| Cameroon
Africa
Mission
THE
MISSION
Cameroon.
Yes, it is in Africa, near the Equator, on the west coast of central
Africa, a neighbor of Nigeria. We flew into Douala and drove to
our two mission towns -- Kumba and Bamenda -- which are in the English-speaking
North West province. On one day of R&R, we drove 30K north west
to beautiful, hilly, volcanic Awing Village (Altitude 1,500m) where
we visited the extended family of the Ngandos, Dr. Anwi and her
mum, Mary.
We
had the unique experience of seeing the pride and delight of
reuniting family members, long separated by thousands of miles and
six
years. We were welcomed by His Majesty Paul Fozo'o II, the area
leader, also a relative. The area is the Awing Fondom; he is the
Fon.
We were met with singing, dancing, dinner, gifts of beautiful
traditional clothing and a welcoming basket of corn. And, signifying
peace, small branches of green leaves. Being one of the few white
persons he'd seen, this Granny admits to scaring a toddler. He peeked
from behind his sibling with whom I was shaking hands, and there
I
was, wayyy too close.
With
so much need in Africa, VOSH-Florida chose Cameroon. Anwi
expressed a wish to someday hold a clinic in her homeland, similar
to
the 2006 VOSH clinic in Ethiopia. Then, in Minnesota, Dr. John
Spencer and Mary Tjosvold talked about Cameroon and her work there.
Our mission was born. In their bios, read about just a few of our
memorable patients. We saw more than 3,500 patients, including a
group of 120 young children. Mary Tjosvold, of Mary T. Inc., her
mother; and friends who were also volunteering with The Heifer Project
joined our clinic efforts.
Our
sponsors were Mary Tjosvold of Mary T. Inc; Dr. Henry Njkoi of the
Heifer Project, (www.heifer.org); Dr. Valentine Lah, of Noah's Ark,
and Angels of Mercy. In Kumba we lived in a Presbyterian Church
camp.
In Bamenda, we were with the nuns in the Franciscan Retreat Center.
To be nearer the airport, our last night was on the sea coast, at
a
hotel in Limbe..
Wherever
we went, we were well fed. Plantains in Cameroon are soft
and tasty. We had rice, potatoes, chicken, fish, goat, egg plant
(aubergine), many other veggies, and liquid pepper for our eggs.
Favorites were fever grass tea, as well as a green called
"huckaberry." We saw rubber and Dole banana plantations,
coffee,
guava, cassava, date and coconut palms, and palms for palm wine.
The
people of Awing Village grow eucalyptus trees which are harvested
for wood products. Houses are made of wood boards, cement/stucco
or
mud bricks, with a tin roof. Metal shipping containers are often
repurposed as small stores. Extremely memorable are the potholes
in
the unpaved roads. A VW could fit in some of them. We circled around
and lurched through and sometimes got off the bus. Much road work
is
done with hand labor, including the (fine) road into Awing Village.
At dusk and at night, headlights are often used only to flash at
on-coming vehicles. People often carry things on their heads. I
saw
school backpacks, dishpans of produce, a meat grinder, even a car
battery. Motorcycle taxis are common as are small curbside booths
for
cellular phone updates.
Thanks to our photographer, Ed Brame, we've over 400 photos online
Click
to see Cameroon Photos
Also
ask to see our videos of our visit to Awing Village.
THE
VISION TEAM
Charles
Covington was our group leader. Charlie is a retired Audit
Manager from the American Automobile Association. Since 1995, he
has
led numerous VOSH-Florida missions. He is also Treasurer of
VOSH-International, the parent group of VOSH-Florida. He resides
in
Lake Mary, Florida, has two daughters, one son, and seven
grandchildren.
Dr.
John Spencer, our clinic director, is an optometrist with Allina
in Minnesota. He practices in a West St. Paul multi-specialty group
setting. He and Marguerite have six children. This was at least
his
seventh VOSH mission. For two years he taught at U. Auckland, New
Zealand. For our mission, he recruited his former student, Hunter
Hill.
Dr.
Anwi Ngando moved from Cameroon to the U.S. as a teen. Presently
residing in Chicago, and the primary O.D. with Visionwork, River
Oaks
Center, IL, she is a 2007 graduate of the Illinois College of
Optometry. She interned with VOSH-Florida in Ethiopia.
She considers herself more than fortunate to have the opportunity
to return to Cameroon with VOSH -- a mission close to her heart.
It
was significantly meaningful to her because the people were very
appreciative of our services. Expressions of gratitude were provided
in ways that have been familiar since childhood. For instance, gifts
of detailed traditional clothing and invitations to visit homes.
