This translation is not completely accurate as it was automatically generated by a computer.
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By Kathy L. Gilbert*
3:00 P.M. EST Jan. 12, 2011 | FURCY, Haiti (UMNS)
Volunteer in Mission team members Terry Temple (left background) and
John Thomas (right background) help lead a game for children outside the
Methodist
church in Furcy, Haiti. UMNS photos by Mike DuBose.
View in Photo Gallery
For much of the past decade, a group of United Methodists from New
York has trekked to a small mountain village in Haiti – and left behind a
piece of their hearts along with a fair amount of blood, sweat and
tears.
Furcy is not a place for the weak of spirit or knees. But it is a place of radical hospitality.
About 30 miles southeast of Port-Au-Prince, Furcy is a village of
farming families who have carved beautiful gardens out of steep
mountainsides. Furcy Methodist Church is the center of community life,
and there is a Methodist medical clinic and a primary school.
The Revs. Wendy and Tom Vencuss, United Methodist pastors serving at
Wethersfield (Conn.) United Methodist Church, made their first trip to
Haiti in 2002. And they found their mission and the passion they would
share.
“We started talking with the resident missionaries, in particular
Charles Maddox, about finding a site for long-term mission work,”
Vencuss said. “We came out here and just walked into this valley and
immediately fell in love with it.”
Wethersfield started sending volunteer teams. Other churches in the
district heard about Furcy and soon also started sending teams.
Eventually the Furcy project was taken over by the New York Annual
(regional) Conference and renamed “Mountains of Hope,” with three or
four teams annually making the rugged trek.
Rugged? A four-wheel-drive vehicle will get you close. In the absence
of street signs, a small house on the roadside has “FURCY” and a big
arrow pointing to the right painted on its tin roof.
Mothers carry their children down a muddy trail after a
visit to the Methodist Church's health clinic in Furcy.
View in Photo Gallery
After parking the vehicle, a long hike remains – down and around the
mountain to the church and clinic. The school, perched on a jutting rock
slab, is even further down a very steep mountain.
The slightest rain changes the dirt trails into a giant, thick-red-mud Slip ‘N Slide.
Mission teams sleep on air mattresses on the cold concrete floor of
the church. There is no electricity, no running water and very little
food. The work is back-breaking, soul-wrenching … and faith-affirming.
‘Another world and time’
Furcy is “breathtaking,” said Terry Temple, chairperson of the
mission commission at Hyde Park (N.Y.) United Methodist Church, who has
made many trips to the village.
Equally awe-inspiring are the people, she added.
“I don't think that many Americans realize that only one hour flying
time away from Miami is a country where so many people live in such an
impoverished situation,” she said.
Leigh Bak and her daughter Emily, 19, took their first trip to Haiti
in November, when they traveled to Furcy with Temple and others from the
New York Conference.
Patients wait to have prescriptions filled at the Methodist Church's health clinic.
View in Photo Gallery
“At first, it seemed that we had landed in another world, or at least
another time. The devastation of the earthquake was heartbreaking,
superimposed on an already struggling country. But at the same time,
there was such beauty in the people and the physical setting of Furcy,”
Bak said.
The people are faithful, joyful and industrious, she said.
Emily was a little overwhelmed by the pleasure they found in simple things like a soccer game in a field of “cow pies.”
As an avid soccer player herself, she said her normal aggression in
the game was tempered by the manure. “I refused to fall in the cow
pies,” she said. “The kids in Furcy did not even seem to notice the mess
the cows had left. One of the boys slipped and was completely covered
in the stuff and he didn’t even seem to mind.” She said it broke her
heart to leave the children, but she looks forward to returning on
another mission trip.
The kids and adults worked as hard as they played, Bak said.
“They worked alongside us in building a latrine at the school, and
could literally run circles around us in carrying heavy loads on the
steep mountain hillsides, regardless of whether they were 5 years old or
75 years old.”
Medical need and poverty
Bak, a diabetes clinical nurse specialist, worked in the clinic with
another nurse from the conference and counseled patients, filled
prescription, taught health and gave medication advice.
“We treated some things that we see often in the U.S., like
bronchitis, pneumonia, diabetes and hypertension; but I also saw
conditions and diseases that I had only read about in textbooks before
this experience.”
She was also struck by the level of poverty.
“Many residents eat only one meal a day, with much of the food
(plants and animals) grown locally on the very steep mountainsides. How
fortunate we are to live in a country where we can turn on a tap to
brush our teeth with water that we know is safe, use a flush toilet …
turn on the lights … open the refrigerator to find safe, preserved food
to nourish our bodies. I hope I never take safe water and electricity
for granted again,” she said.
The VIM team spent a lot of time with the children in the village,
teaching English in the school, and holding vacation Bible school in the
afternoons.
One incident during VBS left a lasting impression on Bak.
“One of our team members was helping a toddler eat the last bites of
rice and beans. I asked our interpreter to tell the young woman with her
how beautiful she was,” she said. “Her response broke my heart because
she asked me to take the child home with me.”
She wanted the child to have a life with opportunities.
“It is situations like that that make me determined to return and be a
part of helping to improve the lives of people in Furcy in ways that
they can sustain on their own.”
*Gilbert is a multimedia reporter for the young adult content team.
News media contact: Kathy L. Gilbert, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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