Work on the Footers etc.

After the conference was over, Michael, Papa and I went up to Allegue and worked on the property for a few days.  Papa preached on Sunday, and I got caught up with some friends over the weekend.  Then Monday and Tuesday we poured footers.  Here are some pictures.  The red lines are generally over the footers, the yellow lines are over the septic, and the purple line is where the fence is.  Michael broke a couple of ribs when they were drilling the wells up there just before Pastor’s Conf., so he was the boss of the job while others did the heavy lifting and such.  Papa did the actual concrete work, and I was his go-fer.  🙂

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Putting in the stakes for the footer height

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Wilmon mixing cement, and others hired to carry it

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Papa making the footers

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Michael cutting re-bar

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Clean up

After Papa left later in the week, Michael and I had some other things to do.  Then we worked on the property some more.  We set the gate posts, formed up and poured the cap on the front fence wall, and did other various jobs that needed done.

Looking at plans and measurements

Looking at plans and measurements

Cleaning out the post holes

Cleaning out the post holes

Getting ready to set the posts in

Getting ready to set the posts in

This next picture is from outside of the left fence line on the land.  The rig there is the well driller.  The black barrel in front of the rig is where our well was drilled, and to the right of that is where the driveway comes down from the road.

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Finishing the low wall in front of Wilmon's house. The fence will be on it.

Finishing the low wall in front of Wilmon’s house. The fence will be on it.

This wall is capped!  It takes a lot longer to do it in Haiti than it would in the States. :(

This wall is capped! It takes a lot longer to do things in Haiti than it does in the States.  But it is a job well done thanks to Michael!

The First Girl’s Class in Haiti

The girl’s class I taught in Haiti two weeks ago went very well by the grace of God!  Monday morning we had a more girls show up than what I thought would, and before I knew it the limit of 15 had been reached.  We limited it to that because it was the first time and we weren’t sure how things would go.  That was all the girls that showed up first thing Monday morning too.  We had a couple others show up late or on Tuesday, but I had to tell them to come back another year.

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First of all we did registration; took their names, where they were from, who their Pastor was, how old they were and their phone number.   Then we had a song and prayer, and jumped right into the lessons.  I didn’t have time to stop and think about how to teach, I just talked because I knew we were running tight on time and I had no time to be nervous!  It went way better than I thought it would, and the girls were very attentive.  Deb Vital was my translator, and she did a wonderful job!  I could have handed the lessons to her and she would have done excellently.  But she preferred to have me teach in English and then translate it, as opposed to her trying to read the notes in English and then talking in Creole.  (So I couldn’t cop out – not that I really wanted to!)  It was a huge blessing and help to me to have her enthusiasm and support and energy right there every step of the way.  I enjoyed teaching, if that is what I did- I still don’t know!  All I know for sure is that I talked, Deb translated, and the girls listened and asked some questions.  The first day flew by, and it was done before I could think much about it.

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Tuesday did not go well for me.  Deb thought it went fine, but I had a very hard time keeping my train of thought and even finding words to explain what I was thinking.  I honestly think God gave me a bad day so that I would rely totally on Him for the strength to finish the week.  If it had all gone as well as Monday, I probably would have felt like “I can do this.”  Tuesday showed me very clearly that I can ONLY do this through the strength and grace of God.  The rest of the days went well, and I know it was only because of God.  Wednesday we had a lesson on hygiene.

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I was able to get some Glo Germ, which is a lotion that glows under a black light.  We had the girls put on the lotion then look at their hands.  Some of them wiped their hands on a dry rag.  Some washed with water, some with soap and water, and some with soap and water and brush.  Then we had them look at their hands to see which way got them the cleanest.  It was interesting!  Some of the girls got their hands perfectly clean with just soap and water!  I rigged the black light up inside the box.

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After class we made hand-washing jugs that help you use a minimal amount of water.  It was a bit hectic making the things, you have to soften/melt the base of the handle and pinch it together to seal it.  Well, it is a tricky process to not melt a hole, yet get it hot enough to seal.  I only had one big pliers to pinch them with, and at times there were four girls trying to give me their jugs!  Getting the strings to hang them by was not an easy job, but we eventually got them done. I hope that the girls will use them to wash their hands more frequently at home.

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Rachel is a friend of Deb’s (and now mine too!), and she came along to the classes.  It is because of her that I have pictures to share with you!  It was good to see the girls accept her as one of them, she was a ‘blan’, but yet she was a student.  I think it was very good that she was there, and she was a big help if we needed an extra hand!  The girls loved her!

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The girls loved illustrations.  The Haitians think in pictures, and I find that is becoming more and more true of myself.  So we used as many pictures as we could to illustrate verses, and to have other illustrations for other concepts.  The subjects of modesty and purity were towards the end of the week, and I was surprised to see how well the girls listened.  With some of them I could see an immediate change, as if they were wondering and found the answer.  Others didn’t really seem to care.  But the truth was presented, and now it is God’s to work in the hearts.

