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His
Royal Highness Prince Mahidol of Songkla |
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His
Royal Highness Prince Mahidol of Songkla
was
born on January 1st, 1892, to Their Majesties
King Chulalongkorn and Queen Savang Vadhana. He
was brought up in his formative years according
to the Royal Thai tradition and ordained as a Buddhist
novice like his brothers before receiving his education
at Harrow, a renowned Public School in England.
He then proceeded to Germany to continue his studies
in accordance with the wishes of his father who
was a close friend of Emperor William II.
Prince
Mahidol
first attended the Royal Prussian Military Preparatory
College at Potsdam which also offered courses on
humanities and sciences in addition to military science.
This liberal education background as well as self-study
and sedulous visits to museums during that period
together helped to form the intellectual and
philosophical basis of his attitude and personality |
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Prince
Mahidol subsequently attended the Imperial
Military Academy at Gross Lichterfelde in Berlin
for two more years. He then followed the wishes of
His Majesty King Vajiravudh by entering the Nurwik
Imperial German Naval Academy at Flensbourg in
1912. In that year, Prince Mahidol was
commissioned by His Majesty King Vajiravudh as a
Lieutenant in the Royal Thai Navy. He was
concurrently commissioned as a Lieutenant in the
Imperial German Navy. Prince Mahidol completed his
naval study but was prevented from joining the
Imperial German Navy since he was instructed by
His Majesty King Vajiravudh to return to Thailand
at the outbreak of the First World War.
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Prince
Mahidol had noted, while serving in the Royal Thai
Navy, the serious need for improvement is the
standard of medical practitioners and public
health in Thailand. In undertaking such mission,
Prince Mahidol set in motion a whole range of
activities in accordance with his conviction that
human resources development at the national level
was of utmost importance and his belief that
improvement of public health constituted an
essential factor in national development. One of
his primary tasks was to lay a solid foundation
for teaching basic sciences which Prince Mahidol
pursued through all necessary measures. |
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These
included the provision of a considerable sum of
his own money as scholarships for six talented
students to study physics, chemistry and biology
in England. Upon their return, these students
formed the core of well-qualified teaching staff
in basic sciences which the country had hitherto
lacked. Once the teaching of basic sciences was
well established, the teaching of other fields of
applied sciences was upgraded. Here, Prince
Mahidol placed special emphasis on medical
education, public health, nursing, and medical
research. |
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His
initiative and effort produced a most remarkable
and lasting impact on the improvement of modern
medicine and public health in Thailand such that
he was subsequently honored with the title of "Father
of Modern Medicine and Public Health of Thailand"
In
implementing
his plan for institutional development in these
areas, Prince Mahidol decided to study public
health and medicine himself. Upon leaving the
Royal Thai Navy, he proceeded to the United States
and enrolled at Harvard University in 1916. In
spite of having to shuttle between Harvard for his
study and Thailand for his official duties and
work as well as his ill health, Prince Mahidol
managed to concentrate on his study.
He
succeeded and received the Certificate of Public
Health (C.P.H.) in 1921, the degree of Doctor of
Medicine (cum laude) in 1928 and the honor of
Alpha Omega Alphal membership. During the first
period of his residence at Harvard, Prince Mahidol
also negotiated and concluded, on behalf of the
Royal Thai Government, an agreement with the
Rockefeller Foundation on assistance for medical
and nursing education in Thailand.
During
his
stay in Thailand after receiving his C.P.H. in
1921, Prince Mahidol was appointed Director-General
of the University Department, Ministry of
Education. In that capacity, he implemented the
assistance from the Rockefeller Foundation. He
upgraded the teaching of biology, physics and
chemistry through curricula development,
acquisition of up-to-date equipment, and
construction of laboratories and classrooms. To
meet these and many other expenses in the
expansion of the medical school, Prince Mahidol
generously supplemented government budget with his
own personal fund, and secured donations from
members of the Royal Family. In implementing his
institutional development plan for the improvement
of the teaching of basic sciences and pre-medical
education, Prince Mahidol mobilized all available
resources, including teaching vertebrate anatomy
himself. But it was in his capacity as Chairman of
the Committee to establish the Siriraj School of
Medicine that Prince Mahidol demonstrated his
capability and farsightedness as an educational
planner, as well as his efficiency as an
institutional builder. |
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After
discharging
his official duties and working as an educator,
Prince Mahidol went back to Harvard and returned
home with his well-earned M.D. (cum laude) in
1928. Back again at Siriraj Medical School, he
taught preventive and social medicine to final
year medical students. However, he was not
permitted to serve an internship because of his
pre-eminent royal status as a celestial Prince.
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Thus, to overcome this obstacle and to enable
him to personally help the sick and bereaved,
Prince Mahidol decided to leave the
establishment he loved and had toiled for, to
work as a resident doctor at McCormick Hospital,
an American missionary hospital in Chiang Mai.
Leaving his family behind in Bangkok, Prince
Mahidol stayed with Dr. E.C. Cord, Director of
McCormick Hospital, and performed operations
alongside Dr. Cord. As ever, Prince Mahidol did
much more than was required in attending his
patients, taking care of needy patients at all
hours of the day and night, and even, according
to records, donating his own blood for them
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Finally,
Prince Mahidol was able to accomplish, through his
determination and effort, an affirmation of the
noble principle of dignity and worthiness of
everyone as human being, irrespective of social
origin, property, birth or other status.
During
the last days of his life and still continuing to
fulfill his noble and zealous mission, Prince
Mahidol took temporary leave to Bangkok in order
to attend the funeral of a senior member of the
Royal Family. He never returned. He had been
suffering from a severe kidney disease, for which
he was once hospitalized while at Harvard, and
refraining from disclosing to his family that he
only had at most a year to live. The nation
mourned a great man's death at a young age of 37
years, 8 months, and 23 days.
The
resounding message affirming the dignity and the
value of life, so forcefully translated into
action by Prince Mahidol, was enunciated in 1948
with the United Nations Universal Declaration of
Human Rights.
His
teaching of the spirit of brotherhood towards all
human beings without discrimination of any kind is
well-known. Many of his exhortations and
pronouncements given to his medical students have
been highly respected for their wisdom and their
eternal moral values. For instance:
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"I
do not wish you to be only a doctor, but I
also want you to be a human being"
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"Real
success exists not in learning but in its
application for the benefit of mankind."
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Prince
Mahidol's humanistic attitude and idea permeated
the lives of his consort, Her Royal Highness the
Princess Mother, his eldest daughter, Her Royal
Highness Princess Galyani Vadhana Krom Luang
Naradhiwas Rajanagarindra, his first son, His
Majesty King Ananda Mahidol, and his youngest son,
His Majesty the King as well as all members of His
Majesty's family, by motivating each and all of
them alike to be selfless, acting on the principle
that each of us, without discrimination, has human
dignity and worth, ardently devoted to the
betterment of health, happiness, and well-being of
the sick, the poor, and the deprived. In the words
of Professor A.G. Ellis, a former Dean of Siriraj
Medical School, Prince Mahidol "was born
to make the world a better place." |
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