Folding paper swans, modeling lives: the ritual of Filipina eldercare in Israel

Med Anthropol Q. 2013 Jun;27(2):215-32. doi: 10.1111/maq.12024. Epub 2013 Jun 20.

Abstract

This article examines the practices of folding paper swans by Filipina migrants employed as live-in caregivers for elderly, dying patients in Israel. These practices create a microsystem model of adjustment through precise, small-scale, and repetitive movements. This microsystem synchronizes a tripartite process: the swan's process of construction, the patient's process of decay, and the caregiver's process of self-creation. In the short term, the microsystem is sustained, but in the long term, the microsystem contains within it the seeds of its own self-destruction, as the patient eventually dies, the caregiver is reassigned to another patient or deported, and the swans are gifted. Therefore, the swan folding expands both medical anthropology understanding of caregiving as a ritual and the phenomenology of global caregivers who use immediately accessible materials-paper and glue-as an imaginative tool for ordering their daily experiences as dislocated and marginalized workers.

Keywords: Filipina migrant worker; eldercare ritual; ethics; global-local homecare; self-creation.

MeSH terms

  • Anthropology, Medical
  • Art
  • Ceremonial Behavior*
  • Home Care Services*
  • Hospices
  • Humans
  • Israel
  • Philippines
  • Transients and Migrants*