Schweitzer, Albert
Signatur: M001-B681-D001-A023
Autor: Schweitzer, Albert
Buchart: Faksimile
Verlag: Albert Schweitzer Fellowship, New York (Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika)
Veröffentlichung: 2025
Sprache: Englisch
Seiten: 22
Format: gr. 8°
Größe (HxBXT): 22,7 x 14,8 cm x 1,0 cm
ISBN 10: 8-888006-892957

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Inhaltsverzeichnis:
1. The Hospital Staff: 16 Doctors; 2. And 24 Nurses; 3. Two General Aides; 4. Three Most Helpful Friends; 5. Hospital Greatly Enlarged; 6. The New Leprosarium; 7. Corrugated Iron Roofs; 8. Cost Is Large but Unavoidable; 9. Why Not a Contractor?; 10. The Site is Pictured; 11. And the Forest and the Sun - and Africa; 12. A Whole Life Is Changed; 13. The Task of Supervision; 14. The Greta Lagerfelt House; 15. Sandals Are Now in Fashion; 16. First Appendectomy; 17. To Europe for a "Rest"
Kurzbeschreibung:
Bericht über das Hospital in Lambarene 1946 - 1954
Textpassagen (Auszüge):
"For the first time, since sending in December 1945 a detailed letter to friends of the Hospital telling them of our experiences during the war, I take up my pen again. More than once I have felt the need and the duty to inform them how things have been shaping for us since the war, and I started to do so several times. But I could never finish, either because I was interrupted by urgent work or because I was too tired. [...]"
1. The Hospital Staff: 16 Doctors; 2. And 24 Nurses; 3. Two General Aides; 4. Three Most Helpful Friends; 5. Hospital Greatly Enlarged; 6. The New Leprosarium; 7. Corrugated Iron Roofs; 8. Cost Is Large but Unavoidable; 9. Why Not a Contractor?; 10. The Site is Pictured; 11. And the Forest and the Sun - and Africa; 12. A Whole Life Is Changed; 13. The Task of Supervision; 14. The Greta Lagerfelt House; 15. Sandals Are Now in Fashion; 16. First Appendectomy; 17. To Europe for a "Rest"
Kurzbeschreibung:
Bericht über das Hospital in Lambarene 1946 - 1954
Textpassagen (Auszüge):
"For the first time, since sending in December 1945 a detailed letter to friends of the Hospital telling them of our experiences during the war, I take up my pen again. More than once I have felt the need and the duty to inform them how things have been shaping for us since the war, and I started to do so several times. But I could never finish, either because I was interrupted by urgent work or because I was too tired. [...]"