From humble beginnings as a 'barefoot boy' in a small town in the heart
of South Africa, he learned to mix with presidents and prime ministers,
with royalty and popes, and quickly embraced the high-life of the
jet-set who surrounded him. Throughout life, he was a serial womanizer,
bedding famous European film stars (and their secretaries). He survived
three tempestuous marriages and divorces, each wife becoming younger
than the last until their age difference reached 40 years. This
scientifically-trained surgeon called on the services of a 'witchdoctor'
(a sangoma)--unsuccessfully--to help punish those who had contributed to
the break-up of his second marriage. With no experience himself, he
trained his daughter to become the second-ranked water skier in the
world, though he was disappointed she never became world champion.
Perhaps the immense effort he put into driving her to success accounted
for the relative neglect of his oldest son, who, as a young doctor,
suffered increasing depression until he died of a drug overdose at an
early age. The surgeon pursued his goals in heart surgery despite a
lifetime of pain from arthritis and a disability from asthma, which
might eventually have killed him.
Having established the first major heart surgery program in Africa, he
eventually became distracted by other interests until he was a mere
shadow in his own department. Yet he remained in the public eye through
his gifts for public speaking and as a writer. He traveled the world;
published two autobiographies; wrote popular books on health for the
public, particularly relating to heart disease and arthritis; and penned
books on such varied subjects as the politics of apartheid in his
homeland, and euthanasia. He became a well-regarded and popular
columnist for several South African newspapers and collaborated on the
writing of four novels. He branched into the business world and expanded
the meager financial rewards earned from his surgical services to the
South African health care system by investing in restaurants in Cape
Town, establishing a game reserve in the hinterland of South Africa, and
causing controversy by his role in advertising a cream that reputedly
prevented wrinkling of the skin. He set up a heart research foundation
and a foundation that paid for children from all over the world to
travel to Cape Town for corrective open heart surgery.
This charismatic and controversial man was Chris Barnard who, by the
way, also dared to carry out the world's first human heart transplant in
December 1967.
Can we summarize Chris Barnard? Not very easily. He was a first-class
doctor--skilled, knowledgeable, compassionate, conscientious, concerned,
decisive, and wise. He was an inquiring and innovative surgeon--though
famously irascible in the operating room--with a vision of the future
developments in his chosen field and the ability, judgment, and courage
to play a part in contributing to those developments. He was an
informative and highly entertaining speaker and raconteur, a gifted
writer, farmer, restaurateur, an unofficial ambassador for his
country--and a good friend.