Ministries Dream back on track for med school in
Tanzania
By ARTHUR JONES
Sept. 11 changed the patterns of
many lives.
At the time, Maryknoll Fr. Peter Le Jacq, a physician, was back in
the United States -- from Tanzania where he normally worked -- fundraising on
the East Coast for a proposed Catholic medical school to be built on the shores
of Lake Victoria.
The World Trade Center tragedy meant Le Jacq switched priorities
-- from begging money to reaching out to young members of his immediate family
who had lost a parent. But as the months passed, Le Jacq was able to again pick
up some of the threads of his delayed Tanzanian dream for a Bugando
University College of Health Sciences medical school.
Tanzania has three referring hospitals for 33 million people, one
doctor for every 25,000 people, and one dentist for every 300,000. Le Jacq
thinks big. Once hes found funds to establish and support the medical
schools four years of study, he wants a dental school and a
pharmacy school and to bring the nursing school up to the
bachelors degree level to develop leaders.
Hes been able to devote enough time to the project that the
first year medical students will walk through the doors in January. Le Jacq
will be there.
Not all the money is in hand yet for the second year, but his
network of support has expanded widely in the past 12 months and he has almost
enough pledges.
Le Jacq has a habit of getting what he wants.
When he was in eighth grade he wrote a religion class essay on
Why I want to be a priest-doctor in Africa. He wanted it because
his family took Maryknoll magazine, and Le Jacq absorbed its stories the
way other kids followed Batman and Robin.
I heard a priest describe in a homily what it is to be a
priest, said Le Jacq, letting God love people through you, and
letting God love you through the people you serve. I thought that if
thats all there is to it thats the job for me. You dont have
to do anything. You just stand there.
I also realized from the magazine that Jesus -- though he
didnt go to medical school -- encouraged us to preach and heal. I
dont have his gift of healing, so if I wanted to preach and heal Id
have to go to medical school.
New York City-raised Le Jacq contacted Maryknoll in 1976, was
encouraged to go through the first two years of medical school, stay in touch
and re-decide.
Until the 1980s it was against canon law for a priest to be
a doctor, said Le Jacq. That was based on the Council of
Trents belief that medicine was magic. And they didnt want a
sacramental minister performing magic. Sisters and brothers were always allowed
to be doctors because they were not sacramental ministers.
Le Jacq would become Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers
sixth M.D (four currently); the Maryknoll sisters have had 30 to 40 doctors (15
currently).
After two years at Weill Cornell Medical College, Le Jacq told
Maryknoll he hadnt changed his mind. He was sent for a summer
experience in a Guatemalan jungle hospital in Jacaltenango where he
worked with locally famed Maryknoll sister and medical doctor Madre
Rosa (Sr. Dorothy Erickson -- see Penny Lernouxs Hearts on Fire,
Orbis).
So he could enter the seminary, Cornell agreed to let Le Jacq take
a years leave between his third and fourth years if he passed Part 2 of
his medical boards early. He studied for the exam in a Franciscan monastery in
Dublin, Ireland, while doing a little work in medicine in a Dublin
inner-city hospital.
He passed Part 2, and after his Maryknoll novitiate finished his
final year at medical school.
For his New York State license, Le Jacq didnt need a
residency, but he did need an internship. I did the bare minimum, an
internship, because I didnt want to be overtrained for the Third World
and become frustrated. Internship completed, he returned to Maryknoll
until his ordination in 1987.
Then he went to Tanzania.
When I was a child, he said, Maryknoll
magazine made it very clear -- and unfortunately its still the case
-- that the continent of Africa is the poorest continent in the world.
Its probably going to remain so due to the climatic fact that its
the only place in the world that has years of drought as part of its natural
cycle.
During theological training Le Jacq had spent each summer in a
different part of the world -- a Cambodian refugee camp, a dispensary in
southern Tanzanias desert, and a little work in China as part of a
Cornell exchange. I realized quickly there is no nice Third World
assignment, he said. Theyre all going to have major
drawbacks. Of all the places, I thought I could function best in
Tanzania. Once hed mastered Swahili.
By linguistic standards, Swahili is easier to learn than
French, he said, and after four months at language school he was
practicing medicine in Tanzania. He was first assigned to a Mennonite mission
-- a joint operation with the government -- as a volunteer.
