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Maya Lasker-Wallfisch

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Maya Lasker-Wallfisch (born 1958 in London) is a psychoanalytic psychotherapist, author and educator, specialising in transgenerational trauma.[1]

Biography

Maya Jacobs Lasker-Wallfisch was born as Marianne Lasker-Wallfisch in London into a family of musicians. Her parents, pianist Peter Wallfisch and cellist Anita Lasker-Wallfisch OBE, were both originally from Breslau and had emigrated to Great Britain after the Second World War. Her mother is of Jewish-German descent and had survived the Holocaust as a cellist in the girls' orchestra at Auschwitz (after arriving in England, she became a co-founder of the English Chamber Orchestra). Maya Lasker-Wallfisch was married to David Jacobs, the son of London's Rabbi Louis Jacobs, with whom she has a son.[2] Her older brother is the cellist Raphael Wallfisch, her nephews are film composer and Academy member Benjamin and baritone Simon Wallfisch.

Career

After initially working with children at the Tavistock Centre in London, Maya Lasker-Wallfisch trained as an addiction's specialist and later became a psychoanalytic psychotherapist for adults, couples, and families. Her focus is on the treatment of transgenerational trauma. Maya Lasker-Wallfisch lectures on the psychological and political consequences of the Nazi dictatorship. She has published scientific articles[3] and was a speaker at the 2017 international conference on transgenerational trauma in Amman, Jordan[4] and at the "Celebrate Life festival" near Oldenburg, Germany.[5] Together with her mother Anita she campaigns at numerous memorial events against anti-Semitism and for a living culture of remembrance.

Author

In 2020 renowned German publishing house Suhrkamp Verlag published her memoirs entitled "Letter to Breslau".[6] In her book she explores her family's history and the transgenerational transmission of trauma. [7] Wallfisch's biography was well received by German feuilleton, with Marta Kijowska in Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung calling it "an impressive book. It contains an unusually open and comprehensible description of a transgenerational trauma that is still rarely addressed."[8] Die Welt's Manuel Brug points out "[w]ith 'Letter to Breslau' Maya Lasker-Wallfisch has written a gripping family history – as well as a modern theory of memory."[9] Deutschlandfunk’s Peter Sawicki calls it a "... touching book. Maya Lasker-Wallfisch writes with empathy and succeeds in portraying a sensitive topic in a lively manner."[10][11] German public-broadcasting radio Deutschlandfunk Kultur remarks "The author finds a clear and touching language to break out of the devastating silence. To tell her grandparents everything that she did not hear from her mother for so many decades."[12]. Alexandra Senfft (Der Freitag) calls it a powerful book that has "greatly enriched the understanding of transgenerational transmission, the perspective on multiple generations in historical contexts. It reminds us of the dangerous psychological and political legacies of the Nazi dictatorship and proves that the destructive spell of the past can be broken."[13] In April 2021 Wallfisch's biography was chosen 'Book of the Month' by 'Haus der Heimat des Landes Baden-Württemberg' (education and research center of the Ministry of Interior of Baden-Württemberg).[14]

On the topic of her family history Wallfisch also curated an original stage performance, 'The Lasker's From Breslau' which she produced from the archive of family correspondence as a staged event with live musical performances by composers such as Ernst Bloch, Max Bruch, and Maurice Ravel. This was presented at the Jewish Museum Berlin and later in Hamburg by invitation of the Shoah Foundation UCLA[15] In July 2020 she was invited to a talk about her book by Munich Documentation Centre for the History of National Socialism.[16]

Maya Lasker-Wallfisch lives and works in London and Berlin. In 2020 she received German citizenship.[17]

References

  1. ^ Royal Society of Medicine Biography Maya Lasker-Wallfisch
  2. ^ The Jewish Chronicle The trauma inherited by the children of Shoah survivors is the focus of Maya Lasker-Wallfisch's new book
  3. ^ Magazine perspektive mediation - Beiträge zur Konfliktkultur No 13, October 2016, issue 4
  4. ^ Common Bond Institute 2017 6th Annual International Conference on Transgenerational Trauma in Amman, Jordan – speaker biographies: Maya Lasker-Wallfisch
  5. ^ NWZ Online Ein Cello rettete ihr das Leben
  6. ^ Suhrkamp Biography Maya Lasker-Wallfisch
  7. ^ The Jewish Chronicle The trauma inherited by the children of Shoah survivors is the focus of Maya Lasker-Wallfisch's new book
  8. ^ Buecher.de/Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung Marta Kijowska: Arbeit am Trauma. Wie das Leben weiterging – Maya Lasker-Wallfisch schreibt eine Familiengeschichte, 25.7.2020
  9. ^ Die Welt Manuel Brug: Für Mengele zu spielen rettete ihr Leben. Es blieb eine ewige Scham; 19.5.2020
  10. ^ Suhrkamp Verlag Letter to Breslau
  11. ^ Perlentaucher Feuilleton Review Overview
  12. ^ Deutschlandfunk Kultur Gabriele von Arnim: Die grausame Wucht des Traumas, 12.6.2020, podcast and review
  13. ^ Der Freitag Alexandra Senfft: Arbeit am Trauma. Maya Lasker-Wallfischs Mutter überlebte den Holocaust. In der Familie wirkte er über Generationen nach; #16/2020
  14. ^ Haus der Heimat des Landes Baden-Württemberg Book of the Month, April 2021
  15. ^ Jewish Museum Berlin Events 2019
  16. ^ Munich Documentation Centre for the History of National Socialism Events 2020
  17. ^ ABC News British jews apply for German nationality as Brexit looms, 30.1.2019


Category:British psychotherapists Category:British writers Category:1958 births Category:Living people