By Mark Reese
Moshe Pinhas
Feldenkrais was born on May 6, 1904, in Slavuta,
in the present-day Ukrainian Republic. When he
was a small boy his family moved to the nearby
town of Korets. By 1912 his family moved to
Baranovich in what is, today, Belarus. While
Baranovich endured many World War I battles,
Feldenkrais received his Bar Mitzvah, completed
two years of high school, and received an
education in the Hebrew language and Zionist
philosophy. In 1918 Feldenkrais left by himself
on a six-month journey to Palestine.
After arriving in 1919, Feldenkrais worked as a
laborer until 1923 when he returned to high
school to earn a diploma. While attending school
he made a living by tutoring. After graduating in
1925, he worked for the British survey office as
a cartographer. Feldenkrais was involved in
Jewish self-defense groups, and after learning
Jujitsu he devised his own self-defense
techniques. He hurt his left knee in a soccer
match in 1929. While convalescing he wrote
Autosuggestion (1930), a translation from English
to Hebrew of Charles Brooks' work on Émile Coué's
system of autosuggestion, together with two
chapters that he wrote himself. He next published
Jujitsu (1931), a book on self-defense.
In 1930 Feldenkrais went to Paris and enrolled in
an engineering college, the École des Travaux
publics de Paris. He graduated in 1933 with
specialties in mechanical and electrical
engineering. In 1933 after meeting Jigaro Kano,
Judo's founder, Feldenkrais began teaching
Jujitsu again, and started his training in Judo.
In 1933 he began working as a research assistant
under Frédéric Joliot-Curie at the Radium
Institute, while studying for his
Ingénieur-Docteur degree at the Sorbonne. From
1935-1937 he worked at the Arcueil-Cachan
laboratories building a Van de Graaf generator,
which was used for atomic fission experiments. In
1935 he published a revised, French edition of
his Hebrew jujitsu book called, La défense du
faible contre l'agresseur, and in 1938 published
ABC du Judo. He received his Judo black belt in
1936, and 2nd degree rank in 1938. Feldenkrais
married Yona Rubenstein in 1938. From 1939-1940
he worked under Paul Langevin doing research on
magnetics and ultra-sound.
Feldenkrais escaped to England in 1940, just as
the Germans arrived in Paris. As a scientific
officer in the British Admiralty, he conducted
anti-submarine research in Scotland from
1940-1945. While there he taught Judo and
self-defense classes. In 1942 he published a
self-defense manual, Practical Unarmed Combat,
and Judo. Feldenkrais began working with himself
to deal with knee troubles that had recurred
during his escape from France, and while walking
on submarine decks. Feldenkrais gave a series of
lectures about his new ideas, began to teach
experimental classes, and work privately with
some colleagues.
In 1946 Feldenkrais left the Admiralty, moved to
London, and worked as an inventor and consultant
in private industry. He took Judo classes at the
London Budokwai, sat on the international Judo
committee, and scientifically analyzed Judo
principles. He published his first book on his
Method, Body and Mature Behavior in 1949, and his
last book on Judo, Higher Judo, in 1952. During
his London period he studied the work of George
Gurdjieff, F. M. Alexander, and William Bates,
and went to Switzerland to study with Heinrich
Jacoby.
Feldenkrais returned to Israel to direct the
Israeli Army Department of Electronics, 1951 -
1953. Around 1954 he moved permanently to Tel
Aviv and, for the first time, made his living
solely by teaching his Method. He worked
sporadically on the manuscript of The Potent
Self, which he had begun in London.
Around 1955 he permanently located his Awareness
through Movement classes to
a studio on Alexander Yanai Street in Tel Aviv.
He gave Functional Integration lessons in the
apartment where his mother and brother lived. In
early 1957 Feldenkrais began giving lessons to
Israeli Prime Minister, David ben Gurion.
In the late 1950's Feldenkrais presented his work
in Europe and the United States. In the mid 1960s
he published "Mind and Body" and "Bodily
Expression." In 1967, he published Improving the
Ability to Perform, titled Awareness through
Movement in its 1972 English language edition. In
1968, near his family's apartment, he made a
studio at 49 Nachmani Street as the permanent
site for his Functional Integration practice, and
location for his first teacher-training program,
1969-1971, given to 12 students.
After giving month-long courses internationally,
he taught a 65-student, teacher-training program
in San Francisco over four summers, 1975-1978. He
published The Case of Nora in 1977, and The
Elusive Obvious in 1981. He began the 235-student
Amherst training in 1980, but was only able to
teach the first two summers of the four-year
program. After becoming ill in the fall 1981, he
stopped teaching publicly. He died on July 1,
1984.