Top 10 Quotes & Sayings by Tom Catena

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American public servant Tom Catena.
Last updated on November 8, 2024.
Tom Catena

Thomas Gerard Catena is an American physician who has been practising in Gidel in the Nuba Mountains of Sudan since 2008. On May 28, 2017, he was awarded the second annual Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity, receiving a $100,000 grant and an additional one million dollars for him to distribute to three humanitarian organizations. He has been likened to the 20th-century medical missionary Albert Schweitzer. The New York Times has published instructions on how to donate to Catena. In 2018, Dr. Catena was appointed Chair of the Aurora Humanitarian Initiative.

My father and mother are Muslims. But from the moment I started talking, I decided I was a Christian. They let me.
I don't think I've had any adversity. I mean, yeah, I studied hard in school, but that's not adversity. Everyone in the Nuba Mountains has faced incredible adversity, every single one of them. Just to finish primary school is an incredible challenge.
I was with a Navy F-18 squadron, and I know a single squadron could finish off the entire Sudanese air force in a day. — © Tom Catena
I was with a Navy F-18 squadron, and I know a single squadron could finish off the entire Sudanese air force in a day.
I was influenced very much by St. Francis of Assisi, whose idea was to radically live the gospel. He was not a priest, or even a brother. He was a layperson. His whole concept was to emulate Christ through the gospels, and to live it in a radical way.
Food is a weapon - a very effective weapon. People don't cultivate, don't farm, you cut the road off, then you subjugate them very easily.
Probably 99 percent of Nuba are subsistence farmers. They have maybe two or three cattle, a few goats. Now there are food shortages, so they're very thin. But traditionally, they are very strong and muscular. They grow sorghum, okra, a bit of corn, some peanuts. If they need money, they'll sell one of their animals or sell some sorghum.
I realized mechanical engineering doesn't much lend itself to missionary work.
My parents have been married 50-some years, and I've never heard them fight. I got the chance to attend great universities and medical school.
The Sudanese army has retaken some towns. The people there are all living in caves because the Sudanese army is shelling their villages.
I've been given benefits from the day I was born. A loving family. A great education. So I see it as an obligation, as a Christian and as a human being, to help.
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