From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


[UMNS-ALL-NEWS] UMNS# 277-United Methodists provide artificial limbs in Africa


From NewsDesk <NewsDesk@UMCOM.ORG>
Date Wed, 2 Jul 2008 17:20:42 -0500

United Methodists provide artificial limbs in Africa

>Jul. 2, 2008

NOTE: Photographs and a related story are available at
http://umns.umc.org.

>By Phileas Jusu*

FREETOWN, Sierra Leone (UMNS)--A limb-fitting center in Bo has provided
more than 200 artificial limbs for amputees since the end of Sierra
Leone's civil war.

Most of the center's patients lost their limbs during the West African
country's 11-year conflict. The center receives funding from the United
Methodist Board of Global Ministries through its Health and Welfare
Department.

During a March workshop at the Kissy Hospital in Freetown, 12 of 30
registered amputees received artificial legs. Amara Lappia, limb-fitting
technician and head of the center, said the workshop was successful
"because amputees who have been longing for artificial limbs, some for
four years to no avail, now have new ones free of cost.

"Those who have received will pass on the good news to their colleagues,
and I'm sure this place will be full to capacity the next time we are
around," he said. "Some of the amputees, I'm told, did not come because
they thought they had to pay for the service."

>Needing miracles

Francis Koroma, an ex-soldier in the Sierra Leone Army, was injured
after a bomb fragment hit his left foot in a battle to defend the
diamond-rich district of Kono from rebel forces. His foot was amputated
at the military hospital in Freetown after several unsuccessful
operations. Koroma was hopeful to secure a job at a security agency that
made acquiring an artificial limb a prerequisite for his employment.

Like Koroma, Donald Gabba needed an artificial foot to qualify for a job
in security. He had walked about 12 kilometers from his home to a
limb-fitting organization but gave up after several attempts because the
demand exceeded the supply.

This time, he was encouraged to get one free. "That is my miracle, and I
do not have words to express how grateful I am," Gabba said. "These
young guys caught up with me on the street and invited me to come here
and receive what I have spent the past six years running after. I opened
up my arms right there and prayed for them for God's blessing."

Afterwards, Gabba was so excited that he would wake up in the middle of
the night, pick up his artificial limb and start learning how to use it.
"At times, I danced in my room while my wife looked on with delight," he
said. With a new foot and a new job, Gabba believes he no longer will
have to beg on the street for a living.

J.T.T. Johnson, a retired Anglican from the Church of the Holy Spirit in
eastern Freetown, has been a beneficiary of the limb-fitting center
since its establishment in 2002. That year, he received his first
artificial limb at the United Methodist Church's Kulanda Town Limb
Fitting Center from the same staff members participating in the Freetown
workshop.

For "Pa Johnson," as he is called, the staff members are his brothers
because they have been nice to him throughout the past six years. In
March, he was at the Kissy workshop to replace a limb that had become
damaged.

His left foot was amputated after rebels shot him in 1999 during a
battle in Freetown at the height of the Sierra Leone civil war. His
house at Kissy had been burned down, so he went to a mosque to take
refuge, believing that the rebels might not enter a place of worship.
The rebels found him, however. A shot pierced through his left foot into
the right foot, "but the force of the bullet had reduced considerably by
the time it flew into my right foot. That is how I did not lose the
right foot as well," he explained, showing the scar on the right foot.

Found later that day, Johnson was taken by his children to the Kissy
Government Hospital, where he spent three days in the hospital kitchen
without treatment. Eventually, he was taken to Connaught, the main
government hospital in Freetown, but it was too late to save his foot.

>Restorative ministry

Saa Bundu Kamara, a Muslim from an amputee resettlement home in Grafton,
an eastern Freetown suburb, also had an artificial limb that became
damaged. Kamara said his new limb from the center "restored more
meaning" to his life.

Bomb fragments hit his left foot during a 1996 fight between
pro-government forces and rebels who had invaded the city. "I suffered
for two weeks because almost all international and local medical
agencies had fled the city," he recalled. "By the time I received
medical attention, my foot had gone terribly bad and needed to be
amputated to save my life."

The limb-fitting center in Bo uses a process from Jaipur, India, and is
the only place in Sierra Leone where that type of prosthetic is
available. Patients can wear normal shoes and clothes. The government
hospitals use a foam material that gets heavy and mildew-ridden in the
heat and rain.

The center receives financial support from The Advance, the second-mile
giving program of The United Methodist Church. Donations can be made
through the Landmine-Prosthesis Program, Advance No. 982580. Make checks
payable to a local church and drop in the offering plate or to "Advance
GCFA" and mail to P.O. Box 9068, GPO, New York, NY 10087-9068. Write the
name of the ministry and the Advance number on the check. Credit card
gifts can be made by phone at (888) 252-6174 or online at
http://secure.gbgm-umc.org/donations/advance/donate.cfm?id=3019065.

*Jusu is a United Methodist communicator in Sierra Leone.

News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or
newsdesk@umcom.org.

>********************

United Methodist News Service Photos and stories also available at: http://umns.umc.org

----------------------------------------------------

To unsubscribe from this group, go to UMCom.org, log in to your account, click on the My Resources link and select the Leave option on the list(s) from which you wish to unsubscribe. If you have problems or questions, please write to websupport@umcom.org.

Powered by United Methodist Communications http://www.UMCom.org


Browse month . . . Browse month (sort by Source) . . . Advanced Search & Browse . . . WFN Home