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MARIO
INCAYAWAR, M.D., M.Sc., DESS
Director, Runajambi (Institute
for the Study of Quichua Culture and Health)
TP Section Committee member, 2005-2008
Former Henry R. Luce Professor in Culture, Brain, Mind, and Medicine
Claremont Colleges, California
Quichua-Inca
Facing-off
Latino Oppressors
It was rainy and cold
in the valleys of the
Andes. A tough hacienda mestizo (Latino) overseer on horseback was
whip-lashing Rosa Cachimuel, forcing her to accept a hundred-pound sack
of corn, for which she would be forced into debt to the landowner.
Forcing their Quichua laborers into debt allowed the latino landowners
of
Ecuador
to subdue their Quichua workers and their families into life-long
serfdom.
My mother has told me
how my father’s grandmother, with a fierce combination of fear and
pride, managed to hold on to the overseer’s whip and to throw the sack
of corn back at him, saying; “Take your corn and bring it to your
master. Tell him that I will never give my children away to be your
servants.” She only had one functional arm; she had lost her
right arm to an untreated infection.
The courage of my
father’s grandmother has always been an inspiration to me.
My Parents
Resilience
My parents’ family
history has been characterized by their continuous struggle for freedom
and their efforts to build a decent life for themselves and their
children. Like the stories of First Nations’ families elsewhere
in the
Americas
, our family history was one of dispossession, abuse, and intense
discrimination by the mestizo ruling class in
Ecuador.
My earliest memories
of my mother and father are of their hard work, love and support of
their family, and of their trying to protect us from the constant
bigotry, cruelty and hostility of mestizos in our town of Otavalo, in the Ecuadorian Andes.
For my parents,
education was of paramount importance. My father and mother were
among the first few Quichuas in their region who went to school. My
father was one of the best students in the high school (Colegio Mejía)
he was able to attend in
Quito, the capital of
Ecuador. However, he was eventually forced to quit, in his fifth year,
because of unbearable humiliation, verbal abuse and beatings inflicted
on him daily by his latino classmates.
Despite being subject
to intense and constant discrimination and intimidation, my parents
succeeded remarkably in life and in their innovative family business.
They became the first Quichuas to own a house in Otavalo, a mestizo
town. They were the first to own a mid-size family business, and
to have mestizo employees, to buy a car, and to be able to send their
children to college in Quito
.
In this environment,
and aware of their struggles and accomplishments despite obstacles put
in their way by the dominant latino group, I felt compelled to succeed
in school.
My parents encouraged
and supported me to enroll in medical school. I was the first
Quichua student in the
School
of
Medicine
in
Quito, at the Universidad Central del Ecuador. When I was in the fifth
year (of seven) of my medical studies, I enrolled in the philosophy
program at the Universidad Católica del Ecuador. By the end of my
seventh and final year of medical school, I was quite reluctant to
settle down and open a private practice in our hometown of Otavalo, as
my father was encouraging me to do.
Understanding
and Responding to a Hostile Social Environment
After becoming a
medical doctor at the age of twenty-four, I felt a strong need and drive
to learn more by going further afield. I spent four years working
with the Quichua communities in the
Andes
. My work was in part clinical, in part political, and in part
epidemiological. It was an enriching period of my life. I
got to know many fascinating Quichua people: community leaders,
peasants, artisans, herders, patients, traditional healers, and foreign
volunteer workers.
It was also a hectic
period in my life. At age twenty-five, I was nominated to become a
member of the national legislature, the National Congress of Ecuador,
which I refused.
In 1984, my wife and
I founded the first Quichua health institution, Jambihuasi, a small
organization that promoted culturally sensitive health care services for
the remote Quichua villages of the
Andes. The services we offered were a collaborative effort between
Yachactaitas (Quichua healers) and medical personnel (including a
physician, a dentist and health educators). Quichua people, in
addition to foreign volunteers and mestizos, comprised the staff of
Jambihuasi.
