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VOSH-FL/Winter
Park Presbyterian Church Mission to Ica, Peru
-By Sue Rudolph, VOSH-FL
Ed. Note: VOSH-FLorida
joined with one of its long time partners, Winter Park, Florida
Presbyterian Church, to do an eye care mission in Ica, Peru which
was hosted by Union Biblica del Peru (Scripture Union). One of the
reasons the mission was so successful was that we were able to recruit
and work with several Peruvian O.D.s and students and a large number
of Peruvian helpers.
The Team’s report:
Dateline:
Ica, Peru March 14th-18th, 2004
My husband,
Chris, and I are back from another powerful mission trip. Most of
the mission team left Orlando on the evening of the 11th, flew to
Miami, changed planes, went through the long, long lines at security
and immigration, baggage, etc. and arrived in Lima, Peru at 5:30
a.m. Meeting us at the airport were Paul and Marty Clark, the missionaries
for Scripture Union (Union Biblica) who are our hosts in Peru. This
was our third trip to Peru, but it had been five years since Chris
and I were there, and we were excited to see the Clarks, and hear
about their work and their family. We then boarded a bus and drove
two hours to Kawaii, a beautiful complex right on the Pacific Ocean,
owned by scripture Union. There is a “street boys” center
there where twenty-five boys live, work and go to school. We had
a nice brunch there, then boarded the bus again for the last two
and a half hour leg of our trip to Ica.
Peru
is a country that has so many different terrains. In past trips
we have been over the Andes Mountains at 16,000 feet to La Merced
and Camp Kimo. We went to Iquitos in the Amazon Jungle, and down
the river to an orphanage where parrots lined the trees. We visited
Lima, a city of eight million people, that is desert on the ocean,
it hasn’t rained there in over thirty years, and now we were
driving through a totally different environment, mostly desert with
NOTHING but sand and rock. Mountains of rock, and barren land, nothing
green in sight. When we arrived in Ica, it reminded me of a mini-Lima,
lots of VW’s for transportation or little moto-caros. People
everywhere working on broken down cars, even our bus broke down
when we got to town and a mechanic working on the street just scurried
over, diagnosed the problem, ran and got the tools to fix it, took
about 30 minutes and we were back in action again. But then the
driver had problems negotiating a turn with the bus, and got stuck
with cars piled up behind us and at every entrance to the intersection.
All the cars were honking, everyone honks in Peru for any reason.
They honk at dogs, other cars, and pedestrians. Taxis honk to see
if you might want a ride, and for just about anything they HONK!
After much honking, a walking policeman showed up and made all the
moto-caros move and the cars back up that had us penned in and we
could finally back up and start over again.
Riding along
viewing the poor, poor housing as far as one could see, just shacks,
everything dusty, dirty and garbage everywhere. The river their
only source of drinking water, brown and filled with garbage.
We checked in
to the Hotel Sol de Ica, (by far the nicest place we have ever stayed,
it had hot running water and flush toilets!). Right away some of
the team left for the opportunity to “Sand Surf”. It
is an area where you can ride boards like snowboards down the hills
of sane, like skiing! Others rode dune buggies around the dunes.
Sunday morning we got up and went to a Spanish evangelical church
that was wonderful and welcomed us with open arms.
Chris
and I bought a large floor fan for twenty dollars because it was
so hot in the hotel and other team members did the same. This was
a boon to our eye clinic, because we took them to the clinic each
day and we used them in the clinic for the doctors and the dispensers.
We did the eye clinic in four straight days, ten-hour days. For
reasons not fully understood, about half our team got sick and took
to bed for a day or two but we were able to accomplish our mission
because we were joined by Dr. Severo Sanchez, who runs an optometry
school in Peru and who brought some of his advanced students and
recent graduates with him, and also some Ica optometrists showed
up and volunteered their services for free for a day or two. We
were able to examine and fit more than 1000 men, women and children
with glasses. Each morning when we arrived, the people were lined
up around the building, many holding their Bibles in hopes that
they would be able to read them once again. Many of the people that
could read, had at one time a pair of glasses, but as their vision
changed, they could never afford to buy another pair. Many had NEVER
had a pair of glasses, even though they were old. We were able to
fit two busses full of children from a nearby orphanage, some as
old as eleven or twelve that couldn’t see their hands in front
of their faces without glasses. We didn’t expect the orphans
and we had run out of “kid” glasses but Dr. Sanchez
volunteered to make new glasses for all the children’s prescriptions
we couldn’t fit. We found out later that all these glasses
were delivered to the orphans and other children in Ica three weeks
later. The glasses we dispensed will literally change the lives
of all those who received them. The Peruvian doctors, translators
and workers that worked side by side with us in this clinic were
truly an inspiration! All volunteers, trying to improve others lives.
Some of the
team members had the opportunity one morning to take a charted plane
to Nasca where the “Nasca Lines” are. It was a two-hour
flight and spectacular! Carbon dating has been done and dates the
lines form 300 BC to 800 AD. On our last day we got up early and
on the way back to Lima, we went to the Paracas National Reserve.
We took a two-hour boat ride to see the Ballestas Islands, which
look like rock mountains sticking out of the sea, and are home to
literally hundreds of thousands of sea birds.
I
will finish with a moment that I want to share with you –
One of my experiences at the eye clinic I will never forget. I was
working with an older woman who had almost no vision without glasses
and had never owned a pair of glasses. I was able to find her prescription
and fit her with the glasses. When I put them on her and even before
I had time to give her the near reading card, she exclaimed “AHA”!
That experience was certainly an epiphany for both of us.
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