Pat Blunden's efforts were tireless when it came to showing support for the betterment of other people's lives. She was particularly passionate about education as a means of advancing society and tangibly demonstrated this with loyal contributions to students at SFU, something she had done for more than 30 years.
Pat's story began in Hong Kong in the late 1930s. Her mother - born and raised in Vancouver's Chinatown - had traveled to Hong Kong in search of job opportunities during the Depression. Pat's family life and education were impacted by World War II and Japanese occupation. Life was precarious. When schools reopened in 1945, textbooks were dated, and the school library was empty.
At age 17, she had been sent to England to complete her education. Pat had only had one year to adjust to a new curriculum and study for school-leaving exams. As a result, she didn't obtain the grades necessary to gain access to university. Instead, she completed a three-year diploma in physiotherapy in London before moving with her husband to Vancouver in 1963.
Pat was busy in Vancouver raising her three young children and working at Shaughnessy Hospi...read more
Pat Blunden's efforts were tireless when it came to showing support for the betterment of other people's lives. She was particularly passionate about education as a means of advancing society and tangibly demonstrated this with loyal contributions to students at SFU, something she had done for more than 30 years.
Pat's story began in Hong Kong in the late 1930s. Her mother - born and raised in Vancouver's Chinatown - had traveled to Hong Kong in search of job opportunities during the Depression. Pat's family life and education were impacted by World War II and Japanese occupation. Life was precarious. When schools reopened in 1945, textbooks were dated, and the school library was empty.
At age 17, she had been sent to England to complete her education. Pat had only had one year to adjust to a new curriculum and study for school-leaving exams. As a result, she didn't obtain the grades necessary to gain access to university. Instead, she completed a three-year diploma in physiotherapy in London before moving with her husband to Vancouver in 1963.
Pat was busy in Vancouver raising her three young children and working at Shaughnessy Hospital, which exclusively treated veterans at the time. Through her rehabilitation work, she gained immense and lifelong respect for those who served our country in World War I and II.
During this era of providing care for others, Pat longed for the chance to continue her studies and go to university. A family inheritance made it possible, and Pat obtained her B.Sc. in 1981. She stayed on as an unclassified student, awaiting the opening of the new gerontology program at SFU, and was among the very first students admitted.
She confessed that it hadn't always been easy. "My fear, however, was that I'd never have the chance to go to university. After moving to Canada, I was so grateful for the opportunity," she said.
Generous by nature and fueled by her gratitude for her education, Pat gave back to SFU immediately upon graduating from the gerontology program through modest annual donations to the library. In 2006, with matching funds from SFU, she elevated her support significantly by establishing the Pat Blunden Bursary Endowment, which helped SFU students in financial need.
Ever humble, Pat said of her donation, "I just want to help the next generation of Canadians become great and productive."