Hills District Independent August 2020 #62 August 2020 | Page 6

LOCAL LIFE ONE OF THE HILLS FINEST... Dr Maleika Selwyn has dedicated her life to helping those less fortunate than herself. Photo: Kathryn Johnston by Lorna Gordon Dr Maleika Selwyn has been a doctor in the Hills for the last 20 years - serving the local community by working as a GP at West Pennant Hills Medical Centre and as an emergency doctor at Norwest Private Hospital. However, it’s her voluntary work and the other ways she gives back to the community that saw her nominated for Hills District Citizen of the year. Maleika attributes a lot of the drive behind her voluntary work to being a “third culture kid”. She was born and grew up in Mumbai, India where she completed primary school and was surrounded by extreme poverty. The concepts of privilege and a commitment to always serving the most vulnerable was a foundational principle instilled by her mother, but the most inspirational and influential voice of her childhood was Mother Teresa, whose dedication to the poorest of the poor in India made a huge impact on her life. Maleika’s family immigrated to Toronto, Canada which was the second culture that Maleika encountered. She spent her formative high school years as a Canadian teenager where her passion for indigenous issues and the importance of being welcoming to immigrants and refugees grew further. “Canada as a country is very welcoming of immigrants and refugees and it was an incredible experience to move there. Canadians are so welcoming of diversity, embrace multiculturalism, are very progressive in their mindsets and work hard to combat systemic racism. They also honour their First Nations people.” Maleika told The Independent. “As a teenager I was given every opportunity to excel and encouraged to pursue my dream to become a doctor.” After high school, Maleika and her family moved to Australia, where she went on to study medicine at Sydney University and embrace a third culture. While her move from Mumbai to Toronto was easy, she felt the move to Australia was more difficult, due to some of the attitudes she encountered. “One of the biggest struggles I faced when our family moved to Australia was the way Australians viewed diversity, immigrants, refugees, asylum seekers and their own indigenous community. All those things were startling to me coming from Canada and their acceptance of all people,” she commented. Having grown up surrounded by poverty in Mumbai, Maleika knew she wanted to give back to the people who needed help the most. When she was first out of medical school and had completed her training as a junior doctor at Westmead Hospital, Maleika moved to Dubbo where she worked at Dubbo Base Hospital, the Wellington Aboriginal Medical Service, the Rural Flying Doctor Service and ran medical clinics in the remote towns of Walgett and Brewarrina. She connected with the local elders and learned from them how to $259 SP55-R1 $429 SP100-R2 $329 $1259 $209 5 Walker Street, South Windsor Phone 4577 4622 www.gwsmachinery.com.au 6 ISSUE 62 // AUGUST 2020 www.hdinews.com.au THE HILLS INDEPENDENT