Dr. Sumathy Pathy has seen her
share of trauma.
The Bellevue-based family practitioner endured
years of civil war in her home country of Sri Lanka
and survived medical school there through bouts
of bombings and gunfire. But for some reason, it's
the 15-year-old boy from the tsunami she can't get
out of her mind now.
Pathy met him during her two-week trip this month
to Sri Lanka on a volunteer journey to provide medical
help to the victims devastated by the waves. When
she thinks of him, she sees an orphaned and malnourished
teenager, looking like an 8-year-old, depression
sinking in his eyes. "It's your people and
they are suffering," said Pathy, who returned
to the United States this week. "It's just
horrible."
Pathy, 37, joined five doctors from the International
Medical Health Organization, a Maryland-based nonprofit
helping with relief efforts in Sri Lanka, an island
nation off the southeastern tip of India.
The Dec. 26 disaster killed more than 200,000 people
across Asia and left millions more homeless. More
than 30,000 of Sri Lanka's 19 million people died
and more than 390,000 were displaced.
Arriving in Sri Lanka on Jan. 9, the physicians
traveled to Batticaloa, about 200 miles east of
Colombo, to help those along Sri Lanka's battered
East Coast.
Dilapidated school buildings were turned into medical
camps, Pathy said. Victims convalesced on mats with
flies and mosquitoes buzzing overhead. Rainwater
poured in from above as the injured lined up for
care, waiting to be sutured and bandaged.
Pathy saw as many as 20 to 30 patients a day, she
said. They would come in with infections, cuts and
broken bones. But the most painful wounds surfaced
when she questioned them about the tsunami.
"Once they started talking, they would just
cry," she said. "Sri Lanka is already
a war-torn area. They have lost so much."
The country has suffered through a two-decade civil
war between the Sinhalese government and the ethnic
Tamils, in which 60,000 Sri Lankans have been killed.
The war left an indelible mark on Pathy, who is
Tamil.
She fled to the United States nearly 10 years ago
under a shroud of fear when fighting erupted in
her hometown of Tamil-dominated Jaffna, in the north.
Her family also left the country.
She returned to Sri Lanka for the first time this
month. She paid $1,400 for the flight and took a
70-pound suitcase full of drugs and medical supplies.
"I had to do something for the victims,"
she said. "If I am there, at least I'm making
somebody feel better."
Pathy and her husband, Jay, are part of the Seattle-area
Sri Lankan community that has raised $80,000 for
tsunami victims, she said. Some 35 families, all
with ties to Sri Lanka, have been actively involved
in the effort.
Pathy said going to Sri Lanka helped her reconnect
with her past and got her thinking about her future
as a physician. She wants to return to Sri Lanka
at some point.
"We take so much for granted here," she
said. "There, people are just fighting for
basic needs. I want to help them as much as I can.
That's the reason I became a doctor."