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Deb taught the last class alone; it was on relating to young men, and I thought it might be better if she just taught it.  I would do it if I had to, but with her being a married woman, and older than me, I thought she would have a lot more clout and respect in that subject.

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Before Deb’s lesson on Friday morning, we took our class down and sat in on a class being taught to the pastors.  It was on “A Woman’s Role in the Church”.  We had had one of the girls ask us about that specifically, so it was a perfect answer to the question.

God was so good in blessing the teaching, and I had one of the girls write me two letters.  Here they are, translated as best I could.

Vijinya, (I love the way they spell my name!)

Good morning. How are you my friend.  I’m writing this letter in the name of God who has all power, and to tell you thank you for what you do for me and for what you are continuing to do for me.  I always love you, and I always hold to the information you are teaching people.
I am praying for you, for God to bless you and your mama and your papa.  Always continue working, I am thinking of you.  
I am happy for the things you taught us. 

Thank you.  Christela

My Friend, I am sad that you are going.  Because I don’t know when you are coming back.  I wish for the passing of a year.  Always hold the feet of God, one day God will bless you.  I am praying for God to give you more vision and more intelligence.
I don’t know how much thanks to give you, but God will thank you more. 
(in English she wrote) I love you my friend.  Jesus loves you.

Good work.
Another time.

I am thankful for the blessing of God.  Some of the girl’s lives will be changed, some will not.  It is all in God’s hands.  I hope that He gives me many more opportunities to share His love and truth in this way.  Thank you all so much for your prayers!  I could tell that you were praying and that it was God working.  May He get all the glory!

Please Pray

I am leaving tomorrow for Haiti to teach the girl’s class.  It starts Monday and goes through Friday.  Please Pray that God will give me strength to do it.  I can’t on my own.

I’ll be staying till the 28th of August then to help Micheal for a couple weeks.

Thank you for your prayers!

More Pictures of the Fence Project

Down the driveway from the road.  We purposely put a crook in it so you can't see everything from the road.

The driveway and Wilmon’s house.

 

Along the front, from the right hand corner to the driveway...  They are getting ready to cap the stone work with concrete after the posts are set.

Along the front, from the right hand corner to the driveway… They are getting ready to cap the stone work with concrete after the posts are set.

 

This is beyond where the red ATV was in the last picture... from the driveway to the left hand corner.

This is beyond where the red ATV was in the last picture… from the driveway to the left hand corner.

 

The back right hand corner.  Michael did a nice job with the posts!

The back right hand corner. Michael did a nice job with the posts!

 

 

This is from the road above, looking on the land from the back.  Beautiful view!  I love the mountains of Haiti for scenery!

This is from the road above, looking on the land from the back. Beautiful view! I love the mountains of Haiti for scenery!

 

 

 

 

 

Fence Progress

It has been a while since I posted.  Sorry.  Life has been busy, but just normal things like garden and working on the classes for girls and family life.  But today I got some pictures from Michael, and thought I’d share the excitement of having the fence looking like it is really going to be there in a bit!  First, I’ll share some pictures a friend took for me the other week.

Panoramic view of the lower half of the land

Panoramic view of the lower half of the land

 

Our Bobcat - it has been a big blessing!

Our Bobcat – it has been a big blessing!

 

Michael hiring and "bossing" men to put in posts

Michael hiring and “bossing” men to put in posts

 

Down the right side

Down the right side

 

July 23-4

Across the back

 

Down the left side

Down the left side

 

Isn’t it exciting?  I think so anyway.  It is some progress that is very noticeable.  As far as I understand, there are two men going down the beginning of August to help Michael put the chain-link up.

 

As far as the girl’s classes are going, I am done with the lessons and the power points.  Breanna was a big help with them, and I hope that for the first class ever it isn’t too bad a job.  🙂   I need to gather supplies yet, and the time is coming up fast.  I leave on the 10th of August with my dad who is having a Pastor’s Conference at the same time.  It has ended up that I will be doing all the teaching myself with a translator this first time around, so I need your prayers.  I would need them anyway, but even more so now!  After that week, I am planning on staying in Haiti with Michael till the 28th.  There is a shipping container we need to clean out, and I will have a chance to see all my friends in Allegue too.

Thank you for your interest and prayers!

 

Report from Dou Bwa Rouge

DOU BWA ROUGE TRIP REPORT: AID FOR HAITI MEDICAL TRIP, MAY 2013

Dear Friends and Family who have been so faithful in praying for our AFH team, below is my journal of the trip if you’d like to read details from my perspective.  This is by no means comprehensive, but just what I remembered to write at the end of each long day.  Thank you for your faithful prayers.  We felt them and saw the results of them, and I personally know that my little family at home was saved from at least one tragedy because of your faithfully, persistent requests to God for us.  I was humbled to go and serve as I could and even more so to be brought home safely.  Sonja Everhart

 

May 18, 2013, am

Copied down a poem Dad wrote for me when I graduated college and started my first nursing job:

 

“For grit and grace in today’s workplace, I remember Him.

