In The Spotlight: Elan Shapiro
By Marilyn Luber, Ph.D.
June 2005
Francine Shapiro was she a cousin a long lost relative? That is what Elan Shapiro
wondered when he heard about the first EMDR training that took place in Israel
in 1989. When Elan was a college student, he worked with Dr. Danny Kahaneman
who later became the first psychologist who won a Nobel Prize. Elan was his
assistant when he was writing a book on attention. His job was to read every
article on attention and summarize it in one page. There was one article that
caught his eye and stayed with him, only to be triggered when he heard about
Francine Shapiro and a new idea called Eye Movement and Desensitization. This
article was by someone called Day that documented the following observation:
when attention is focused inward e.g. while doing mental arithmetic, the eyes
move to the left or right. Some people’s eyes move right and the others move
left while, with couples, often, one spouse goes to the right and the other
goes to the left. Day’s conclusion was that it had something to do with personality;
he thought that there was a link between shifting attention and spontaneous
eye movement. Interestingly, this was the only article that Elan remembered
so vividly, Shapiro and eye movements, it looked like a winning possibility.
Elan was born in South Africa. The family moved to England when he was six.
Education was always important for Elan and it was in England that his first
love of science was fostered and then thwarted. Physics, math and chemistry
were his passions and life may have taken a very different turn had he not had
an uninspired Physics teacher. The subject became so much less interesting in
the hands of this ungifted teacher that he decided to take a year off before
university and enlarge his world perspective.
In 1966, Elan went to Israel for a year through a one-year program at the University
of Jerusalem, joining students from seven different countries, including his
soon to be bride, Helene, from Belgium. Elan was entranced by Jerusalem and
Israel. He stayed on to complete a first degree with distinction at the Hebrew
University, where he majored in Psychology and Sociology, and he began his work
with Dr. Kahaneman. He was married in 1968. When he completed his university
studies in 1970, they went to England.
He was accepted at Sussex University, one of the "new" universities
of the time, modeled on the tutorial system of Oxford and Cambridge. When he
saw that the unstructured nature of the program meant that no one yet, in 6
years, was able to graduate with his doctorate, he finished his MA and went
on to merge his science with his love of art. He went to an Art Therapy Program
at St. Albans, now Hertfordshire College of Art and Design.
At the time, he read about an idea that a program in Holland espoused, which
was to give their students a list of 300 different types of art media and expected
them to try at least 150 to find the one that spoke to them. They figured that
if artists find a medium that speaks to them, they would know what to do with
it. Elan found oil painting on wood and began to experiment.
At around the same time, the need for Israel and his desire to work with the
land grew until he could no longer deny it. In 1973, one day before the Yom
Kippur war, Elan and his wife made aliyah to Israel - they came to stay.
They moved to a rural area in the north near Nazareth. He began to work in Clinical
Psychologist training posts at a Ministry of Health Child and Adolescent clinic
in Haifa and the Psychiatric Department at a government hospital in Afula. They
were also expecting him to use his art therapy, and, it was then that he came
to another point of crisis in his life. Elan said that after the Yom Kippur
War, it was a very strange and difficult time in Israel. The people went into
shock and depression, and it lasted a long time. He tried to use Art Therapy,
but found that he did not really know what it was and how to help with these
tools. He felt that it was "not authentic for me". He made the big
choice to keep art and psychology separate. While he continued working as a
psychologist, he began taking his own art more seriously.
It was then that Elan stumbled on this oil painting on textured woodwork. He
took great delight in the sensuousness of the wood and the figurative models
and landscape that he began to capture in this unique medium. He did exhibitions,
and he was surprised to find out that people really liked his work and that
he could supplement his income through his art.
In the beautiful home that he and Helene created in RamatYishay with their 3
children, Cygalle, Yuval, and Inbal, Elan turned his second floor into a studio
and went to work. No doubt finding inspiration in the splendor of their garden,
with its orchards and 30 different kinds of fruit trees.
He became a member of his local Town Council in the 80’s for about 5 years and
took great pride in the 700 trees he was responsible for planting during his
term portfolio for Education and Environmental Development.
Deciding to delve more deeply into Psychology, Elan went on to specialize in
Adlerian Psychology, doing a 3-year training in Adlerian Lifestyle Analysis
with Mica Katz who, incidentally, was trained by Dreikurs –who himself was trained
by Adler. It was only when he had his own Lifestyle analysis that Elan realized
a possible holistic connection between his name Elan, which means "forest
tree" in Hebrew, and his passion for trees and for working with wood.
At this time, he went to the Director of the Psychological Service in Nazareth
Ilit for some advice. Wisely, the Director offered Elan a job on the spot. In
Israel, Municipal Community and Educational Psychology is the largest employer
of psychologists with an impressive continuing education program. Elan went
on to become a Senior Consultant in Educational Psychology and directed the
Clinic for several years when his chief went abroad. Later, he became the director
of their new Treatment Unit. Today, he focuses on administration, treatment,
and special education. He is the Coordinator for Special Education and has had
a private practice for over 25 years in RamatYishay.
In the late 90’s, he was the Deputy Chief Regional Psychologist, an inspector
of psychologists for a period of time. His job was to visit the 80 clinics in
Northern Israel and check the quality of the work.
EMDR entered Elan’s life in 1989. He attended the first workshop that Francine
Shapiro gave on EMD after she presented her research at the International Stress
conference in Tel Aviv. It was given in KiryatSchmona and sponsored by MooliLahad.
