By Joan O’Connell Hamilton
We
are a society that likes to christen heroes. But we like our heroes
neat and tidy, easily defined: the star quarterback, the Nobel
laureate, the ace fighter pilot. We anoint them, store them away, and
then march them out for parades in their golden years.
It has
been 25 years since the world met a most unlikely hero, a gentle doctor
who had no desire to capture the public eye. Although he became a hero
in death, it was the life of Paul Earle Carlson that is compelling.
Between
ads for Ford Mustangs and Coca-Cola, Life magazine ran a spread on the
Congo during the first week of December 1964. It was no exotic
travelogue: Africa was erupting and the Congo was its flashpoint. The
Congo had been given independence suddenly and unexpectedly from
Belgium in 1960 and was highly volatile. For five months, rebel
insurgents had held the city of Stanleyville, deep in the country’s
interior, and had proclaimed a “People’s Republic.”
Inside
Stanleyville’s Victoria Hotel were 250 hostages, most of them Belgians
unlucky enough to be in the region when the rebels, known as Simbas,
staged their assault. There were many families with children, a
smattering of Americans, several diplomats. But one prisoner, a kind,
36-year-old physician and missionary, would later be remembered more
than the others. He moved among the prisoners, setting up his own tiny
clinic to treat the sick and injured, making jokes to calm their
nerves. “I have never seen a man behave like that,” a fellow prisoner,
a Belgian engineer, would later write, calling Carlson “the one real
man I have ever met in my life.”
From childhood, Paul Carlson
had a calling to help others. The son of Swedish immigrant Gustav
Carlson, a Southern California machinist, Paul earned a bachelor’s
degree in anthropology from Stanford in 1951, and finished medical
school at George Washington University five years later. Despite the
fact that he had a wife and two children, in 1961 Carlson responded to
an urgent appeal by the Christian Medical and Dental Society for
doctors in the Congo. Instead of settling down to a potentially
lucrative private practice in Redondo Beach, Calif., he took a
six-month missionary tour in Africa. Although the young doctor was
deeply touched by the experience, he returned to Southern California
and set up his practice. But the vast medical needs of the people of
the Congo continued to haunt him. Finally, he told a friend, “I’m going
back. I can’t stand doing hernias and hemorrhoids any more.”
Carlson
and his family left for the Congo in 1963, trading his then-comfortable
$12,000-a-year income in California for roughly $3,000 in missionary
pay and a backyard full of crocodiles. The Carlsons moved to Wasolo, a
simple clearing in the jungle that locals called “The End of the World.” (The photo shows the Carlson family plus two medical colleagues to the left, at home in Congo.)
Their
new environs included a leper colony and an 80-bed hospital serving
100,000 people. The family was only a few yards from impenetrable rain
forest, but half a mile from fresh water. “I didn’t want to go,”
recalls Wayne Carlson, 36, now a Chicago physician. Back then, he was a
9-year-old boy who missed his American friends and wasn’t sure he was
ready for a home where “bugs and snakes fell from the grass roof.”
For
almost a year, Carlson fought the daily struggles of the missionary. He
was devoted to his patients, concerned about his family, and anxious to
spread the word of the plight of the poor people of this equatorial
region. He spent 95 percent of his time trying to heal—which at times
meant fixing plumbing or repairing a car on a “house call” in a nearby
village. Fun consisted of family Scrabble games, hymn singing, and the
children’s adventures in raising animals. It was a hard life, but
Carlson felt fulfilled. The natives took to calling him Monganga Paulo,
or “My Doctor Paul.”
Unfortunately, Carlson picked a bad time to
do good work. In the early fall of 1964, the political situation in the
region was deteriorating. Carlson became sufficiently concerned that he
moved his wife, Lois, and their two children across the Ubangi River to
the Central African Republic. He, however, returned to his post, hoping
to stay as long as possible to minister to his patients.
Carlson
was betting that the rebels would not bother doctors, but he had
contingency plans to join his family if the situation became more
violent. “He worried that if he left, the rebels would come in and kill
all the patients,” remembers Wayne.
