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Dr. Jack Preger

Dr. Jack Preger
(En Français)

Jack Preger was born on the 25th of July 1930 in Manchester, UK and was brought up in an orthodox Jewish family. In 1950, he began studying at St-Edmont Hall, Oxford University, after a stay in a kibboutz. He obtained a degree in economy and political science. As a young adult Preger converted to Catholicism. In 1957, he got married and bought a farm in the countryside. He and his wife had one son, Alun, in 1960. In 1964, when cultivating his fields, Jack Preger felt the urge to study medicine and wanted to become medical doctor. In 1965, he was admitted in the Royal Surgery College in Dublin at the age of 35. To finance his studies, he sold his farm. Two years later, he was divorced from his wife.

In 1972, Jack Preger was listening to the radio and heard an announcement calling medical doctors to leave on a mission to Bangladesh. Having recently completed his medical training, Dr. Jack Preger soon found himself on board a plane heading for Dhaka. He worked with a local non-government organization in a refugee camp. Five years later, he was expelled after exposing a government-masterminded racket involving the illegal export of babies for adoption. Upon returning home, Dr. Preger remarried and had a daughter, Anna.

In 1979, undeterred, Dr. Preger set off again to begin his now legendary work in Calcutta. He reached Calcutta and requested a work permit which did not come. While he awaited his permit, he worked under the bridge of Howrah and in the city's railway stations. The following year, Dr. Preger distributed medicine and registered patients on record cards in Middleton Row, in a room belonging to the presbytery Saint-Thomas. Doctor Preger was then put on notice that he did not have the right to examine patients anymore. Because of the dire state of health care in Calcultta at the time, and still waiting for his work permit, Dr. Preger decided to continue practicing medicine without a licence. As soon as the Saint-Thomas presbytery found out that he did not have a license, he was asked to leave.

Later on, Dr. Preger organized a silent public demonstration to protest the increasing number of missing children in Bangladesh. As a result, he was served a notice of expulsion from India. After many attempts and a stay in prison, the suit between him and the government started. It lasted 10 years, during which he was authorized not to leave India. This "allowed" him to continue his medical work on the sidewalks of Calcutta. Finally, in 1990 the suit ended with a withdrawal of the case. By 1991, The Association of Indian Rights "Calcutta-Rescue" was registered, and Doctor Preger was granted a resident's permit of India.

Today, still having no personal authorization to practice medicine, Dr. Preger is tolerated as long as he keeps silent. On a stretch of pavement measuring 2 m x 30 m, he operates a very unique type of medical clinic. His patients are destitutes and dispossessed, those who live and die on the streets. Yet, his clinic has survived for over a decade, despite these conditions and official disapproval.

In 1993, for his continued perseverance and incredible selflessness, Dr. Preger was named a Member of the British Empire (M.B.E.), by the Queen.

Other Links of interest

Calcutta Rescue

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