Dr. Ambrosoli asked to enter the Congregation of the Comboni Missionaries in 1949, while he was a young doctor. In his letter of application, he wrote: “I would like to place myself at the service of the missions as a qualified doctor.” On 9 September 1953, he made his first profession and on 13 December 1955, he was ordained priest by the Cardinal Archbishop of Milan, Giovanni Battista Montini, the future Pope Paul VI.
A few months later, on the first of February 1956, he left for Africa. His destination: Kalongo, in the north of Uganda. The town of Kalongo is located on a plateau 1,100 m above sea level. When Fr. Ambrosoli arrived there, it had a population of over 4,000. There he found a small medical dispensary.
He was not discouraged. His plan for a large hospital meant there was a lot of work to do. Working with his own hands, he dug for stones and transported them on a lorry to the building site where he also supervised the making of bricks.
Little by little that dispensary grew, one block after another until it had room for 350 patients. There were departments for maternity, paediatrics, medicine, surgery, gynaecology, radiology, and infectious diseases. They also needed to care for the malnourished, as well as those suffering from leprosy and tuberculosis. Today, the facility treats nearly 60, 000 patients every year.
The Great Doctor
In only a few years, the people began to call him Ajwaka Madit (the great doctor) or Doctor Ladit (the great giver of medicine). His peacefulness became proverbial, although he could be equally firm when required. He defended the wives of the soldiers and the people of the South when they were targeted by guerrilla soldiers in the North.
The faith of the people in the healing powers of Fr. Ambrosoli knew no limits. In the collective imagination of the people, he became “The man of God with the power to heal,” to heal not only the body but the spirit and the heart. In his work as a surgeon, Fr. Ambrosoli afforded special care to the women as mothers and bearers of life. He understood that those mothers were capable of heroic acts to make sure their children were born and lived.
Fr. Ambrosoli looked for collaboration and made people responsible: the doctors working alongside him looked upon Kalongo Hospital as their own. He wanted all the nursing staff to feel directly involved in running the complicated machine that was Kalongo Hospital. He valued local insight and knew that everyone’s work in the process was essential.
Towards the end of 1973, his health began to show signs of deteriorating but he gave himself no rest. Even the periods he spent in Italy were a race against time as he went from one operating theatre to another to learn the latest surgical techniques.
He met with support groups who provided medical equipment. He was well aware of his precarious state of health but he felt it would be a betrayal to hold back with things in Uganda in such a state of emergency. For him, to love others more than himself was the norm.
The year 1986 was certainly the most difficult year for Kalongo, overrun alternately by rebels and the regular army. On 21 October, the army occupied Kalongo amid indescribable scenes of panic: even the patients took flight.
Relations with government troops collapsed irremediably. The very fact of having spent a few months with the rebels was interpreted as connivance. This is the destiny of any hospital in a war zone. The situation in the hospital came to a head on 30 January 1987.
The military authorities accused the missionaries and hospital personnel of collaborating with the Acholi guerrillas and ordered the evacuation of Kalongo. Having to transfer everything and everyone suddenly to Lira was a massive task for Fr. Ambrosoli. His concern was for the doctors, the young women students of the school of midwifery, and the Sisters in charge of them.
He feared the students would miss a school year while he wanted them to end their courses with their exams and diplomas. Even though he had only one partially functioning kidney, Fr. Ambrosoli asked his superiors for permission to delay his return to Italy for treatment. Unfortunately, his health was rapidly deteriorating.
Back To Kalongo
After working unceasingly for 31 years, he died in Lira on 27 March 1987, of renal infection. He was 64 years old. It was not until seven years later that his remains were exhumed and reburied in Kalongo, close to the hospital that bears his name.
On 28 November 2019, Pope Francis authorized the Congregation for the Causes of the Saints “to promulgate, among others, the miracle attributed to the intercession of the Venerable Servant of God, Giuseppe Ambrosoli.”
The miracle, granted through the intercession of Fr. Ambrosoli and which will allow him to be beatified next November 22, took place to the benefit of a young Ugandan woman. This was the decision reached in the spring of last year by the medical commission set up by the Congregation for the Causes of the Saints, concluding their examination of “an extraordinary and inexplicable cure” from the clinical and scientific point of view. The beneficiary’s name is Lucia Lomokol.
On the evening of October 25, 2008, the 20-year-old Lucia lost the child she was carrying in her womb and was dying of septicaemia (blood poisoning). She was brought to Matany Hospital in Northern Uganda, another hospital run by the Comboni Missionaries, in extremely poor condition. The hospital had no means of helping her.
Then Dr. Eric Dominic placed an image of Fr. Ambrosoli on her pillow and asked the relatives there to pray to “The Great Doctor.” The following morning, Lucia was better; something no-one expected.
Today, the work of Fr. Ambrosoli goes on through his foundation called “Doctor Ambrosoli Memorial Hospital.” The Foundation was created in 1998 by the Ambrosoli family and by the Comboni Missionaries to guarantee the continuity and future of the hospital and the school of midwifery founded by him.
Its aim is to ensure access for the population to qualified health services for their better health and standard of living. The Foundation’s proceeds, together with contributions from the local communities, fosters medical training so that Uganda may one day have its own independent health service. Fr. Ambrosoli will be the first Comboni Missionary to be beatified.