The Arizona Republic

3 black doctors detail their journeys to success

- Chevel Johnson AP

NEW ORLEANS – One used to deal drugs on the streets of New Orleans. Another grew up in Chicago with drugaddict­ed parents. A third survived the tough streets of New York and Washington, D.C., where he once stared down the barrel of a gun.

All three young black men became board-certified doctors.

Pierre Johnson, Maxime Madhere and Joe Semien Jr. said they knew the odds were stacked against them when they entered Xavier University of Louisiana in 1998 with hopes of becoming doctors. Black men make up a small percentage of doctors in America, and they knew getting through college and medical school wouldn’t be easy.

Their early lives, college struggles and victories are chronicled in “Pulse of Perseveran­ce: Three Black Doctors on Their Journey to Success.” They said they wrote the book to show AfricanAme­rican boys that athletes and entertaine­rs aren’t the only examples of black achievemen­t.

“Young boys need to know it’s not a game in these streets,” said Madhere, an anesthesio­logist in Baton Rouge. “They need to know that we are completely marginaliz­ed as people of color when we mess up. They also need to know you don’t have to rap or shoot a ball to get out of their circumstan­ces.”

Semien, Johnson and Madhere each set a goal early on to become a doctor. Semien, an obstetrici­an/gynecologi­st from New Orleans who practices in Lake Charles, describes in the book how he became intrigued by a sixthgrade anatomy class. Madhere discovered his love for medicine after volunteeri­ng at a hospital. Johnson said he “just knew” he wanted to heal people.

Four percent of doctors in the U.S. are African American, according to the Associatio­n of American Medical Colleges. The men chose Xavier, knowing that the nation’s only historical­ly black Catholic institutio­n consistent­ly places black students in medical school.

Johnson, an obstetrici­an/gynecologi­st working in Chicago, writes about Xavier’s nurturing environmen­t, which helped spark the trio’s friendship.

Johnson said he often saw Madhere in class and around campus but noticed that he, too, was “always in the library.” “We started a conversati­on about how things were going and the struggles we were going through in class and ultimately decided we needed to band together … and we saw that same energy in Joe,” Johnson said.

“We held each other accountabl­e,” Semien recalled. “When one was falling short, the other would pick him up.”

Semien had to shed a street reputation that included drug dealing and an anger problem that got him in trouble. He dropped out of Xavier at one point, joined the military, re-enrolled, dropped out again, and finally returned and met Johnson and Madhere.

Madhere describes in the book the troubled Brooklyn neighborho­od where his mother lived after divorcing his father. He recalls one day when a young black man was shot in front of her apartment building.

“This was my first encounter with death. The image of this man dead on the pavement, with the police and paramedics swarming around him, was immediatel­y burned into my 7-year-old mind. It remains there to this day,” he wrote.

Johnson writes of being 3 when he and his mother franticall­y ran from his father “who was high out of his mind.”

The doctors decided to tell their stories because they’d already proven they could work together. Johnson said he plans to write a follow-up.

“If this book does what we hope and plan, to inspire kids everywhere and to push people to achieve success through all circumstan­ces, definitely a second book is in the making,” he said.

 ??  ?? Dr. Pierre Johnson, left, Dr. Maxime Madhere and Dr. Joseph Semien, Jr.
Dr. Pierre Johnson, left, Dr. Maxime Madhere and Dr. Joseph Semien, Jr.

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