The project was well
accepted and much appreciated by the local communities. Twenty-one
years later, Jambihuasi has received the support of the United Nations,
has been featured by many national and international media, including
ABC News, has been the subject of several peer reviewed papers in
academic journals of public health, and has established collaborative
relationships with American and European universities.
During this period,
I met Lise, who was to be my wife, and we had our only daughter, Sioui.
My Graduate
Studies in Montreal, Canada
In 1986, Lise and I
decided to further extend our education and world view, by moving to
Montreal
,
Canada
to pursue our graduate studies, and to ensure a quality education and
healthier social environment for our daughter, Sioui, than was possible
at that time in
Ecuador
.
I was very fortunate
to have Dr. Raymond H. Prince as my advisor for completing a Master’s
degree in Psychiatry at
McGill
University. At the same time, I enrolled in a graduate diploma program in
Community Medicine at the Université de Montréal.
I was fully immersed
in learning both the French and English languages, and learning about
the English-Canadian and Québec cultures. Those formative years
were spent mainly in a French milieu. My wife, a Montreal-born
Quebecoise, facilitated my integration in Québec society. Sioui,
who was starting to say some words in Quichua, quickly became a
French-speaking child. French became the language of our home.
Later, I started a
Ph.D. program at the Université de Montréal in psychiatric biomedical
sciences, with a focus on pain and ethnicity.
While doing fieldwork
in
Ecuador
for my Master’s and Ph.D. research, in 1990, Lise and I founded
Runajambi; the Institute for the Study of Quichua Culture and Health.
It was the first Quichua health institution in
Ecuador
devoted to the study of the physical and mental health of the First
Nations of the
Andes
.
During the final
years of my graduate training in
Montreal, my wife and I developed a consulting firm in transcultural medicine.
We also contributed extensively to, and created a section on
transcultural medicine, in L’Omnipraticien, a medical magazine
targeting French-speaking general practitioners ( family physicians ) in
Québec.
Developing an
Academic Career in the U.S.A.
In 1994, I had the
exceptional opportunity to visit and work in a short postdoctoral
training with Dr.
Keh-Ming Lin
, Professor of Psychiatry at UCLA, and director of the
NIMH
Research
Center
on the Psychobiology of Ethnicity. He introduced me to the
American academic culture. His generosity and academic excellence
inspired me deeply.
In 1998, I was
offered a unique academic position; the “Henry R. Luce Professorship
in Brain, Mind, and Medicine: Cross-Cultural Perspectives” at The
Claremont Colleges, in
Claremont
,
California. I spent six wonderful years of academic work there. Again,
my family was immersed in a different culture and struggling to become
proficient, now in English, our fourth language. Sioui, my
daughter, did the best. In just 3 months, she was speaking English
quite fluently! What a difference from her more linguistically
fossilized parents.
The journey of my
family across countries, languages, and cultures, naturally led me to
consider the role of social and cultural factors in health and disease.
I always thought dispossession, oppression, and racism explained, in
considerable part, the mental health problems of the First Nations of
the Americas.
Discovering the
WPA - Transcultural Psychiatry Section
With this background,
I found it extremely appealing to participate in the scholarly
activities of the Transcultural Psychiatry Section of WPA. I approached
the Section in 2001, and I soon felt like I was among friends who
supported my ideas and encouraged my work. Their friendship,
scholarship, and generous spirit have captivated me, and have helped me
cope with the loneliness of several moves to unfamiliar environments
during my adult years.
Now, I find myself
working in collaboration with colleagues from around the world. A
few months ago, I was invited to become a member of the WCPRR Editorial
Board and Regional Advisor for Ecuador, which I accepted enthusiastically. And only recently, I learned
of my election to the Executive Committee of the Transcultural
Psychiatry Section of the World Psychiatric Association, which I am
happy to participate in and contribute to in whatever ways possible. My enthusiasm grows even further with the recent creation of the World
Association of Cultural Psychiatry and the prospect of my participation
in the 1st World Congress of Cultural Psychiatry, in Beijing
in September 2006.
More information
about my academic, research, and clinical work is available at
April 5, 2006
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