His face like flint to Jerusalem

His pure heart, the Father’s pleasure

His words of love, mine without measure,

Lord, I need You near.  To Thee I rise,

Whose name I bear, Whose ways I prize.

For grit and grace to reflect Thy Son

Till the day is over and the race is run. – Dad

 

On my way to Haiti.  Dad brought Sarah B. and I to the airport this morning, early.  I catnapped on the first flight, so now I’ve had 3 hrs. sleep.  Couldn’t sleep but an hour last night- too anxious to have everything ready and sad to leave my babies at home.  Deep breaths, a few tears, many prayers and ready for this adventure.  The Sovereign Lord who holds the galaxies in His hand, stretches that same hand down, down to earth and leads me, if I’ll follow.  He goes before, preparing a way, softening hearts to His gospel.  I pray that I live it out this week along with the team.  AFH. Aid for Haiti.  All for Him.

May 18th, pm

We arrived safely to Port Au Prince- very hot and humid as expected because of rainy season.  The airport exterior is nondescript with some brightly painted ramshackle buildings as well.  Spent too much time in the hot concrete baggage claim looking for a bag that never appeared.  We’ll see.  Michael Rudolph and Cindy Mast rescued us from baggage claim and the team was waiting out in the truck.  A mountain of camping gear and medical supplies with  us all standing in the back of the truck flying down the highway.  There is a cage structure on the truck bed.  Wonderful to be here and take in the noise, smells, exhaust, palm trees, mountains, ocean, brightly colored cars, buses, motor bikes everywhere – and people, people, people.  Reminds me of my reading in Matthew on the plane:  ” The land of Zebulun and the land of Naphtali, by the way of the sea, beyond the Jordan, Galilee of the Gentiles- The people who were sitting in darkness saw a great Light and those who were sitting in the land and Shadow of death, Upon them a light dawned”  Matthew 4:15, 16 (quoting Is. 9:2, 60:1-3)

We are fortunate to stay tonight at a Christian guest home, CAM, run by reformed Menonites from Ohio.  They served a wonderful dinner and I drank so much ice water but still thirsty.  Team meeting and sorting of medical supplies followed.  Then a cool shower and now to sleep in a bed for the last time.  Driving up the mountain to Do Bwa Wouj tomorrow and camping at the clinic area.  Now for sleep.  God is good.

Sunday May 19th

Continuing my reading in Matthew and loving it.

‘Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be Thy name. Thy kingdom come.  Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.  Give us this day our daily bread…deliver us from evil…for Thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen’  Matt. 6:9-13

Up at 6 am today to get ready, pack our bags, eat breakfast. Shannon and I made scrambled eggs for the team and the others sliced up the fresh mangos and made coffee.  Fresh mangos bring back good memories of my trip to Honduras in summer of ’97.  I can’t believe how long ago that’s been.  Almost half my life ago.  Another ride in the back of the luggage laden truck, standing, driving fast, bracing ourselves and having such a good time together.  The fellowship has been wonderful.  The warm sun, beautiful ocean and mountain views during the almost 3 hr. ride.  Made 2 stops for Michael, the ‘on the ground’ team member here in Haiti full time since the 2010 Earthquake, to put chains on the tires for the rocky, steep climb.  Took lots of pictures, hiked a bit during the stop for chains.  Beautiful mountain views, palms, banana trees, mango trees, corn.  There would/should be many more trees though – deforestation history.  Arrived here in village of Do-Bwa-Woug while church still going strong.  Vibrant singing, clapping, preaching, praying.  We were introdued and greeted with clapping, blessings, smiles.  A very warm, vibrant, loving group of believers.  Gorgeous people and I’m in love with all of the children- big brown eyes and shy smiles.

Set up tents inside concrete block structure with tarp roof – very thankful since it’s rainy season.  Lunch of noodles and sausage with sauce plus Louisiana style hot sauce.  I opted out of the mayo and sweet ketchup toppings.  (All meals cooked over open fire out back by Haitian church ladies who live on site.) Set up pharmacy station for tomorrow and reviewed diseases: malaria, typhoid, cholera, etc.  Dinner, hymn sing, back to tents, fun girl times, talking, laughing, reading, writing in journals, trying to learn some creole.  Lovely hike today too, through the village – though very muddy, red clay.  ‘But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven.’