Sadly, he bet wrong. In
September, Dr. Paul was arrested, then tortured physically and
mentally. He was sent 300 miles south to Stanleyville where he became a
pawn of the Simba rebels. They repeatedly sentenced him to death as an
American spy, sparing him whenever they thought they were about to win
concessions from the Belgian and American governments, which opposed
their activities. Carlson’s worried family spent their days listening
to shortwave radio, praying for word of his safety.
As morning
dawned in Stanleyville on November 24, 1964, however, the American and
Belgian governments decreed there would be no more concessions. The
savage rhetoric from the rebel leadership prompted the Americans and
Belgians to launch a rescue mission. U.S. airplanes droned overhead as
Belgian paratroopers dropped down on the outskirts of town. The rebels
were anxious and full of adrenaline. And then Carlson’s final ordeal
began.
The brutal Simbas routinely killed and tortured their
enemies, sometimes consuming the dead prisoners’ organs in front of
others. With the paratroopers approaching that morning, the rebels
assembled the Stanleyville prisoners in the street. They put women and
children in the front rows. Crazed with fear and anger, the Simbas
began chanting “kill” in Swahili.
What followed was a nightmare.
A Simba guard opened fire on a woman, emptying his rifle into her
bleeding body. Other soldiers fired blindly into the crowd, targeting
parents who had flung their bodies over children. Some prisoners
feigned death. Carlson and others at the rear of the group ran toward a
wall, hoping to leap to safety. But before trying to scale the wall,
Carlson urged another prisoner, a missionary as well, to go first. As
Carlson climbed, he was sprayed with machine gun fire and fell to the
ground. Belgian paratroopers arrived at the scene shortly after Carlson
was killed, and the rebels fled.
A photo of the young, clean-cut
missionary with unseeing eyes, an ID tag looped around his neck, soon
was seen around the world. It was taken only minutes after his death,
as he lay in a field of casualties. In the following weeks, Carlson’s
photograph was featured on the cover of Time magazine, and his story
would become a riveting tale of martyrdom from the turbulent Congo.
Life
managing editor George P. Hunt called Carlson “a heroic man of God who
lived for the African—only to be killed by his hand.” It’s unlikely,
though, that Carlson would have penned such an epitaph. “The secular
perspective was that this was a horrible tragedy,” says Carlson’s
brother, Dwight, a Torrance, Calif., psychiatrist. “There was not an
understanding of why someone would give his life. Paul had a strong
religious faith. He had a calling, he went, he was faithful to his
calling. I think he would have said that human beings took his life and
that was unfortunate, but there was a higher benefit.”
In the
last tape Carlson dictated and sent home before his arrest, Dr. Paul
clearly had no simplistic view of his mission. “The people are trying
to take over more and more, yet realize their own inability to handle
so many of these things,” he told his father, who is still alive at age
92. “There are times when they know of repression, when they know of
opposition, when they know of problems faced by other Christians in the
country. You see, it’s a tremendous burden.”
Today, a medical
foundation formed in Carlson’s name supports the Central African
hospital where he worked. It sponsors such activities as agricultural
projects and a fish farm in the Wasolo region. His son, Wayne Carlson,
hopes to retire early from his private practice and return to the Congo
to continue his father’s work. “Like a lot of us who go through medical
school and residencies and internships, my father had lost perspective
on what medicine is about,” says Wayne. “But he found it again. It’s
about helping people.”
Paul Carlson’s friends and family still
speak lovingly of an apolitical man who sought no fame or fortune.
Carlson was heroic, not because of his martyr’s death, but because he
was committed, against all odds, to healing others. In the New
Testament he carried with him, Carlson had written the date and a
single word the day before he died. The word? Peace.
Stanford magazine, September 1991
Published by Stanford Alumni Association, Stanford University
Reprinted with permission
If you would like to learn more about the life and death of Paul Carlson, we recommend two resources:
Monganga Paul (book), by Lois Carlson Bridges
Monganga (video), by Richard K. Carlson