Training Soviet immigrant therapists in the field of group psychotherapy |
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Authors: | Mordechai Benyakar M.D. Merav Gurevitch M.A. Dr. Ilan Neilman Ph.D. |
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Affiliation: | (1) Analytic Institute of group Psychotherapy, Israel;(2) Department of Psychology, Tel-Aviv University, Israel;(3) Brull Community Mental Health Center, Tel-Aviv, Israel;(4) School of Social Work and at the Department of Psychotherapy, Sackler Medical School, Tel-Aviv University, Israel;(5) Department of Psychotherapy, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel;(6) 28 Arba Aratzot Street, 62746 Tel Aviv, Israel |
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Abstract: | Between 1970 and 1990 about one-half million Jews immigrated to Israel, most of them from the former Soviet Union, including many mental health therapists who had trained and worked in the Soviet Union. This article addresses the special characteristics of this population, in general, and of the mental health therapists, in particular. It relates these characteristics to training for group psychotherapy. Key issues include their unique experience of the inner world as a source of danger, the specific defensive modes connected with this experience, their perception of authority as an agent of ideology, and their representation of the group as a persecutory entity and as a vehicle of indoctrination. |
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