Monday May 20th

It rained very hard last night for a couple hrs and then consistently but lighter through the night.  I awoke many times and my headache from the day persisted.  Very sore today, but excited for the day.  Breakfast of spaghetti noodles with hot dog chunks.  I should’ve realized it was too early for hot sauce.  Ate some bites of cereal bar to settle my stomach.  Probably some unsettling was nerves for the first day.  Haitian villagers already lined up outside the chapel, which we have set up for clinic with curtains to separate exam rooms and a pharmacy.  Day spent triaging, taking vitals, filling prescriptions, teaching through interpreters.  The automatic/battery operated BP cuff was not working, so I taught Elijah and Sarah how to take manual blood pressures, etc.  They’re quick learners and will soon be experts.  It’s hot but not unbearable- rain in the afternoon but we kept on with short meal breaks, treating about 120 pts. today including malaria, typhoid, malnutrition, worms, etc.  Beautiful babies and children, broke my heart to see them so lethargic and weak.  Several children with club feet, lady with radial head fracture, splinted by Caleb and Jerry, I think.  Highlight of my day was assisting Caleb taking a bullet out of a woman’s thigh.  We wore camping headlights for light and he did a great job dissecting down and then let me close the fascia layer.  I did a running vicryl stitch.  My first time ever!  Then he closed the skin nicely and we dressed it .  Made my day.  After dinner we watched Michael debride a lady’s two thumbs – one partially bitten off and the other cut with a machete.  Wonderful how he is fluent in Creole and can communicate.  I forgot to mention a morning devotion, hymn sing and then late evening hike (group) up the road to attempt phone calls home- little reception and raining- not sure texts went through.  Cold bucket shower tonight – felt wonderful.  Bible reading, to bed.

Tuesday 21st

I didn’t sleep well last night- I couldn’t reach Doug by phone or text yesterday and felt uneasy.  I think this, and the roosters, woke me up in the night and being uncomfortable I couldn’t sleep for several hrs.  Very tired today, but God gave grace and we treated about 120 pts today – preop, clinic visit, lab, pharmacy, education, more procedures.  Such good fellowship and commraderie amongst the team and the Haitian believers and interpreters.  They serve so cheerfully.  One of the sweet cooks here is about 35 wks. pregnant and preeclamptic by vitals and urinalysis.  She was told that to save her and the baby, she needs to ride down the mountain and then on to a hospital in PAP and probably be delivered w/in 36hrs.  She was so sweet and hiding tears.  It breaks my heart to see the realities and dangers of third world jungle life.  ‘Lord, watch over Genovese and her baby’.   ‘He Himself took our infirmities and carried away our diseases’.  Isaiah 53:4

Last of all, what has been weighing on my heart today is a woman 9 mo pregnant wo came to clinic yesterday and was treated for heartburn.  I knew she was close to delivering, but she wasn’t in labor yet, was told that we would help if she called for us or came to us for delivery.  She wanted to birth at home with her midwife and gave birth to twins last night.  The first one died right away and the other one later.  We were told she didn’t want them and left them alone to die.  She has other children.  I have grieved for those babies all day and wonder at the sin-numbed soul.  But for the grace of God would I be one.   “It is not those who are healthy who need a physician, but those who are sick…I desire compassion and not sacrifice, for I did not come to call the righteous, but sinners.”  Matt 9:12, 13  ( Side note: many mothers and grandmothers have offered their children to Cindy when she sees them in clinic – I think they are weary of seeing their children hungry, malnurished etc.  Cindy tells them that she would if allowed and has given out much protein powder for shakes, electrolytes, vitamins, toys, and even her own jar of peanut butter.  One return text from Konrad that came through says that he’s setting up bunkbeds – Cindy told him we’d try to sneak some babies home in our backpacks.  I wish.)

We hiked again after procedures and dinner – I climbed atop an old wall on an old building on the mountain with Elijah and Michael and found reception.  I resked my neck to call home, but only got voicemail.  I hope my family is not concerned and doing well and happy.  Doug is wonderful to take off work and be home with the kids.  The Lord has been so kind to allow me to do this.

Wed. May 22nd

Today was so long it feels like days since I got up this morning at 6:30am.  Breakfast of mango and my cereal bar with syrupy sweet coffee.  Then group devotions led by the guys – today was Caleb- ‘The Lord is our rock’ – very fitting for the day as it turns out.  Patients waiting in line outside the chapel as every day.  Jerry, an ED nurse, and I were seeing pts. this morning to give Caleb a break and consulting him when needed.  I was thrilled to find a baby’s heartbeat with fetal doppler and watch the lady hear the strong, fast heartbeat for the first time.  She had thought she was losing the baby.  Her eyes were wide and full of happy tears.  Cindy, pediatric PA, is again seeing all the children and most of their parents.  She has done a wonderful job.

First thing today an apparently elderly, emaciated Haitian brought in on a stretcher.  Appeared to have cancer in his abdomen – hard and visibly bumpy.  Too far gone to send for surgery and too weak.  Turns out he was only 39 years old, and up until 3 mo ago was the strongest man in his village.  Caleb and Michael agreed on palliative care and gave him pain meds to send home with him.  Michael shared the gospel in Creole and the man said he was a believer in Jesus, had burned all of his voo doo charms, but didn’t know any of the Bible’s teachings.  Michael told me later that he gave one of the Creole audio Bibles to this family so they could listen to the N.T. in their home.  It solar charges so they can listen over and over.  What a blessing.  I know the Lord had something special in mind for the audio Bibles.

