A retired medical practitioner who loves writing.
Raised in Singapore, Dr Susie Baboo Samuel completed her undergraduate medical studies and post-graduate training in OB/GYN at CMC, Christian Medical College, Vellore, India, and Dermatology in the UK at St. John’s Hospital, London. Together with her husband, Sam, she worked in Bhutan, Nepal, London, and Chennai before they retired to Coimbatore.
Dr. Susie’s myriad interests continue to fill her life. An imaginative short-order cook, her innovative experiments with fusion cooking, which evolved in all the places she lived, are legendary. Her simple and easy-to-follow recipes are slated to appear in “My Grandma’s Cook-book” edited by her grandson Rohan.
An indiscriminate encourager and disciple of each-one-help-one, she founded a music group to send out a music video to inspirit her friends every night. The modest list of recipients has multiplied exponentially into an appreciative group who in a ripple effect pass on the music to encourage their friends.
A passionate champion of the Girl Child and the rights of women, she continues to write about the prevalent farcical gender slant, sexual abuse, and the empowerment of women. She has worked tirelessly to introduce self-defence classes for girls in primary schools, families, and communities to equip them to handle assault and abuse later in life.
The Bear Wore a Swimsuit, a memoir, is the first in a series of life experiences recalled by the author.
The author's royalty is pledged with a tripartite agreement between the publisher, the author, and the beneficiary to The Banyan, an NGO based in Chennai that rescues destitute women from the streets and offers them comprehensive psychiatric cover when needed. www. thebanyan.org .
The Banyan Story :
Vandana Gopikumar and Vaishnavi Jayakumar, two students from the Women’s Christian College Chennai, were walking home from college one day when they saw a scantily clad disturbed young woman running down a crowded street in a busy part of Madras. Without a thought they rushed forward spontaneously and flung their dupattas over her, to whisk her away from the curious spectators who stood motionless and watched. After they bathed, clothed, and fed her they phoned around for a safe rescue home for the lady and found, to their utter dismay, that only a handful of places were equipped to work with this vulnerable group in ways that focussed on community inclusion and agency. Undaunted, the young and enthusiastic duo started The Banyan in a rental in 1993 as a haven for homeless, destitute women with psychiatric overlay in Chennai. Over the years, it has grown into a massive, well-oiled ship manned by trained healthcare professionals providing comprehensive mental health services to those rescued from the streets–not just women, but virtually anyone who needs help. With multiple centres in different states all over India, The Banyan is a living testimony to two youngsters who allowed compassion to fuel their courage and vision.
Books
THE BEAR WORE A SWIMSUIT