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Goffredo
Bartocci, M.D.
TP Section Honorary Advisor
Chair, 1999-2005
Italy
During the past six
years I had the honor to serve WPA Transcultural Psychiatry Section as
its chair. This experience was both very enjoyable and very productive
for me. I hope it was equally so for the Section members.
Now I find myself in
the newly appointed position of TPS Honorary Advisor, joining my friends
Profs Wen-Shing Tseng, Wolfgang Jilek and Raymond Prince.
A young TPS member
recently greeted me -and teased me- observing that my hair is just white
enough to fit the criteria for an Honorary Advisor.
His comments brought
to my mind the pleasant feeling of having reached that time of life when
it is appropriate to continue my efforts to promote transcultural
psychiatry from the relaxing position of the couch in my study, as I
gaze across the orchards and vineyards in the valley below.
That very image came
to mind at the XIII World Congress of Psychiatry in Cairo, in September.
Following the TPS Business Meeting, I had the pleasure of having dinner
with some close friends (all of them are Section members) at a
marvellous terrace restaurant overlooking the Nile river.
It often happens that
the best inner realizations occur after a day of hard work, when you are
among good friends and -why not- enjoying a meal together. While gazing
at the Nile’s gentle current that carries a natural synthesis of both
African and Mediterranean cultures, I realized that this view reminded
me that exactly 30 years earlier, I had sat alone, at a table in a
nearby Cairo tavern, eating sandwiches in complete solitude.
I was on my way back
to Italy from my first field research, with Bantu people in South
Africa. I had arranged a stopover to visit Cairo, and to reflect on my
experience in Africa and what my future might be like, before I immersed
myself again in the academic life of the Dept of Psychiatry at the
University of Rome ( see my detailed bio-sketch in WACP website: www.
waculturalpsy.org).
In the tavern, I was
aware of a sort of dichotomy: no doubts about my passion to continue my
work in transcultural psychiatry, but…where would it take me? At that
time I was probably one of the few Italian physicians who had decided to
be fully involved in this new discipline.
Now, in 2005, on the
beautiful restaurant terrace overlooking the Nile, I was brought back
from my reveries to confront a sort of
"nearly-new-life-experience". I emerged from my withdrawal to
focus on the lively dinner-table discussion of my friends, in order to
work through my emotions about my long-past visit to Cairo, but also,
and most importantly, to try to get some hint of the future.
The future, in this
case, is characterized by the greatly increased worldwide recognition in
recent times of the relevance of transcultural psychiatry. Scholars of
transcultural psychiatry are increasing in number and in disciplinary
perspectives: from comparison of different illness presentations to the
validation of different medical epistemologies.
WPA’s Transcultural
Psychiatry Section has been in the forefront of promoting a flexible and
anti-dogmatic approach to the diagnosis and healing of mental
disturbances. Starting from the founding WPA-TPS in 1971, the Section
has given to psychiatry as a whole a strong impulse, acting both as an
incubator of scientific advances and as a meeting point for students of
transcultural psychiatry around the world who had felt isolated, and had
difficulty finding an environment that supported their work and
encouraged the exchange of ideas with like-minded colleagues.
The first
jointly-sponsored meeting of the Society for the Study of Psychiatry and
Culture and WPA-TPS, held in Providence (USA) in Oct 2004, has warmed
the psychological climate and has led to the cooperative planning of
organizational initiatives among SSPC, WPA-TPS and the new established
WACP; and in so doing, has
demonstrated the willingness of the world’s scholars in TP to maintain
a common epistemological focus, independent of the national psychiatric
associations each of us is involved with.
While flying over the
placid waters of the Nile on my way back to Rome to encounter the
culture-harassed waters of the Tiber that lap at the edges of St Peter’s
Square, the Mithra grottos, the tomb of Caesar and the Capitoline Hill,
I had the strong feeling that we, as cultural psychiatrists, once again
are about to become engaged with, interpret and try to solve, a wide
range of issues that confront people everywhere with the turbulence of
rapid historical and cultural change.
April 5, 2006
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