MSF is an incredible associative venture. Our world-renowned medical humanitarian work has contributed to saving lives and alleviating suffering in many global crises over the last 50 years. And this year we mark a quarter century of MSF Australia.
Growing up in the 1990s, the time that MSF Australia was founded, I was inspired by aid workers in places like Ethiopia, Rwanda and Bosnia. The news events of my adolescence reminded me that, as an Australian, I also had a responsibility to be a citizen of the world. More than that, they affected so many people and caused so much pain.
I myself joined MSF in the early 2000s. The crises we met then included the Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004, violence causing mass suffering in Darfur, Sudan, the earthquake in Kashmir, the ongoing crisis in Haiti, further complicated by the earthquake of 2010: the list goes on. If it involves armed conflict, epidemics, natural disasters or people who are excluded from healthcare, chances are it’s an MSF operational context.
In the many years that I have been involved with MSF Australia, as a field worker, a Board member and President, I’ve seen our organisation mature and evolve. About two years ago, for example, our International Board and executive platforms validated a statement confirming what we already knew: there are three ‘peoples’ in our work – our patients, our workforce and our supporters.