Zerefeh Bashur
Syrian physician

Zerefeh Bashur

The basics
Quick facts
Intro
Syrian physician
Gender:
Female
Places:
Work field:
Birth:
1884
Death:
1968
Education:
University of Illinois at Chicago
Biography menu
Menu

Jump to

Introduction Education and practice
The details
Biography

Introduction

Zerefeh Bashur, MD (Safita, Syria; 1884 – 1968) was the first female licensed physician in the Levant.

Education and practice

Zerefeh Bashur was born in 1884 into an Orthodox Christian family in Safita, Syria, then a part of the Ottoman Empire.

Born into a family of physicians, Zerefeh often accompanied her father and older brothers in their clinics. She noticed that the patients were predominantly men, as many of the women would not expose themselves to physicians, who were exclusively male. This prompted her to decide on a career in medicine for herself – a noteworthy feat, given that males during this time in the Ottoman Empire typically did not study past the 5 grade, and females would end their studies in the 2 grade.

Zerefeh began her studies in the American Protestant School in Safita, which she continued in Tripoli (in what is now Lebanon) in the Tripoli Girls School.

Following in the footsteps of her brothers, who had received their degrees from the University of Illinois, Zerefeh convinced her father to let her pursue a medical degree in the United States. She left for the US in 1907, enrolling in the University of Illinois College of Medicine that same year, and receiving her medical degree in 1911.

Dr. Bashur returned to the Middle East after completing her training, and practiced in Tripoli and Safita until her death in 1968, bringing modern medicine to women in the Middle East for the first time, and delivering thousands of newborns over the course of a career that spanned over half a century.