I have been working on an update and revision of two books I wrote with Dr. Paul Brand, a world-renowned leprosy expert who died in 2003. Dr. Brand influenced me more than any other person, and we spent most of a decade collaborating on writing projects. Last week I came across this memory from his life:
In the 1950s I visited a nun, Dr. Ruth Pfau, outside of Karachi, Pakistan, amid the worst human squalor I have ever encountered. As the taxi neared her place, a putrid smell burned my nostrils, a smell you could almost lean on. Soon I saw an immense garbage dump by the sea, the city’s accumulated refuse that had been stagnating and rotting for many months. The air was humming with flies. At last I could make out human figures—people covered with sores—crawling over the mounds of garbage. They had leprosy, and more than a hundred of them, banished from Karachi, had set up home in this dump. Sheets of corrugated iron gave them a bit of shelter, and a single dripping tap in the center of the dump provided their only source of water.
There, beside this awful place, I found a neat wooden clinic in which I found Dr. Pfau. She proudly showed me her orderly shelves and files of meticulous records on each patient in the dump. The stark contrast between the horrible scene outside and the oasis of love and concern inside her tidy clinic seared deep into my mind. Dr. Pfau was daily exhibiting these properties: beauty, sensitivity to needs, compassion, and the steady, fearless application of divine love through human touch. All over the world people like her are fulfilling Christ’s command to fill the earth with God’s presence.
My curiosity piqued, I searched the internet to learn more about Dr. Pfau, and pieced together her remarkable story from such diverse sources as The New York Times, Al Jazeera, the BBC, Pakistani newspapers, and Christianity Today. In a time when terrorist acts make the headlines, and Muslim-Christian relations are strained, this nun’s extraordinary career in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan deserves our attention.
Ruth Katherina Martha Pfau was born in Leipzig, Germany, in 1929, just as the stock market collapse rocked the financial world. As a child she saw the rise of Nazism, the disappearance of her Jewish schoolmates, and then the outbreak of World War II. Allied bombers destroyed her family home, and she barely survived. At the end of the war, the Soviets occupied half of Germany, separating her from members of her family. Now a teenager, with a teddy bear tucked under her arm, she set off alone to join her father in West Germany. For two days she walked through forests and fields, hiding behind barns at night, to cross the “no man’s land” between the partitioned East and West.
Traumatized, but safe at last, she finished high school and enrolled in university to study philosophy. There, she met a Dutch Christian woman who had survived a German concentration camp and yet had learned to forgive her captors and had dedicated her life to spreading the message of “love and forgiveness.” For Ruth, it proved a life-changing encounter. She got baptized as an Evangelical Protestant at 22, then converted to Roman Catholicism two years later. Believing she had been called to a life of service, she rejected a marriage proposal, studied for a medical degree, and joined a Catholic order. “When you receive such a calling, you cannot turn it down, for it is not you who has made the choice… God has chosen you for himself,” she explained to her dubious parents.

Although the order sent her to southern India, a visa foul-up left her stranded in Karachi, Pakistan. By chance, she visited a leprosy colony there, where she met one of the million Pakistanis afflicted with the disease. She later described the scene to the BBC: “He must have been my age — I was at this time not yet 30 — and he crawled on hands and feet into this dispensary, acting as if this was quite normal, as if someone has to crawl there through that slime and dirt on hands and feet, like a dog.”
The experience stunned her. “I could not believe that humans could live in such conditions,” she said. “That one visit, the sights I saw during it, made me make a key life decision.” That was when she moved to the little hut by the garbage dump, to care for leprosy patients. A few years later she trained at the Christian Medical College in Vellore, where Dr. Brand was devising new surgical treatments for leprosy patients.

In the following decades, Dr. Pfau helped establish 157 leprosy clinics across Pakistan. She crisscrossed remote mountain ranges, performing surgeries in primitive conditions in 100̊ heat. The number of active leprosy cases plummeted to 531. Primarily due to her efforts, in 1996 the World Health Organization declared Pakistan the first country in Asia to have controlled leprosy. The German consulate in Karachi declared, “It was due to her endless struggle that Pakistan defeated leprosy.” Undaunted, she expanded her clinics to treat tuberculosis, blindness, and disabilities caused by land mines.

