Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Dr OC Raffel



http://www.ozlanka.com/apr10/raffel1.htm

DR. O.C. (Chris) RAFFEL; an appreciation of a warm and loving medical practioner
Dr. O.C. (Chris) Raffel, who passed away on the 30 th March, emigrated to Australia in 1975 but there must still be hundreds of people in Colombo who will remember and mourn him as the most devoted of doctors and perhaps even a small number who recall, at least by name and reputation, his father, Dr. E.L. (Lawrie) Raffel, who founded the dispensary and surgery in Wellawatte where Chris himself presided for over twenty years.

When he arrived in Sydney, his qualities of dedication to his patients, even at the sacrifice of his own leisure time, quickly distinguished him from the run of general practitioners, and his practice there expanded rapidly. The Eastwood area in which he had settled became a popular one for Lankan migrants and I remember him chuckling to discover that many of his new patients, having forgotten or never heard of the Burgher community, were happily amazed to hear this light-skinned man enquiring about their symptoms in fluent Sinhalese or Tamil.

A smaller number of people will mourn the loss of an incomparable friend, one who radiated a steady warmth rather than a brilliant glare. These qualities perfectly complemented the different ones of his wife Carmel, and resulted in their both providing a setting for pleasure and good fellowship which will live forever in the minds of those privileged to enjoy it.

I have no doubt that it was his response to their qualities that inspired the late Geoffrey Bawa, one of their closest friends, to design for them a house of great beauty in which music and the visual arts enhanced the loving kindness that enveloped all who crossed its threshold. In Australia they had no Bawa at their disposal, but Carmel revealed a genius for creating beauty in unpromising situations, while Chris acquired new skills such as mowing, pruning and eventually cooking. Their human qualities glowed as warmly south of the equator as previously in the north.

Chris had a family feeling which made him a surrogate father to the children of his brother Allan and his cousin Lorenz, both of whom died too young. They too will always cherish his memory, as will his three children, Adam, Suhanya and Lahiru, and four grandchildren. They know they had a most remarkable forebear.

3 comments:

  1. one of my first memories of my uncle Chris was when my mum and dad were visiting aunty Carmel's dad .my grand father.who was briefly admitted to Durdan's nursing home.I was about 3 years old when uncle Chris gave me an Orange orange.This was the first time I had seen an orange orange! in sri Lanka oranges were green.Uncle Chris was a kind man and worked long hours caring for his patients.I remember how he always balanced his family life with his working life so well.He will be missed by us all.

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  2. He was the most sought after medical practitioner at Wellawatte together with the wonderful Dr. George R Muthumani who practiced down Station Road. They were both great men of great mettle who served the community sincerely with great dedication. God Bless them.

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  3. Christ Raffel was my doctor in the 60s and 70s. I had the greatest admiration for him, as he had a huge clinic every day and seemed to turn no one away. Today living in the UK I see doctors with a fraction of the resources he had, and a 20th of the patients who feel as though they are very hard working! He was much appreciated by his patients not just for his medical skills but for his kindness. Seeing his photo took me back instantly. A different world. LA.

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