Pubdate: Sat, 11 Sep 2010 Source: El Paso Times (TX) Copyright: 2010 El Paso Times Contact: http://www.elpasotimes.com/townhall/ci_14227323 Website: http://www.elpasotimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/829 Authors: Aileen B. Flores and Adriana M. Chavez Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/topic/Juarez CHILDREN ARE PAYING EMOTIONAL PRICE FOR JUAREZ VIOLENCE JUAREZ -- The image was disturbing -- a young girl stretching her body through iron bars to catch a glimpse of several people who had just been gunned down. Their bodies collapsed on the sidewalk near her home after gunmen opened fire on them in apparent retaliation for the kidnapping of another child. For children such as the girl trying to see the victims, the brutality of the drug war in Juarez is causing psychological and emotional problems. Violence seems to be all around them. On Thursday, multiple attacks in different parts of the city claimed the lives of 25 people -- the youngest 15 years old. Authorities said the slayings are connected to a warning painted on a wall that threatened retaliation against the Sinaloa drug cartel for the kidnapping of a child. On Friday, a woman who takes car of her grandchildren knows firsthand the impact the violence is having on children. The woman, who preferred not to be identified, said children are scared. "Children are suffering. They don't want to go out and play in the streets anymore. They're afraid. Every time they see a police unit, they think something bad happened," she said. She said her 3-year-old grandson heard the shots in one of the attacks Thursday. "The child didn't sleep all night; he was very scared," she said. She her grandson would not stop crying on Friday and was restless. This week, a program designed to teach schoolchildren and their teachers how to protect themselves in the event of a shooting was discontinued. In addition, one school was closed Friday because the principal was the victim of an extortion attempt. Child psychologist Robert Patterson, of El Paso, said the violence is causing a general state of anxiety among children. Even if children haven't experienced violence directly, there is going to be a general anxiety for their own safety and the safety of their parents, he said. If children witness a violent act directly or indirectly, they will start having nightmares and flashbacks, he said. "From what I gather from a few other therapists on this side of the border, people are bringing their kids over here for help for trauma," he said. "They're traumatized just about hearing about something awful. Even if they've heard a story at school about a body being beheaded, they show classic symptoms of trauma," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake