Unraveling Despair: A Qualitative Sociological Study of Suicide in Chitral District, Pakistan
Keywords:
Suicide, Silence, Stigma, Honor, ChitralAbstract
Suicide is still a very hidden and underexplored social crisis in rural and socially conservative environments, as stigma around the issue, honor-related principles, and institutional failure obscure the commonality of suicide, as well as factors that can lead to it. This article investigates suicidal vulnerability in the mountainous and geographically isolated district of Chitral, located in the northern part of Pakistan, using a qualitative and sociological approach that goes beyond individualistic and clinical explanations. Based on purposely chosen information from 100 plus cases of survivors of suicide attempts and relatives of those who commit suicide, the paper uses the reflexive thematic analysis approach to establish patterned social processes that contribute to suicidal behavior. The results demonstrate that suicide in Chitral is not a chance mental event, but a process of accumulation and social construction that is created through the interaction of five domains that are interrelated, such as structural and cultural regulation, prolonged psychosocial suffering, silence and stigma, gaps in institutions and services, and vulnerability through the family. The sustained strain is caused by economic instability, lack of education-employment fit, gendered expectations, and limited life opportunities, which, in most cases, are exacerbated at the family level with emotional neglect, authoritarian authority, violence, or relational rejection. Cultural demands of respect, restraint and perseverance further inhibit the expression of emotions and postpone help-seeking, converting distress into extended silent distress. Lack of access to culturally responsive and affordable mental health services at the institutional level eliminates the most crucial protective buffers, which give way to vulnerability in the long run. This paper is based on the sociological theories of strain, social regulation, stigma, gender, and psychosocial pain, which conceptualize suicide as a societal social failure and not an individual failure. Their results highlight the importance of suicide prevention programs that are based not only on biomedical services but also on family relationships, cultural discourses, and institutional responsibility, especially in marginalized and geographically remote settings. With its infrequent qualitative data on a less studied area, the study will provide context-related sociological knowledge for national and global suicide prevention discussions.


