Edna Adan Ismail had wanted to build a hospital since she
was 11 years old. Today, her facility in Hargeisa saves
women's lives every day--and has reduced the maternal
mortality rate by one-fourth.
As an 11-year-old growing up in Somaliland, then a
British protectorate, Edna Adan Ismail had a powerful dream.
“I wanted to build a hospital,” she recalls. “One that my
father would like.” Edna’s dad was a widely beloved but
overworked doctor in a poorly equipped government hospital
with little medicine, and she lent a hand when she could.
“My playground was the hospital,” she says, “and my father
was my hero. I’d cut up sheets for bandages, wash the
forceps. I wished I knew more to be able to help him out.”
It took more than half a century,
but her dream has come gloriously true. The Edna Adan
University Hospital in Hargeisa has just celebrated its
eighth birthday–a 50-bed facility that is the largest
privately built hospital in Somaliland. And it wasn’t just
Ismail’s money that made it happen. “Every brick that was
laid, every nail that was pounded, I was there,” she says
proudly. “I sold everything I had, recycled my whole life. I
am just a crazy old lady!”
Hardly. Despite her own privileged circumstances, young
Edna faced the same discrimination that kept the entire
region’s women down: no schools for girls. “It wasn’t right
to teach a girl,” she said, explaining the tradition. “They
thought nothing good would come of it. Who would ever want
to marry a girl who read and wrote?” So the child who was so
taken with medicine–“I saw my first birth and my first death
before I was a teen. I felt I’d been given a small peephole
into what the world looked like”–was sent away to school,
and ultimately became the first female in her country to win
a scholarship to England. There she studied nursing and
midwifery, and came back home in 1961 as the first qualified
Somali nurse-midwife. That’s the first ever
Once again she had to confront centuries of bias against
girls. "I would ask them to come help me register the
patients, and I’d have to get permission from their fathers.
They’d say, ‘I don’t want my girl to work in a hospital and
catch diseases.’ Or, ‘Will she be working with men?’”
Slowly, Ismail prevailed.
Even as her life expanded into the
public realm – her husband became Somaliland’s prime
minister–she continued to work in another hospital, proudly
donning her uniform to teach and to deliver babies. “I was
teaching the young women how to talk to patients, to
pregnant women, to respect human rights and dignity.”
Revolution
interrupted her work, and she spent several decades with the
United Nations. By the time she returned to Somaliland in
1997 and started building the hospital, she was so well
respected, she joined the new government, ultimately
becoming Foreign Minister. Today, she says with confidence,
“I am my own minister.” But she continues to work for her
people, training, in addition to nurse-midwives, lab
technicians and the first pharmacists in her country. “The
government isn’t doing it,” she tells me. “The biggest gift
I want to leave behind is not a building, but the skills I
leave with the women. I want to train 1,000 midwives.”
Her progress so far is astounding. Since the hospital
opened, they have delivered more than 9,500 women and lost
only 39. “That’s 39 too many,” she laments, nonetheless
delighted that they have reduced the maternal mortality rate
by one-fourth. In 1988, the last time a study was done,
there were 160 deaths per 10,000 births in Somaliland,
making it the third worst in the world. “Women are dying of
complications nobody is picking up,” she explains. “Because
nobody is there to support them, care for them, or deliver
them. They are getting infected, torn apart. No woman should
die of childbirth, because modern obstetrics has ways to
save them.” The challenge: “ignorance, poverty, and harmful
traditions.”
Those are also the culprits in her
other lifelong cause: ending the practice now called Female
Genital Mutilation. When she started speaking out–to the
embarrassment of her husband–it was simply Female
Circumcision. “No one would talk about it then. I was the
first Somali woman to pick up a microphone.” And despite all
the publicity in recent years she says, “We have not cracked
the surface of it. I am giving out a document at the
conference showing a new survey of 4.000 women. Of them, 97
percent, shamefully, had been cut. After 34 years of
campaigning. We’re nowhere near winning that battle.”
But Edna Adan Ismail takes comfort that now, “we have the
whole world talking about it, it’s out of the closet.” And
she’s working on a new project, a picture book in the Somali
language to illustrate the pros and cons (with emphasis on
the cons) of the practice.
“It will be one more gun that we haven’t used before,”
she announces with confidence.
Crazy old lady, indeed.
Lynn Sherr is a former ABC
News correspondent, author of
Failure Is Impossible: Susan B.
Anthony in Her Own Words
and
Tall Blondes,
a book about giraffes. She is also co-editor of
Peter Jennings: A Reporter's Life.
Her most recent book, a memoir—Outside
the Box: My Unscripted Life of Love, Loss and Television
News—is out in
paperback.
THE DAILY BEAST
by
Lynn Sherr