
Bonnie Green (ISTSS President) asked me to tell you about Chaim "Hy" Shatan at this Annual ISTSS Banquet, especially about his significance to the field of traumatology and to our Society. I will keep my remarks to less than five minutes due to the already dense agenda.
The most recent (Fall, 2001) issue of Traumatic Stress Notes included an excellent testimonial to Hy, written by his long-time colleague, Arthur Egendorf. Please read it. It gives you a good sense of who Hy was as a human being.
Dr. Shatan made five important contributions to both the Society and to the field of traumatology. First, he organized the first non-governmental treatment program for Vietnam war combat veterans. Artie Egendorf, a Vietnam vet seeking help and help for others, first met Hy who led his rap group. These group inspired the group treatment approach now used today in most Veterans Administration Medical Centers and facilities throughout the US. These groups also inspired Robert Lifton's first book on Vietnam and its veterans, Home From the War: Neither Victims Nor Executioners (1973). Lifton joined Shatan as an early member of the treatment team. Rap groups inspired a generation of practitioners.
Second, Dr. Shatan organized and coordinated a successful effort to establish the diagnosis of Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) in the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) of Mental Disorders in 1980 (APA, 1980). This was the first time that a single diagnosis help to clarify and guide practitioners and researchers toward and understanding of the immediate and long-term psychosocial and neurobiological consequences of traumatic events. PTSD now enjoys both public and professional acceptance. None of this would have been possible were it not for Dr. Shatan's initial leadership.
Third, Dr. Shatan was one of the first to discuss war atrocities, through is New York Times editorials (e.g., Shatan, 1971) and publications (e.g., Shatan, 1978). Among other things, he argued that infantry training induced and combat experiences reinforced the dehumanization of the enemy in mostly young, inexperienced males that neither inspire effective fighting nor prevent years of unwanted, post-war effects. These effects are associated with sexual dysfunction, racism, and violence. Throughout his career he continued to raise questions about the ethics of war and combat training.
Fourth, Dr. Shatan, a respected New York psychiatrist and psychoanalyst and educator (Shatan, 1997), applied his considerable influence in supporting the birth of the Consortium on Veteran Studies, the Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (now ISTSS), and the Editorial Board of the Journal of Traumatic Stress as early founding members of these new and then controversial institutions. While the Society is the premier international organization of traumatologists, the Journal holds a similar stature among scholarly journals. Their current stature is due in part to Dr. Shatan's early endorsements.
Fifth, Dr. Shatan was and continued to his death to be a valuable mentor to the many traumatologists who have held leadership roles within the field. These include, among others, Norma Shatan, Dr. Gabrielle Shatan and Dr. Jeffrey Jay, Sarah Haley, Jack Smith, Arthur Egendorf, Charles Figley, Yael Danieli, and Robert Laufer.
Hy Shatan's humanity, love for life, curiosity, and dignity will be part of us forever and his contributions will continue to benefit tens of thousands of people helped by the institutions and people he nourished and influenced. He will be missed but his life will continue to be noticed.
Egendorf (2001) wrote
"Hy saw a role for traumatologists as leaders -- practicing and showing
others how to practice refusal to project evil onto others (emphasis
mine)." May the spirit of Hy Shatan be with us as we challenge the evil
of evil projection in the shadows of September 11th.