In Full Flight - A
Story of Africa and Atonement by John Hemingway, Alfred A. Knof, New York,
2018.
This is a biography of Dr. Anne Spoerry, a key medical
provider for Kenya’s Flying Doctors.
From the 1950s to 1999, Dr. Spoerry, or Mama Daktari as she was known to
tens of thousands of Kenyans, flew to the far reaches of Kenya’s forgotten
regions to provide medical care. Indeed,
her legacy of service is astounding, but there was more. Why was she so driven? Why was she so guarded
about relationships? Why was Dr. Anne so reluctant to reveal her past or even
discuss World War II events? There was a
mystery here and one that author Hemingway pondered over for years and even
quizzed Anne about - only to be brusquely reprimanded. Only after her death was he able to unravel
most - but not yet all - of the story.
The book is a compelling read as the complicated personality
of Dr. Spoerry is peeled back layer by layer as her personal history is
chronicled. Born to a wealthy
French/Swiss family, she was studying medicine in Paris when WWII erupted. She joined the resistance and worked for it
until her cell was arrested. She was sent to prison by the Nazis and ultimately
interned in Ravensbruck concentration camp.
This is where clarity loses focus.
What did Anne do or not do?
Whatever the specifics - and Hemingway goes to great length to elucidate
them - Anne had a case to answer. So
with family concurrence she ran and ended up in Kenya.
Putting the past behind her Anne found a new life as a
doctor to highland communities. After enduring Mau Mau in Ol Kalou, she bought
a farm in nearby Subukia. There she
learned to fly and joined the Flying Doctors. For the next forty years she flew
and doctored, becoming a legend.
Hemingway’s biography is remarkable not just for its
readability - it reads like a page-turner thriller - but for the research he obviously put in to
it. His study of the complex personality
of Anne Spoerry is meritorious. She was
driven by inner forces, both devils and angels.
Apparently she came to terms with herself, although always remaining
something of enigma to friends. As the
story unwinds, readers gain insight into Kenya over the past sixty years and
how the nation has evolved, especially in terms of race relations.
In Full Flight is
highly recommended.
1 comment:
Looks like Dr. Ann was an incredibly brave woman! It would be very interesting to learn about her life in papers more detail.
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