Dr.
Dzejna Mezbur is from Bosnia and Herzegovina and came to the U.S.
in 1996. She has a B.S. degree from U-IL, Chicago, and a doctorate
of
optometry from Illinois College of Optometry in 2003. While working
for her degree, she volunteered in four missions in Chicago. In
2006,
her first international mission was to Honduras with VOSH-Indiana.
"Jenna" states that while she is grateful to once again
be a part
of a mission that treated some thousands of patients, she will most
remember the manner in which they showed gratitude. They said, "We
have so little to give." yet they shared so much of their culture.
She is overjoyed to have had the opportunity to have given and
received so much.
Dr.
Hunter Hill hails from the far south of the South Island of New
Zealand where he is an optometrist. Our trip provided him with many
firsts: a VOSH trip; a trip to Africa; and a first time to hear
the
delightful Cameroonian Top Top song and dancing. "Huntah"
says he had
a stupendous experience with great memories.
He will always remember his apprentices, Blessing and Toni, from
the Kumba clinics. After their eye tests, 14-yr Blessing and 9-yr
old
Toni helped him for several hours with translation, seating patients
and, yes, "with his hair." He sincerely hopes he will
get another
opportunity to return to Cameroon and help in whatever way he can.
Dr.
Calvin Dalton calls the state of Georgia home. He received his
bachelor's degree in bio-med sciences at Western Mich U. He graduated
from Illinois College of Optometry in 2004, returned to Georgia,
where
with a partner, he started his first practice in 2005. With a team,
he now manages and sees patients at five locations that specialize
in
many areas of optometry.
This was his first VOSH trip and he enjoyed it very much. One
patient stood out from the rest. A youth who had congenital glaucoma
which had enlarged his eyes very markedly. At age 4 mos. he had
had
surgery which saved his eye sight. However, no one ever tried to
correct his vision. Sadly, at age 9 yrs, he had never experienced
seeing clearly past the end of his nose. As one could imagine, he
was
very timid and introverted. After doing his exam, which included
ensuring the glaucoma surgery was still successful, Calvin put a
pair
of glasses on the boy's face. The boy was able to see his mother
at
arm's length for the first time and he began to touch her face and
smile. His mother gave us big hugs and started to cry. There's no
telling how huge of an impact our VOSH trip made in the life of
that
boy and his family. Calvin says, "I thank Charles Covington
and the
whole VOSH-Florida team for making it possible for me to be a part
of
their team."
Dr.
Tessa Sokol is a Wisconsinite who graduated from the U-WI, at
Madison, with a bachelor's degree in biology. She then attended
the
Illinois College of Optometry in Chicago, where she met Dzejna,
Anwi
and Calvin. She, Dzejna, and others went to Honduras with
VOSH-Indiana. After that amazing experience, she couldn't pass up
the
opportunity to go to Cameroon with Anwi. Since graduating in May,
2007, from ICO, she has been employed at Costco in northern Georgia.
When asked about a memorable moment, it was difficult for Tessa
to choose just one. (There was getting locked in a bathroom stall
on
the first day, cocktails on the veranda, plantains and mackerel.)
To
her, the people were the most memorable The smiles on their faces
at
the clinic when she shook their hands and said, "hello."
There were
the many sincere thanks we received, and the looks on their faces
after receiving their glasses and realizing they could now see faces
across a room or read their bible. A favorite was a man who came
back
after picking up his glasses and said to Tessa, "Thank you
Doctor.
Now that I can see better, I can go farther." Tessa wants everyone
to
know she had a fabulous time meeting and working with all of us.
Maggie
Arkinstall. Having recently retired from the construction
industry in England, this was her second VOSH mission. She enjoyed
Ethiopia in 2006 and decided to join us again. Prior to this mission,
she did four weeks of volunteer work caring for chimps at Limbe
Wildlife Center, in Cameroon. After our mission, she toured Ethiopia
for four weeks, returning to the U.K. for Christmas. Then she was
off
to Australia to visit her daughter.
Ed
Brame is a native of Pittsburgh, PA, graduate of Arizona State U,
recently retired and lives in Lake Mary, FL. His career required
extensive travel; he's been in 60+ countries. He and Patricia have
a
son, a daughter, and one grandchild, Tyler. This was his first VOSH
mission. He is signing up for his next one.
John
Gehrig, with "forty-seven years of lawyering..." is a
retired
Deputy County Attorney and lives with his wife, Carla, in Florida.
