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Information About

Norman Bethune





BIOGRAPHY


Dr. Bethune was born in Gravenhurst, Ontario , Canada . After graduating from the University Of Toronto as a doctor he moved to Montreal where he was associated with McGill University and taught thoracic surgery. Bethune was an early proponent of Universal Health Care , the success of which he observed during a visit to the Soviet Union . As a doctor in Montréal , Bethune frequently sought out the poor and gave them free medical care. As a thoracic Surgeon , he travelled to Spain ( 1936 - 1937 ) and China ( 1938 - 1939 ) to perform Battlefield Surgical Operations on war casualties.

Bethune's work in Spain in developing mobile medical units was the model for the later development of Mobile Army Surgical Hospital (MASH) units. The need to provide Blood Transfusion s in a battlefield context led him to develop the first practical method for transporting blood.

Bethune died on November 12 , 1939, of Blood Poisoning from a cut he received while performing surgery, while with the Communist Party Of China 's Eighth Route Army in the midst of the Second Sino-Japanese War .


MOTIVATIONS


What inspired Doctor Bethune to place himself in such dangerous and harsh conditions, being thousands of miles from home and practically working without pay? The Communist Party Of Canada (CPC) asserts that Bethune, who joined the party in 1935 , acted out of devotion to the Chinese Socialist movement. Some in the West , however, have been highly skeptical to the notion and generally believe the doctor's motivation was exclusively based on humanitarian considerations. But the fact remains that Bethune went to Spain soon after joining the CPC to help in the struggle against Fascism , and then went to China to help the Communists there against Japanese Imperialism . It is also noted in his most recent biography, ''The Politics of Passion'' by Larry Hannant, that he specifically refused to work under the better-off Chiang Kai Shek 's Nationalist government and insisted on helping the Chinese Communists instead. He is also the only Westerner to have a statue in Communist China and he also has a hospital named in his honour.


MEMORY


Virtually unknown in his homeland during his lifetime, Doctor Bethune finally received international recognition as Chairman Mao Zedong of the People's Republic Of China published his essay entitled ''In Memory of Norman Bethune'' (original Chinese title : 紀念白求恩), which documented the final months of the doctor's life in China. Mao went ahead and made the essay required reading for the entire Chinese population. Mao wrote in the book's preface: ''As a selfless internationalist, Doctor Bethune served as a role model for every human being''.

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Bethune College at York University , and Dr. Norman Bethune Collegiate Institute (a secondary school) in Scarborough, Ontario , were named after Dr. Bethune. Heroic statues of Bethune have been erected throughout China.

Doctor Bethune also invented several Surgical Instrument s that still bear his name.

). The latter was a co-production of Telefilm Canada , the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation , FR3 TV France and China Film Co-production.

In March 1990, to commemorate the centenary of his birth, Canada and China each issued two postage stamps of the same design in his honour.

In 1998 he was inducted into the Canadian Medical Hall Of Fame .

In the CBC's The Greatest Canadian program in 2004 , he was voted the 26th Greatest Canadian by viewers.

He attended Owen Sound Collegiate in Owen Sound Ontario, now known as Owen Sound Collegiate And Vocational Institute. He graduated from OSCVI in 1911 along with William Avery "Billy" Bishop. Both names are inscribed on the School's Great War Memorial.

He is buried in Shijiazhuang , Hebei Province, China , where his tomb along with that of Dr. Dwarkanath Kotnis lie next to great memorials and statues to their honour.
His ideals and teachings were instrumental in the formation and growth of the Medical College Democratic Students Association .


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