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Related: About this forumHe refused to accept the soft bigotry of low expectations.
This was the quote of the day from the Nature News Briefing:
He was unconstrained by small thinking. He rejected the artificial limitations we put on caring for the worlds poor limits we would never put on ourselves or our families. He refused to accept the soft bigotry of low expectations.
Physician and public-health leader Ashish Jha remembers the global-health pioneer Paul Farmer, who has died aged 62.
Physician and public-health leader Ashish Jha remembers the global-health pioneer Paul Farmer, who has died aged 62.
From the Atlantic article: Paul Farmer Invented a New Way of Caring for One Another
The global-health pioneer redefined his field to make it more human, in part by being so wonderfully human himself.
An excerpt:
Several years ago, Paul Farmer and I both spoke at a conference at Harvard on the history and future of global health. As our program finished, Paul was immediately inundated with a throng of students eager to speak with the guru of the field, the man who inspired us all and asked more of each of us. I shuffled off to speak with the few avoiding the crowd.
After Paul finished with the students, he came over to give me a hug, and we made small talk. Then he asked for a favor: Could he borrow a pair of socks? Socks? I asked. Why yes, he said, as if socks were a totally normal thing to be in need of in a lecture hall. He was in Boston briefly, stopping on his way from Geneva to Rwanda, and he had exhausted his supply. I walked over to my briefcase, pulled out a pair of socks, and handed them to Paul; he quickly put them away.
For years, I often carried an extra pair if I was going to see Paul, especially when he was just passing through town. He was so deeply focused on the people around him and making the world a better place that he often forgot what he needed to put on his own feet. Paul was the creator of the modern global-health movement. He was a founder of Partners in Health, which changed the way we all understood what it means to care for the worlds poor. In service of this role, he was a world traveler, always on the road, preaching his message of caring for all. Many of us who loved Paul had at least one occasion to lend him socks, knowing there was little risk of ever seeing those socks again.
Paul died yesterday, a shocking and devastating blow to his friends and the generations of people inspired by his work. Throughout his life, he fought against a counterproductive mindset that has haunted efforts of global health. The field that started as tropical health had been deeply rooted in the colonial context of caring for the subjects of Western rule. As European powers left their colonies in the global South, the nomenclature of the field changed to international health, but the field kept that deeply colonial frameworkwe the anointed global North providing charity for the uncivilized global South...
After Paul finished with the students, he came over to give me a hug, and we made small talk. Then he asked for a favor: Could he borrow a pair of socks? Socks? I asked. Why yes, he said, as if socks were a totally normal thing to be in need of in a lecture hall. He was in Boston briefly, stopping on his way from Geneva to Rwanda, and he had exhausted his supply. I walked over to my briefcase, pulled out a pair of socks, and handed them to Paul; he quickly put them away.
For years, I often carried an extra pair if I was going to see Paul, especially when he was just passing through town. He was so deeply focused on the people around him and making the world a better place that he often forgot what he needed to put on his own feet. Paul was the creator of the modern global-health movement. He was a founder of Partners in Health, which changed the way we all understood what it means to care for the worlds poor. In service of this role, he was a world traveler, always on the road, preaching his message of caring for all. Many of us who loved Paul had at least one occasion to lend him socks, knowing there was little risk of ever seeing those socks again.
Paul died yesterday, a shocking and devastating blow to his friends and the generations of people inspired by his work. Throughout his life, he fought against a counterproductive mindset that has haunted efforts of global health. The field that started as tropical health had been deeply rooted in the colonial context of caring for the subjects of Western rule. As European powers left their colonies in the global South, the nomenclature of the field changed to international health, but the field kept that deeply colonial frameworkwe the anointed global North providing charity for the uncivilized global South...
I was unaware of this man; but having heard of him, I certainly understand the loss.
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He refused to accept the soft bigotry of low expectations. (Original Post)
NNadir
Feb 2022
OP
Tracy Kidder's "Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer ..." is a wonderful read.
eppur_se_muova
Feb 2022
#1
eppur_se_muova
(36,247 posts)1. Tracy Kidder's "Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer ..." is a wonderful read.
Kidder wrote an obit for the NYT: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/22/opinion/paul-farmer-tracy-kidder.html
NNadir
(33,468 posts)2. Thanks for that. n/t.