She is also very involved in VOSH-Florida missions. This was John's
"thirty-something" mission. He and Charlie started VOSH-Florida
in
1996. He says each mission is better than the one before; and
Cameroon is very special because of the wonderful people involved,
both our VOSH volunteers, who are the best company anyone could
ever
want and our hosts, who were people with great heart and love for
those they serve. And the patients, who trust us with their eyes,
and
for whom we can do great things, almost effortlessly. Having been
at
this work for 12 years, John hopes to be allowed to do it another
24.
Judy
Johnson is a Minnesotan with four sons and seven grandchildren.
She is a retired human resource manager and a retired teacher of
English for language learners. Paid or unpaid, that last activity
is
a favorite. As hard as everyone works on VOSH missions (this was
her
fourth) and as grateful as she is to return home to rest and quit
the
Cipro, the clinic results and the people -- VOSH and otherwise --
met
along the way make it absolutely worthwhile.
Caryl
"Cookie" Mikrut is mother of five, grandmother of seven,
and a
retired teacher. When she isn't traveling with whole wide world,
she
lives in a suburb of Chicago. (She met Maggie A. when they were
roomies in Bhutan.) Cookie's a veteran of many memorable VOSH
missions in more than nine countries. She recently spent a month
in
Mexico learning Spanish. I'm sure she used it on a subsequent VOSH
mission in Nicaragua.
Mary
Ngwe Ngando is a native of Awing Village. She was a teacher in
the Gov't H.S., Limbe, S.W. Province of Cameroon, until 1997, when
her
husband, David Kwa Ngando, won a lottery which gave the family a
legal
right to live and work permanently in the U.S. After selling their
possessions to raise the necessary money, David, Mary, and their
three
youngest children, came to the U.S. Their two oldest children, being
more than 21 years of age, didn't qualify and still live in Cameroon.
Mary lives in Oregon and works at a retirement home/retreat center.
Thanks to Anwi's recruitment, Mary and her friends, Hannah and Denise,
joined our mission.
Duane
Sackett, Ed.D. of Independence, WI is married to Ruth; and, they
have five daughters. He is a retired professor and dean of Temple
University In Philadelphia. He conducts workshops for foreign
language teachers of English. This was his eighth VOSH mission.
He
has been to 107 countries. At home he serves on his local City
Council.
Stanley
Mataichi Sagara. Born to parents from Japan, he was raised in
central Washington state, on the Yakima Indian reservation. He served
in the 101st and 82nd Airborne Divisions in the European Theater
in
WWII. He was a special investigator in the US Air Force with primary
duties in the Far East with stations in Japan and Korea. Stan is
also
a retired US Military Criminal Investigator with Navy Civil Service.
He served aboard the USS Constellation (CV64) in the Indian Ocean
and
the Persian Gulf. He's been a private investigator in Coos Bay,
Oregon, and a member of the Coos Bay Lions Club. A member of VOSH
for
17 years, he has worked on at least 20 missions. Stanley lives at
the
Armed Forces Retirement Center in Washington, D.C. where he has
arranged for VOSH folk to stay in guest quarters, prior to flights.
Hannah
Hurdle Toomey. As she wrote it in first person, here is her
bio. "It is difficult for me to write biographical sketches
because
those who know me also know about me. Those who do not know me don't
care anyway. What I perceive myself to be might not be reality.
Suffice it to say there are a few things about me that I consider
unique. My father was born into slavery in 1845. I was born 87 years
later. In this electric and electronic age, I do not have a cell
phone, e-mail nor computer! I prefer to live in tranquility and
calm
without 'widgets' interrupting me. I spend hours (5 - 7) each day
writing two books about my fruitful life as a
pastor/missionary/pastor-developer. My handwriting is worse than
Egyptian hieroglyphics. I am happiest when I am traveling, serving
humanity and living my life to the fullest." After our mission,
Hannah preached in a congregation in Limbe.
Denise
Williams was born in Philadelphia, attended Temple University,
majored in psychology, and decided she wanted a career in the criminal
justice field. She works with mental health clients with substance
abuse issues. Nine years ago, one of her three children became an
engineer and was recruited by Intel, so she moved to Oregon. Denise
enjoyed the trip and looks forward to another one in the near future.
She learned a great deal and met many interesting people. After
our
mission, Denise, as a drug and alcohol counselor, gave a talk to
the
people of Good Samaritan Ministry in Limbe.
Finally,
As John Gehrig so aptly stated, "We are so blessed to be able
to do this. Who could stay home?"
Interested in joining VOSH-Florida? Like to go on a mission with
us?
Other Questions? Please feel free to contact us.
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