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WireTap

Therapy for Revolutionaries

By Jennifer Liss, WireTap. Posted September 15, 2006.


A new documentary explores a Brazilian therapy that combines anarchist politics with the search for mental and physical liberation.
somaclass1
soma class

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In 2003, Nick Cooper, a 38-year-old independent journalist and activist based in Houston, came across an intriguing T-shirt in Brazil. It featured the anarchy symbol and an image of a capoeirista -- a player of capoeira Angola, an Afro-Brazilian art form developed by slaves that combines music, dancing and fighting. The T-shirt vendors explained it is for a practice called Soma, a kind of therapy that embraces anarchist politics as a way to achieve mental and physical health.

For Cooper, who'd played capoeira in the United States and who'd long had an interest in the anarchist movement, Soma piqued his interest immediately. And when he found out that the founder of Soma, 79-year-old Roberto Freire, is still alive and perfecting his technique, Cooper decided to buy a camera and return to Brazil to make a documentary on Soma.

The resulting 50-minute film, "Soma: An Anarchist Therapy," is finished, and Cooper spent the summer touring across the United States, screening it wherever he found an interest, from Unitarian churches to makeshift theaters in activists' backyards. He's enjoyed strawberry almond juice in Eugene and vegan chili hotdogs in Athens, and crashed on the couches of "crusty punks" half his age -- and all the while making biodiesel refill stops.

Cooper describes himself as an "anti-fascist fighting against nationalism, hierarchy, brutality and unsustainable living," and the ideas behind Soma therapy obviously resonate with him.

Beginning in the mid-1960s during Brazil's military regime, dissidents were disappeared and tortured. Psychologist Roberto Freire -- blind in one eye after being tortured by the military -- found that in a climate of mistrust, violence and paranoia, his fellow comrades were unlikely to seek out therapeutic help. Freire responded by abandoning psychoanalysis and inventing Soma, a therapy for revolutionaries that he calls "fast, efficient and liberating."

Soma is a group therapy where people come together for about 18 months to do physical exercises and engage in personal and political discussion. It combines ideas from Austrian Jewish psychologist Wilhelm Reich, capoeira Angola, and anarchism. And unlike traditional psychotherapy, Soma rejects the authority of the therapist: during a session, a therapist is present, but he or she participates equally with the other members of the group and does not draw conclusions or make analysis. There is an emphasis on pleasure and physical release. The documentary shows Soma groups deep in physical play, doing theater and movement exercises. Participants call the work difficult but "delicious."

Now decades later, Soma has spread across the world and is still liberating modern-day revolutionaries -- young people, artists and students -- who are fighting against the bourgeois and seeking liberation.

Cooper says that even learning about Soma can be helpful for "gringo activists," who Cooper believer are more familiar and comfortable critiquing the authoritarianism in the government or the larger society than within themselves. As he wrote in an email:

As I was first reading about Soma, I remembered meetings where American activists were screaming in each other's faces. So my initial target audience was here -- I was hoping to have some small impact on the tone of activism in the states. Later, nonactivists and people in other countries started expressing interest, so I broadened my conception and did subtitles for five different languages.

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Jennifer Liss is a writer living in San Francisco.

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therapy
Posted by: rsaxto on Sep 15, 2006 1:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This kind of therapy has the possibility of making our lives better instead of making our lives worse and worse (except for very rich folks) as is the case with the Bushies. No other kind of anarchy can possibly be worse than the Bushie style of anarchy.

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Cautionary tales
Posted by: talkville on Sep 15, 2006 3:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Now decades later, Soma has spread across the world and is still liberating modern-day revolutionaries -- young people, artists and students -- who are fighting against the bourgeois and seeking liberation"

Anarchism, so popular today, is also an aspect and product of bourgeois society, not necessarily serving the interests of liberation alone. It can serve not only revolutionary but also reactionary ends. We'd do well not to proceed too uncritically in accepting 'therapies' of any sort. The struggle for substantial equality for our human species and liberation from oppression is a continuing one. Bourgeois methods will most likely produce bourgeois results, and illusion ought not be confused with progress.

