Thursday, 15 May 2008

Alimu

























His name is Alimu and he comes from Conakry, Guinea, in West Africa. We first met him when a team of us went from the ship to Guinea to see if there were people there who needed surgery. We had slots still available for facial tumors and cleft lips. He is 22 years old and he has had this tumor growing for 8 years. All of his teenage years. He had come 24 hours to see if we might be able to help. He carries a towel around for whatever reason...to hide the tumor…to wipe his mouth as the tumor stretches his mouth open…or to cover up the odour. He is very social, or at least he was with us.
The clinic where we saw him was in a village called N’Zao. A great place, run by the Christian and Missionary Alliance. A wonderful place with very caring people. The World Food Program flew him down here to Monrovia for free for his surgery and will fly him home to Conakry when he leaves here. With a new outlook on life…
I left there on a great high. People we met were wonderful. We felt like we were with old friends. People with great need would be coming for help. The team I had just spent 4 days with was fun. The 20 hours of travelling together had gone quickly and interestingly. But I also had thoughts that were not quite so comfortable. I had just seen at this clinic some people with great commitment. I read recently that a refugee is not just for Christmas and the thought kept running through my mind last week as we travelled. I had seen people whose doors are open 24 hours a day…yes, they have to set some boundaries but it is because they are willing…willing to be there for the people they serve all the time. Learning all the time…teach me to pull teeth, tell me what you are feeling, what does that lump feel like, what are you looking for. Yes, I love being here, and I love development issues and all I have learned here, and yes, I love being out in the village and yes, I love getting to know the patients and the people I meet here... but I do not think I want it 24 hours a day. Am I weak? Am I not committed enough? Am I spiritual? These are questions I wrestle with, that do not make me feel comfortable.

Alimu is in surgery right now as I write. One of our team is a young man who I know will visit him in the ward many times through out the days as he recovers. He will take him back to the airport and see him personally onto the plane that will take him home. I wish I could be there to see him arrive back home. I wish I could see what he does next and what his life holds. I think it will be different.

Tuesday, 13 May 2008

To Guinea we will go!

Last week a team of us drove north to the country of Guinea. For most of our operations the schedules are full, some with waiting lists, but we still have openings for facial tumors and cleft lip surgeries. So...off we went for a small screening. A great team of 5 of us drove 10 hours there and 9 hours back. It was wonderful. We stayed at a great clinic run by the Christian and Missionary Alliance.
The hospitality was amazing, the people were like old friends and we saw a lot of patients, 21 of whom will come for surgery.
This young man is Alimu and he is 22 years old. He has had this tumor for 8 years. Yesterday he was flown down from Guinea for free by the World Food Program and today he will have his surgery. I am looking forward to seeing him tomorrow to see how he is doing.
Needless to say, we returned very excited, refreshed, and ready to go!
Again, what a priviledge!

Tuesday, 22 April 2008

This little Piggy....


Lots of babies this week for cleft lip surgery. A nurse this morning says they cried all night long. She said it was quite distracting. An understatement. I am sure it is a strange place to be. And she is the nurse for the job. We have such great, compassionate nurses here.

Also, many young patients are in for clubbed feet correction. I saw 2 young boys the other day on the dock, leaving to go home. They were probably 7 or 8 years old, hobbling very fast on new crutches, walking casts on, big grins, happy family members, just as if it were all so normal. Made me smile. a life can change so quickly!


Wear Your Slippers, Wear Your Slippers!


Two weeks ago, I was visiting one of the villages where some health care teaching was going on under a big tree. The teaching was on Hookworms and wearing your shoes as a preventative measure. It looked like attention was wavering. I remember praying for a missionary family with SIM in Burkina Faso who wanted us, as a Sunday School, to pray that their young son would keep his shoes on to prevent hookworms. So, this brought back memories for me As I watched, I thought, can we sing about it? Really, God is so faithful. Right away the tune for Frere Jacque or Are you sleeping? came to mind, so here goes…

Wear your slippers (flip flops here are called slippers)
Wear your slippers
Every Day
Every day
When you wear your slippers
When you wear your slippers
The worms stay away
The worms stay away

Of course, all this with motions. They all started to sing it. And a couple of days ago, while walking through the same village, people saw me and started singing. My favourite scripture lately has been Psalm 121. Our help cometh from the Lord who made Heaven and Earth. Why don’t I fgo to him more often. It was so fast, so direct, so practical and the ship people who are out there everyday, say that the people young and old are still singing that little piece of wisdom.

I am excited!!

Friday, 11 April 2008

PRINCESS

This is Princess. She is one of our VVF women and I got to know her last year. She has been on board three times now, so we have spent a lot of time together. She has learned to knit and to crochet and this time we played lots and lots of card games, with her beating me soundly at Crazy Eights many times. Princess was identified and brought here by the International Rescue Committee and they will bring her back for check ups until she is considered ready to go back to the Interior. Her plan is to continue selling from her wheel barrow and return to school in the fall. These women are amazing.
Check out the documentary called A Walk To Beautiful, airing on Nova May 13th in the States. It really shows the plight of women with fistulas.

Honey!!!

FROM POLLEN...TO HONEY!!!





How exciting to see the first harvest of honey from the women's projects from last year in Liberia!

Friday, 28 March 2008

What a privilege!!


I am reminded so often of what a privilege it is to be here...like when I was sitting under some trees the other day during a village meeting to see what some of their needs are...like when I visit "my" patient in the ward...teaching her to plat "Fish"...like when I donate blood(we are a floating blood bank, after all)...like when I am dodging the tubes and catheters during the worship service on the ward...like when I visited the Women's projects from last year and...saw them harvest their first ever honey from their bee hives. So many things. Last week a baby came on board for a surgery and had, not a cleft lip surgery but a whole cleft face surgery! Amazing!

This photo is not an easy one but it does show one of the little ones who came to our Screening Day for help, Yes, it really is a privilege to be here!!