Elan was convinced during the second day of the practicum after he had an authentic
experience in the practicum. Francine told them to go out and see what they
could do with EMD(R) and Elan did just that.
In 1991, he was on sabbatical in London, taking a CBT course at the Institute
of Psychiatry, when he wrote to Francine that he was getting good results with
EMD. She invited him to come to the United States as a guest to see what she
was doing with it now. During 1992, he completed his Part I and II trainings
in Philadelphia and San Francisco. When he returned, he had hoped that the Maudsley
Institute of Psychiatry would sponsor a training; this was not to be. However,
two years later, during his facilitator program in London, he took on the role
as client when a participant needed one. He chose as the target the disappointment
and responsibility he felt because he was unable to get EMDR to London 2 years
earlier. As he worked, he realized that it had not been realistic, as he did
not have the contacts that he had in Israel. He then went and asked Robbie Dunton,
the co-owner of the EMDR Institute, about sponsoring EMDR seminars in Israel.
The birth of EMDR in Israel came out of an EMDR session; his insight was translated
into action in 1995.
EMDR was re-introduced in its current format to Israel in ZichronYaakov. William
Zangwill was the trainer and Elan and I did logistics. More trainings followed,
with Francine giving the first Part 2 in 1996. EMDR Institute Trainers, Gerry
Puk and Roger Solomon, continued the trainings and were a major influence on
the local training team. Since then, there have been many trainings throughout
Israel. There are 2 EMDR Institute trainers: Udi Oren and Gary Quinn, and 15
trained facilitators, trained by Harriet Sage and myself: Yair Emanuel, Alan
Cohen, BruritLaub, Frances Yoeli, Yvonne Tauber, AitonBirnbaum, Joel Comet,
Eva Eshkol, Estie Bar Sade, ShulaBrin, Barbara Wizansky, NiliArkin and Marlene
Zaslow. Two of the facilitators are also trained Child Trainers by Bob Tinker
and Sandra Wilson: Estie Bar Sade and Barbara Wizansky.
Although Elan identified himself as an Adlerian and worked within the framework
of the Lifestyle Analysis work where you use early recollections, interpreting
them and then looking for "the recognition reflex", Elan’s therapeutic
gestalt shifted in 1991, after he worked with a woman in her seventies and decided
to try using EMDR with the early childhood memories rather than the way he would
ordinarily have done it using the lifestyle work. He brought the results of
the session to his peer supervision group in lifestyle. They interpreted the
memories, and he compared them with how the woman herself processed the memories
with EMDR; he found that the EMDR work took her much further. Subsequent to
processing 3-4 memories, the woman’s depression went into remission, and she
was able to decrease the many medications that she was on. The treatment was
so successful that it was the last time that Elan interpreted memories, moving
directly into EMDR.
EMDR-Israel was formed in 2000, as a non-profit professional association whose
mission is to promote training of therapists in EMDR and promoting and maintaining
standards. In keeping with this beginning conceptualization, Elan’s plan for
Israel to address the results of terrorist attacks was to adopt a strategy to
train as many therapists as possible so that people could be treated in their
own regions. He did this by charging a nominal fee. Currently 1500 people have
been trained at a Part 1 level. Recently, they have been doing small trainings
in the hospitals and work places. In Israel, the course has been modified into
a 4-day course that is mandatory, with much more time for practice. The last
day of the course is 6 weeks later after the participants have worked with at
least one real client of their own. During this last day, they are given some
supervision, learn resource development and there is a lecture on children and
a practicum.
After being involved in so many HAP projects, the local trainers and facilitators
are in the planning stage of evolving their own HAP-Israel. Members of the Israeli
team have been very involved in the Turkey trainings after the earthquake and
supplying ongoing support. Recently, Gary Quinn led a team to Bangkok, Thailand,
to train therapists and work with victims of the Tsunami.
The latest phase for EMDR-Israel is the decision to train consultants from all
over the country. In March 2005, I taught the first part of the Consultancy
training -pioneered in Germany- in ZichronYaakov. Twenty-one consultants were
trained and will ultimately be involved in consulting with groups of EMDR-trained
therapists to ensure ongoing support in the implementation of their EMDR skills
into their practices.
Not only has Elan been instrumental in bringing EMDR to Israel and promoting
its growth there, he is also an active member of EMDR Europe. He was part of
the founding EMDR Europe Board and has been on the Board since its inception
in 1996. He was recently elected to the Executive Board as its Secretary. Currently,
there are 14 member countries and observer countries like Greece.
His thoughts for the EMDR Community are the following:
| I have always liked Rollo May’s definition of
Creativity, "Total commitment in the face of total uncertainty"
the product is unique, transformed. With the artist, if you believe in the
process and have the hope that the outcome will be a worthwhile outcome,
you are committed to the process. This is the way in art. In EMDR, you are
similarly committed to the process, while you are uncertain about its course.
You know where you start; you do not know where you are going to go. EMDR
is a merging of science and art. After you structure and organize it, a
lot of the work is intuition. The actual process is creative and intuitive
in that sense and empowering for the same reason. You step back and say,
"How did that happen?" You are amazed at the outcome. It has come
from somewhere divine. |
Elan’s total commitment to EMDR has been our good fortune. He has contributed
to the EMDR community in innumerable ways. How did that happen? Clearly, he
has come from somewhere divine.