UAE | General
Couple honoured for medical contributions
Dr Rouhalla Sabetimehr and his wife Dr Maleeha were among the eight winners for the 2008 Abu Dhabi Awards for their medical and humanitarian contributions to the United Arab Emirates since the 1950s.
- The royal family gave my husband a time span of three weeks to learn all he could about dentistry, during which I was assisting 1,000 Bedouins who were at that time living in tents made out of wood, says Maleeha Sabetimehr, Award winner
- Image Credit: Supplied Picture
Abu Dhabi: Dr Rouhalla Sabetimehr and his wife Dr Maleeha were among the eight winners for the 2008 Abu Dhabi Awards for their medical and humanitarian contributions to the United Arab Emirates since the 1950s.
Dr Rouhalla, 78, of an Iranian origin, arrived to the UAE in 1954 to offer medical assistance to Bedouins and citizens in Al Ain during the summer and in Abu Dhabi during the winter, his wife Maleeha told Gulf News on Thursday.
Shortly after his arrival, the late Shaikh Zayed Bin Sultan Al Nahyan advised him to get married to a female doctor to assist him with his medical services. He then travelled to Iran and came back with his wife Maleeha.
"Shaikh Zayed and the rest of the family visited our home shortly after I arrived to Al Ain. My husband asked me to wear a abaya and shela out of respect. The minute Shaikh Zayed saw me he asked me why I was wearing the national costume," said Maleeha, who immediately took off her abaya and shela and continued the evening in her regular clothes.
"I'm a doctor, I shouldn't be restricted by clothes! Those were the exact words to my husband from Shaikh Zayed," she explained.
Even though Maleeha was originally a gynaecologist, she delivered over 5,000 babies in both Al Ain and Abu Dhabi.
Multi-tasking
Rouhalla who is a general practitioner was also multi-tasking and spent three weeks learning more about dental care.
He also travelled to Iran to purchase all the necessary dental equipment needed.
"The royal family gave my husband a time span of three weeks to learn all he can about dentistry, during which I was medically assisting 1,000 Bedouins who were at the time living in tents made out of wood. There was no electricity, no bread and very little water available at the time. The only rice available had bugs and worms in it," said the award winner.
In 1958, Rouhalla once again travelled to Iran and came back to Al Ain with a farmer.
"The first fruits, vegetables and proper seed planting were then introduced to Al Ain and Abu Dhabi to help improve the countries poor nutrition." Maleeha explained.
The Sabetimehr's were also the first to introduce pharmacies all over the UAE and the first camera which Rouhalla had to travel by to purchase from Iran.
"My husband dealt with more than 300 pharmaceutical companies all over the world to make sure the best drugs would be available in each city across the UAE," she said.
Share this article
More from UAE General
More from UAE
Popular in UAE

-
Your pictures
Readers' pictures
The best reader pictures from around the UAE this week
Latest news
- Dance group brings taste of Korean culture to Abu Dhabi
- EAD studies focus on water security
- Dubai Press Club marks 10th anniversary
- Visitors flock to see latest offerings at Sharjah book fair
- UAE combats human trafficking
- Ministry denies hijacking of UAE-flagged ship
- Saif meets special needs centre users
- Man says he repaid 95% of amount he embezzled
- Dubai saleswoman claims she was duped, raped
- Female clerk, waiter deny drug trafficking charges
- Gulf health officials slam unethical advertising
- The blue-chip boy
- Live hoardings: Ad a glance
- Gem of a woman
- Dewa charges: It's a bitter bill
Community Reports
-
Help me find my precious cat
Raif, my cute eight-month-old ‘fur ball', went missing in Abu Dhabi's Al Bateen area last month
-
Pavement parking irks pedestrians
Gulf News reader calls on authorities to step in and stop car owners from invading pathways meant for safe walking
-
Faded parking lines pose a problem
Motorists could be fined for parking incorrectly even though they can hardly see the boundaries in the designated areas
-
School buses block residential parking
Commercial vehicles taking up free parking facilities in Al Wuheida, inconveniencing residents in surrounding villas


