Waila KLindsay N2025-03-142025-03-142024-08-01Waila K, Lindsay N. (2024). Understanding the role of spirituality during COVID-19: a cross-cultural qualitative analysis. Mental Health, Religion and Culture. 27. 3. (pp. 241-254).1367-4676https://mro.massey.ac.nz/handle/10179/72638The novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in 2019 brought widespread disruptions to normal daily functioning. The current qualitative phenomenological study explored the role of spirituality during the pandemic across two divergent cultural contexts; India and New Zealand. Inductive thematic analysis of results revealed that spirituality was found to entail a range of convergent health and wellbeing effects that were categorised into four major themes; hope, meaning amidst chaos, strengthened mental fortitude, and inner transformation. Overall, spirituality provided individuals a range of tools to navigate the crisis, building individual resilience and providing courage to face the pandemic’s most difficult challenges. Moreover, the inner-transformative effects of spirituality fostered significant post-traumatic growth above and beyond the immediate impacts of the event, providing evidence for the therapeutic potential inherent within spirituality.(c) 2024 The Author/sCC BY-NC-ND 4.0https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/COVID-19pandemicresilienceSpiritualitywellbeingUnderstanding the role of spirituality during COVID-19: A cross-cultural qualitative analysisJournal article10.1080/13674676.2024.23504731469-9737journal-article241-254