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Shanta
Bhawan
Palace
of Peace
By Ivan Sada
Some believe it was divine intervention, and perhaps it was, because
Nepal only began opening its doors to the foreign world and to
the world of scientific medicine in the middle of the last century.
It was a time when King Tribhuvan took up the task of leading
the nation trapped in medieval manners and ways toward a prosperous
future. It was 1951, after the rule of the Rana regime had come
to an end, and the King promised that his government would do
away with the country’s outmoded systems and strive for
a new Nepal. Though the actual opening of the Shanta Bhawan Hospital
did not occur until 1956, its coming began earlier, with the political
and philosophical changes for the better that were brewing in
‘Nepal’, as the Kathmandu valley was often called
in those days. Strangely enough, it began with a request by a
missionary working in India to study birds in Nepal.
That missionary was the American Robert Fleming, an avid ornithologist
who taught science at Woodstock School in northern India. He had
a PhD degree in education, but collecting birds consumed much
of his and his family’s vacation time. Curious about the
feathered species that existed in India’s closed and isolated
neighbor, Nepal, ‘ Dr Bob’, as he was known, requested
permission and was surprised when the Nepal government approved
his proposed birding trip into the Nepal hills. At the end of
October 1949, Fleming’s bird expedition team left on a three
month trek to Tansen in central Nepal. The party returned with
720 bird specimens and also with an awareness of the vast medical
needs of the country. Almost 18 months after the expedition, during
the winter of 1951-52, a second trip was approved. This time,
two medical doctors came along: Dr Bethel Fleming and Dr Carl
Friedericks.
During the second tour a temporary clinic was set up at Tansen
using medications and equipment that
Dr Bethel and Dr Carl had personally bought with them. In the
six weeks that it was open, they treated more than 2000 patients.
The team was then approached by local leaders who requested them
to open a permanent hospital. After their return to India, the
Flemings and the Friedericks thought and prayed about this proposition
and concluded that they were, indeed, being called to establish
medical work in Nepal. In February 1952 Bob and Bethel Fleming,
Carl Friedericks and Dr Moffatt wrote a letter to His Majesty’s
Government (which had recently replaced the Rana regime) offering
to open a hospital in Tansen. They also reported these events
to their respective mission boards back in the USA.
Before starting anything, however, the Friedericks went on furlough
to America and the Flemings returned to Nepal again to visit friends
in Kathmandu. On this trip, Dr Bethel examined the meager health
care
facilities in the valley and approached the Health Ministry officials
with an offer of help. As a response to the proposal to open a
hospital in Tansen still had not materialized, Bob sent a letter
restating the original offer, but with an added a proposal to
establish maternity and child welfare clinics around the Kathmandu
valley. With the assistance of a leading Nepali physician, Dr
J. S. Malla, they convinced officials to accept the medical grant.
In a letter dated May 18, 1953, signed by K.A. Dikshit, Assistant
Secretary of Foreign Affairs, the
missionaries were at last granted permission to establish the
Tansen hospital as well as five maternity and child health clinics
in the Kathmandu valley. The first clinic was established in Bhatgaon
(Bhaktapur) in 1954 and the next month saw another in an unused
wing of the government Cholera Hospital in Teku. The Prime Minister,
Matrika Prasad Koirala, officiated at the inauguration. Clinics
in the nearby villages of Gokarna, Kirtipur, Banepa, Thimi, Sangu
and Bungmati villages were set up next. Meanwhile, the Friedericks
went to Tansen to begin planning for the hospital there. From
the initial stage the Flemings and Friedericks shared a vision
of establishing a united, interdenominational mission organization
to coordinate the work in Nepal. This became a reality in March
1954, when eight missions joined together to form the United Mission
to Nepal (UMN), which directed the work from then onward.
Though the Flemings were unexpectedly absent for almost two years
on furlough, the clinics in Kathmandu functioned under a series
of doctors and nurses who came to Nepal on loan from medical missions
in India. The 15 bed Cholera Hospital soon evolved into a maternity
hospital, but faced several difficulties. A report noted that
sharing the small building with cholera patients made unhealthy
companions for maternity work and that the hospital was being
confronted by a host of non-maternity patients. In addition, the
staff had trouble finding housing conveniently nearby and they
described the work as a “wonderful chaos with complete dependence
on God”. Dr Bethel had known of these difficulties prior
to leaving on furlough and had asked the UMN’s Executive
Secretary, Ernest Oliver, to keep an eye out for better accommodations.
