Paul White (missionary)

Paul Hamilton Hume White (26 February 1910 – 21 December 1992) was an Australian missionary, evangelist, radio program host and author.

Early life and missionary work

White was born in Bowral, New South Wales. After studying medicine at the University of Sydney, he married Mary Bellingham and together they travelled to Tanganyika Territory (now part of Tanzania) as Church Missionary Society (CMS) missionaries in 1938, where White established a hospital at Mvumi Mission which soon replaced Kilimatinde as the main medical centre of the CMS mission in Tanganyika.

White succeeded Dr Cyril Wallace as the medical secretary of the Diocese of Central Tanganyika in 1939. In 1941 after only two years in missionary work White had to return to Australia due to his wife's illness.[1] On the way home, he developed a boil in, to use his own words, 'a place which caused me to take a pillow, cut a hole in it, and sit very carefully (!)'[2] Unable to take part in the shipboard entertainment he started to write.[3] From this came his first missionary book, Doctor of Tanganyika, which is factual and contains many photographs taken by White himself, to illustrate how missionary work was carried out under such primitive settings, with the local Chigogo people.

Published work

Following his return to Australia, White went on to write Jungle Doctor,[4] the first in an extensive series bearing the same name, which have been translated into more than 80 languages.[5] At the same time he began his Jungle Doctor radio program, which continued for 25 years. His books are based in Africa and depict African folklore and missionary adventure. Many of White's stories include moral teaching. They tell of surgical operations in the wild using the most basic equipment and the very colourful people of Africa, including his friend Daudi (David) Matama, and quite often striking against the village witchdoctors who relied on black magic to gain power. Several stories are tales of good winning against evil. Although the stories are fiction, they are based on fact, based on White's own, as well as other people's experiences.

Original editions were illustrated by Graham Wade, who also produced Jungle Doctor comic strips. White then authored six 'Fable' books, in the form of the traditional African 'round the fire' storytelling, incorporating Christian moral lessons. They are Jungle Doctor's Fables, Jungle Doctor's Tug of War, Jungle Doctor's Monkey Tales, Jungle Doctor's Hippo Happenings, Jungle Doctor's Rhino Rumblings and Jungle Doctor Meets Mongoose.

Some of the Jungle Doctor stories were released on record in the 1960s, with White himself narrating them.[6]

Other work

As well as pioneering Christian media in the form of both radio and television in Australia, White was active in student evangelism and is credited with revitalising evangelical Christian student groups in Australia after World War II.[7] He became general secretary of the Intervarsity Fellowship in 1943.[8] White also continued to practice medicine on a part-time basis right up until his death.

Death

White died on 21 December 1992, aged 82. He is buried at St. Simon & St. Jude Anglican church in Bowral.[9]

Bibliography

Jungle Doctor Series

Jungle Doctor's Fables Series

Jungle Doctor Picture Fables Series (Illustrated by Peter Oram)

Jungle Doctor Comic Books

Jungle Doctor Novels

The Ranford Series (in collaboration with Dr. David Britten)

With Clifford Warne

Other Works

Further reading

External links

References

  1. Church Missionary Society Archive, Section IV: Africa Missions, p23
  2. source not stated by original Wikipedia contributor but tallies broadly with Alias Jungle Doctor, pages 123, 124
  3. source not stated by original Wikipedia contributor but tallies broadly with Alias Jungle Doctor, page 127
  4. Alias Jungle Doctor, pages 128, 129
  5. source not stated by original Wikipedia contributor but tallies broadly with list of over 70 languages on page 227 of Alias Jungle Doctor
  6. http://www.45cat.com/artist/paul-white-1960s2
  7. Biographical Dictionary of Christian Missions, p729
  8. Piggin, Stuart (2004). Spirit of a Nation: The Story of Australia's Christian Heritage. Strand Publishing,. p. 112.
  9. Hawkesbury on the Net, Paul White's grave Retrieved 1 June 2009
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