
About Dr. Mukwege
Dr. Denis Mukwege is the founder of the Panzi Hospital
in Bukavu, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Dr. Mukwege
specializes in treating women and girls who have been victims
of sexual violence in the Congo's 12-year war. Many
of these patients have been gang raped, and some subjected
to assault from the inside out with bayonets, chunks of
wood and even rifles.
Dr. Mukwege has evolved to become the world's leading
expert on how to repair the internal physical damage caused
by gang rape and brutal sexual violence that is characterizing
the conflict in the Congo. Since the founding of the Panzi
Hospital in 1999, Dr. Mukwege has treated 21,000 women,
some of them more than once. Dr. Mukwege performs up to
ten operations a day and often works 18 hours straight.
His patients arrive at the hospital in a heartbreaking
state -- sometimes naked, often bleeding and with fistulas
that cause incontinence through their brutalized vaginas.
Dr. Mukwege is the son of a Pentecostal minister and his
wife, and has eight brothers and sisters. His reason for
studying medicine was that he wanted to heal the sick that
his Minister father had prayed for his whole life. Though
he studied gynecology in France, he returned home to Congo
to treat women in Congo who had no access to regular medical
care.
Dr. Mukwege is now recognized by leaders in international
health and development for his pioneering work and dedication.
In 2008 he received the Olof Palme Prize for his work to
help women victims of rape and war crimes in the Congo.
The Olof Palme award is given for outstanding achievement
aimed at promoting peace, disarmament and combating racism
and was created in memory of the popular Swedish prime
minister. He also received the United Nations Human Rights
Prize in 2008 for his work protecting the rights and dignity
of tens of thousand of Congolese women. The award was started
in 1966 to "honour and commend people and organizations
which have made an outstanding contribution to the promotion
and protection of the human rights embodied in the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights".
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Dr. Mukwege
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