Books

  1. Doctor Mary in Arabia: Memoirs
    Doctor Mary in Arabia: Memoirs

  2. Dark Voices : W. E. B. Du Bois and American Thought, 1888-1903
    Dark Voices : W. E. B. Du Bois and American Thought, 1888-1903

  3. They Said It Was Murder
    They Said It Was Murder

  4. We Only Come Here to Struggle: Stories from Berida's Life
    We Only Come Here to Struggle: Stories from Berida's Life

  5. Civil Rights Childhood
    Civil Rights Childhood

  6. Narrative Of The Life & Times Of Frederick Douglass
    Narrative Of The Life & Times Of Frederick Douglass

  7. When the Time Is Right, Move on
    When the Time Is Right, Move on

  8. Black Shrink
    Black Shrink

  9. Little Town in Virginia: It Started in Vienna
    Little Town in Virginia: It Started in Vienna

  10. Conversations With Clarence Major (Literary Conversations Series)
    Conversations With Clarence Major (Literary Conversations Series)

  11. Tessie and Pearlie : A Granddaughter's Story
    Tessie and Pearlie : A Granddaughter's Story

  12. Juan Vicente Gómez and the Oil Companies in Venezuela, 1908-1935 (Cambridge Latin American Studies)
    Juan Vicente Gómez and the Oil Companies in Venezuela, 1908-1935 (Cambridge Latin American Studies)

  13. Frederick Douglass
    Frederick Douglass

  14. Lugenia Burns Hope: Black Southern Reformer
    Lugenia Burns Hope: Black Southern Reformer

  15. Ungido
    Ungido

  16. Making Their Own Way: Southern Blacks' Migration to Pittsburgh, 1916-30 (Blacks in the New World)
    Making Their Own Way: Southern Blacks' Migration to Pittsburgh, 1916-30 (Blacks in the New World)

  17. The Splendid Drunken Twenties: Selections from the Daybooks, 1922-1930
    The Splendid Drunken Twenties: Selections from the Daybooks, 1922-1930

  18. Voices for the Future: Appreciating the Past in Order to Understand the Present While Planning for the Future
    Voices for the Future: Appreciating the Past in Order to Understand the Present While Planning for the Future

  19. Conversations With Amiri Baraka (Literary Conversations Series (Paper))
    Conversations With Amiri Baraka (Literary Conversations Series (Paper))

  20. T-3 Just Me and the Sunset: My Past, Present, Future, and Personal Healing
    T-3 Just Me and the Sunset: My Past, Present, Future, and Personal Healing

  21. Through the Back Door : Memoirs of a Sharecropper's Daughter Who Learned to Read as a Great-Grandmother
    Through the Back Door : Memoirs of a Sharecropper's Daughter Who Learned to Read as a Great-Grandmother

  22. Brown Face, Big Master (Caribbean Classics)
    Brown Face, Big Master (Caribbean Classics)

  23. Bearing Witness: Memories of Arkansas Slavery: Narratives from the 1930s Wpa Collections
    Bearing Witness: Memories of Arkansas Slavery: Narratives from the 1930s Wpa Collections

  24. Gabriel's Fire : A Memoir
    Gabriel's Fire : A Memoir

  25. Too Deep Were Our Roots: A Viennese Jewish memoir of the years between the two world wars
    Too Deep Were Our Roots: A Viennese Jewish memoir of the years between the two world wars

Doctor Mary in Arabia: Memoirs
Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
  • Illuminating
Doctor Mary in Arabia: Memoirs
Mary Bruins, M.D. Allison
Manufacturer: Univ of Texas Pr
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

GeneralGeneral | Biographies & Memoirs | Subjects | Books
Basic ScienceBasic Science | Medicine | Subjects | Books | Anatomy | Biochemistry | Embryology | General | Genetics | Histology | Immunology | Microbiology | Nosology | Pathophysiology | Physiology
GeneralGeneral | Medicine | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Physician & Patient | Medicine | Subjects | Books
Instruments & SuppliesInstruments & Supplies | Reference | Medicine | Medical | Professional & Technical | Subjects | Books
ASIN: 0292704542

Book Description

"Dr. Mary Allison has written a fascinating book about her nearly forty years as a medical missionary in the Arabian Gulf. . . . Dr. Mary in Arabia is a valuable addition to the writings of foreigners about the Middle East. . . . Mary Allison provides detailed information on many aspects of life in the region to readers with few contemporary native sources at their disposal. . . . The fact that she is a complicated and interesting human being adds to the pleasure of reading what she has to say about her profession and the places where she practiced it." --Middle East Journal Until fairly recently, Islamic women rarely received professional health care, since few women doctors had ever practiced in Arabia and their culture forbade them from consulting male doctors. Not surprisingly, Dr. Mary Bruins Allison faced an overwhelming demand when she arrived in Kuwait in 1934 as a medical missionary of the Reformed Church of America. Over the next forty years, "Dr. Mary" treated thousands of women and children, faithfully performing the duties that seemed required of her as a Christian--to heal the sick and seek converts. These memoirs record a fascinating life. Dr. Allison briefly describes her upbringing and her professional training at Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania. She then focuses on her experiences in Kuwait, where women of all classes, including royalty, flocked to her care. In addition to describing many of her cases, Dr. Allison paints a richly detailed picture of life in Kuwait both before and after the discovery of oil transformed the country. Her recollections include invaluable details of women's lives in the Middle East during the early and mid-twentieth century. They add a valuable chapter to the story of modern medicine, to the largely unsuccessful efforts of the Christian church to win converts in the Middle East, and to the opportunities and limitations that faced American women of the period. Dr. Allison also worked briefly in Bahrain, Qatar, Oman, and India, and she includes material on each country. The introduction situates her experiences in the context of Middle Eastern and medical developments of the period.

