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Lucille Teasdale. Deborah CowleyЧитать онлайн книгу.

Lucille Teasdale - Deborah Cowley


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Web site: www.xyzedit.qc.ca E-mail: [email protected]

      International Rights: Contact André Vanasse, tel. (514) 525–2170 # 25 E-mail: [email protected]

       In grateful memory of

       Dr. Lucille TeasdaleDr. Piero CortiDr. Matthew Lukwiya

       who devoted their lives to others

       Contents

       5 Birth of a Country – and a Baby Daughter

       6 A Wily Dictator Seizes Power

       7 The Carnage Continues

       8 A Devastating Blow

       9 More Challenges

       10 Losing Hope

       11 Remission

       12 A Will to Survive

       Epilogue

       Chronology of Lucille Teasdale (1929–1996)

       Acknowledgments

       Sources Consulted

       Index

      In October 1989 I had the good fortune to visit Lucille Teasdale and her husband, Piero Corti, in northern Uganda. Lucille had received an award from the Canadian Medical Association, and the Reader’s Digest had asked me to investigate whether or not she would make a good subject for an article. I quickly discovered that, apart from this award, Lucille was virtually unknown in her native Canada. Few people knew her name and little had been written about her. Furthermore, the Canadian High Commission in Kenya was only vaguely aware of her presence in neighbouring Uganda, and none of their staff had ever met her or visited her.

      From the little information I could find, I sensed that Lucille Teasdale was a woman who was out of the ordinary. After all, she had left her home in Montreal twenty-eight years earlier and travelled to the distant country of Uganda. There, she had lived and worked through long periods of horrendous political upheaval but had never succumbed to the temptation of returning to the safety of Canada. In 1987, I decided to write to Lucille and ask if I could visit her when I was next in East Africa.

      Lucille replied at once. She was more than happy to help, she said, but with Uganda still in the midst of political turmoil, she felt it was much too dangerous for me to visit.

      I wrote to Lucille the next year, but still she feared for my safety. Another year later, I was planning a trip to East Africa and asked again if I could include a visit with her in Uganda. Finally she agreed, but only if I would meet her and her doctor husband Piero Corti in Kampala and travel the eight-hour journey north to Lacor Hospital with them in the security of their Red Cross ambulance.

      At long last, we managed to meet in Kampala. I was immediately struck by the strength of this woman. She was slight in build but expansive in spirit, and her bubbly personality quickly put me at ease.

      We climbed into the front seat of the vehicle and Piero took the wheel. Throughout the journey, Lucille talked at fever pitch. She spoke in a heavily accented English, lacing her words with French and Italian expressions, her hands gesticulating for emphasis. As we bounced along, lurching to avoid the endless string of potholes, she seemed oblivious to the crumbling roadway or to the soldiers who stopped us regularly at gunpoint to check through the boxes of medical supplies in the van.

      At sundown, we veered west of the northern town of Gulu. As we approached the hospital, the gates swung open and pandemonium broke out. A large group of nurses suddenly burst into a rhythmic song of welcome, and hordes of youngsters swarmed around the van in a heartfelt outpouring of affection for the couple they called “our beloved doctors.”

      During the week I spent with Lucille, I followed her on her daily hospital rounds while she checked on the progress of dozens of patients. I stood perched at her elbow while she undertook the most delicate operations, and I chatted with her long into the night about the frustrations and joys of her life in Uganda. I left at the end of the week much enriched and knowing I had met a truly remarkable woman, one of selfless dedication and immense courage.

      The coffin of Lucille Teasdale is lowered into the ground by Medical Superintendent Dr. Matthew Lukwiya and a team of doctors who are among the many trained by “Dr. Lucille.”

       A Sad Farewell

      Lucille Teasdale was nothing less than a miracle worker… By her very presence, she gave Ugandans so much hope. – Dr. Elizabeth Hillman, Canadian pediatrician

      On a hot and steamy morning in August 1996 a small Cessna airplane landed on the airstrip of Gulu airport in northern Uganda. The door opened, and Piero Corti, an Italian doctor, stepped down onto the sizzling tarmac. Following close behind him was the coffin of his Canadian-born wife, Dr. Lucille Teasdale.

      The moment ended an emotional journey for Corti, one he had dreaded ever since he first received news of Lucille’s illness just over eleven years before. Since then, the two had lived through many highs and lows, and even as Lucille grew slowly weaker, they had both prayed for more time together. But it was not to be. After a heroic struggle that amazed her family and friends, Lucille finally lost the battle. Her death in Italy ended a remarkable and loving partnership that spanned thirty-five years and three continents.

      On this blistering day, Corti was bringing his wife’s body back to the country they had both called home for more than three decades. From the Gulu airport, a van carried the coffin across the barren plains of Uganda’s northern region to the village of Lacor [pronounced La-chore]. After a bumpy six-kilometre journey, they arrived at a grove of palm trees. Branches of scarlet bougainvillea tumbled over a high stone wall, and a white sign with a large red cross marked the entrance to Lacor Hospital.

      The van passed through the black steel gates and entered the compound. In front of them lay the hospital that was Piero and Lucille’s lifelong labour of love. In 1961, when they first arrived here, they had found a tiny forty-bed dispensary run by a handful of Italian nuns. By 1996, they had managed to transform it “by our wits and our faith” into the medical showpiece of Uganda, a hospital with 450 beds and a staff of 400, all of them African.

      Piero Corti had the coffin placed in the tiny hospital chapel. The following day, mourners began to arrive from all over the region. Some travelled by bus or


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