Clinical eye
Years of medical thinking give the stories a practical grounding: bodies, symptoms, food, metabolic health, care, and prevention.
Dr Sudah Yehuda’s work lives at the crossing point of medicine, anthropology, travel, food, ritual, memory, and friendship. This site gathers twenty years of field notes into a living archive — less a résumé, more a map of attention.

It is shaped by kitchens, families, grief, ritual, migration, poverty, friendship, faith, geography, and the stories people tell about their own bodies. The archive follows those connections without stripping them of life.
Years of medical thinking give the stories a practical grounding: bodies, symptoms, food, metabolic health, care, and prevention.
The writing listens for context: culture, ritual, family systems, memory, colonial traces, and how communities understand healing.
The archive moves across countries and ordinary encounters — airports, homes, clinics, rivers, kitchens, ceremonies, and roads.
The best parts of the archive are alive because the doctor is present inside them: curious, social, funny, observant, and willing to keep moving.



The biography is the doorway. The archive is the real body of work.