In late 1955 Oliver learned of the availability of a medium sized
Rana palace called Shanta Bhawan, ‘Palace of Peace’,
south of the Bagmati River in Lalitpur District. The 60 room building
offered space for wards, out-patient clinics, laboratory, operating
rooms and staff housing. With the fledgling mission eager to expand
its medical work, the UMN’s Business Manager, Fran Swenson,
and Laboratory Technician, Daftan Sada, negotiated to lease the
white stucco palace. The government indirectly sanctioned this
new development by permitting Dr Edgar Miller, an Internist, and
his wife Dr Elizabeth Miller, a Gynecologist, to assist in the
work. The Millers were convinced by the Flemings to set aside
their long established medical practices in America to join the
new adventure in Nepal under the UMN banner. They found a church
congregation in the state of Illinois to provide an annual grant
of $2,500 to cover the rent on the palace-turned-hospital, then
they set out on the two month sea voyage to India, then on to
Nepal overland to join the new venture.
In January 1956 medical staff and equipment were moved out of
the Cholera Hospital into Shanta Bhawan. The building was named
for its owner, General Shanta Shamsher Jang Bahadur Rana. This
new facility, the ‘Palace of Peace, was considered a fitting
place for Christian work and medical care. In a report to the
UMN Executive Committee, Ernest Oliver expressed his joy and hope
for the new hospital site. “I wish you could all see Shanta
Bhawan. I feel when God saw the Rana prince building the mansion;
he knew that he would acquire it later for a hospital where his
dear Son might be glorified.”
The décor of the new hospital was quite novel when the
UMN first moved in. Large chandeliers, European parlor furniture,
marble floors and life-size portraits of Rana family members were
part of the package. More typical hospital furnishing gradually
replaced these as services expanded into the many rooms of the
palace. The orchestra balcony became the women’s surgical
ward and later was converted to orthopedic storage. The room with
hunting murals and trophies was replaced by the X-Ray
Department. One room with a large tiled bathroom, quite exceptional
for Nepal in those days, was converted for use by VIP and foreign
patients. The heavy overhead chandeliers were removed because
of apprehensive patients. The former card game cottage was converted
into a quaint guesthouse. And the concubines’ residences
were converted into staff quarters. This process was described
in a
report by Bob Fleming 15 months after Shanta Bhawan opened.
“Our effort in Kathmandu has been to set up a model hospital”,
Fleming wrote. “A year ago we already had a delivery room,
private maternity rooms, a laboratory and a ward for women. The
Flemings and Millers arrived in April 1956 bringing a great deal
of equipment. We soon opened a second women’s ward and a
ward for men, set aside rooms for prayer, library, office, private
rooms, out-patient clinic and drug rooms, all for their specific
purposes. We remodeled an annex, now called Bethlehem as a residence
for nurses while male staff live in a neighboring house. In March
1957, the x-ray was installed and now the children’s ward
is almost complete. All these things we have had to do to change
a palace into a hospital.”
Revamping the Rana palace turned out to be an unending job over
the years. As early as 1962 it gave rise to thoughts of building
an entirely new hospital; but more important than the early remodeling
efforts was the confidence and respect the hospital gained among
the people of Nepal. Dr Bethel and Drs Edgar and Elizabeth Miller
dedicated themselves to caring for patients suffering from tuberculosis,
abdominal cysts, infections, malnutrition and other severe ailments.
King Mahendra called upon
Dr Edgar Miller as his personal doctor, and the Prime Minister
and cabinet members, along with embassy officials, registered
their approval of the hospital. Princess Princep Shah used to
volunteer at the hospital, wheeling a trolley of books and other
items around the patient wards. Within a few years Shanta Bhawan
Hospital had, indeed, won approval from the needy people of Nepal.
The local business
community and the growing foreign community in the capital, the
staff and families of the various embassies and aid agencies,
looked to it for their medical care. Besides the needy, who were
provided “charitable concessions” which frequently
amounted to covering the entire bill, the new influx of Western
tourists and trekkers also came to rely on the hospital. Sir Edmund
Hillary and John D. Rockefeller III were among the early visitors
to become friends of Shanta Bhawan, and they donated funds to
build a new out-patient department in 1960.
At times the failure of the mission hospital to give more exclusive
attention to the poor surfaced as a criticism. But, all the while,
the establishment of a high quality and modern medical center
in a country that had none was always on the mind of the mission.
