Tributes flow at retirement celebration for Dean Brian Postl
Dr. Brian Postl, the longtime dean of medicine and health sciences at UM, was praised at his retirement celebration as an influential leader who has advanced equity and brought about transformative change.
“Thank you for everything you have given to the university,” UM President and Vice-Chancellor Dr. Michael Benarroch told Postl at the June 20 event. “Your legacy will live on for a long, long time.”
More than 200 members of the university and health-care communities gathered in the Brodie Centre Atrium for the celebration of Postl’s distinguished career. Theresa Oswald, CEO of Doctors Manitoba, emceed the event.
Postl, a 1976 UM alumnus in medicine, has practised as a pediatrician for 40 years, with a particular focus on Indigenous children in northern Manitoba and Nunavut.
“You have dedicated your life for children, and that’s what’s important,” said UM Elder-in-Residence Margaret Lavallee.
Postl’s roles at UM in the 1980s and ’90s included leading the J.A. Hildes Northern Medical Unit (now Ongomiizwin – Health Services) and the departments of pediatrics and community health sciences.
The Rady Faculty presented the departing dean with a 1991 print by Inuit artist Pitaloosie Saila. Titled Changing Traditions, it depicts four generations of an Inuit family, including a baby.
Dr. Diane Hiebert-Murphy, provost and vice-president (academic) of UM, said Postl “deeply understands what it means to be of service to the community,” noting his work toward reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples and his support of the Rady Faculty’s anti-racism policy, a first among Canadian post-secondary institutions.
Beth Beaupre, provincial lead, health workforce at Shared Health, said Postl has built successful partnerships with the health system, regulatory bodies and government stakeholders and has led the expansion of students’ learning opportunities in rural and northern Manitoba.
Raman Dhaliwal, associate vice-president (administration) and executive director, Rady Faculty of Health Sciences, praised Postl’s ability to “take a really complex issue and make a decision on how to move forward quickly.”
“In a faculty of health sciences, how can we not be involved?” he asked.
Postl’s term has been extended to the end of August while the search for his successor is completed.
In honour of his retirement, a UM scholarship has been established for Indigenous students in the health sciences. To donate to the scholarship fund, visit https://give.umanitoba.ca/PostlScholarship.
View the four-minute video Dr. Brian Postl: An Illustrious Career.
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