DR LEE Wei Ling, the daughter of founding prime minister Lee Kuan Yew, has died at the age of 69, four years after she was diagnosed with a rare, degenerative brain disease.
Her death was disclosed by younger brother Lee Hsien Yang in a Facebook post on Wednesday (Oct 9). He said she died at home.
The wake will be held at the Singapore Casket, Pearl and Sapphire Hall, in Lavender Street, from Oct 10 to Oct 12, he added in a subsequent post. Visiting hours will be from 2 pm to 10 pm on Thursday, 10 am to 10 pm on Friday, and 10 am to 1 pm on Saturday.
Dr Lee, the second of three children, was also the sister of Senior Minister Lee Hsien Loong. Writing on Facebook, SM Lee said his sister was a fighter, and her character remained unchanged throughout her life.
“She was fiercely loyal to friends, sympathised instinctively with the underdog, and would mobilise actively to do something when she saw unfairness, or suspected wrongdoing,” he added.
Dr Lee, a neurologist who headed the National Neuroscience Institute from 2004 to 2014, was diagnosed with progressive supranuclear palsy in 2020.
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The condition affects physical movements, walking, balance and eye movements, and eventually swallowing, and can lead to serious complications such as pneumonia and choking.
Prime Minister Lawrence Wong wrote on Facebook that Dr Lee had devoted her life to medicine: “Throughout her career, she was unswerving in her focus on patient welfare and medical ethics.”
PM Wong added that Dr Lee had also written newspaper columns later in her career, where she shared her stoic outlook on life as well as stories of her father.
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“Many readers would have come away enriched by her strong convictions and incisive observations,” he said.
SM Lee said his sister had expounded her views “trenchantly and vividly” in her column in The Sunday Times.
Some of these pieces were later published in a book titled A Hakka Woman’s Singapore Stories: My Life As A Daughter, Doctor And Diehard Singaporean.
Announcing her diagnosis in Aug 2020, Dr Lee described it as a “rather nasty brain disease” that will result in death “for the fortunate”.
She said then: “My immediate reaction to the news was “忍”(ren), or ‘endure’ in Chinese, of which the traditional character has a knife above a heart. I have been practising “忍” since I was in Chinese school, recognising that life has many unpleasant, unavoidable situations.
“It would be nice if this entire episode turns out to be a nightmare and that I will wake up. But it is getting increasingly real and inescapable every day.”
Born in 1955, Dr Lee was the only daughter and middle child of Lee Kuan Yew and Kwa Geok Choo.
Her father became Singapore’s first prime minister the year she turned four.
Dr Lee’s achievements were chronicled in newspaper articles over the years, such as when she became one of the youngest Singaporeans to attain a black belt in karate in 1970, and when she graduated top of her class year after year and became a President’s Scholar in 1973.
SM Lee said one of his early memories of his sister was of her first day in kindergarten, when she cried all the way home while on the school bus, despite his best efforts to comfort her. “After that, our mother arranged for our grandfather to pick us up after school instead.”
Dr Lee loved animals, especially dogs, and wanted to become a vet, SM Lee recounted. But after being dissuaded by their parents, she took up medicine instead, topping her class at the University of Singapore (now the National University of Singapore) before becoming a paediatric neurologist, specialising in epilepsy.
“She brought to medicine the same intensity and commitment she did to everything, and developed close bonds with her patients, many of whom she treated over many years,” SM Lee said.
SM Lee said his sister stayed on at their family home at 38 Oxley Road with their parents after he and Lee Hsien Yang married and moved out.
“She kept a watchful eye on their well-being as they grew older. She supervised our mother’s care after her strokes. She took care of my father, too, who was himself growing older and frailer even as he looked after our mother, and especially after she died in 2010,” he added.
“Years ago, when I was about 13, my father felt his life to be in danger, and told me that if anything happened to him, I was to take care of my mother and younger sister and brother,” SM Lee said.
“Sadly, after he passed away in 2015, a shadow fell between my siblings and me, and I was unable to fulfil his wish. But I held nothing against Ling, and continued to do whatever I could to ensure her welfare.”
Dr Lee and Lee Hsien Yang were the joint administrators and executors of Lee Kuan Yew’s will. In 2017, they made public their dispute with SM Lee over the will with regard to 38 Oxley Road.
After Dr Lee was diagnosed with progressive supranuclear palsy in 2020, she took it with her usual fortitude and stoicism, and posted about it as one of those things in life to be borne and endured, SM Lee said.
“She knew what it meant, and made the most of the time she had, even as her health declined. Now she has left us. I will deeply miss Ling. May she rest in peace.” THE STRAITS TIMES