It was no easy task writing this book on Paul Farmer鈥檚 goodness.
Farmer is the man who, in the early 1980s, before beginning his studies at Harvard Medical School, started doing clinic work in impoverished Haiti, focusing on tuberculosis and AIDS. Since then, and seemingly without sleep, he has expanded his good deeds around the world.
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Tracy Kidder, in writing about Farmer, worried that people might look upon the story as a kind of Hallmark card that was too good to be true.
On top of that, 鈥淗e forces us to think about problems we鈥檇 rather not think about,鈥 like the poor state of health care in Haiti, one of the poorest nations in the world.
Kidder wrote the book anyway, publishing it in 2003. Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer, A Man Who Would Cure the World would become a New York Times best-seller, and 不良研究所 selected it as the Campus Community Book Project for 2008. The project finished up last week with the author鈥檚 visit to campus for a forum, a writing workshop and a formal address.
In his evening address Dec. 1, which drew nearly 1,300 people to the Mondavi Center鈥檚 Jackson Hall, Kidder told how six years elapsed between the time of his and Farmer鈥檚 first meeting and when Kidder started his book in earnest.
鈥淚 just knew that if I started to follow this guy around, he鈥檇 disturb my peace of mind鈥攁nd he did.鈥
Kidder joined Farmer on Haiti鈥檚 central plateau, and traveled with him to such places as Moscow鈥檚 Central Prison and the Carabayllo slum on the outskirts of Lima, Peru. 鈥淗e showed me more reasons for despair than I鈥檇 ever imagined,鈥 Kidder said.
And yet, 鈥渋t was exhilarating to see what a small group of people could do,鈥 Kidder said, as they confronted great pandemics that are destroying whole societies.
In the end, Kidder said, he became sold on Farmer鈥檚 organization, Partners in Health, and today serves as a fund-raiser when asked. He noted his participation in a recent auction in Boston, where someone paid $120,000 to accompany Farmer on a trip to Haiti, whereas Kidder said he was a 鈥渃heap date鈥 by comparison: auctioned for $35,000 to a book group.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a shameless attempt to promote a vision I believe to be true,鈥 he said.
But make no mistake, Kidder said. He spent days and weeks at a time with Farmer, working hard to find flaws in his character and mission, even joining him on an 11-hour trek to make a house call, or, in Farmer鈥檚 case, a 鈥渉ut call.鈥
Then, in writing his book, Kidder inserted himself into his story more than he normally would, to show how he had acted as 鈥渁 foil to my improbable main character.鈥
What he found, Kidder said, was a man who 鈥渄eep down, had discovered what he really liked to do, and that is being a doctor.鈥
He described Farmer as having an 鈥渋ncredible鈥 knowledge of infectious diseases. And while books may have been helpful during medical school, he does not rely on them now. 鈥淗e remembers his patients,鈥 Kidder said, their circumstances and diagnoses and treatments in painstaking detail.
He showed before-and-after photos of some of those patients. First there was Alcante, a Haitian boy who looked to be nothing more than skin and bones, near death from TB at the age of 11.
Conventional wisdom said the boy could not be saved, Kidder said. But, he added, 鈥淔armer was born with a constitutional aversion to conventional wisdom.鈥 So he started Alcante on an inexpensive regimen of medicine.
It worked, and 鈥渉ere鈥檚 the proof,鈥 Kidder said as he showed a second photo of Alcante, a smiling picture of health.
Partners in Health not only saved Alcante, but provided his family with a better home鈥攕till a hut, but one with a concrete slab instead of dirt for a floor, and a tin roof.
鈥淭his is what Haitian peasants have been asking for鈥攁 life of dignified poverty,鈥 Kidder said.
Next came a photo of a Haitian man suffering from TB and AIDS, which Kidder said is 鈥渦nfortunately horrifyingly common in the world today.鈥
Partners in Health treats both, relying on a cadre of community health workers from the native population to visit patients daily to ensure they are taking their medicines.
鈥淎nd they work,鈥 Kidder said, once again declaring, 鈥淗ere鈥檚 the proof,鈥 as he showed a picture of the Haitian man looking happy and healthy.
Julie Jacobs, a retired physician from Fairfield, came to Kidder鈥檚 speech as an admirer of his writing, especially his insight into ordinary people.
But Farmer, she said, is no ordinary person. Jacobs said she worked in migrant labor camps, 鈥渁nd it wrings your heart out in a couple of days.鈥
Farmer, she said, 鈥渉as been doing it for 30 years.鈥
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Dave Jones, Dateline, 530-752-6556, dljones@ucdavis.edu