Resilience: Deogratias Niyizonkiza
Hours: 1.00

Dr. Deogratias Niyizonkiza’s dramatic story of survival of two genocides in the 1990s was featured in Tracy Kidder’s book Strength in What Remains. “Deo” shares his life experience in Burundi and Rwanda, as well as his work in health care in rural Burundi through Village Health Works; his is a lived example of Resilience.

This course reports to CE Broker
  1. Identify moments of resilience demonstrated in the speaker’s life journey.
  2. Compare and contrast the attitudes of children in Burundi and the US toward education.
  3. Discuss the journey from enemies to friends as exemplified in the villagers who had no road.
  4. Describe the lifelong consequences of early children malnutrition.
  5. Discuss the wholistic approach to health care practiced in Dr. Deo’s clinic.

Deogratias Niyizonkiza,

Deogratias “Deo” Niyizonkiza, Village Health Works’ (VHW) visionary founder and CEO, is a leading advocate for the most impoverished people in the world. His compassion, expertise, and life experience have made him a key voice in global health and international development.

An American citizen, Niyizonkiza was born in rural Burundi, where he attended grade school and part of medical school and left the country during the catastrophic war that lasted more than a decade and took lives of hundreds of thousands people. He survived not only this man-made tragedy and poverty, but also homelessness in New York City.

Niyizonkiza's life journey is told in Pulitzer Prize-winner Tracy Kidder’s most recent work, “Strength in What Remains”, a New York Times best seller named one of the best books of the year by Washington Post, San Francisco Chronicle, Los Angeles Times, and the Chicago Tribune.

Despite the hurdles, Niyizonkiza —homelessness, illness, and low-paying work as a grocery store delivery boy—he eventually enrolled at Columbia University, where he received a bachelor’s degree in biochemistry and philosophy. After graduating from Columbia, he attended the Harvard School of Public Health, where he met Dr. Paul Farmer and began working at the medical non-profit organization Partners In Health. He left Partners In Health to continue his medical education at Dartmouth Medical School.

In 2005, with his unwavering conviction that humanity’s progress should be in how we value and honor the dignity of others including those a world away, Niyizonkiza traveled back to Burundi to establish Village Health Works with the goal of removing barriers to human dignity and progress by creating a healthcare system model in Kigutu, a remote village of Burundi, an East-African country and one of the poorest on the planet. Deo’s passion rallied his native community of Kigutu into action. Thanks to community-donated land, a small amount of seed money from American

Disclosures
This author has disclosed that there are neither conflicts of interest nor commercial affiliation with this activity.

This course is not accredited.
There are no disclosures.
Promotion Code: