped by the Travel Ban

“Ms. A” is a married 40-year-old Muslim Sudanese doctoral student at a university in the United States who was doing dissertation-related field work in Sudan when she learned from her study subjects that a ban limiting the travel of Sudanese nationals to the United States was to be signed into effect the following day.

Ms. A immediately contacted her university and was advised to get on the next plane back to the United States. She missed one of her connecting flights and landed at JFK International Airport in New York 20 minutes after the Executive Order was signed. As a result, she was held in a separate holding area, questioned extensively about her political views and religious affiliation, and asked to disclose her social media handles. She was then patted down in an invasive manner (including in sensitive areas such as her chest and groin), handcuffed, and transferred to a holding area where she was detained for several more hours with other Sudanese, Iraqi, and Iranian citizens with valid visas.

After legal intervention, she was eventually released and advised by U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials not to return to Sudan because even holders of U.S. Permanent Residency Cards (“green cards”) from the seven countries affected by the travel ban were not guaranteed reentry into the United States. This meant that Ms. A would need to forfeit the fieldwork necessary to complete her dissertation and that she could not visit her family. She found herself forced to choose between her academic career and her family.

The incident retriggered PTSD symptoms resulting from trauma earlier in her life that had been dormant for some time. A full mental status examination revealed that she was suffering from severe insomnia, dissociative reactions, flashbacks, nightmares, hypervigilance, poor energy, and lack of productivity. She denied suicidal ideation.

Ms. A met full criteria for PTSD, and she was referred to both psychiatric treatment and therapy. Treatment thus far has been only partially successful, reflective of her post–travel ban situation. Although a revision to the travel ban later permitted green card holders to travel without restriction, Ms. A’s situation remains complicated. Her husband’s immigration status remains tenuous, and uncertainty about when they will be reunited has put a strain on their relationship. Furthermore, Ms. A had applied for visas for her elderly parents prior to the ban in order to help her father obtain medical treatment in the United States. She reports unrelenting stress after realizing that she may need to wait at least 4 more years for a potential administration change before she can attempt to reapply for a visa for her father, who may not live to see the change.

Executive Order 13769, titled “Protecting the Nation From Foreign Terrorist Entry Into the United States,” decreased the number of refugees to be admitted into the country in 2017, temporarily suspended the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program, banned the entry of citizens from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen, and suspended the entry of Syrian refugees indefinitely. This Executive Order was dubbed the “Muslim Ban” because it targeted only Muslim-majority countries. The timing of the Executive Order coincided with the highest level of hate crimes against Muslims residing in America. The Council on American-Islamic Relations reports that attacks on Muslims occur almost daily and that anti-Muslim bias incidents increased by more than 67% in 2016 (1).

The far-reaching ban intended for terrorists in reality affected countless ordinary people who wished to pursue the American Dream and were committed to the American ideal of “pulling themselves up by their bootstraps.” Ms. A is an exemplary case of one such immigrant, who had taken the best of what this country has to offer and had been a productive and devoted resident. At 14, she emigrated from Sudan after being awarded a scholarship to complete high school in the United States. She later graduated from an Ivy League university on a full scholarship, and then entered a Ph.D. program.

Limiting travel from the countries targeted by the ban did not just limit academic pursuits and contributions by people like Ms. A. It also denied entry to those most in need of help, such as refugees and persons in need of medical attention. Additionally, the aftermath of the ban has negatively affected even green card holders and naturalized citizens, many of whom are from mixed-status families. The ban wreaked havoc on their family structure and sense of safety despite their status as legal permanent residents or citizens of this country.

Furthermore, the ripple effect of the ban continues to be felt by many marginalized communities who identify closely with those the ban directly targeted (2). Examples of this include all immigrants and Muslims who are from countries other than the seven targeted by the ban. The Executive Order shattered the sense of safety of communities of people who now feel that they could be targeted next because of their ethnic or religious background.

Our patients who are from the countries targeted by the travel ban or share similar characteristics (i.e., immigrants, Muslims) experience compounded levels of trauma. Some patients, like Ms. A, have experienced previous individual trauma in addition to the general trauma of growing up in a war-torn or conflict-heavy region of the world. Additionally, resettling in a new country and the tenuous immigration status that then ensues is itself traumatizing. Moreover, the harsh handling and long detainments by U.S. Customs and Border Protection as a result of the ban is retraumatizing to those already vulnerable. Once successfully in the United States, the sense of feeling unwelcome because of anti-immigration and anti-Muslim rhetoric from the highest levels of the country’s leadership is immensely traumatizing. By the time such patients reach our care, they have endured several layers of trauma, each of which needs to be carefully peeled back and addressed.

Perhaps the single most valuable asset for clinicians working with such populations is cultural sensitivity training. Ms. A reported several failed attempts at therapy either because the clinicians she saw only offered pity or because the cultural divide was so wide that she felt exhausted by just “catching up” her therapists, and she quit before truly addressing her problems. It is imperative that this training be both culturally and religiously congruent (3), and it should address issues of culture, faith, and immigration status as it relates to trauma. In addition to being trained in trauma-informed care, we also found it helpful for clinicians to undergo implicit bias training (such as that provided by Project Implicit; https://implicit.harvard.edu/).

We further discovered that it was useful for clinicians to offer or refer their patients to support groups for similarly affected individuals. Our experience has been that students affected by the ban were not willing to seek out counseling support unless their sessions were anonymous. These patients expressed fear that having their religious affiliation or immigration status documented in their chart could potentially put them at further risk. Support groups and anonymous drop-in sessions were important forms of support for members of marginalized communities and those with tenuous immigration status.

More specialized culturally and religiously congruent care is also needed for affected communities—such as the spiritually integrated therapy model the Khalil Center (khalilcenter.com) offers for the Muslim community. Likewise, we have found it mutually beneficial to be involved in psychoeducational initiatives with marginalized communities who shoulder the additional burden of high levels of stigma against mental health care in their communities (4).

From the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, Calif.
Address correspondence to Dr. Awaad ().

The author reports no financial relationships with commercial interests.

References

1 Council on American-Islamic Relations: Civil Rights Report 2017: The Empowerment of Hate. Washington, DC, Council on American-Islamic Relations, 2017. (http://islamophobia.org/images/2017CivilRightsReport/2017-Empowerment-of-Fear-Final.pdf)Google Scholar

2 North A: When hate leads to depression. New York Times, April 17, 2017. (https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/17/opinion/when-hate-leads-to-depression.htmlGoogle Scholar

3 Awaad R, Ali S, Salvador M, et al.: A process-oriented approach to teaching religion and spirituality in psychiatry residency training. Acad Psychiatry 2015; 39:654–660Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

4 Awaad R: A journey of mutual growth: mental health awareness in the Muslim community, in Partnerships in Mental Health. Edited by Roberts LW, Reicherter D, Adelsheim S, et al.. Basel, Switzerland, Springer International Publishing, 2015, pp 137–145CrossrefGoogle Scholar