About Bert Hellinger

«If in my family system one member has been excluded or forgotten, the family will feel that something is missing. We will perceive that we lack something, but often we don’t know where to search. A suchlike search produces, sometimes, addiction or sometimes it may lead to search for God. We feel an empty space inside us which we wish to fill up.»
Dr. Bert Hellinger

Dr. Bert Hellinger was born in Germany in 1925. He studied philosophy, theology, and pedagogy. Afterwards, he became a psychoanalyst and deepened into Group Dynamics, Primal Therapy, Transactional Analysis, and various hypnotherapeutic methods. After 16 years working in South Africa as a Catholic missionary he became a psychoanalyst and through Group Dynamics, Primal Treatment, Transactional Analysis and several Hypnotherapy methods he developed his own family systemic therapy. During the eighties he discovered how identifications and tragic implications are developed between the members of a family. Based on these findings, he was able to develop innovative procedures for the solution of such dynamics. Focusing directly on the solution, his approach constitutes one of the most effective therapeutic instruments to reorient and heal relationships within the family.

Nowadays, his methods are widely known in German speaking countries, where his books and videos have become authentic best sellers, as well as in the rest of Europe, the United States, Latin America and Asia, where he has been frequently invited to present his work.

Bert Hellinger considers his parents and his childhood home to be the first major influence on his later work. Their peculiar form of faith provided the entire family with immunity against believing the distortions of National Socialism. Because of his repeated absences from the required meetings of the Hitler Youth Organization and his participation in an illegal Catholic youth organization, he was eventually classified by the Gestapo as «Suspected of Being an Enemy of the People.» His escape from the Gestapo was paradoxically made possible when he got drafted. With only 17 years of age, he became a soldier, experienced the realities of combat, capture, defeat, and life as a prisoner of war in a camp in Belgium with the allies.

His 16 years in South Africa as a missionary to the Zulu also deeply shaped his later work. There he directed a large school, taught, and was parish priest simultaneously. He tells with satisfaction that 13% of all black Africans attending university in South Africa at that time were students of this one mission school. He learned the Zulu language well enough to teach and minister, but he tells amusing anecdotes about the courteous dignity of the Zulu people when he inadvertently said something rude rather than what he intended. With time he came to feel as much at home with them as is possible for a European. The process of leaving one culture to live in another sharpened his awareness of the relativity of many cultural values.

His peculiar ability to perceive systems in relationships and his interest in the human commonalty underlying cultural diversity made itself apparent during those years–he saw that many of Zulu rituals and customs had a structure and function similar to elements of the Mass, pointing to common human experiences, and he experimented with integrating Zulu music and ritual form into the Mass. His commitment to the goodness of cultural and human variety is deep, and to the validity of doing things in different ways. The Sacred is present everywhere.

The next major influence was his participation in an inter-racial, ecumenical training in group dynamics led by Anglican clergymen. They had brought a form of working with groups from America that valued dialogue, phenomenology, and individual human experience.

The next major influence was his participation in an inter-racial, ecumenical training in group dynamics led by Anglican clergymen. They had brought a form of working with groups from America that valued dialogue, phenomenology, and individual human experience. He experienced for the first time a new dimension of caring for souls. He tells how one of the trainers once asked the group, «What’s more important to you, your ideals or people? Which do you sacrifice for the other?» A sleepless night followed, for the implications of the question are profound. Hellinger says, «I’m very grateful to that minister for asking that. In a sense, the question changed my life. That fundamental orientation toward people has shaped all of my work ever since. A good question is worth a lot.»

His decision to leave the religious order after 25 years was amicable. He describes how he gradually became clear that being a priest no longer was an appropriate expression of his inner growth. With characteristic impeccability and consequent action, he made his decision and gave up the life he had known so long. He returned to Germany, began a psychoanalytic training in Vienna, met his future wife, Herta, and they married soon after. They have no children.

