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HANNAH
JESSIE HANKIN-HARDY, IN MEDICAL AND HUMANITARIAN MISSION IN SERBIA DURING
THE GREAT WAR
Slavica Popović-Filipović |
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Free
topics
ArchOncol 2010, 18(4)136-9 |
The Studenica Monastery, built
in 1186 A.D., the royal mausoleum of the Nemanjic Dynasty, is considered
the forerunner of the Serbian statehood and conscience because in it the
first school and hospital were established. It is also where the first book
was written in Serbian language. Studenica, as the cradle of the Serbian
medicine, produced – and through the following eight centuries, nurtured
many educators and iconic figures of the Serbian cultural tradition. Among
them was St. Sava, the first Serbian Archbishop, whose name is also borne
by one of the highest Serbian civilian orders, which is awarded for extreme
dedication and philanthropy in Serbia and worldwide. This here is an attempt
to preserve the memory of the philanthropist Hannah Henkin Hardy, who was
also personally awarded one of these Serbian orders. Hannah Henkin Hardy
(1886-1944) was born in Worchester, U.K., completed a medical school in
Melbourne, Australia, and arrived in Serbia in January 1915 together with
the first Scottish Women’s Hospitals. In Kragujevac, together with the Serbian
physicians, and the “Kolo srpskih sestara,” Mrs. Hardy established the League
of Serbian Women to jointly fight the great typhus epidemic. She also founded
the out-patients ambulances for the poor in Kragujevac, as well as the soup
kitchens, and took part in various humanitarian activities. Mrs. Hardy and
her husband Samuel Hardy, together with some other philanthropists, repaired
the war-damaged Church of St. George in Topola. She joined the Serbian refugees
in their escape from the invading enemy forces to the Adriatic Coast through
the dangerous snowbound mountains of Albania and Montenegro. She remembered the suffering of the Serbian people and the dedicated humanitarian activities of the Serbian medical corps and foreign medical missions for the rest of her life. Mrs. and Mr. Hardy dedicated their lives to philanthropy and humanitarian work, helping small and suffering peoples and nations. |
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Key words: Famous Persons; History of Medicine; History, 20th Century; World War I; Physicians; Medical Missions, Official; Serbia Non MeSH Hannah Hankin-Hardy | ||
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©
Oncology Institute of Vojvodina, Last updated
February 16, 2011
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