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'SPLENDID TEACHER': Namphy
specialized in T.S. Eliot.
Courtesy Lisa-Marie Namphy |
while volunteering in the
Middle East last year with Christian Peacemaker Teams,
Kathleen Namphy came upon a weeping Palestinian woman
at a checkpoint. The guard would not let her pass to
take her child to the hospital. Namphy picked up the
child. The soldier blocking the path asked if the child
was part of her family. “Yes,” Namphy told
him, “the human family.” She told the guard
that to stop her, he would have to shoot her.
Namphy, a lecturer emerita in English, died
August 22 after falling while climbing on Iran’s
tallest mountain, 18,600-foot Mount Damavand. She was
69.
The daughter of a forest ranger and timber salesman
father and a schoolteacher mother, Kathleen Kampmann
was born in Park Falls, Wis., the middle of three sisters.
The family moved many times to ranger stations in California,
Oregon and Washington; and her parents supplemented
her formal schooling with lessons in botany, geology
and zoology. After her 1956 graduation from the University
of Washington, her life became a crazy quilt of adventure.
In her early 20s, she traveled to the Amazon and wrote
a descriptive grammar of a tribal language. She studied
Elizabethan drama at Oxford University in 1956 on a
Fulbright scholarship. In 1957, she won a gold medal
in the high jump in the East-West Games in Moscow. Setting
out to retrace the steps of Alexander the Great and
Marco Polo, she drove and hiked from Germany to the
Middle East and into Asia before hitching a ride across
the Pacific in the laundry room of a cruise ship. She
trapped animals, including a pair of rare onagers, in
Iran for American zoos—an activity that she later
would view as at odds with her environmentalism.
In the 1960s, she taught at the American University
of Beirut and Beirut College for Women. During this
time, she met and married Haitian entrepreneur Joseph
Namphy, with whom she had four children. They later
divorced.
Kathleen Namphy received a master’s degree in
English in 1970 from the University of Portland and
her doctorate in English and humanities in 1978 from
Stanford. She taught the range of Western literature,
but her specialty was T.S. Eliot. She won Stanford’s
two top teaching honors: the Lloyd W. Dinkelspiel Award
in 1982 and the Walter J. Gores Award in 1993. “She
was a splendid teacher,” says Ronald Rebholz,
professor emeritus of English. “She expected
her students to express themselves with clarity and
grace.”
Even after being diagnosed with Hodgkin’s disease
in 1980 and breast cancer in 1990, Namphy retained her
spirit. “She was always troubling the powerful
on behalf of the oppressed,” says the Rev. Robert
Hamerton-Kelly, a former dean of Memorial Church who
told the story about the Palestinian checkpoint at a
September 21 service honoring Namphy. In working with
Christian Peacemaker Teams in Iraq, she lobbied U.S.
military authorities on behalf of Iraqi women whose
male relatives were missing and perhaps in custody.
She had learned about abuses at Abu Ghraib months before
the matter became widely known.
Namphy’s survivors include her children, Lisa-Marie,
Andre, Paul and Mychel; two grandchildren; and her sisters,
Pat Spada and Kay Frawley. She fostered several children
and young adults who became part of her extended family. |