Next came many more of the same pt. problems as before, but a 4 yr old named Linda came back again.  She was diagnosed Monday with Typhoid and given meds and told to return today if worse.  Parents brought her in after turn for the worse, dehydrated, poor vital signs, lethargic, in her mom’s arms.  Held ouside in her mama’s lap in the shade under the palm trees while Jerry started an IV and I managed her fluid bolus of LR.  Later rocephin added for more antibiotic coverage.  Within a few minutes of IV fluids, she started to blink more and look better, by evening child rehydrated, more alert, hungry, able to void for urinalysis, and go home with family.  Another IV for a 20 something woman with persistent vomiting for 15 days.  Lab  results back, and pregnant- which she already knew and didn’t tell us and we suspected.  Michael talked with her to encourage her not to take an abortion pill.  3L of NS and anti nausea meds, vitamins, etc, later – Pt. smiling, feeling better.  Parents at her side.  Endless day of filling meds, etc, 12 hrs, then I assisted Caleb in removing a scarred mass on a lady’s backside that made it painful to sit down.  Very deep and difficult, considering limited instrumentation and tempermental hand-held cautery.  Fibrous tissue removed, so hopefully pt. can sit down without pain. Morphine injection during and sublingual zofran after with pain meds.  (Pt. came back next day for more antibiotics, smiling, very happy).

Truly the Lord is our rock.  A 15 hr workday amongst friends, bone tired but in good fellowship.  I was happy to hear the local Haitian pastor preaching to the waiting patients since massive rains have prevented people from coming out to evening Gospel meetings.  The Lord knows best.  We smile and work hard.  Reminds me of James chptr 2?  “Faith without workds is dead…show me your faith without your works and I will show you my faith by my works.”  To God be the glory.

Friday May 24th

I’m on an airplane in Miami, heading home.  Whirlwind day yesterday and too tired to write.  After a short night’s sleep Wed, we were up at 6am TH -packing bags, tearing down tents, several hrs. of clinic.  Packed up all the medical supplies, loaded the vintage beast of a Land Cruiser – this time with all the buckets of meds/supplies under our baggage, tents-piled high, the team riding standing again in the bed of the caged truck.  Took two additional people down with us partway – so 13 people!  It’s more enjoyable in the back of the truck with the sun and wind, but b/c of limited space and my tendency for motion sickness when I can’t see over the load,  I was voted to ride up front.  Michael driving and Martalise and I sharing the other seat.  A fun surprise to discover that Martalise speaks Spanish as well as Creole so we could talk on the way down to her stop.  She and her husband, Brother Drakes, were heading to his mother’s home, then on to the Dominican Republic where they live now.  Marta is a phychologist who volunteers at her church counceling inner city youth and teens.

I fogot to mention the departure-it was difficult saying goodbye to such sweet people-so loving and little Veronica hugging me during the final prayer and farewell.  Her mother is Genovese, the pregnant woman with preeclampsia who had left that morning on the back of a mule, I believe, to head down the mountain, stopping overnight on the way to PAP to be hospitalized and deliver the baby early.  The truck ride would have been too bumpy and hard on her.  The night before, Genovese was up late with us watching over our post-surgical pt. We encouraged her to please rest and put her feet up.  In the states she would have been on strict bedrest.  She always smiled and was constantly serving.  Her three children are some favorites with our team-Leonardo, Veronica, Michael.  Her husband is brothers with Drakes and Olivier (one of our interpreters).

Also said goodbye to a little girl named Loveli, who gave me fruit for a going away gift.  Passed out candy and hugs all around as we said goodby.  Tears during the prayer -hard to leave a part of one’s heart behind in a farway place, but better than not having done so.  I think loving and letting go enlarges the heart.  “Freely you received, freely give.”  Matthew 10:8

The trip down the mountain to PAP was very enjoyable.  We stopped at a lookout ridge with a view of a beautiful waterfall.   Shannon and I hiked down to a mango tree and tried our hand at knocking mangos down with rocks like the locals.  It appears we would starve here on our own.  We hiked to the ridge and saw the others had hiked down into denser jungle grass/trees toward the waterfall but were unable to cross all the way to the falls.  If they had been swimming we would have hiked down gladly.  Turns out they had an adventure with cuts, scrapes, and snakes so we’re happy with our pictures from above.