The UMN committee thus approved (and budgeted) a five year expansion
plan in 1958 that aimed to increase the number of hospital beds,
add specialty services, create nursing and lab training programs
as well as continue the operation of the district clinics. About
this time, a clinic (and later a hospital ) was also opened in
Gorkha District, several days’ walk west of Kathmandu (before
roads). And later, an associated community health program was
opened in Okhaldunga District, east of Kathmandu.
During a severe cholera epidemic large volumes of intravenous
solutions were required by Shanta Bhawan. Since bottles were in
short supply, the hospital solicited bottles of different shapes
and sizes from embassies and aid groups; thus, one could see patients
apparently receiving intravenous infusions of whiskey, brandy
and lemon squash, if you believed the labels.
By the end of 1964 Shanta Bhawan Hospital had made great progress
towards its goals. Dr Robert Berry, a surgical specialist had
arrived and performed the first closed heart surgery at the hospital.
As a volunteer surgeon, Dr Edgar Miller Jr performed the first
decortications of the lung for tuberculosis. The Departments of
Medicine, Pediatrics and OB/GYN (Obstetrics/Gynecology) were also
established and outpatients visits had increased considerably,
as reported by Dr Eleanor Knox of the Pediatric Clinic. The School
of Nursing had graduated a dozen nurses by then, and they were
conditionally accredited by the Nepal Nursing Council. Nepali
nursing graduates under the leadership of Nursing Superintendents
Helen Berg and Mabel McLean were gradually replacing Western nurses
in the wards. The hospital still lacked an anesthesiologist, orthopedic
surgeon, pathologist and ophthalmologist and did not find a permanent
dentist until Dr Neulon arrived from Germany in 1966. The UMN
wanted an efficiently organized hospital of 250 beds, but the
hospital had only expanded to 135 beds in 1964, which remained
the official capacity until it shifted to a new building in 1982.
During the last half of the ’60s, Shanta Bhawan Hospital
ran into various frustrations. When the Millers returned to the
USA after nine years in Nepal, no specialist in internal diseases
was immediately available to replace Dr Edgar. Four more doctors
returned home in 1966, including Dr DeVol after developing eye
problems. Tragedy struck the staff the next year when a number
of the hospital workers were incapacitated by an unusual febrile
disease, still undiagnosed. Among them were the Friedericks, who
had to leave Nepal for a long period of convalescence. But hospital
services continued unabated, even submitting to an influx of the
world travelers, known as the “hippies”, who sought
help and treatment for various illnesses. When 17 of them were
diagnosed with hepatitis, the nurses called it “hippie-titis”.
All the while, Shanta Bhawan Hospital continued to evolve into
a well-equipped hospital.
The decade of the ’70s saw Shanta Bhawan Hospital continue
the work as a base hospital supporting primary health care programs
in Lalitpur District and keeping pace with important developments
in community health. Nursing education and other training were
also advanced by the hospital. Not only did the quantity of work
increase spectacularly during this decade, but there was also
an impressive upgrading in the quality and range of services offered
to the patients. The hospital also became conscious of other medical
work in the whole of Nepal and lent support where it could.
In 1973 the government offered UMN the option of transferring
to a new hospital site in Patan, only two kilometers away but
closer to the District’s urban center where patients would
have better accessibility to the services. The proposal sparked
mission staff enthusiasm and in April 1974, the UMN and the government
signed an agreement concerning the new hospital. By then the old
palace had become too crumbly and the clinical work had outgrown
its walls. In November 1982, Shanta Bhawan Hospital moved into
a new structure now popularly known as Patan Hospital. Though
the old ‘Palace of Peace’ closed its gates as a hospital,
the new Patan Hospital is a culmination of the dreams and hopes
of many who gave themselves in service in Shanta Bhawan through
the years.
The era of unselfish service had come to an end but the spirit,
heart and soul of the ‘Palace of Peace’ is still alive
even in this new millennium. Thus, the transition was not an ending
but was a new beginning.
The
author, whose parents were amongst the pioneers, were long-term
employ-ees of the hospital, was born and raised at Shanta Bhawan.
The old hospital complex is now occupied by Gyanodaya School.
The UMN can be contacted at 422.8118 or 426.8900 and at umn@umn.org.np,
and Patan Hospital’s phone numbers are 552.2266 or 552.2278,
or email patanhospital@wlink.com.np.
Part of the Shanta Bhawan story is adapted from A Story of a Hospital
by Douglas Cooley (1979) and Fifty Years in God’s Hand edited
by the UMN (1954-2004).
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