Psychoanalysis was to be his next major influence. As with everything he did, he threw himself into his psychoanalytic training, eventually reading the complete works of Freud and much of the other relevant literature as well. But with an equally typical love of inquiry, when his training analyst gave him a copy of Janov’s Primal Scream shortly before he completed his training, a book was not enough. He wanted to learn more about Janov as it was not enough to read a book by him. He wanted to go further and visited Janov in the United States. During his visit he completed a 9 month training program with him and with his training analyst in Los Angeles, California as well as in Denver, Colorado.

The psychoanalytic community in Vienna was less enthusiastic about this way of including body-based experience in the therapeutic process than he, and he again stood before the question of what was more important–loyalty to a group, or love of truth and inquiry? Love of free inquiry won out, and a separation from psychoanalysis became unavoidable, although he later qualified at a different institute. His skill in body-based psychotherapy, however, remained an essential element in his work long after his association with Janov had ceased to be fruitful.

Several other therapeutic schools have had major influence on his work. In addition to the phenomenological/dialogical orientation of the group dynamics from the Anglicans, the fundamental need for humans to align themselves with the forces of nature he learned from the Anglicans and the Zulu in South Africa, the psychoanalysis he learned in Vienna, and the body-work he learned in America.

He developed an interest in Gestalt Therapy through Ruth Cohen and Hilarion Petzold and trained with them both. He met Fanita English during this period, and through her was introduced to Transactional Analysis and the work of Eric Bern. Together with his wife, Herta, he integrated what he had already learned of group dynamics and psychoanalysis with Gestalt Therapy, Primal Therapy and Transactional Analysis. His work with the analysis of scripts lead to the discovery that some scripts function across generations and in family relationship systems. The dynamics of identification also gradually became clear during this period. Ivan Boszormenyi-Nagy’s book Invisible Bonds and his recognition of hidden loyalties and the need for a balance between giving and taking in families also were important.

He trained in family therapy with Ruth McClendon and Leslie Kadis. That’s where he first encountered Family Constellations. «I was very impressed by their work, but I couldn’t understand it. Nevertheless, I decided that I wanted to work systemically. Then thought about the work I’d already been doing and thought it’s good too. I’m not going to give that up before I really understand systemic family therapy. So I just kept on doing what I’d been doing. After a year I thought about it again, and I was surprised to discover that I was working systemically.»

His reading of Jay Haley’s article about the ‘perverse triangle’ led to the discovery of the importance of hierarchy in families. Additional work in family therapy with Thea Schönfelder followed, as did training in Milton Erickson’s Hypnotherapy and Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP). Frank Farelly’s Provocative Therapy has been an important influence. So too the Holding Therapy developed by Irena Precop. The most important element he took from NLP is the emphasis on working with resources rather than with problems. His use of stories in therapy of course pays tribute to Milton Erickson. The first story he told in therapy is the story Two Measures of Happiness.

Those familiar with the full range of psychotherapy will recognize that Hellinger’s contribution is his unique integration of diverse elements. He makes no claim that he has discovered something new–but there’s no question but that he has made a new integration. He has the natural ability to throw himself into a new situation, to immerse himself in it, and when he has learned what there is to learn, to move on. Certainly his early experiences taught him indelibly the importance and the skill of listening to the authority of one’s own soul–for although it isn’t foolproof, it’s the only real protection we have against seduction by false authorities. His insistence on seeing what is as opposed to blindly accepting what we’re told–combined with the unwavering loyalty and trust in one’s own soul–is the fundamental basis upon which this great work has been built.

In a sense, he’s the ultimate empiricist.

Through all of this, his philosophical companion has been Martin Heidegger–himself no stranger to the dangers of false authority. Heidegger’s profound quest for the true words that resonate in the soul must have commonalty with those sentences clients speak in the constellations heralding change for the better, signaling the renewed flow of love.

One last influence – or perhaps better, companion – should have been named: The main pattern of Hellinger, his love for German music, yes, opera; and yes again, especially Wagner.