A kind of strange mental illness called Stockholm syndrome!
1973 year. Stockholm, Sweden. A robbery took place at a bank in Sveiges Kreditbank-Sweden.
Two robbers held 4 people hostage in the face of the enemy. They have kept them in custody for 6 days. In these 6 days, the bargaining of the police and robbers is going on. At the end of 6 days, when the hosts were released, the people of the world noticed a strange thing in their behavior. They refused to testify in the court against the robbers and started collecting money to fight the case of the robbers!
Even during his tenure, the then Prime Minister of Sweden, Wolff Palam, was requested not to do any kind of force.
Through this incident, people are introduced to a new type of mental state - the Stockholm Syndrum.
It is good to say here that Stockholm Syndrum is a mental disorder among many. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorder (DSM) - Stockholm does not recognize syndrum as a mental illness.
So is this Stockholm Syndrum?
This is a psychological reaction, where a victim begins to feel sympathy for his oppressor or his rob, and expresses distrust and non-cooperation with the police or law enforcement agencies.
At the root of this strange behavior is the tendency to survive. When a man is in danger of losing his life at the hands of his detainee, he naturally becomes dependent on his detainee for his own life. In return for the detainee's death plan, Zimimar gains trust and sympathy. Surviving is the main thing from torture or torture. In the promise of survival, the host is so fond of sympathy for the detainee that creates distrust towards the organization of the police or law enforcement. And this is how the detainer uses this Stockholm Syndrum to achieve his own interests.
Sometimes the Stockholm Syndrum is so infatuated that the individual misdeeds himself. One such incident happened during the Petrasia Hercetre. He was abducted by Symbian Liberation Arimar in 1974. Within 10 weeks of abduction, he engaged in a call to a bank in California with his abductors.
Marie McEllroy was abducted by 4 people at the age of 25 in 1933. He was kept in custody in the mouth of a farmhouse. The kidnappers in exchange for his ransom were seeking ransom. Even so, Mary expressed sympathy for her kidnappers in public. He even committed suicide to protest the punishment of his abductors.
Natasha Campch was abducted in 1998 at the age of 10. He was kept in an underground cell for about 8 years, tortured and persecuted. Even death threats were being made. But unbelievable, Satya Natasha was breaking down in tears over the suicide of her abductor Wolfgang Pyreklapil.
In 1979-81, during the hostilities in Iran, Stockham Syndrum began to show its presence in the world. In 1985, the TWA-847 plane hijacking, the Japanese embassy, the manifestation of the Stockholm Syndrum in the Japanese Embassy caught our eye.
This strange behavior is due to the tendency of the Stockholm syndrum to adapt to a type of coping mechanism or the tendency to accept a kidnapping incident. Through this the victim may forget his trauma or horror.
In these cases, a mental health specialist should be consulted as soon as possible.