From Publishers Weekly
Despite having all the elements of an absorbing drama—life and death in exotic locales, heroic doctors working in the shadow of the Khmer Rouge, corrupt officials and impoverished citizens—this intermittently atmospheric memoir never truly captivates. Heinzl, a Canadian physician who founded his country's chapter of Médecins Sans Frontières, starts his account with the experience that catalyzed his interest in the international humanitarian organization: in 1985, he abandoned a medical school elective in Kenya to see the war in Uganda. Jumping ahead six years, the disjointed narrative stitches together Heinzl's recollections of his first posting at a rudimentary hospital in war-ravaged Sisophon, Cambodia; his frustration with MSF politics and bureaucracy, and experiences as a bar rang or white foreigner. But in this dispassionate account, Heinzl never transcends his outsider status, nor does he seem to try. One of his biggest problems is how to spend his relative wealth—$50 per month, which brings longed-for luxuries like Cuban cigars all the way from Amsterdam. Among the most vivid scenes are Heinzl's early visit to Angkor Wat and his stay, against MSF policy, at a five-star hotel in Phnom Penh shortly before leaving Cambodia. When he burns out after six months, he doesn't seem to have earned his escape. Instead, Heinzl comes off as an intrepid traveler whose relief work is less a calling than a ticket to adventure. (Feb.)
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Review
From Winnipeg Free Press:This non-fiction entry is an alluring chronicle of one young doctor's experience as a member of a Doctors Without Borders (Médecins Sans Frontières) team assigned to the impoverished village of Sisophon, Cambodia, during the aftermath of the Khmer Rouge civil war in the early 1990s.This is not the typical memoir of heroic doctors braving war zones to save lives. Ontario-based Richard Heinzl, founder of the Canadian chapter of Doctors Without Borders, takes the reader past the expected sphere of the crisis in Humanitarian Aid.He provides an honest and personal assessment of the challenges and professional obstacles that confronted him in Cambodia and within Doctors Without Borders.Heinzl's coming-of-age story begins in Uganda in 1985. As though he were scripting an international movie drama, Heinzl shares the sense of being a fish out of water as he walks "into a foreign country in plain view, a 22-year-old Medical Student from the other side of the world on elective in Africa."So begins Heinzl's journey of self-discovery. He is looking for a taxi to take him from a Kenya-Uganda border crossing near Tororo along the Jinja-Kampala highway to work at Mulago Hospital with Liz and Don Hillman, Canadian pediatricians running a program called the Child Health and Maternity Program (CHAMP).The story is compelling. Heinzl provides exceptional details of how he confronted his self-doubt as a newly trained doctor questioning his intent and commitment to Humanitarian Aid. He successfully captures his inner turmoil through his dialogue with his mentors, colleagues and friends. The reader becomes a true witness to Heinzl's experience.The thread that ties his account together from Uganda, back to McMaster University in Hamilton and on to the Caribbean, Amsterdam and finally Cambodia in 1991 is Heinzl's exceptional ability to shine a light of all who affected him along the way.It is as if you are sitting in very comfortable chair by a fire in the dead of winter listening to him share his exciting and life changing experiences.You come to know Heinzl and those connected to him, be it his mentor Dr. Jim Anderson, one of the professors at McMaster medical school in the 1980s who successfully trained doctors by the Socratic method, or his experienced, laid-back Dutch medical partner, Rob Overtoom, who knew what to do and how to get it done in Cambodia.Heinzl captures that sense of joy that comes when one goes beyond merely sharing one's knowledge to sharing one's self with the people in the Cambodian community that he briefly called home.His writing enables you to feel the sweat running down his body as he shares the joy of the down time with like-minded companions drinking imported beer over ice after a long day in the hospital.The reader also learns of the frustration associated with establishing the Canadian chapter of Doctors Without Borders. Heinzl makes sure the reader realizes that politics is evident in all forms of human interaction including respected Humanitarian Aid organizations.The book will not only be enjoyed by those interested in understanding the crisis of Humanitarian Aid agencies around the world but also by those seeking an excellent coming-of-age memoir by a doctor who should consider a second calling as an author.Doug Edmond is a Winnipeg educator who recently volunteered for Habitat for Humanity in New Zealand.© 2008 Winnipeg Free Press. All Rights Reserved.
From the Inside Flap
It is while in Uganda as a young and idealistic Medical Student that
Richard Heinzl Hears his true calling: to set up a chapter of Doctors Without Borders in his native Canada.As a prerequisite to fulfilling his Médecins Sans Frontières dream, Heinzl is sent to a war-ravaged town in Cambodia to work for a year in the field in order to earn his wings with the organization.
Cambodia Calling is this young doctor’s story of setback and accomplishment in the exotic splendor of a remote and dangerous part of the world.Compelling and visceral,
Cambodia Calling offers a rare insight into the work and lives of MSF in the field. The author brings to life the isolated and impoverished village of Sisophon, where he works with the locals to save lives in the aftermath of the Khmer Rouge civil war. Heinzl’s experiences are peopled with a fascinating array of characters, many of them survivors of a brutal regime, who bring powerful insights to bear on war, madness and mortality. During his time in Cambodia, Heinzl bonds with the villagers, all the while facing obstacles of war the harsh reality of treating those who cannot be healed.Heinzl’s year in Cambodia is a vehicle for self-discovery too. The author begins to shed his idealism for a new and deeper understanding of himself and humanity in an uncertain time and place, where the powerful beauty of the tropics and the sometimes humorous and often poignant moments clash with the dehumanizing events engendered by war.
About the Author
Richard Heinzl is a medical doctor from Hamilton, Ontario, and is the founder of Doctors Without Borders / Médicins Sans Frontières in Canada. He studied at the University of Toronto, McMaster University, Harvard University, and the University of Oxford. His travels and work have taken him to over 70 countries, and he is the recipient of numerous awards and honors, including a citation from the Government of Cambodia and an honorary doctorate from his alma mater, McMaster University. He travels widely, speaking about his adventures in the field to enthusiastic audience at universities and organizations. He lives in Oakville, Ontario, with his wife and two sons.