The Atlanta - Tbilisi Healthcare Partnership |
|||||
|
May 2000
|
|
|
In Casablanca, everybody went to Rick's. In Tbilisi, they go to Betsy's
Place. |
|
|
March 2000
|
|
|
"Ambassador Yalowitz, Governor, ladies and gentlemen.....
when I came into this center today I smelled a smell I have
never before smelled in Georgia--new paint. This Women and
Children's center is blessed by having the support of the
government of Kutaisi and the US, working with AIHA,
all of whom have participated in establishing it.
Life has priorities, and one must choose
them. It is often useful to see what God has chosen for his
priorities, in deciding those for one's own life. God has made
it clear that reproduction--survival of the species--is amongst
his highest priorities. One has only to look around at the myriad
of wonderful ways in which reproduction occurs in nature to
see that God must have spent six out of the seven days of
creation thinking about reproduction."
More
|
|
|
December 1999
|
|
|
To a meeting at the Metechi Hotel called by US AID to discuss ideas
for funding the next three years..... The question was: if you had only
one thing to do for Georgia, what would it be? The answers were predictable:
the rule of law; human rights; education; macroeconomics. I said there
was an old house with a well a few hundred yards away. Near the bottom
of the well was a tunnel that reached a small room under the house.
In the room, during the early 1900s, was a hand-operated printing press
upon which the communists had printed the propaganda supporting the
revolution I asked: what would the communists in 1900 have said in answer
to the question 'what do you want?' The answer: a printing press and
paper. My answer to the question now was simple: electricity. With electricity
one can heat homes, feed hungry bellies, teach children, print informative
materials about the rule of law and macroeconomics, provide working
hospitals, etc......More |
|
|
May 1999
|
|
|
This is my fifteenth trip to Tbilisi. I approach them now with as much
enthusiasm and pleasurable anticipation tinged with a hint of mystery
as I did with the first one in August, 1992. My two planets now are
Atlanta and Tbilisi. I use the word 'planet' advisedly, because they
are so different. As a youngster of ten or so my favorite book was The
Red Planet by Edgar Rice Burroughs. He wrote several science fiction
books, in addition to his multiple Tarzan books. If I remember correctly,
the hero was John Carter. One night as he was gazing at Mars (= red
planet) something happened and he was forthwith transported there. The
books are about his adventures on Mars, and I remember even now my fantasies
of having another planet I could go to. The Republic of Georgia is exactly
that to me, a few years beyond age ten. More
|
|
|
December 1998
|
|
|
At breakfast at Betsy's met Mike Calhoun, who is here for a couple
of months and doing something about agriculture. Probably fifties, avuncular
sort. The kind of treasure one encounters at the table in Betsy's Hotel.
He told me in Eastern Georgia, near the coast and up in the mountains,
there is a town Tchalka. A huge bowl of 50,000 acres with black, rich
soil that is fluffy--like butter. Home of the Tchalka potato. The villages
are perched around the periphery, so as not to waste any of the precious
soil .....He said Georgia's latitude is the same as the middle of Iowa,
somewhere around 42 degrees...... This present time--December--is the
'rain of the latter days' in the Bible--viz., the increase in rain that
comes at the end of the year.....In Soviet times there were two million
acres of wheat cultivated in Georgia. Mike says Georgia has the most
agricultural potential of any place he has seen outside the United States.....More
|
|
|
October 1998
|
|
|
Levan came and we had a 7 a.m. Turkish bath. I was rubbed painfully by a sponge of sorts ('mekise') that scraped off the first layer of the epidermis. I quote from Alexander Dumas' visit to the Turkish baths of Tbilisi in the last century: '.....we followed our guide to the private rooms beyond. The first
was |
|
|
June 1998
|
|
|
To the Children's Hospital to consult on a patient. I have remarked
before how this is inevitable each visit, and so difficult. The patients
are usually extremely ill, and the diagnostic data is not present......This
was a 17 year old law student who had been found comatose in his bedroom
by his parents at 9 a.m., after they had a normal evening with him the
night before, seeing him last at midnight. He lived with them. Taken
to a hospital, where aspiration pneumonia had been diagnosed, and his
lungs washed out with some unknown and probably ungodly chemical. This
is a frequent practice amongst Soviet Union emergency medicine physicians.
