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Antti
Pakaslahti, M.D., Ph.D.
Finland
Being asked to
contribute a short bio-sketch was an honour and a challenge. How was I
drawn to transcultural psychiatry, presently my natural intellectual
environment? What follows are some notes on my voyages in time and
place, coincidences, choices,
perhaps ascending spirals.
By nationality and
mother tongue I am Finnish. My family background is a composite; a
grandmother from the Stockholm French school, and elements of Russian
and Scottish as well. As a boy, I spent a long period in war-torn
France. Back in Helsinki, I attended the new French primary school –
one of the post-war links between Finland with the West. At home, I
listened to discussions in several languages, as my parents conversed
with their guests in half a dozen tongues they learned in the course
of their international diplomatic activities.
During my teenage
years my father was posted to India and other Asian countries. From my
boarding school in Mussoorie, the snow-capped Himalayas invited trekking
and exploration. In addition to English, I learned Hindi. The intriguing
complexities and cultural flavours of India made their indelible mark on
me. I started to record my impressions in photography. After the years
in India, I had shorter stays in Turkey and in Spain, with my parents.
Transcultural riches; but also some identity diffusion for me.
Back in Finland, I
studied Indian culture and languages at university, but I realized in
time that future job prospects in this field might be very limited. I
opted for medicine, another career attraction I had considered. However,
I continued with my fascination with India as a sideline: tasting (and
preparing) curries, hearing (and meeting) Ravi Shankar, learning
Sanskrit, and translating Hindi poetry into Finnish (winning a small
prize for that along the way). I was a fan of cinema, discovering
Satayjit Ray.
As a young doctor
specializing in psychiatry, I had an opportunity to return to India for
several months. It was by car; through Turkey, Iran and Afghanistan. In
India, I was once again subject to its exuberant charm. I talked Hindi
and practiced my photography. I observed the tensions and paradoxes
around unequally developing modernity. I sensed in many ordinary people
their backbone of traditional culture and solid family bonds; despite
the hardships of material poverty and life-crises. I wondered what kind
of cultural and psychiatric research
might exist on such issues?
In the 1980s, I
submitted my doctoral dissertation on schizophrenia, with a follow-up
study on protective and risk factors affecting outcome. The empiric
material was from Helsinki, but included an extensive international
literature review and discussion. Finding out about the WHO multi-centre
studies, with their surprising results of a better outcome in
schizophrenia in the developing countries, I pondered about what might
be the role of culture, family and social networks in that improved
outcome?
Soon afterward, I was
assigned to a project starting new emergency services for acute
psychotic patients in the community, near Helsinki. By then I had
completed my training in psychotherapy and had gained some experience in
community psychiatry. I wondered whether there was a workable
alternative to the usual hospitalization of psychotic patients in
crammed closed wards? Our multi-professional team began to offer family
and group interventions in psychoses, on an immediate outpatient basis.
Effective mobilization of supportive and healthy resources in patients,
their families and social groups proved to be effective in stabilizing a
number of problematic situations, without resorting to hospitalization.
Later this emergency approach was also applied to crises involving
suicide risk. A new family, network and community-oriented treatment
"culture" was evolving.
I came across some
ethnographic accounts of healing of mental problems in traditional
societies. Rather than being excluded, the afflicted individuals became
a centre of caring and attention by their relatives and fellow
villagers. As cultural professionals of crisis solving, healers
organized and led group sessions aimed at interpersonal healing and
community reintegration. Had we western psychiatrists just started to do
something similar - across distances in time, place and culture?
My next project
started to take shape slowly in my mind, during vacation trips to India.
Could I locate traditional healers in India and study their therapeutic
approaches and techniques; perhaps even with video documentation, which
I had been utilizing by then
for over a decade?
Starting in the early
1990s, I participated in the meetings and symposia of the WPA-
Transcultural Psychiatry Section. I plunged in to learning from the work
of many well-known cultural researchers, surrounded by stimulating, and
at times, fascinating discussions. All this helped me to develop and
contextualize my transcultural field research ideas.
Ultimately, I arrived
at the famous healing shrine of Balaji in Rajasthan, North India, where
I could communicate in Hindi. Well-received locally, I embarked on a
series of annual field research trips. I succeeded in finding a number
of respected healers associated with this shrine. These were serious
professionals who treated psychiatric and interpersonal problems in the
culturally-congenial idiom of "spirit illness". Their
techniques consisted basically of family and group-oriented therapeutic
interventions. I was able to obtain in-depth audio and video interviews
of healers, patients, and their families. As many allowed me also to
film actual healing sessions, I was able to assemble an extensive body
of authentic field material for subsequent analysis. Direct field
experience and later analyses revealed highly sophisticated and
culturally relevant therapeutic techniques. To date, my results have
been presented in transcultural psychiatry congresses, research papers
and two documentary films. The second film, "Kusum", has
received several international awards. Further work on this subject is
forthcoming.
I now feel that
transcultural psychiatric research has become a unifying process for me,
bringing together disparate life strands: linguistic attractions, some
translation work, cultural curiosity, my attraction to India, visual
documentation, psychiatric and psychotherapeutic investigation,
professional and human interactions.
What about future
transcultural projects? Some have started, including collaborative
efforts in Finland, the Nordic countries and elsewhere – but that is a
story for future telling.
Closing
Reflections
I hear a polyphony of
voices in space and time. Every voyage involves both departure and
return. My three year-old daughter is a fan of videos about the Finnish
Moomin family. The touching Moomins are curious and open toward all
kinds of strangers emerging into their lives. Many become their friends.
The Moomin father tries to put all this together in his memoirs. So,
last week my daughter asked me to give her a big notebook and pencils. I
asked: "what for"? She replied: "I want to write my
memoirs".
Recent and ongoing
transcultural activities
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Associate
Professor (docent) of Psychiatry; teaching transcultural psychiatry
at the Universities of Oulu and Tampere, Finland
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Member of the WPA-Transcultural
Psychiatry Section; Committee member, 1999-2002
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Editorial board
member; Anthropology and Medicine,
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International
advisory board member; Indian Journal of Psychiatry
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2002- founder and
chairman of the Transcultural Section of the Finnish Psychiatric
Association
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2003- founding
member; Nordic Cultural Psychology and Psychiatry Network (CPPN);
co-ordinator, 2005-2006
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Scientific
Committee member & transcultural program co-ordinator, 28th
Nordic Congress of Psychiatry; 16-19 Aug 2006
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Editor of the
forthcoming issue of the Finnish Medical Journal, Duodecim; on
transcultural psychiatry
October 5, 2006
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