I asked Michael a lot of questions about the Island seasons, vegetation, crops, his work here now and in the months following the earthquake when he came and stayed 3 yrs ago until now.  The physicians who came for earthquake aid told Michael, who was already a paramedic, that the experience he gained in 4 months of 20+ hr days of trauma and delivering babies, etc. was about the equivalent of 2 yrs of medical school residency in the states.  He continues to work part time in a medical clinic near the AFH land, as well as travel all over the country providing medical and spiritual assistance to different villages.  That clinic as well as the temporary one that we set up, both charge a small fee b/c the people are proud to be able to pay something for service and we don’t want to develop an even greater sense of dependence on handouts.  No one is ever turned away for lack of funds, though.  Having arrived a day late for the trip, I had missed some of this info, as well as the tour of the AFH land, and am happy to get some questions answered.

Beautiful island sunshine and breeze through open windows flying down the mountain now that we were off of the rocky trails and onto pavement.  Roads crowded with people walking, pulling carts, leading cows and pigs and goats, riding horses and mules laden with mangos, avocados, bananas, sweet potatoes, etc.  Children walking along the road carrying machetes, same as their parents. People sitting in roadside stands selling produce, etc.  Gradeschool age children holding the younger ones by the hand, walking along the roads, or over mountain paths.  Sisters carrying younger siblings on their backs, though seemingly too small to do so.  Pregnant women hiking up the steep mountain roads with their load of produce in a bag or bucket on their head.  Everywhere little brown baby bottoms as toddlers run around without pants – probably for easy potty training as no one seems to use diapers.  Women carry their babies with towels around the babies.  The upside is we saw no diaper rash problems in clinic.

Still driving/flying down the mountain, weaving in and around trucks and motorcycles all laden with produce and people.  I am reminded of verses I’ve been reading in Matthew of Jesus in the villages- of simple ways of life and a slower tempo to the day – of life in its bare essentials- food, clothing, shelter, life, death, and looking beyond the temporal as life is known to be short and accepted as such.  “Jesus, going through all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues and proclaiming the gospel of the kingdom, and healing every kind of disease and every kind of sickness.  Seeing the people, He felt compassion for them because they were distressed and dispirited like sheep without a shepherd.  Then He said to His disciples, ‘The harvest is plentiful, but the workers are few.  Therefore beseech the Lord of the harvest to send out workers into His harvest.'”

Safe arrival back to CAM where we spent the first night at the guest house.  Real beds and showers after 4 nights of sleeping on our thin mats in tents on hard clay floors and taking cold ‘bucket showers’.  Some of course chose not to try the bucket shower so this was their first shower in 5 days.  They will remain nameless.  I personally enjoyed the cold bucket shower while camping, especially after a sweaty day in clinic and assisting in a not-so-minor procedure.  Maybe I didn’t get the full camping experience.

Dinner was served to our whole team by the CAM folks who run the guest program-dinner at tables on their long front porch with expansive views of the port with the city lights twinkling on the far side.  Not very many city lights for such a massive crowd of people in huts and slums.  We met several Americans at dinner, one of whom has the job of overseeing many of the schools in Haiti-he travels 2 weeks of every month, visiting villages, schools, overseeing curriculum, teachers, outcomes, etc, and the subsidizing of much of the cost of books, etc.

After dinner, we all walked back to the main living quarters where we have our team meetings.  For the first time in 5 days, I was able to reach my family by phone and hear their happy chatter of the last day of school party etc.  The few times we found reception from Do-Bwa-Wouj, I had only reached Doug’s voicemail.  I am very thankful for a wonderful husband who cheerfully agreed to take time off of work to stay home with kids and run the house for me, as well as both of our moms and other siblings who stepped in to help.  I am acutely aware of all the details that come into focus and have to fall into place for a trip like this to happen.  Sacrifices by those close to me, gifts of supplies from my coworkers at LMH and mostly the prayers of so many that I cannot count – asking the Lord for grace, safety, wisdom, open hearts, strength for each day, unity for the team;  I feel that all of the prayers were answered and more that we did not think to ask for.

Our team meeting last night to wrap up the trip was a wonderful time of sharing best and most challenging times, what we’ve learned, and acknowledging that we have all felt the prayers lifting us up and giving unity and good harmony as a team.  We sang hymns together for the last time, as we have every night.  We are so thankful for the dear sister in Lawrence who thought to print off copies of our favorite hymns so we could sing together. We are also humbled to know that another sister has been fasting and praying for us and the work here every day until our return.

When I was tempted at times to be tired of filling meds and explaining the same things over and over through the interpreters, I was continuously reminded of the verse in Matthew 10:24 which says ‘ A disciple is not above his teacher, nor a slave above his master.’  If the God of all creation would humble Himself to be born as a human baby, grow, live among sinful mankind, serve them and then die on a cross made from a tree that He himself created, to pay the price for mine and all of mankind’s sins – how can I hold myself above even the most mundane tasks?

“Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden and I will give You rest.  Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and You will find rest for Your souls.  For My yoke is easy and My burden is light.”  Matt 11:28-30

Come and Hear!

Psalm 66: 16-17, 19-20

Come and hear, all you who fear God, And I will declare what He has done for my soul.  I cried to Him with my mouth, And He was extolled with my tongue.
But certainly the God has heard me; He has attended to the voice of my prayer.  Blessed be God, who has not turned away my prayer, nor His mercy from me!

