Psychiatric Bulletin (2004) 28: 347. doi: 10.1192/pb.28.9.347
© 2004 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Psychiatric Bulletin (2004) 28: 347
© 2004 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Jurek Lister (Known as Jeremy Lister)
Formerly Consultant Psychiatrist, West Glamorgan Health Authority, Swansea
Tom Davies
Jeremy Lister was born in 1919 in Poznan, western Poland, where his father
was a wine importer. The ninth of ten children, he had decided on a medical
career early in life. His undergraduate medical studies at Warsaw University
were interrupted by the Second World War, when he was interned by the Russian
authorities. During his detention in the Ukraine and Siberia, he underwent the
most arduous experiences. On being finally released, he had lost half his body
weight, but had already decided to join the Polish Army. In his fascinating
book, Poles Apart, published in 1997, he described the long and perilous
journey that brought him to Britain. This involved travelling incessantly over
vast distances under the most appalling and gruesome conditions.
After joining up with the Polish forces, he was parachuted into Greece,
where he was to liaise with the partisans. He was later awarded the
Kings Medal for Courage in the Cause of Freedom.
Having got to Italy, he was able to re-start his medical studies at Bologna
University. He was demobilised in Britain, only to learn that the Polish
School of Medicine at Edinburgh had been closed. Seemingly undaunted, for a
period, he was able to attend the Paderewski Hospital, which was considered to
be a medical school. He was eventually accepted as a student at the Welsh
National School of Medicine, Cardiff and qualified, MRCS, LRCP in 1951. From
having lived in several different countries, he had become a gifted linguist.
On one occasion, on a professorial ward round, to the despair of the medical
staff, four patients who each were only able to speak their native language,
namely Greek, Italian, Polish and Russian, had been admitted. To the great
surprise and relief of his seniors, he was able to serve as a translator in
the case of all four.
Before specialising in psychological medicine, he held various posts at the
Swansea General Hospital, Morriston Hospital and Neath General Hospital, where
he met his wife Barbara, who worked there as a radiographer. In 1955, he took
up psychiatry, became a consultant at Cfn Coed Hospital, Swansea in 1963, and
was made a Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrists in 1983. As a
past-chairman of the West Glamorgan Division of Psychiatry, the Welsh
Psychiatric Society and of the West Glamorgan Division of the BMA, Dr
Listers contribution to the work of the National Health Service locally
was considerable.
He retired from his NHS post in 1984, but continued with his clinical work
for many years afterwards. He will be sadly missed by a wide circle of
friends. A devoted family man, who was renowned for his kindness to others, he
is survived by his widow, Barbara, and their three children.