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Related: About this forum‘He’s Jesus Christ’
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/28/opinion/sunday/nicholas-kristof-hes-jesus-christ.html?_r=0Nicholas Kristof
JUNE 27, 2015
Dr. Tom Catena, the only physician permanently in Sudan's Nuba Mountains, examines a leprosy patient, Nemat Kuku, whose child Nasra Makous is malnourished. Both leprosy and malnutrition are common in the area. Credit Nicholas Kristof/The New York Times
IN THE NUBA MOUNTAINS, Sudan IF you subscribe to the caricature of devout religious believers as mostly sanctimonious hypocrites, the kind who rake in cash and care about human life only when it is unborn, come visit the doctor here.
Dr. Tom Catena, 51, a Catholic missionary from Amsterdam, N.Y., is the only doctor at the 435-bed Mother of Mercy Hospital nestled in the Nuba Mountains in the far south of Sudan. For that matter, hes the only doctor permanently based in the Nuba Mountains for a population of more than half a million people.
Just about every day, the Sudanese government drops bombs or shells on civilians in the Nuba Mountains, part of a scorched-earth strategy to defeat an armed rebellion here. The United States and other major powers have averted their eyes, so it is left to Dr. Tom, as he is universally known here, to pry out shrapnel from womens flesh and amputate limbs of children, even as he also delivers babies and removes appendixes.
He does all this off the electrical grid, without running water, a telephone or so much as an X-ray machine while under constant threat of bombing, for Sudan has dropped 11 bombs on his hospital grounds. The first time, Dr. Tom sheltered, terrified, in a newly dug pit for an outhouse, but the hospital is now surrounded by foxholes in which patients and the staff crouch when military aircraft approach.
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‘He’s Jesus Christ’ (Original Post)
cbayer
Jun 2015
OP
I guess the three MSF workers who recently died in Nepal just didn't rise to the jesus christ level.
Warren Stupidity
Jun 2015
#3
Jim__
(14,077 posts)1. There's something to be said for being unreasonable.
There also are many, many secular aid workers doing heroic work. But the people Ive encountered over the years in the most impossible places like Nuba, where anyone reasonable has fled are disproportionately unreasonable because of their faith.
cbayer
(146,218 posts)2. It's interesting.
In visiting certain areas of Kenya, I found the bravest people were those who were working in a religious capacity. They seemed to believe that they were afforded some kind of protection that allowed them to be disproportionately unreasonable.
Of course, that doesn't always work out all that way, but for there does seem to be some degree of bravery that is instilled in them by their beliefs.
Warren Stupidity
(48,181 posts)3. I guess the three MSF workers who recently died in Nepal just didn't rise to the jesus christ level.