Claire Bertschinger
Dame Claire Bertschinger DBE DL is an Anglo-Swiss nurse and activist in advocacy on behalf of suffering people in the developing world. Her work in Ethiopia in 1984 inspired Band Aid and subsequently Live Aid, the biggest relief programme ever mounted.
Biography
The daughter of a Swiss father and British mother,[1] Bertschinger was brought up in Sheering near Bishop's Stortford on the Hertfordshire/Essex borders.[2]
Dyslexic, she could barely read or write until she was 14.[1] After her parents got a television in the 1960s, one of the first films she watched was The Inn of the Sixth Happiness starring Ingrid Bergman playing the role of Gladys Aylward, an English missionary to China in the 1930s who is caught up in the Japanese invasion. Bertschinger thought: “I could do that. That’s what I want to do.”[1]
Bertschinger graduated from Brunel University with an MSc degree in Medical Anthropology in 1997.
Bertschinger is a Buddhist, practising Nichiren Buddhism. She became a member of Sōka Gakkai International in 1994.[3][4][5]
In 2005, her book Moving Mountains was published, describing her experiences, and her spiritual motivation which led her to Buddhism. Part of the royalties from the book went to The African Children's Educational Trust, a British charity.[6]
Career
After training and working as a nurse in the UK, Bertschinger became a medic on Operation Drake, an expedition with Colonel John Blashford-Snell and the Scientific Exploration Society in Panama, Papua New Guinea and Sulawesi.
After this experience, she joined the emergency disaster relief group of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), allowed to attend war locations thanks to her dual-nationality. Through this she has worked in over a dozen zones of conflict including Afghanistan, Kenya, Lebanon, Sudan, Sierra Leone, Ivory Coast and Liberia.
Bertschinger has also worked at ICRC headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland as training officer in the Health Division.
Bertschinger is currently Director for the Diploma in Tropical Nursing course at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.[7]
She is an ambassador and Trustee for The African Children's Educational Trust,[8] Patron for Promise Nepal,[9] and a voluntary worker for the charity Age UK.[7]
Ethiopia
In 1984, Bertschinger was working as an ICRC field nurse located in Mekele, the capital of Tigray Province, Ethiopia during the famine of 1984. She ran a feeding centre which could only take in 60 to 70 new children at a time when thousands more were in need of food.[10] As a young nurse, she had to decide who would and would not receive food; those she couldn't help had little hope of survival, she has said:"I felt like a Nazi commandant, deciding who would live and who would die. Playing God broke my heart".[11] When a BBC News crew appeared with reporter Michael Buerk, Bertschinger willingly told her story to highlight the problems. While Buerk thought Bertschinger was a heroine and edited his report to highlight this, Bertschinger initially thought Buerk was an arrogant "prat" asking "stupid questions."[11] The subsequent news report filed by Buerk and broadcast on 23 October 1984, inspired the watching Bob Geldof to launch Band Aid. This was followed by Live Aid in 1985, the biggest relief programme ever mounted, which raised more than £150m and saved an estimated 2m lives in Africa.[11]
In 2004, she returned to Ethiopia with Buerk, to assess the situation 20 years on to make the programme Ethiopia: A Journey with Michael Buerk.[12][13]
Awards
- 1986: Bish Medal from the Scientific Exploration Society.
- 1991: Florence Nightingale Medal from the International Committee of the Red Cross.
- 2005: Women of the Year Window to the World Award.[14]
- 2007: Human Rights and Nursing Awards 2007, from the International Centre for Nursing Ethics (ICNE), in the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences at the University of Surrey.[15]
- 2008: Honorary degree of Doctor of Social Sciences, Brunel University.[16]
- 2010: Voted one of the Top 20 Most Influential People in the Nursing Field by Masters in Nursing Online.[17]
- 2010: Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in the 2010 New Year Honours for services to Nursing and to International Humanitarian Aid.[18]
- 2010: Honorary degree of Doctor of Education, Robert Gordon University.[19]
- 2010: Honorary degree of Doctor of Health Sciences, Anglia Ruskin University.[20]
- 2011: Honorary degree of Doctor of Staffordshire University.[21]
- 2011: Honorary degree of Doctor of Science, De Montfort University.[22]
- 2012: Voted one of the Five formidable women who shaped the Red Cross by the British Red Cross.[23]
- 2012: Voted one of The 10 most influential female nurses of all time by Scrubs Magazine.[24]
- 2012: Deputy Lieutenant of Hertfordshire.[25]
References
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External links
- Bio at the London School of Tropical Medicine
- Video interview by BBC's "Hardtalk"
- Audio interview with BBC Radio4 Woman's Hour
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- ↑ The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 59282. p. 6. 31 December 2009. Retrieved 31 December 2009.
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- ↑ The London Gazette: no. 60331. p. 1. 19 November 2012. Retrieved 22 November 2012.
- Pages with reference errors
- EngvarB from August 2014
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- Year of birth missing (living people)
- Living people
- Swiss people of English descent
- British people of Swiss descent
- People from Epping Forest (district)
- British Buddhists
- British nurses
- Swiss Buddhists
- Swiss nurses
- Alumni of Brunel University
- Academics of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
- Dames Commander of the Order of the British Empire
- Members of Sōka Gakkai
- Deputy Lieutenants of Hertfordshire