4. But the story today starts with this
monument in Colmar, which captured
the young Schweitzer’s childish
imagination and made him think of
Africa.
5. The 21 year old Schweitzer decides to
live the academic life until he’s 30, and
then to endeavour to seek a way to
serve without having to use words.
6. The house master and professor of theology with his students at Strasbourg University.
But in line with the promise he made to himself aged 21, he now decides in addition,
to study medicine there, in order to go to Africa as a doctor.
7. Whilst studying the organ
with Widor in Paris,
and by now an authority
on J. S. Bach,
Schweitzer gives organ
recitals to raise funds in
order to finance a new
hospital in Africa.
8. Now ready to go to Africa as a doctor, Schweitzer gives his last sermon to his congregation at
St. Nicolai in Strasbourg on the 9th of March 1913.
The text is ( Philippians 4. 7. ):
“And the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds
through Christ Jesus.”
9. On Good Friday 1913 Albert and his wife, Helene, leave Guensbach,
and on the 16th April they arrive at their destination deep in the tropical jungle on the
banks of the river Ogowe.
17. Whilst deep in thought on one of his many boat trips to see patients up and down the river,
the full significance of “reverence for life” for the future of humankind becomes clear to him.
18. Eventually his work becomes well
known and he is awarded the Nobel
Peace Prize in 1952.
Here he is enrobed in preparation to
receive an Honorary Degree at
Cambridge University on the
22 October 1955, the same year in
which he received the Order of Merit
from the Queen.
19. Except when in the operating theatre, wherever he is, in and around the hospital, some
animal or other is never far away.
20. First up in the morning and last to extinguish the paraffin lamp at night, we would often see
him late at night, aged 88, trying to keep up with his global correspondence.