I read this earlier, and it is so true!  I want to stand on the top of the roof and shout out the goodness of my Lord.  I want to go throughout the earth convincing men of the beauty and worthiness of my King and God.  He hears when I pray, He answers when I call!  I am so grateful and humbled by the mercy my God has given me, is bringing me close to His heart, in dealing with me gently and lovingly.

Several months ago I was so thirsty for God.  I had a hunger that would not be satisfied by anything or anyone else.  Months before that, I did not have that hunger, but I wanted it.  I asked God to give me a desire for Him and He did!  Then that hunger drove me to Him in ways I never knew before.  I have found in my Lord the spring of life, full overflowing life!  He is truly ALL I need, He is my surfeit.  In Him I find  my Savior, my King, my Husband, my Friend, my Counselor.  He is the source of my life, my strength, my joy, my peace.  He feeds me with heavenly bread, satisfies my thirst with living waters.

He is totally trustworthy.  Countless times I have had to trust Him because there was no possible way out of a bad situation, and He has provided safety.  I have trusted Him with the future when it was pitch dark and full of terror, and He turns the night into day and works things out for His glory and my good.  I have trusted Him with my physical needs, and He has provided for them all.  I have trusted Him when my heart was so hurt and sad I couldn’t even pray, and He healed and blessed me beyond what I thought possible.  I have trusted Him when He asked me to do things far beyond my capacity, and he has always given wisdom and strength.  I have trusted Him with the people in my life, and He keeps and helps them far better than I can or could or would.  He is perfectly trustworthy!

He has total control over my life, and the things that come into it.  Of that I am sure.  It is so freeing!  I used to worry and fear for the future, but His perfect Love has cast out my fear!  He will do all things well.  I still have times of trials and troubles, and I still doubt sometimes (to my shame); but time after time, I am able to believe, trust, and praise even in the darkness.  Through His grace I can give it all to Him sooner than I used to be able to.  Praise His glorious name!

He is more than worthy of my life, my love, my all.  And by His grace and strength I will love Him above all others and do His will for the rest of my life.

EVEN SO, COME LORD JESUS!

Lawrence health care workers aid remote village in Haiti

Lawrence health care workers aid remote village in Haiti

From left, Cindy Mast, a Lawrence physician assistant, Sarah Bradshaw, a Lawrence nursing student, and Shannon Harvey, a former Lawrence resident and nurse, pose for a picture with kids from the Haitian village they provided medical care for last month.

The patients started lining up at the crack of dawn. They had come from hours away, up the mountain, from areas so remote they made this dot on the map seem like a big city in comparison.

They presented a wide range of ailments: a large facial tumor, a broken arm, cancer. Some would likely not survive — not because their illnesses were too acute, but because they were too far from an adequate medical facility and too poor even if they were closer.

Villagers started waiting early in the morning to see the doctors and nurses from Lawrence who ran a mobile medical clinic in Haiti last month.

They made the treacherous, exhausting trek to Haiti’s Dos Bois Rouge region to see people we often take for granted: doctors and nurses from Lawrence. In the jungles of Haiti, though, they were like visitors from another planet, aliens there solely to help.

Caleb Trent, an emergency room doctor at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, first went to Haiti in the mid-2000s with medical school classmates to investigate a rash of neck tumors, discovering that it was being caused by an iodine deficiency. They saw numerous nongovernmental organizations doing mission work in Haiti’s population centers but seemingly none in the more remote parts of the country.

“We were impressed with the medical need and the lack of resources these people had compared to what was available in the city,” Trent said. So in 2008, they started Aid for Haiti, a Christian charity that provides health care and spiritual training to Haitians.

Trent, 34, moved to Lawrence, his wife’s hometown, last year, starting his job at the hospital in July. At his church, Lawrence Bible Chapel, he noticed that the pews were filled with people working in or studying health care. So he pitched the idea for a church-sponsored trip to Haiti. Five current or former Lawrence residents signed up, and last month the group traveled to Dos Bois Rouge, near the border with the Dominican Republic.From left, Cindy Mast, a Lawrence physician assistant, Sarah Bradshaw, a Lawrence nursing student, and Shannon Harvey, a former Lawrence resident and nurse, pose for a picture with kids from the Haitian village they provided medical care for last month.

In Haiti, it was hard to ignore the trash everywhere. It was also hot — very hot. Fresh mangoes and bananas were sold at roadside stands. People wore hand-me-down clothes from the U.S.; Trent said he once saw a guy sporting a John McCain “Road to Victory” shirt from 2008. The locals, while poor, dressed and cleaned up well. Clothes, vehicles and homes were splashed with bright colors, perhaps as a way to lift the spirits but also be representative of the Caribbean culture.

The drive to the village was an adventure in itself: The gang packed in a Bobcat utility vehicle filled with medical supplies, including several 5-gallon drums of medications, driving up rocky, steep mountains.

