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JOAN
OBIOLS-LLANDRICH, M.D., PH.D.
Secretary
WPA - Transcultural Psychiatry Section, 2005-2008
Principality of Andorra
I was born in 1951,
in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain; so my ethnic background is Catalan. My
father sent his six children to the Lycée Français; the French school
of Barcelona, one of the few non-religious based schools in the city at
that time. There, my first name, Joan –John in English- was translated
into French as Jean. (The Lycée Français, in an effort to assimilate
its students into French culture, assigned French first names to all of
them.)
Considering that
under Franco’s dictatorship, which I had to endure throughout my
school years, and until 1975, Catalan was a forbidden language, even for
first names, so my official name had to be registered as Juan, the
Spanish version. Accordingly, a single vocal change in my name was the
cause of my first cultural shock; at a very early age and throughout my
childhood and through much of my teenage years. This made me
precociously acquainted with cultural struggle.
Joan/Jean/Juan grew
up feeling that being a member of a minority group was not easy. First
of all, my own language, Catalan, even if spoken by about ten million
people, was not very useful outside the Catalan borders. Therefore,
learning other languages was highly recommended. Second, as Catalan
identity was diluted into a global Spanish identity in the eyes of
foreign people, I realized that we Catalans had to work hard to make our
voices heard on the international scene.
In keeping with the
peaceful traditions of Catalonia, Catalans believe that this recognition
should come not from bombing or terrorizing, but from art, culture,
science, gastronomy or sport. (Travelling around the world, you soon
realize that the most famous thing people identify as Catalan is the
football/soccer team from Barcelona).
Besides these
comments about Catalan ethnic awareness, I must say that as a child I
was fascinated by books about travellers and explorers and books of what
was called "human races". I dreamt about becoming an explorer
in Africa and discovering unknown tribes.
So, it should come as
no surprise that in my third year of medical school at Barcelona
University, I decided to begin to study cultural anthropology at the
same time as medical subjects. In 1974 I finished my medical studies and
began my residency in psychiatry. In 1975, I completed my doctoral
degree in cultural anthropology, so I was obviously committed to
becoming a transcultural psychiatrist –although I didn’t really know
at that time what that might involve.
In the summer of
1970, I had the opportunity to drive from Barcelona to Rawalpindi
(Pakistan) and back, along with four other medical students. Driving
across Europe, Turkey, Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan was a great
experience –though probably not a very safe one to repeat nowadays-
and a good way to encounter people of very diverse cultures.
Later, during my
training as a psychiatrist, I spent a year and a half in different
centers in the United States, getting to know something about the
diverse American society; quite an experience. In 1976, in San
Francisco, at the Biological Psychiatry Association Congress (!),
through some common friends, I happened to meet Wolfgang Jilek and
Louise Jilek-Aall.
Until then, all my
knowledge of cultural psychiatry had been acquired through books. I
remember scrolling through the French "Encyclopédie
Médico-Chirurgicale" and discovering articles on ethnopsychiatry
by Wittkower and by Ellenberger that I was very excited by. But now, in
1976, in San Francisco, for the first time I met a couple of real,
working transcultural psychiatrists! I was delighted, especially because
Wolfgang and Louise offered their friendship to me and began to send me
many of their publications. Since then, they have been a model for me
and the natural way to introduce me into this impassioned world of
transcultural psychiatry.
It was also through
Dr Jilek that I would later become a member of the Transcultural
Psychiatry Section.
Upon my return to
Barcelona at the end of 1977, as an associate professor at the
Psychiatry Department of the Medical School I took the initiative to
begin teaching some seminars on this new discipline called transcultural
psychiatry. It was probably the first time this topic was taught at a
Spanish university.
In the 1980s and ‘90s,
I continued to include this subject matter in post-graduate courses.
Since at that time there were really only a few colleagues in the
Spanish psychiatric scene interested in cultural psychiatry, I jokingly
defined ourselves as a sect. Fortunately, our numbers have been growing
steadily since then and there is now a much wider interest in Spain in
cultural aspects of psychiatry.
In the summer of
1992, I had the chance, beyond the travels I had made in many countries,
to do real fieldwork, in collaboration with a team of anthropologists in
Ecuador. Modified states of consciousness have been one of my topics of
interest, and I had the opportunity to observe the use of hallucinogenic
compounds among the Shuar people of the Upper Amazon region of Ecuador.
I continued my
involvement in transcultural psychiatry as a staff psychiatrist and
professor at the University Hospital of Barcelona, doing research on
traditional healers, until 1998.
In 1998 I was
appointed as Director of the Mental Health Services of the Principality
of Andorra. This is a unique country, a very small one, with only 76,000
inhabitants, 200 kilometers north of Barcelona, in the midst of the
Pyrenees mountains. For me, it was going back to my family roots, as my
father and my grand- father were of Andorran origin. It was also a great
opportunity to develop some culturally sensitive services, given my
position, in a country where 70% of the population are immigrants.
In 2001, Goffredo
Bartocci, Chairman of the TP Section at that time, and a good friend
since I had met him in Rome some years before, asked me if I was willing
to organize the annual conference of the Section in Andorra. I was
willing and I did it, though I still don’t know how. I’m very happy
now about this decision, as I was able to host a magnificent group of
transcultural psychiatrists, whose contributions signified a great
scientific event for Andorra.
I also feel happy
after these years of travelling around, getting to know so many
colleagues; many of whom I greatly admire, and participating in the
friendly atmosphere that has been a characteristic of transcultural
meetings.
I have been a member
of the (executive) Committee of the Transcultural Section since 2002. As
the recently elected Secretary of the Transcultural Psychiatry Section
of the WPA, I feel highly honoured and willing to pledge the best of my
efforts to contribute to the strengthening of the Section and to the
growth of our discipline.
April 5, 2006
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