When the Oppressed Become the Oppressor:

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The Spiritual Cycle of Trauma and Power

Why This Question Matters Right Now

As conflict continues between Israel and the Palestinians, many people are asking a difficult question:

Can oppressed people eventually become oppressors themselves?

It is an uncomfortable subject, but history shows this pattern is not new. Across nations, religions, governments, and even families, unresolved trauma often repeats itself in different forms.

The deeper issue may not simply be politics. It may be human nature.

The Psychology of Oppression and Power

One of the greatest myths about suffering is the belief that pain automatically creates compassion.

Sometimes it does.

Sometimes suffering creates empathy, wisdom, and a desire to protect others. Yet history also shows that trauma can create fear, defensiveness, and control. Groups that once lived through persecution can become deeply focused on survival once they gain power.

Fear changes people.

Fear narrows perspective. It creates division between “us” and “them.” Over time, survival instincts can slowly overpower empathy.

This does not happen only in governments or wars. It happens in workplaces, relationships, communities, and families as well.

People who never heal their pain often repeat it.

Why History Repeats Cycles of Oppression

History is filled with examples of this cycle.

Revolutionaries become dictators.

Victims become aggressors.

Communities once denied freedom later deny freedom to others.

This does not mean all oppressed people become oppressors. Many become compassionate leaders and advocates for justice. However, suffering alone does not guarantee wisdom.

Healing requires accountability.

Without reflection, trauma often recreates itself through fear, anger, or the need for control.

The danger begins when any group believes their past suffering makes them incapable of causing suffering themselves.

The Spiritual Cost of Dehumanizing Others

Every conflict begins with a story about who deserves compassion and who does not.

Once people stop seeing others as human beings, harm becomes easier to justify. Labels replace humanity. Entire populations become statistics instead of individuals with families, fears, and dreams.

This is where spiritual awareness matters deeply.

Real spiritual growth asks us to remain conscious of humanity even during conflict. That does not mean ignoring danger or avoiding accountability. It means refusing to lose empathy completely.

Hatred changes people spiritually.

So does unresolved fear.

What the Israel and Palestine Conflict Reveals About Humanity

The conflict between Israel and the Palestinians carries generations of grief, trauma, displacement, fear, and loss. Innocent civilians on all sides continue suffering deeply.

This article is not about assigning simple blame. The situation is far too complex for that.

Instead, it raises a larger human question:

What happens when collective trauma goes unhealed for generations?

History suggests that pain left unresolved can become identity. Survival can become justification. Fear can slowly reshape morality.

That lesson extends far beyond the Middle East.

Breaking the Cycle of Trauma and Oppression

Perhaps the most important question is not who suffered first.

Perhaps the real question is this:

What do human beings do with suffering once they gain power?

Do they create compassion?

Or do they recreate fear?

The answer shapes nations, families, relationships, and communities every single day.

True healing begins when people become willing to examine their pain instead of building their identity around it.

That may be one of the greatest spiritual lessons humanity still struggles to learn.

 Reflection Questions

  • Does suffering naturally create compassion?
  • Can fear distort morality over time?
  • What happens when trauma becomes identity?
  • How do we break cycles of emotional and societal pain?
  • What responsibilities come with power?

About Me

Colleen Irwin is a psychic medium, teacher, and author who helps women navigate their Second Season of Life with clarity and confidence. Through Mediumship Development, Tarot, and spiritual mentoring, she guides women to trust their intuition and step forward into life’s next chapter

Rev. Colleen Irwin

Founder & Author

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Work With Colleen Irwin

Whether you are seeking clarity, validation, healing, or deeper spiritual growth, I offer readings, mentoring, and transformative experiences designed to help you move forward with confidence. Explore private sessions, upcoming classes, and events created to support your journey.


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