Lawrence nursing students Sarah Bradshaw and Elijah Penny do intake at a makeshift medical clinic in Haiti last month.

They finally arrived at the village, a grouping of shacks alongside dirt roads, kids standing around chewing on sugarcane. The locals were happy to see the contingent from Lawrence, writing a greeting on a chalkboard to welcome them.

The health care workers set up a clinic, using tarps as a roof to keep the rain out. Patients would check in, with Lawrence nursing students Sarah Bradshaw and Elijah Penny taking their vitals. Cindy Mast, a pediatric physician’s assistant in Lawrence, would see the kids, while Trent would treat the adults. Sonja Everhart, a surgical nurse at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, and Shannon Harvey, a Lawrence native and nurse from Colorado, helped out along the way. Ailments included hypertension — “It wasn’t uncommon to see a blood pressure of 180 over 90,” Trent recalled — and acid reflux — not surprising when many of the kids’ breakfasts consisted of bread and coffee.

By the time the group woke up every morning at 6 or 7 a.m., there were already dozens of people waiting to be seen. The missionaries would work straight through until 8 or 9 p.m., treating respiratory illnesses, fungal infections, elephantiasis, and children so malnourished they looked much younger than they were.

At one point, a woman came in, lethargic, complaining of fatigue. She could hardly walk, needing help to even get into the clinic. It turned out she was pregnant and would have been fine had she been in a developed country with access to nausea medicine and prenatal vitamins.

Another patient, a man in his early 40s, was gaunt and emaciated, with several masses in his abdomen. He had cancer that was metastasizing, the doctors believed. But because the area they were in was so remote and the man was so poor, his chances for survival were slim. The group couldn’t treat him, save for giving him some medication to keep his stool regular, so it prayed for him.

“If you make a difference in his life, you make a difference in his eternity,” Trent said. It also helps that Haitians are generally more accepting of death than their American counterparts, he added, having to deal with it at seemingly every turn. Their life expectancy, 57, is roughly two decades shorter than it is in the United States.

A medical mission trip to Haiti last month included current and former Lawrence residents, from left, Sonja Everhart, Sarah Bradshaw, Shannon Harvey, Elijah Penny, Cindy Mast and Caleb Trent.

Trent also said that as hard as it is, you have to realize that you can’t help everybody, that the need is so immense that any assistance makes a difference.

“You look at what you can do, and you’re thankful for the people who you can help,” he said. “You realize that the people you did help are better because we are there, so you focus on the positive.”

On the last day, the team worked for 15 hours, trying to treat as many people as they could before they had to go home, bringing the total to 400 over three and a half days. The Haitians returned the favor, giving them gifts like fruit and blankets and singing hymns with them.

Trent, the board chairman for Aid for Haiti, plans to return for another medical mission in September or October and, prior to that, pastor-teaching training in August. Part of the mission of Aid for Haiti is to educate, showing Haitians not only how to care for their ailments and prevent further disease but also be their best spiritual selves.

“I think there will always be a need there,” he said, “but as people become more educated and dependent on themselves, hopefully that will change.”

http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2013/jun/11/lawrence-health-care-workers-aid-remote-village-ha/

Building Continues

Over the next few days we hope to keep you updated with some pictures of the building that is going on in Haiti. AFH is currently building at a new location to provide for our future ministry. Currently a small home with storage space is being built.

photo (4)

photo 1

photo (5)

photo 2 septic-foundation

 

Progress and Plans

The building is in progress!  Michael has the hole for the septic dug, and the foundation for the sides ready for block.  My older brother just left on Thursday to go help lay the block.  He will be there helping a week.  Another young man from our church went along also, and will be staying for three weeks.   Here is the foundation Michael made.

septic foundation

In three weeks, Michael is going to be coming home for a short time.  We are all very excited that we will have him with us again!

There has been a new plan put into the works in my life.  I went to the CHE class in April, and I am now working on developing classes for a week of teaching.  In August, my dad has a Pastors Conference in Haiti, and with the help of God I will be teaching a group of girls at the same time.  Please pray for me as I think and plan and write, it is a huge job!  Not only will I be teaching for the first time, I have to cross a language and culture barrier as well.  We (AFH) have asked Breanna to help, so you can pray for that to work out as well.

Since my language isn’t developed well enough to teach, there is an American nurse who lives in Haiti that we have asked to help with the translating and teaching.  Her husband is a translator for the Pastor’s Conference, and she is willing to help with the health classes.  I am so grateful that God has provided for the language area!   Please keep us in your prayers as we work to produce simple yet thorough lessons.  I want to cover practical life lessons as well as health issues.  I know that in God’s hands, these classes could change lives, so please pray that He would guide and direct, and prepare our hearts and the hearts of the girls that attend.

Here is a link if you care to see the topics we plan to cover.

Proposed Schedule for August Health Class