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I wanted this interpretation to be more contemplative and approachable," said artist David Pelletier (photo by Jacklyn Atlas)

Sculpture to show intimate side of Norman Bethune

New work to be unveiled May 30 at U of T Faculty of Medicine

When Norman Bethune died of septicemia in a Chinese mountain village in 1939, there was no way he could have known that his work would be celebrated 75 years later, not only in China but in Canada as well.

Today, he鈥檚 remembered as an inventive battlefield surgeon and an internationalist who helped to create strong and lasting ties between China and Canada.

The University of Toronto鈥檚 Faculty of Medicine is commemorating the anniversary with a bronze sculpture to be unveiled May 30, which reaches back to Bethune鈥檚 student days for a new interpretation of the legendary surgeon as thoughtful and very human.

鈥淪tatues of Bethune are usually heroic and strident,鈥 said artist David Pellettier, who was chosen to create the sculpture. 鈥淚 wanted this interpretation to be more contemplative and approachable.鈥

Chinese philanthropists Zhang Bin and Niu Gensheng contributed $800,000 to create the life-sized work and support for new medical student awards and bursaries in Bethune鈥檚 name. The unveiling will be followed by a gala dinner Saturday evening, part of the Faculty of Medicine鈥檚 Bethune Legacy Celebration, which recognizes his international impact on health and the Faculty鈥檚 associations with China.

鈥淭he statue will commemorate Dr. Norman Bethune, one of our most celebrated medical alumni. The gala is an opportunity for us to recognize both the donors and Bethune鈥檚 legacy, whose contributions will continue to inspire many generations,鈥 said Catharine Whiteside, dean of the Faculty of Medicine.

To arrive at a fresh presentation of the military surgeon and inventor, Pellettier read Bethune biographies and combed through photographs from the two years he spent in China at the end of his life. He was astonished by the images of Bethune, at age 49, broken by the deprivations of war, looking like a man in his 70s. He began to imagine Bethune as physician and humanitarian.

Then Pellettier started thinking about the setting of the planned statue 鈥 not in China, but in a triangle of grass surrounded by trees at U of T, where the Gravenhurst, Ont. native completed his medical degree in 1916. A spot where Bethune likely would have walked, and perhaps paused in contemplation.

He realized there was a chance to tell a more intimate story about the man who brought modern medicine to rural China, to view his heroism through the lens of a deeper humanity, and perhaps through the idealism of youth. 

鈥淚 wanted to reflect back on his connection to U of T as a student, so I pictured him there, casting back to his accomplishments, working in such difficult situations,鈥 said Pellettier, who recently completed the ferry terminal statue of late NDP leader Jack Layton. 鈥淗ere he is in his surgeon鈥檚 gown, with his stethoscope, and the Chinese sandals he chose to wear. He鈥檚 glancing up from his journal, in a moment of reflection.鈥

The sculpture is inscribed with words adopted from Bethune鈥檚 writings:

鈥溾 I am content. I am doing what I want to do. Why shouldn鈥檛 I be happy 鈥 see what my riches consist of. First I have important work that fully occupies every minute of my time鈥 I am needed."

Heidi Singer is a writer with the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto.

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