In 1941, Baker was born in New Zealand to a wealthy, noble family of Catholics.[1] He was a lifelong bachelor.[2]
In 2011, Hanif Sanket of Bangladesh Television produced a documentary about Baker and his medical work in Madhupur Upazila. This led the Bangladeshi government to[1] change legislation so the doctor could be granted Bangladeshi citizenship[3] (in addition to his New Zealander citizenship)[4] in recognition of Baker's "selfless service to the people of Bangladesh". He was subsequently interviewed by Ityadi.[3]
Ill since 2011,[2] Baker was diagnosed with incurable idiopathicpulmonary hypertension in 2014. He died at his Kailakuri Health Care Centre[5] at 74 years old on 1 September 2015[4][1] at around 2:15pm. He was survived by his mother, two sisters, and four brothers—all in New Zealand.[2] The doctor was buried on 8 September 2015 behind his house at Kailakuri.[5]
Driven by his Christianity,[3] Baker moved to Bangladesh in 1979 because of its "really good" people and their inability to receive healthcare due to poverty. After working in Meherpur District and Mirzapur, Baker established the Kailakuri Health Care Centre in Madhupur Upazila in 1983. The doctor was renowned for charging only 5–10 Bangladeshi taka (equivalent to approximately 0.08–0.17 United States dollars in 2023) for physical examinations, and providing his patients with needed medicine whether they could pay or not. The clinic received donations from New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States. For his devotion to the local Bangladeshis, they called Baker "Doctor Brother" (Bengali: ডাক্তার ভাই, romanized: Daktar Bhai). By 2011, Baker was ill and awaiting a physician to replace him; when he died in 2015, none had arrived.[2]
References
^ abcdFr. Carraro, Lorenzo (February 2016). "A modern-day saint". World Mission. Archived from the original on 9 October 2019. Retrieved 9 October 2019.