OpinionJewish Diaspora

Pro-Israel supporters unsupported in the mental-health sphere

The latest trend? Mental-health professionals seem to be declining patients and colleagues who are Zionists.

Counseling and dialogue. Credit: Cottonbro Studio/Pexels.
Counseling and dialogue. Credit: Cottonbro Studio/Pexels.
Paul Schneider
Paul Schneider is an attorney, writer and member of the Board of Directors of the American Jewish International Relations Institute (AJIRI), an affiliate of B’nai B’rith International.

Are you stressed out? Feeling traumatized? Anxious? Depressed? Are friends, family and colleagues giving you a hard time about your support for Zionism and Israel? Maybe you need a therapist.

If so, there could be a problem with that.

As Sally Satel, a psychiatrist and fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, noted: “Nore and more clinicians insist that psychotherapy is, foremost, a political rather than a clinical enterprise.” Calling this approach “critical social-justice therapy,” she says, “Under a social-justice regime, therapists who have the ‘wrong’ politics—they might, for example, believe that Israel has a right to exist and to defend itself—must be kept away from vulnerable patients. If, conversely, it is the patient whose politics are perceived to be misbegotten, revising their viewpoint must become the focus of the treatment.

“Currently, Jewish patients (deemed to be members of a privileged group) are finding themselves subject to attempts by activist-therapists to morally reeducate them; no support of Israel can be condoned as it is declared a ‘settler colonial’ state.”

Social-justice therapy is not a fringe phenomenon. In fact, the American Psychological Association (APA) has endorsed it. In a 2023 column titled “Psychologists must embrace decolonial psychology,” the group’s then-president, Thema Bryant, said: “Highlighting decolonial psychology is one of my presidential initiatives.”

Psychologists, she said, “must choose to advocate for change.”

“This commitment,” according to Bryant, “includes a dedication to both dismantling systems of oppression and promoting liberation individually and collectively.”

Bryant didn’t mention Israel by name. But as she certainly knows, and conveniently fails to acknowledge, Israel is the major focus of decolonial ideology. The Jewish state is the only “colonial system of oppression” that could conceivably be “dismantled.” (The three big so-called colonial countries—the United States, Canada and Australia—aren’t going anywhere.) So when people like Bryant talk about decolonization, they’re talking about Israel.

Other professional groups, such as the National Association of Social Workers and the American Counseling Association, have also adopted the social-justice approach to psychotherapy.

In response to all of this, you might say, “No problem, I’ll get a Zionist therapist.” But good luck finding one. Zionist therapists are literally being blacklisted by their peers and cut off from sources of referrals.

For example, as Gabby Deutch has reported in Jewish Insider, “When someone posted in a private Facebook group for Chicago therapists in March [2024], asking whether anyone would be willing to work with a Zionist client, several Jewish therapists quickly responded, saying they would be happy to be connected to this person.” (Therapists commonly rely on listservs and other online groups for referrals.)

“Those who replied, offering their services to this unnamed client soon found themselves added to a list of supposedly Zionist therapists that was shared in a group called ‘Chicago Anti-Racist Therapists.’ ” Deutch said, adding that the purpose of the list, according to its author, Heba Ibrahim Joudeh, was to prevent referrals to therapists with “Zionist affiliations.” According to Deutch, the administrator of the Facebook group, the list was a good way “to be transparent about clinicians who promote and facilitate white supremacy via Zionism.”

“The only trait shared by the 26 therapists on the list,” said Deutch, “is that they are Jewish.”

Zionist therapists also face exclusion from professional groups that provide referrals. Deutch reports, for example, that anti-Zionism is now the price of admission to the private Facebook group, Therapists in Private Practice (TIPP). Since Oct. 7, prospective members have been required to respond to the following: “We examine privilege and engage in discourse related to dismantling oppressive systems in the field. We support BLM and are pro-Palestine. Are you open and willing to support this direction?”

TIPP moderator Nam Rindani has even removed a number of members who voiced support for Israel, stating in an online comment, “We as Admin call this is a Genocide.”

Then there’s the organization, Inclusive Therapists, which says, “Palestine is a moral litmus test for the world” and advocates ending the “mental-health field’s complicity to genocide.”

The group demands “accountability, immediate response and reparative actions for the perpetuation of accumulated trauma” suffered by Palestinians. Of course, there’s no mention of the trauma suffered by Israelis as a result of Hamas attacks and atrocities on Oct. 7. According to Inclusive Therapists, the expression of empathy for Israelis who have lost loved ones amounts to “framing the Palestinian people” as terrorists, thereby “reinforcing white-supremacist propaganda.”

Fortunately, therapists like Satel are calling out this bigoted nonsense. “These prescriptions,” she writes, “are antithetical to the therapeutic project. According to the principles of responsible psychotherapy, a Zionist therapist should be able to treat a supporter of Palestine and vice versa, ever aware that failing to maintain a clear partition between one’s personal ideological commitments and one’s clinical work will inevitably distort the therapy and fail the patients they serve.”

She emphasizes that therapists should concentrate on “putting patients’ needs, not dogma and grievance, at the center of their practice.”

Let’s hope that view prevails.

The opinions and facts presented in this article are those of the author, and neither JNS nor its partners assume any responsibility for them.
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