“…The sense of helplessness resulting from mothers’ inabilities to effectively care for their children causes significant distress and insecurity for women (Ajduković, 1996; Berman, Giron, & Marroquin, 2009; Kaitz, Levy, Ebstein, Faraone, & Mankuta, 2009; Pavlish, 2005; Punamäki, 2006; Robertson & Duckett, 2007; Shachar-Dadon, Gueron-Sela, Weintraub, Maayan-Metzger, & Leshem, 2017). Caring for their children and providing for their safety and security during wartime are extremely challenging, to the degree that parenting is perceived as an additional burden (Brodsky et al, 2012; Qouta et al, 2005; Robertson & Duckett, 2007). Yet, at the same time, as the sense of meaning and responsibility within motherhood represents a hardship, it may also represent a key protective factor against the negative consequences of war trauma for mothers (Qouta et al, 2005; Smith, Perrin, Yule, & Rabe-Hesketh, 2001; Walsh, 2003) and a source of resilience (Baines, 2014; Brodsky et al, 2012; Wyche et al, 2011).…”