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Judith <I>Hornung</I> Kalla

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Judith Hornung Kalla

Birth
Moravska Ostrava, Okres Ostrava-mesto, Moravian-Silesian, Czech Republic
Death
16 Aug 2022 (aged 88)
Vancouver, Greater Vancouver Regional District, British Columbia, Canada
Burial
Burnaby, Greater Vancouver Regional District, British Columbia, Canada Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
KALLA, Dr. Judith (née Hornung)
Died on August 16, 2022 at the age of 88.

Born in Czechoslovakia in 1934, Judy's idyllic childhood was upended by the Nazi occupation. Her family barely escaped the Holocaust to England in 1939, following a harrowing journey through Prague and Berlin. The war years were tumultuous for young Judy, who was separated from her family for much of it. Despite the early childhood trauma, Judy's perpetually sunny disposition never faltered, and she was eventually reunited with her family after her father, Leo, settled into a family practice in north London. Determined to follow her dad into medicine, she completed medical school at St. Mary's Hospital, one of only fifteen women in her class.

With a love of a travel and eager for new experiences, Judy decided to finish her post-graduate training abroad. She arrived in Vancouver in 1958 and, in typical Judy fashion, happily threw herself into an internship at Vancouver General Hospital, forging lifelong friendships and a love for her newly adopted city. In 1959, she met her husband, Frank, a doctor and Hungarian refugee, on a blind date. Despite what she would later describe to one of her granddaughters as a challenging first date due to Frank's then-limited English, they soon fell deeply in love and were married within four months.

Frank and Judy started a family practice in Vancouver, which they shared until their retirement in 1997. They complemented each other's skillsets: Frank was trained as a surgeon, while Judy was a people person whose patients adored her, and vice versa. She fondly remembered sharing a laugh with one patient after he asked her to review his "autopsy report". Judy was passionate about learning and, throughout her career, pursued other opportunities to augment her practice, including working in public health, screening school kids for signs of scoliosis, teaching medical students, and participating in the early evolution of the College of Family Practice.

Born to participate, Judy was an avid and skilled skier, tennis and squash player. She loved music, art, history, literature, and travel. And she was unfailingly generous with her time, resources, and devotion. But of her countless pursuits and passions, family always came first. Judy was a beloved daughter, sister, wife, mother, and grandmother. Despite working fulltime, she was a devoted mother to her three sons: Tim, Tony, and Dan. And when that streak of maleness, gave way to a raft of girls in the next generation, she tirelessly dedicated herself to her granddaughters: Melissa, Chelsea, Samantha, Gabrielle, Ashley, and Charlotte.

Judy touched so many lives. She will be long remembered for her contagious smile, her passion for life, her selflessness, her unconditional love of family and friends, and her penchant for making anyone she encountered feel heard and supported.

In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made to St. Paul's Hospital Foundation (http://donate.helpstpauls.com/judith-kalla) in honor of the wonderful care she received there and the deep family ties to the institution.

Obituary from https://www.remembering.ca/obituary/judith-kalla-1086029257
KALLA, Dr. Judith (née Hornung)
Died on August 16, 2022 at the age of 88.

Born in Czechoslovakia in 1934, Judy's idyllic childhood was upended by the Nazi occupation. Her family barely escaped the Holocaust to England in 1939, following a harrowing journey through Prague and Berlin. The war years were tumultuous for young Judy, who was separated from her family for much of it. Despite the early childhood trauma, Judy's perpetually sunny disposition never faltered, and she was eventually reunited with her family after her father, Leo, settled into a family practice in north London. Determined to follow her dad into medicine, she completed medical school at St. Mary's Hospital, one of only fifteen women in her class.

With a love of a travel and eager for new experiences, Judy decided to finish her post-graduate training abroad. She arrived in Vancouver in 1958 and, in typical Judy fashion, happily threw herself into an internship at Vancouver General Hospital, forging lifelong friendships and a love for her newly adopted city. In 1959, she met her husband, Frank, a doctor and Hungarian refugee, on a blind date. Despite what she would later describe to one of her granddaughters as a challenging first date due to Frank's then-limited English, they soon fell deeply in love and were married within four months.

Frank and Judy started a family practice in Vancouver, which they shared until their retirement in 1997. They complemented each other's skillsets: Frank was trained as a surgeon, while Judy was a people person whose patients adored her, and vice versa. She fondly remembered sharing a laugh with one patient after he asked her to review his "autopsy report". Judy was passionate about learning and, throughout her career, pursued other opportunities to augment her practice, including working in public health, screening school kids for signs of scoliosis, teaching medical students, and participating in the early evolution of the College of Family Practice.

Born to participate, Judy was an avid and skilled skier, tennis and squash player. She loved music, art, history, literature, and travel. And she was unfailingly generous with her time, resources, and devotion. But of her countless pursuits and passions, family always came first. Judy was a beloved daughter, sister, wife, mother, and grandmother. Despite working fulltime, she was a devoted mother to her three sons: Tim, Tony, and Dan. And when that streak of maleness, gave way to a raft of girls in the next generation, she tirelessly dedicated herself to her granddaughters: Melissa, Chelsea, Samantha, Gabrielle, Ashley, and Charlotte.

Judy touched so many lives. She will be long remembered for her contagious smile, her passion for life, her selflessness, her unconditional love of family and friends, and her penchant for making anyone she encountered feel heard and supported.

In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made to St. Paul's Hospital Foundation (http://donate.helpstpauls.com/judith-kalla) in honor of the wonderful care she received there and the deep family ties to the institution.

Obituary from https://www.remembering.ca/obituary/judith-kalla-1086029257


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  • Created by: LarryJ
  • Added: Aug 23, 2022
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/242918032/judith-kalla: accessed ), memorial page for Judith Hornung Kalla (11 Mar 1934–16 Aug 2022), Find a Grave Memorial ID 242918032, citing Beth Israel Cemetery and Memorial Garden, Burnaby, Greater Vancouver Regional District, British Columbia, Canada; Maintained by LarryJ (contributor 49091117).