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Metiv | The Israel Psychotrauma Center
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Ethiopian Community
Ethiopian Community
Ethiopian, Professionals, Therapy20151014155935

Our latest guide for mental health professionals offers invaluable insight into working with Israel’s Ethiopian community. Learn how to receive a guide.

Contact Us

Address:
Hasadna 4, Talpiot (floor #2)
Jerusalem
Mailing address:
P.O. Box 3900, Jerusalem, Israel 91035
 Phone: +972-2-644-9666; Fax: +972-2-644-9777
 info@metiv.org

Recent Testimonials

  • Peace of Mind provided a place where I was listened to, but also a place where it was okay for me to talk about my experience – not as a hero, but as a boy who was afraid.

    Avinoam

    Peace of Mind alumnus

  • Through the CBT Trauma Training Course I have gained a wealth of tools and techniques for treating clients dealing with trauma or anxiety, as well as a much deeper theoretical understanding of trauma. I find myself using knowledge from the course with clients all the time. My clients are the true beneficiaries of my taking this course! Gafnit Aghassy is a master therapist who truly has “the touch,” and while I have learned many techniques from her, her ability to be truly present and respectful and enter into the reality of the other transcends any specific modality.

    Miriam Friedman, MSW

    Psychotherapist

  • After participating in the Ethiopian documentation project I really feel that there is a light at the end of the tunnel, and that I do not suffer alone.

    Anonymous

    Participant in Ethiopian Documentary Program

  • My life was saved twice. Once by the doctors who operated me in the hospital, following the attack at Cafe Moment in 2002. This saved my physically. But after this, I was vulnerable and above all, I was depressed. The physical wounds heal quickly, but the mental trauma takes longer to overcome, when it heals at all. The second time my life was saved was by Joel Wardi. He saved my life because he took me out of my home, he took me out of this past experience and showed me the future. Showed me how to deal with my depression and pointed me in a positive and new direction. He is the one that saved my real life, and my soul.

    Anonymous

    Survivor of 2002 Jerusalem terrorist attack

  • The training on trauma-focused CBT opened my eyes to a new world. In the course of the two-year training I gradually began to see that there is much I can do for many of the patients I previously felt were beyond my help. The therapeutic techniques and approaches seeped into other therapies I gave, which are not PTSD-related. I think my patients benefited from this, but I did, too, as their therapist.

    Dr. Oren Tene

    Senior Psychiatrist, Director of Army Veterans, Department of Psychiatry, Ichilov Tel Aviv Medical Center

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