History

A Brief History of the Gestalt Institute of Toronto

Harvey Freedman was an established psychiatrist in Toronto when he met Fritz Perls at the Esalen Institute in California in 1965. Dr. Freedman studied with him until September 1969, at which time Dr. Perls, then at Lake Cowichan in British Colombia, appointed Dr. Freedman as Clinical Director of his Gestalt Institute in Canada on Vancouver Island – a position he planned to take up the following year.

When Perls died in March 1970 Dr. Freedman and his family cancelled their plans to move to Vancouver Island. Instead, in September 1970, with the help of Dr. Harold Silver and Dr. Peter Brawley, he founded the Gestalt Institute of Toronto and established a space at the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto. The Institute was granted the last non-profit charter ever issued by the Department of Health of Ontario.

These were very exciting times – Dr. Freedman’s unique perspective, pure sense of Gestalt, and creative and sensitive application of Gestalt as a therapy had a powerful and much valued impact on the lives of his students and participants in group therapy.

In 1971, a contemporary of Freedman, Jorge Rosner, who had trained at the Gestalt Institute of Chicago under Fritz Perls, was invited by Dr. Freedman to come to Toronto to join the Faculty of the new institute. The work they did drew large numbers of students to the program. Together with other Faculty members they developed an approach to training leaders and therapists, which continues as the basis of present day programming at the Institute. Dr. Freedman once described Jorge Rosner as one of the most naturally brilliant therapists he had ever known.

When Dr. Freedman left in 1975, Jorge Rosner took over as Executive Director. Rosner lived Gestalt and incorporated his background in drama, various forms of bodywork, and his study of Tibetan Buddhism into his work. He also founded, taught, and practiced at Gestalt institutes in Scandinavia and Australia, along with teaching in Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Mexico, Poland, The Netherlands, and England.  Rosner continued to lead the Gestalt Institute of Toronto until his death in May 1994.

When Jorge Rosner died JoAnne Greenham stayed on to build the Faculty as Jean Jackson committed to build the Board.  After a brief appointment of Jorge’s wife, Lisbeth Trier-Rosner, JoAnne Greenham took over as Executive Director and Head of Faculty in 1995.  She had studied with both Harvey Freedman and Jorge Rosner, graduating from the GIT in 1977. She was also a member of the Faculty at the institutes in Sweden and Denmark for eight years.

Jay Tropianskaia, who studied with Jorge and JoAnne Greenham joined the Faculty in the fall of 1994.

Carolina Edwards arrived on the Faculty in 1997 and Frances Battista Khanna joined in 1998.

The Gestalt Institute of Toronto was registered in 1970  as a private educational institute and a registered charitable organization. Currently it has a seven-member Board of Directors that works with the Faculty to establish policy and direct planning. All tuition fees and donations are deductible for income tax purposes as permitted under the Canadian Federal Income Tax Act.