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With a Common Purpose

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 January 2010

Extract

I have been invited, in 1971, at the time of my retirement, to write an article to the International Review. It has taken over two years to gain sufficient perspective to carry out the assignment; for the thousands of incidents to settle into highlights of experiences in that capacity. I, at first, thought that I had to sort out my activities during the period as a full-time Red Cross nurse and the events which occurred when acting as an officer of my professional organization, the Canadian Nurses' Association. It was only when I recognized, in retrospect, that the two were irretrievably interwoven that I could begin to outline the tapestry of my life during those years. It was the common purpose of the two roles that made the time so fulfilling. To paraphrase the words of a Roman philosopher, “So far as I am an individual, my country is Canada; so far as I am a Red Cross nurse, I am a citizen of the world”. The International Red Cross mapped the road I was to travel as well as serving as a backdrop to all that was to come.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Committee of the Red Cross 1974

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References

page 241 note 1 Up to this year, eleven Canadian nurses have been awarded the Florence Nightingale Medal.

page 242 note 1 International Committee of the Red Cross, Rights and Duties of Nurses (under the Geneva Conventions, August 12, 1949) Geneva, The ICRC 1969, p. 56.Google Scholar

page 242 note 2 Stanbury, W. Stuart, M.B.E., B.A., M.D. Our Common Heritage. The Canadian Nurse Journal, vol. 54, No. 10, 1958.Google Scholar