Bugando Hospital in Mwanza is at 3,000 feet above sea level. The
shores of Lake Victoria have a daily high in the high 80s, nightly lows in the
low 80s, and sunshine even during the rainy season because the rains fail to
arrive.
Theres an occasional drizzle, a couple of downpours, said Le
Jacq, but never enough to grow food. We live on relief food, hunted food,
or on fish from the lake, he said.
After two years at Bugando, he spent time at the Dublin branch of
the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons for catch-up in tropical medicine
and international health. Then, back to Bugando, the 800-bed Catholic teaching
hospital built by the German Catholic agency, Misereor, in the 1960s, now
operated jointly with the Tanzanian government.
The work was not the sort of practice hed have had in New
York. He tells of meeting a young woman on a local street who started to give
birth right in front of him. A nurse midwife was nearby, he pulled out a pair
of latex gloves to give her for protection. Carrying gloves is second nature --
25 percent of all pregnant women in Tanzania test HIV-positive in a country
ravaged by AIDS. But he did not have gloves for himself and had to work
unprotected.
I had to pull the cord off the babys neck, then I put
the placenta in my left hand and the baby in my right hand while walking
several blocks to the hospital, he said. Along the way people greeted him
casually, asking him when Mass would be that day. AIDS? If I got AIDS,
well, we figured two for one. My Wall Street friends would say thats a
good return.
AIDS hes so far avoided, but hes personally battled
malaria, tuberculosis, hepatitis and dysentery.
At Bugando he taught tropical medicine to physician assistants and
began thinking how a medical school could be established to guarantee primary
health care. The Tanzanian bishops were equally interested. The need became
pressing.
The [physician assistants] in the rural areas appropriately
began referring to Bugando patients who need complicated surgery or complicated
medical diagnoses and treatment. We did not have enough physicians to manage
the cases coming in and were sending people back dead, in body bags, to their
villages simply because there was no MD to do the surgery, or to make the
diagnoses and treatment.
That meant, he said, we were now at the point of
undermining the primary health care persons credibility. They were
triaging people who were being sent home dead. The Catholic bishops in East
Africa decided it was time for the Catholic church to establish a medical
school.
Le Jacq remained in Tanzania until 1996 when it was his turn for a
six-year term in administration at Maryknoll, N.Y. He returned to America, a
doctor different from most U.S. medical school graduates in matters of personal
income as well as usual location. As a Maryknoll priest he gets $300 a month;
as a doctor in Tanzania the government there pays him $2 a day. (When he
returned to America the Internal Revenue Service demanded receipts and made him
pay taxes on his Tanzanian income.)
In 2001, Maryknoll let him finish his administration term a year
early to concentrate on fundraising for Bugando.
The gleam in the priest-pitchmans eye is for an eventual $21
million to establish the various schools, plus scholarships to sustain the
students, who are usually impoverished.
The pitchman surfaced: We have nearly $2 million cash used
to create the first year infrastructure -- classrooms, labs, dorms. The deans
are in place recruiting heads of departments, the instructors are already
taught --using Cornells computerized curriculum, which has already been
sent over.
Le Jacqs race against time, he continued, is that we
have roughly $2.5 million in pledges to create the second-tier dorm -- faculty
classrooms and housing, and now were working on the third-tier -- for
third year medical school faculty -- barely a years lead time on each
tier.
All that and an economic downturn in the United States.
Were playing it very close, he admits.
A recent Touching Tanzania project -- that converted a
Stamford, Conn., ballroom into an Africa village feast complete with
stilt-walkers -- raised $500,000. And during this past year volunteer
fund-raisers and organizers have begun to make Le Jacqs task much
easier.
Hes hoping to be back in Tanzania on a more permanent basis
within a year. He said he needs both the satisfaction and credibility of
continuing to work in Tanzania and seeks a schedule that will give half a year
in Bugando, half in the United States.
That way he can fulfill a four-way mission: as a priest to the
people of Mwanza, as a doctor to doctor-short Tanzanians, as a fundraiser, and
as close-by kin to his young relatives still dealing with their Sept. 11
tragedy.
Arthur Jones is NCR editor at large.
Contact information
Fr. Peter Le Jacq can be reached
at Lejacq@igc.org
National Catholic Reporter, September 20,
2002
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