Founder & Medical Director

Meet Dr. Moolji.

From a teenage volunteer at a Chicago elementary school, to a U.S. Army Captain in Iraq, to founding Princeton Pediatrics — a doctor whose path has always followed the children.

Dr. Beezer Moolji at Princeton Pediatrics

A doctor who treats the whole child, not just the symptom.

Dr. Moolji is the founder and medical director of Princeton Pediatrics. He's a board-certified pediatrician who has spent his entire adult life — from teenage volunteering to U.S. Army deployment to founding this practice — caring for children.

His philosophy: prevention over treatment, root cause over symptom relief, and the least invasive remedy whenever possible. Behind every diagnosis, there's a child being listened to, observed, and read in the full context of their life.

20+
Years caring
for kids
7
Years U.S.
Army service
6
Urgent care
clinics led
1
Mission:
your child
Children smiling together

From tutoring children to Hope Children's Hospital.

Dr. Moolji knew he wanted to be a pediatrician since he was a teenager. While attending high school at the Illinois Math & Science Academy, he first started working with children as a volunteer at a local elementary school.

At the University of Chicago, he majored in psychology and tutored children in the surrounding Hyde Park area — including caring for an autistic boy. The psychology training would later become one of his most-used tools as a pediatrician.

During residency at Hope Children's Hospital, he became known for diagnosing rare illnesses and advocating for those children.

Caring for the wounded on both sides of a war.

Dr. Moolji served in the U.S. Army from 2005 to 2012. From 2006 to 2007, he was deployed to Iraq, where he treated injured soldiers and children caught in the crossfires of war.

That experience taught him the fragility of life — and prepared him for the kind of emergency situations that can walk into an urgent care clinic at any hour. He emerged a more skilled clinician, trained in procedures like suturing lacerations and caring for traumatic wounds, but more than that: a doctor who never forgot what it meant to show up for someone on their worst day.

Captain Beezer Moolji examining a child during his deployment in Iraq, January 5, 2007
Capt. Moolji examining a child during deployment, Iraq · Jan. 5, 2007
Princeton Pediatrics clinic at sunset
Princeton Pediatrics, 136 S. 2nd Street

From the floors of Medical City to a home of his own.

Born and raised in Chicago, Dr. Moolji got to Texas as quickly as he could. He has lived in the north Dallas area since 2013 — starting in the outpatient clinic at Dallas Children's Hospital, then spending six years at Medical City Children's Hospital, first on the hospital floor, then in their pediatric urgent care system.

From 2015 to 2021, he served as associate medical director of all six Medical City Children's Urgent Care clinics across the north Dallas area. He continues to work prn at Medical City Children's Hospital.

In Princeton, he found the place to put it all together: a community-rooted practice that combines the rigor of a hospital system with the warmth of a family doctor down the street.

Medical philosophy
The key to unlocking a difficult problem is through carefully listening to the parents and to the children, astute observation, and reading the totality of the child in his or her environment.
— Dr. Beezer Moolji
From Dr. Moolji's notebook

A few favorite quotes.

Lines Dr. Moolji returns to often — about diagnosis, prevention, and the practice of medicine as a partnership.

"When you rule out the probable, you are left with the improbable."
— Sherlock Holmes · Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
"When you rule out the improbable, you are left with the impossible."
— Dirk Gently · Douglas Adams
"An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure."
— Benjamin Franklin
"Intellectuals solve problems. Geniuses prevent them."
— Albert Einstein
"Imagine a world in which medicine was oriented toward healing rather than disease — where doctors believed in the natural healing capacity of human beings and emphasized prevention above treatment. In such a world, doctors and patients would be partners working toward the same ends."
— Andrew Weil
Ready to meet?

Let's take care of your child, together.

Call us to book your child's first visit, or open the patient portal if you're already part of the practice.

Call 469-581-8115 Patient Portal