Gulf News

Tributes pour in for Egypt’s ‘doctor of the poor’

HE WAS A DIFFERENT HOPE MAKER, A MODEL FOR DOCTORS — MOHAMMAD

- BY RAMADAN SHERBINI Correspond­ent

Egyptians yesterday paid farewell to Dr Mohammad Al Mashali, nicknamed the “doctor of the poor” who had died earlier in the day in a Nile Delta province aged 76.

For 50 years, Al Mashali ran a clinic in the province of Gharbia, around 60km from Cairo, where he charged patients for 10 Egyptian pounds (Dh2.3) and treated the poor for free. He was a specialist in internal diseases and fevers.

His fame went far beyond Gharbia, making him a national icon in recent years.

His death was attributed to a sharp drop in blood circulatio­n. Hundreds of people in his hometown in Beheira, another Delta province, attended his funeral later Tuesday.

His death triggered an outpouring of tributes inside and outside Egypt. His Highness Shaikh Mohammad Bin Rashid, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, eulogised him, calling him a “different hope maker”. “He spent 50 years of his life for treating the poor. He is a model for doctors and an example for the great ones...,” Shaikh Mohammed said in a tweet.

Dr Al Mashali credited the late Egyptian president Jamal Abdul Nasser for becoming a medical doctor.

“President Abdul Nasser changed my whole life when he ordered free education [at the university level],” Dr Al Mashali said. “I grew up in a modest family. When I got the general secondary school certificat­e, my father found out that fees at the medical school were too high. By Allah’s will, on that evening President Abdul Nasser decreed free education. Without this decree, I would not have been able to get my studies.”

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