“…Nevertheless, a more recent meta-analytic review indicated higher posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms among Holocaust G2 relative to comparisons (Payne & Berle, 2021). Other researchers have identified vulnerability among Holocaust G2 when coping with stressful life events and life-threatening circumstances (e.g., Baider et al, 2000; Shrira & Felsen, 2021; Solomon et al, 1988), indicating a combination of resilience and vulnerability (Giladi & Bell, 2013). This dispute is notable globally, as the long-term consequences of the Holocaust have ramifications in a widespread context of trauma among older survivors of atrocities around the world (Greenblatt-Kimron, 2021) and underscores the long-term effects of trauma on individuals and families in other trauma-exposed groups including families of Cambodian survivors of the Khmer Rouge Regime (Lin & Suyemoto, 2016), American Indian native groups (Hartmann & Gone, 2016), children in Northern Ireland (McNally, 2014), and survivors of political violence in Lithuania (Kazlauskas et al, 2017).…”