As for chapter-and-verse, all I can say is I believe it was on one of the MANY
hours of videos of Hellinger working. But you can tell your client that
Hellinger most emphatically made the point that killing during war was NOT
murder, and didn't carry the same inner consequences.
There are certain war stories where a soldier knows he killed someone-
eyeball-to-eyeball- and has been haunted by it for ... well, since WW2 anyway,
and still going. I've found that setting up the client/soldier with the
victim is often healing. In one profound session that somehow ended up in the
conquistador period of Mexico, with all its atrocities, the "victims and
perpetrators" looked each other in the eyes and recognized and honored the
"great warrior" and "noble enemy" in each other... . There was profound
respect in this exchange... and then there were no longer "victims and
perpetrators" but mutual honor.
The story of Arjuna, in the Mahabarata, may be useful too---where a great
classic of spiritual literature points out that war is a play, and both sides
have chosen to take their parts, with no blame (no karma attached) to either
side.
Best wishes to you and your soldier.
Anne Beversdorf
Counselling Astrologer
Western and Vedic
www.stariel.com
anne@xxxxxxxxxxx
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