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Dan
Lamla Mkize, M.D.
South Africa
The small village of
Mzimkhulu, in the Transkei region of South Africa, was already divided along
racial lines when I was born, in 1948. This is a significant year in the
history of South Africa. It was the year in which the all-white Nationalist
Party came into power, entrenching the laws of Apartheid.
Therefore, from an
early age I grew up in a culturally divided country, in which I had
limited contact with other racial groups, especially Whites, with whom
interaction was mostly clouded by suspicion and hatred. In consequence
it took me a long time to rid myself of the racial prejudice that I had
involuntarily acquired during my developmental years, during which the
primary and secondary schools that I attended were exclusively African.
My introduction to
transcultural influence occurred during my experience as a medical
student amongst Coloured and Indian classmates at the University of
Natal.
It wasn't until my
post-graduate studies, at about age forty, that I was able to develop a
meaningful relationship with my White colleagues, an interaction which
increased with time and led me to realise that my preconceptions and
prejudices about White South Africans were misinformed.
This has led to my
studies of other cultures, to my interest in cultural psychiatry and to
my travels worldwide to widen my horizons.
It was during my time
as a registrar at the Whites-only Townhill Hospital, that I had an
intense interaction with White patients.
I remember one, a 28
year-old university student, who refused to be examined by me. He said
in Afrikaans, "I won't be examined by a black man. I am AWB"
(an extremely right-wing White Afrikaans political organisation). I
responded by saying "I am ANC", which at that time was the
feared, and banned, South African resistance political organisation
headed by Nelson Mandela. After that encounter, he developed a respect
for me (I am not sure whether it was based on fear) and I never had any
more problems with him, or with other White patients.
My career interest in
psychiatry began in the late 1970's, when I was a general practitioner
doing sessional work at Mzimkhulu Mental Hospital. This was an
institution caring for over 500 patients; with no psychiatrist. Through
that experience, I saw the need to specialise, with the intention of
fulfilling the role of psychiatrist at Mzimkhulu Mental Hospital, where
there was such manifest need. However this was not to be, because after
qualifying as a psychiatrist, I was appointed by the University of
Transkei to start the Department of Psychiatry there.
My interest in
cultural psychiatry, local and global, blossomed whilst doing my
post-graduate studies under the mentorship of Professor W H Wessels. I
was fascinated by this white person who was teaching me about my own
culture and its relationship to psychiatry.
My contribution to
cultural psychiatry includes a review article in the South African
Medical Journal on 'Amafufunyane - a culture-bound syndrome', and I have
given a number of presentations, both nationally and internationally, on
African psychiatry and psychotherapy. My academic work includes studies
of traditional healing methods, and integration of (indigenous) African
health systems with Western health systems.
As my retirement
approaches, I intend devoting much more time to this subject, with a
view to writing a book on cultural psychiatry relevant to South Africa.
This journey would
not have been possible without the support of my wife, Lungi, and our
three lovely children, Lwazi, Lundelwa and Zamakhize.
July 5, 2007
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