Andrew Feldmár


Andrew Feldmár is a Hungarian born psychotherapist living in Canada. He is most known as the Hungarian follower of R. D. Laing, the Scottish psychiatrist who was one of the leading figures of the counterculture of the ‘60s. Laing, who later became his friend, was his teacher and therapist first. Following his mentor, Feldmár practices and popularizes a form of radical psychotherapy, where the main goal of the therapist is to engage in a real, spontaneous and honest relationship with the patient. This approach is based on the findings of research on interpersonal phenomenology, spiritual emergency, the anthropology of healing, existential psychotherapy and community therapy. Feldmár rejects the labelling of human suffering, and therefore distances himself from the mainstream forms of psychiatry and psychotherapy which are based on the concept of mental illness. He has published many books in Hungarian, he lectures, teaches, provides supervision and therapy internationally, he has worked as a psychotherapist with over 48 years of experience, having spent more than 100,000 hours in psychotherapy with clients. He has been noticeably successful treating psychotic patients. He is a well-known expert in psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy.

Biography

Andrew Feldmár was born in Budapest, Hungary in 1940 in a non-religious Jewish family. When he was 3 and a half years old his mother was taken to Auschwitz, his father to a labor camp, and his grandmother to the Budapest ghetto. However his father managed to arrange for a young Catholic woman to take the young Andrew. For a year and a half he was living with the woman called Irén Igaz and her kids. To protect him, he had to be called by a different name. His relatives came back around 1945. After the defeat of the 1956 revolution, at the age of 16 he immigrated to Canada alone. Feldmár holds an Honours BA in mathematics, physics and chemistry from the University of Toronto, as well as an MA in psychology from the University of Western Ontario. He is an Honorary Life Member of the Canadian Psychological Association. Feldmár is married, he has a daughter and a son.

Career

Feldmár had been trained in the practice of psychotherapy and was trained and supervised in LSD therapy under R.D. Laing in London between 1974-75. During this year he also studied from a wide range of well-known experts of their fields: Francis Huxley, John Heaton, Hugh Crawford and Leon Redler. Feldmár also worked with one of the founders of transpersonal psychology Stanislav Grof at the Esalen Institute in California. He gained further experience in the field while volunteering at Hollywood Hospital in New Westminster, where LSD was legally used for research and therapy. He gained experience in Brief psychotherapy in Palo Alto in the research group of Paul Watzlawick. While still legal, he had been involved in different projects concerning the use of MDMA in psychotherapy. In 2008 Feldmár was involved in a research study, sponsored by the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies to show the efficacy of MDMA as an adjunct to psychotherapy with severe cases of PTSD. He is currently a mentor in the Certificate in Psychedelic-Assisted Therapies and Research program in California. Although he promotes the benefits of research and use of psychedelics in therapy he does not practice it due to its illegality.
He has participated in many research projects and taught, lectured and lead workshops at the Simon Fraser University, University of British Columbia, Emily Carr and Douglas College, The Cold Mountain Institute, The Collingwood Institute and meetings of BC Psychologists Association as well as in Europe. In Hungary he is a frequent participant of popular open lectures and podiums, he has a regular column with Dorottya Büky in the Hungarian newspaper HVG.
In 1989, he was a guest on a 3-part CBC Ideas radio series entitled R.D. Laing Today. He has also worked as a consultant in both television and film. He founded the Integra Households Association, a non profit charity working with those in extreme mental distress. In the 1987 film, which he co-produced, Feldmár played together with Laing. He also played in the 2013 documentary, From Neurons to Nirvana: The Great Medicines. In 2007, he appeared in an episode of the Colbert Report, after he was banned from the US for several years as the result of a border guard googling his work.
Feldmár worked for several international organizations as a specialist in mental health. In 1993 he took part in the UNESCO Chernobyl Program in Minsk, Belarus. He participated in training specialists for the Community Mental Health Centers for the victims of the Chernobyl catastrophe. For two weeks in 1996 he was a consultant for the United Nations High Commission for Refugees in Bosnia and Croatia.
To popularize Feldmár's work, his theoretical and practical approach to mental health Andrew Feldmár and a group of professionals in 2006 founded an institute in Budapest, Hungary, called . The nonprofit organization is organizing and hosting popular events and an annual summer school. The Institute sponsors a reintegration program for inmates which has proven to be significantly successful. The Institute is also involved in the sponsorship and professional work of the Soteria Shelter program in Budapest, a non-coercive alternative to psychiatric hospitalization. In 2019, Feldmár Institut Stuttgart was officially founded.
Feldmár has been writing poems since his childhood. In the mid 60's he was the Poet of the Month on Toronto's CHQM radio, and his poetry was read at the Vancouver Art Gallery. In 2007 a selection of his haikus was published in a bilingual poetry book. His poems were translated by the famous Hungarian contemporary poet Dezső Tandori. He translated Géza Gárdonyi's novel, Slave of the Huns which was first published in English in 1969.

Selected works (in English)

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