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars Illuminating.......2004-07-23

This book tells the story of Dr. Mary Allison, medical missionary in the Arabian Gulf from 1935-1975. Dr. Allison, or Dr. Mary, as she was known in the Gulf, was the daughter of a minister and decided at an early age that she wanted to be a missionary. Since women at that time were not commonly called to the pulpit, she trained as an M.D., a general practitioner, and applied to work for a missionary society as soon as she completed her training. She was sent to Kuwait in 1934, where she served in a mission hospital until 1964, with brief sojourns away during World War when she worked in the US and India. Following her time in Kuwait, she also served in Bahrain and Oman until her retirement in 1975. This book represents her personal memoirs of her years of training and service, stretching from her early childhood through retirement. The book includes a small collection of black and white photographs documenting scenes of daily life in Kuwait and Oman, as well as the clinics where Dr. Allison worked and her patients and helpers.

Dr. Allison comes across as being very modest about her training and skills. She claimed she was of average ability, and many of the anecdotes described in the book tell of her medical failures, although some highlight her successes as well. She possessed an unwavering faith in her particular version of Christianity, heavily influenced by her Dutch heritage. She felt that even if she wasn?t the best doctor in the world, her very presence and willingness to serve gave life and hope to her patients. Given the low level of development in the Gulf at the time and the lack of access to quality medical care, she was able to save hundreds, if not thousands of lives, through her work. As for saving souls, she describes how she only knew of one or two Muslims during her entire 40 years in the Gulf who had converted to Christianity, and seemed to have trouble understanding why more were not attracted to her faith by the kinds of work the mission hospital was offering.

The documentation that Allison provides of mission life in the Gulf during the first part of the Twentieth Century is invaluable. Allison was in the middle of all the changes that came to pass as the oil money began to flow. When she first arrived, she learned to survive and work through the desert summer heat without AC. Her patients came to her with trachoma, tuberculosis, and infected feet from stepping on needles. Then oil company men came from the West, and she even ended up marrying one herself. She describes how the oil money brought AC, electric lights, cars, and schools. If she could re-visit Kuwait today, she would find very little trachoma or infected feet. Instead, there is diabetes, heart disease, and car accidents, the scourge of the Gulf which ensures that polygamy will be a common practice for all of the foreseeable future. Although she left the region before all of these changes came to pass, she could already see them coming.

Anyone who has spent time living in the Gulf will recognize that many traditions have changed very little since the time when Allison first arrived. The Arabs still drink their coffee with cardamom, and a visitor must take 3 cups, swirling the last to signal satiation. Many women are still not free to pursue health care on their own, and medical personnel will not touch a woman, even in an emergency, without a husband?s permission. Blood for transfusions is ever in great need, especially because of the innumerable car accidents, but people don?t die anymore for lack of blood donations because enough ex-pats are around to keep a steady blood supply, and even some Arabs are now willing to donate blood. There is still a dearth of nurses from the Gulf, but the shortage is no longer due to lack of proper education for girls. It turns out that Gulf Arabs just don?t like nursing as a career, so they still import the vast majority of their nurses from India and the Philippines.

Although the information in the book is fascinating in itself, the book could really have used quite a bit more editing. There are a number of places where Dr. Allison repeats the same anecdotes, and she occasionally even confuses the location where she met a particular patient, sometimes saying it was in Kuwait and later in Bahrain, for instance. All in all, though, the book is well worth reading for anyone with an interest in the Gulf, especially those considering taking a medical posting in a Gulf country.
Doctor Mary in Arabia Memoirs by Mary Bruins Allison, M. D.
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Doctor Mary in Arabia Memoirs by Mary Bruins Allison, M. D.
    Sandra, editor. Shaw
    Manufacturer: U. Of Texas Press
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Hardcover
    ASIN: B000RKXL6S
    Doctor Mary in Arabia Memoirs
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      Doctor Mary in Arabia Memoirs
      Mary Bruins; Shaw, Sandra J. & Lucie Wood , Ph.D. Saunders & John Clarke , M.D. Saunders Allison
      Manufacturer: University of Texas Press
      ProductGroup: Book
      Binding: Paperback
      ASIN: B000ORFLMG
      Doctor Mary in Arabia, Memoirs by Mary Bruins Allison, M.D.
      Average customer rating: Not rated
        Doctor Mary in Arabia, Memoirs by Mary Bruins Allison, M.D.
        Mary Bruins Allison
        Manufacturer: Univ. of Texas Press
        ProductGroup: Book
        Binding: Hardcover
        ASIN: B000N2W6B6

        Books:

        1. Shine on Me : The Biography of an African American Woman, Born Blind
        2. The Medicine of Memory: A Mexica Clan in California
        3. Adios to Tears: The Memoirs of a Japanese-Peruvian Internee in U.S. Concentration Camps
        4. An Irish Navvy: The Diary of an Exile
        5. Children of the Dream : Our Own Stories of Growing Up Black in America (Children of Conflict)
        6. The Most Promising Young Officer: A Life of Ranald Slidell Mackenzie
        7. Soul Babies: Black Popular Culture and the Post-Soul Aesthetic
        8. The Chosen One
        9. Doctor Mary in Arabia: Memoirs
        10. Sand for Snow: A Caribbean-Canadian Chronicle

        Books