Healing Trauma in Wartime: Dreams, Symbols and Transcultural Wisdom with Dr. Jorge Burmeister and Dr. Gaea Logan
On December 13, 2025, over 145 participants gathered for a two-hour workshop titled Healing Trauma in Wartime: Dreams, Symbols and Transcultural Wisdom, co-sponsored by the IAGP Social and Collective Trauma Committee and the International Institute for Trauma Studies in Ukraine. Held in tribute to the late Dr. Earl Hopper, the workshop honored his profound contributions to group analysis, the social unconscious, and the fourth basic assumption of incohesion. Co-facilitated by Dr. Jorge Burmeister and Dr. Gaea Logan, the session offered a powerful integration of theory and practice, weaving insights from Gordon Lawrence’s Social Dreaming Matrix, Jung’s transcendent function, other contributors to the field, and the realities of collective trauma in wartime.
The matrix opened with dream motifs of a dark world: violence, threat, killing, torture, silenced grief, trusted guides, and the river that carries us. These images revealed the raw textures of the social unconscious in times of rupture. The facilitators’ poetic synthesis, Circling the Holy Mountain, offered participants a symbolic container- invoking images of swampy paths, raging minotaurs, destroyed bridges, navigating by the sun, Lucia’s day of light, and finding the path in the dark of night. The session affirmed that collective dreaming can restore connection, community, and a sense of relational home- revealing transcultural wisdom still alive beneath the rubble.
Circling the Holy Mountain
from a dream matrix on the front lines of trauma
Even if it’s true
that a mountain can be high
and the way full of swamps,
with no ray of light
and no hope.
Even if
the violence enters us
with all its killing,
its pain, its torture.
And our tears
fall down
while we are crying.
Still,
there is the river
with Gaea,
her dog
and her canoe
waving for us to come cross
repairing what was broken.
Even if a bull comes
raging,
my father
can show us how to tame the beast,
if only a little.
Even if the beast turns into
a man, searching for eyes,
searching for home,
a dog will be waiting,
offering his tenderness.
And even if
the door is wrong,
and we fail
to find safety,
or fail to find a home at all.
Even if violence
has already taken our bridge,
not everything
will be destroyed.
Even if
a little bit of pain
spreads into endless time,
and our home
is fallen into ashes.
We can create
for our parents
a home in our hearts,
and wear their ring
with pride
wherever we will go,
because on Lucia’s day,
we receive the lessons of the light:
That it is simply good
to celebrate
the change of seasons,
to stand and play
in heavy winds,
to jump
through swampy roads.
That it is even better
not to climb the peak,
but to circle on the
ground around the
holy mountain.
To see
the sun behind the clouds,
If we follow
our hearts.
To go
with bravery,
with courage
along our way.
And to finally discover
that even ashes
can bring
new life.