Throughout, Dr. Pfau lived in a single room, rising at 5 a.m. to pray and worship before tending to patients and dealing with government bureaucrats. She mobilized her clinics to treat victims of a drought, an earthquake in Kashmir, and a devastating flood. A grateful nation granted her Pakistani citizenship and heaped awards on her. On her 70th birthday, Muslims and Christians alike filled Karachi’s main cathedral to attend a service in her honor.
When asked about her retirement, Dr. Pfau responded, “I don’t use the word ‘retirement.’ “It sounds as if you had completed everything, as if life was over and the world was in order.” She would spend seventeen more years serving the needy in Pakistan.
Just two months ago, in August, Dr. Pfau died at the age of 87 in the country she had come to love. Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi said, “Dr Ruth Pfau may have been born in Germany, [but] her heart was always in Pakistan.” He added that, “she came here at the dawn of a young nation looking to make lives better for those afflicted by disease, and in doing so, found herself a home. We will remember her for her courage, her loyalty, her service to the eradication of leprosy, and most of all, her patriotism.”

Then the prime minister announced that a state funeral would be held for her, the first Christian woman to receive such an honor. Huge crowds of mourners, including the nation’s president, lined the streets of Karachi as a military guard carried her coffin to the city’s St. Patrick’s Cathedral. The state television broadcast the funeral service live as politicians, military officials, and dignitaries paid tribute to the woman who had become known as “Pakistan’s Mother Teresa.” Flags across the nation were flown at half-mast in her honor. The government renamed its largest teaching hospital The Dr. Ruth K. M. Pfau Hospital.
I never met Dr. Pfau, but as a journalist I have met dozens of dedicated servants across the world who bring healing, compassion, and mercy to some of the most neglected and needy people on earth. They rarely get the same press coverage as lone wolf terrorists or Islamic extremists. Yet they offer lasting proof that even in this dark world, light shines out.
(Note: If you know of other “servant heroes,” please tell us about them in the Comment space below.)


Hi Philip, I have read Dr. Brand and your book and was so impressed with the work done with this disease and now I am in awe of DrPfau. These places where it seems the main happenings are all about chaos and death scare me so I for one would find it really difficult to set foot in the country let alone visit a place like where she worked. I am like others here and yourself no doubt amazed that we come across individuals like this who sacrifice themselves for others. I am left feeling that by comparison, I have done very little to ease the plight of others in distress.
Thank you once again for challenging me to open my eyes!
George Fanning
Check out http://www.hopeforhome.org/ Hope For Home and Daryl Fulp
The plight of orphans and children with special needs in developing countries is desperate. A lack of resources for even the healthy means that these little ones are left with what few crumbs may fall from the table. Many languish in substandard orphanages and institutions while others are allowed to die.
But there is hope…the Church of Jesus Christ.
Hope for Home Ministries exists to bring glory to Jesus by caring for orphans and children with special needs in developing countries. Our multi-faceted approach to needs provides support to families who want to care for their children and provide homes when that is not possible.
Guatemala Uganda Liberia
Surely if there were more Christians like Dr. Pfau, there would be less fanatical terrorists.
Thank you so much to introduce a witness of Jesus Christ to me. It help me stand firm for God in the mess – age.
My servant heroes are the caregivers for the mentally and physically disabled. My handicap son wanted to move out when he turned 18. It took me a year and half to get used to the idea of putting him in strangers hands. With lots of prayer and learning, we did find a good home for him. The compassion I see in the staff at his home has brought me to tears a couple of times. This group of people bands together and brings a quality of life to 6 men, most who cannot even speak. It was sad to learn that the other men’s families wrote them off long ago. The staff celebrates all the holidays with them, take them out to eat, fun times at the mall, weekend field trips, plus to programs Monday – Friday. On top of all the daily care they need to survive. While I know they are not volunteering, they are underpaid and they have to give so much physically, mentally and emotionally. They have become an extended family to me and I will be forever grateful that God opened this door for us.