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» RE: Cautionary tales Posted by: Gatsby
» RE: Cautionary tales Posted by: talkville
» RE: Cautionary tales Posted by: cmaukonen
» RE: Cautionary tales Posted by: talkville
» RE: Cautionary tales Posted by: mooseNYC
» RE: Cautionary tales Posted by: talkville
Initiation rituals
Posted by: Sojourner on Sep 15, 2006 6:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Gangs in the US use a technique called "jumping in," where the new recruit must submit to whatever the gang members order. For males, it is frequently the infliction of pain. For females, often it's sexual.

Cult groups, such as Raj Neesh, use less violent but still physical methods. Erhard Seminar Training used trainers who would harangue and insult the audience and then offer some form of pleasurable reward. It's the reason for military boot camps, as well as theme parks with exilarating rides.

It's also the reason for exercise and sports and hard physical work. Drugs are an even shorter cut to a similar somatic condition. We feel better.

It's the way successful leaders/salesmen have always initiated their subjects. What does that have to do with progressive politics? Join a gang? Join a health club instead.

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» RE: Initiation rituals Posted by: fifthworld
» RE: Initiation rituals Posted by: gdpaul
» RE: Initiation rituals Posted by: karyse
» I've read Reich. Posted by: Sojourner
» RE: Initiation rituals Posted by: Dboy
» Unlikely Posted by: Sojourner
Why are religious beliefs important here?
Posted by: laoma on Sep 15, 2006 11:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I fail to understand why the author adds an incorrectly placed adjective 'Jewish', qualifying, alleged religious beliefs, when she doesn't do that for any other person in the article.

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Brevity Y Paz Y Amour
Posted by: XOXO on Sep 20, 2006 1:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Brevity is not my forte in cyber space nor on the phone...

I write with a benign trust and promotion of peace as the most distinct possibility for the writings in all corners of the world people have created...I think blogs can connect progressive action, I remember randomly emailing someone from the National Conference on Organized Resistance, a crop shoot to get a hold of one of the Weatherwomen of the Weather Underground to interview her for my Syracuse University History class type of thesis...we ended up talking over the phone, I've tried to get speakers like Vaclav Havel and weather people to campus to speak, but...

But

I am the Anti-Blog. I've been on 104.1 FM Berkeley Liberation Radio on Thursdays on Noon and intend to continue towards that end.

I agree about how this all makes things better...writing can be a release and a discipline in addition to this exploration.

Life is a contradiction...the things that I'm saying reflect some sort of discipline, I have been active in South Berkeley despite the overpinnings of a society that transcibes itself upon this sociology student to say screw peace and following your subjectivity and intutition...you need a fortress of funds to back you up.

So much amplified emotions are dreams, right? And this is the activist dream worth pursuing, this author's life and documentary dissemination.

To be as brief as I can, I just spent an hour copying and pasting emails from an old boss whose story is amazing, brutal and reflects what the Revolutionary Therapy reflects....I saw footage of Capoeira therapy sessions at South Berkeley's anarchist jumping off point, the long haul...

I would connect this dream of going on a book tour for a book about a man stabbed repeatedly as a cabbie who survived and is kept alive by modern medical and therapeutic practice who is suprisingly benevolent in the face of things. Mr. Revived plays with biotech stocks, OK, he's a wise investor, right, but gives so much of the money away.

Even though his place is a mess and sorting out things in my own life with the East Bay experience and just knowing this person is an incredible process that I half find myself greedily saying, "I'll make a mamoth profitable book tour out of this" already spending hours on this and wanting to spend money in a capital context to make health care a completely revamped policy of the collective mind....how that can happen I don't know, but to reflect on therapies and theatre of the 60s and how now weather people, and you really don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows, thank you Bob Dylan, it's like these words resound because of the needs that generations face while seacing a separate peace in sound music and social movements.

Do you have questions that can generate the right kind of change amongst a generation coming off the early childhoods of the 80s and the 20somethings of the post Semptember 11, 2006? Has anyone seen the 9/11 Display in the front lobby of the Berkeley Public Library? Are we in Europe? Is this not the Americas?

I make statements like we should be having this conversation in spanish.

Sometimes I wonder if the Americas will take the same shape as artistically presented between the dialouge of an "American" reflection on what 911 means and a Chilean reflection of what 911 means.

The Americans I think can be revitalized in a thoughtfully seaced* sustainable agricultural non-revolutionary progressive cyclical movement.

*Seac.org
Student Environmental Action Coalition

Paz Y Amour

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