He was then brought to the Children's Hospital and placed in intensive
care. More |
|
|
October 1997
|
|
| I got a shoeshine from a sidewalk vendor..... I have a thing about shoe shines. I am constantly on the lookout for masters of the profession. The man today I rank amongst the three best. Oscar was the first. When I was in the Vietnam war I lived in a compound in Angeles City, near Clark Air Base in the Philippines. Four of us rented a house, complete with two live-in maids and Oscar, the house boy. We paid $100 a month for everything. I would get up at 5:30 a.m. to find fresh bread procured that morning from the bakery man who made a daily 4 a.m. circuit. Home in the afternoon and Scotch with ice waiting. The best quality Scotch, at $2.15 a fifth. And Oscar. Every night I put out my shoes and opened my bedroom door the next morning to be blinded by the shoes. More | |
|
April 1997
|
|
|
On the way to Gori we passed by y.......momWame, a castle the Georgians defended against the Persians in the fourteenth century or so. The name is an obscenity..... The tale is the Persians surrounded the castle, thinking to drive the Georgians out by cutting off their water and food supplies. Unbeknownst to the Persians, there was a tunnel which ran some distance to a river, so the Georgians had no problems with water or food. Each day at sundown, the Georgians would go to the parapets of the castle and shout y.....momWame! which is a command to perform a certain obscene act. ......Ksani is the official name. More |
|
|
December 1996
|
|
|
Opening of the National Information Learning Centre "President Shevardnadze, Minister Jorbenadze, Ambassador Courtney,
ladies and gentlemen. These few rooms in this old building began as
a dream three years ago. .....The capital of the new age we are entering
is information. Information is to our age what gold, diamonds and oil
were to previous generations. Georgia is uniquely suited to take full
advantage of this new wealth. Georgians are highly intelligent and intensely
motivated. The creation of Gelati by King David is a testament to their
respect and love of education....... Today we stand in a few rooms in
an old building. But these few rooms in this old building contain something
more precious than all the gold and silver and jewels of Aladdin. They
contain the open sesame to the world of information." More
|
|
|
April 1996
|
|
|
I got off the plane in Moscow, returning home from Tbilisi. Raining.
Dreary. Cold. Sheremetyevo-1 airport. Dirty, old, uninviting. I waited
patiently in line for customs. The woman looked at length at my papers,
then called a guard. They gestured at my visa. A smattering of English.
I rapidly got the message I was being put on a bus to Sheremetyevo-2
and was to be deported to the U.S. on the next flight. They kept pointing
to my Russian visa. They sat me down and went, I could tell, to make
arrangements for my immediate departure from the airport, without picking
up luggage, without even being allowed to see my friend who was waiting
for me outside. I gestured, plead, did everything I could.....More |
|
|
September 1995
|
|
|
A visit to the National Medical Library. The visit carved images in
my brain that are probably ineradicable. First of all, over one million
books. Secondly, they are on the floors, on staircases, piled high on
desks, windows, every conceivable place. Thirdly, they all look to have
been printed around the time of Gutenberg. I took a picture of the chief
financial officer sitting with her abacus. I will send this to the National
Library of Medicine......More |
|
|
May 1995
|
|
|
After breakfast we went down into Tbilisi. There was a flat tire, and
I told Irina and Shio about my father's recollection of when he was
an eighteen-year-old young man growing up on the farm, and spending
his weekends in the small town of Washington, Ga. That was around 1915,
when cars were just becoming popular, and his family had one. The inner
tubes were balloon tubes, and were always getting a puncture and going
flat. My father said he and his brothers spent their weekends |
|
|
December 1994
|
|
|
I awakened to snow and a penetrating cold. When I was here in February my feet suffered the most, so this time I brought fleece-lined boots, thin socks to put on followed by thick ones. My feet stayed warm all day, and I discovered if they stay warm so does the rest of me. When I dressed for the day I carefully took a small pocket flashlight with me: a necessity when one goes to a completely dark bathroom without electricity. More |
|
|
June 1994
|
|
|
The hospital was only a few miles from the border. There were bullet holes everywhere, and I was told the hospital had been terrorized repeatedly. The minister of health and I visited most of the patients. I saw an old man whose leg clearly had osteomyelitis, and who had been there two months. He told me he and his son had been going back to their house to get some belongings when a mine went off under them, killing the son and injuring the old man. The old man buried his son, then crawled to the hospital. More |
|
|
February 1994
|
|
|
Have you ever tried to explain 'In Kind' contributions to citizens of the former Soviet Union? They have absolutely no concept, and in spite of every explanation I could come up with, I felt they ended up feeling that somebody, somewhere (they suspect Archil) was using the money for their own personal benefit. More |
|
|
July 1993
|
|
|
At night we went to dinner at the head of preventive medicine. The places they live are interesting: outside they are cold, forbidding, undecorated buildings that are not unlike our slum housing projects. The stairways are unlit, cement. But open the iron or steel door that barricades each one of them, and inside is a warm large lovely apartment with awesome antique furniture, many pictures and Persian rugs, and every one has inlaid parquet floors. More |
|
|
August 1992
|
|
|
At about 6 p.m. we went to one of the domestic airports (Vnukovo Airport)
for an Aeroflot flight of about two and one-half hours to Tbilisi. ......
We were taken out to the plane, a three-engine jet that resembles a
737. There were 300 seats on the plane; there were about 310 people
and a dog who got on. .... a cabin that approached 109°...... Seat
belts are never used .....More |
|
| Summary
of Accomplishments | Summary
of Future Plans |
| Site Contents
| Contact |
Get
Adobe Acrobat Reader |
| Emory University | Emory
University School of Medicine |
Department of Medicine |
| Morehouse School of Medicine
| Grady Healthsystem
| Emory Grady
Partnership |
| Georgia
State University | Georgia
Institute of Technology |