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Juanita Jacobs and Debbie Murley of Corner Brook help improve lives in Papua-New Guinea

Retired nurse Juanita Jacobs of Corner Brook with the mother of an ill child she helped during her recent humanitarian volunteer mission to Papua-New Guinea.
Retired nurse Juanita Jacobs of Corner Brook with the mother of an ill child she helped during her recent humanitarian volunteer mission to Papua-New Guinea. - Submitted

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You just never know what might come in handy during a humanitarian mission to a country where the needs are countless.

When retired teacher Debbie Murley and retired pediatrics nurse Juanita Jacobs of Corner Brook left recently on such a mission to Papua-New Guinea with the Youth With a Mission organization, they knew they could be of some help.

The pair were among more than 170 volunteers from 15 countries who spent two weeks aboard the Youth With a Mission PNG medical ship, visiting various villages along the southwest Pacific Ocean island nation’s coast.

Debbie Murley of Corner Brook poses for a photo with two local schoolchildren who welcomed her volunteer group to their village in traditional tribal dress during her recent humanitarian volunteer mission to Papua-New Guinea.
Debbie Murley of Corner Brook poses for a photo with two local schoolchildren who welcomed her volunteer group to their village in traditional tribal dress during her recent humanitarian volunteer mission to Papua-New Guinea.

 

It wasn’t just their efforts to deliver health and dental care and education that brought smiles to the residents there.

Each day, they would be given a backpack full of items they could use to help the people they encountered as they went ashore.

One day, Murley was looking through her pack and found, of all things, a pack of guitar strings.

At some of the schools she visited, Murley said there no desks, chairs or school supplies and students had to practice their letters by writing on the dirt floor. At one school, she asked if they had any musical instruments.

The teacher said they had a guitar, but it only had two strings.

It was that school’s lucky day as Murley reached into her bag and pulled out the guitar strings she had otherwise thought were an odd item to have been included.

With nearly all the supplies, even the fuel for the ship, coming by way of donation, Murley figured the strings had simply been another graciously accepted donation.

“It just goes to show that every little bit counts,” she said.

Corner Brook’s Juanita Jacobs, on the right, and fellow Youth With a Mission volunteer Amy Glynn pose for a photo with some of the children and families they helped vaccinate in Papua-New Guinea.
Corner Brook’s Juanita Jacobs, on the right, and fellow Youth With a Mission volunteer Amy Glynn pose for a photo with some of the children and families they helped vaccinate in Papua-New Guinea.

 

At another school, there were four guitars with none having any strings. Murley managed to find one more package of strings aboard the ship for that school.

“The teacher was so excited and he promised that he would play us some music if we came back,” she said.

While that was an unexpected turn of events, seeing the poor residents of Papua-New Guinea receive much needed school supplies, vaccinations and dental care, or watching the reaction of someone getting glasses and being able to see clearly for the first time in their lives, was truly the most rewarding part of the experience.

It was the second time Jacobs has been on this sort of mission to Papua-New Guinea and she said she saw many improvements in the population health this time around, which she credits to Youth With a Mission.

“The goal here is not for international people to come in and constantly take care of and be the saviors, if you will, in that country,” she said. “It’s to go in and partner with the government there and the local people to teach them good health care practices and for them to then take a hold of that and improve their situation when the ship is not there.”

A major focus for Jacobs, who helped provide vaccinations, was teaching the local residents how to avoid contracting tuberculosis and malaria, two diseases which are serious problems in the country. But she said it’s the wide-ranging approach to how the organization could help these people in whatever way they could that attracted her to Youth With a Mission.

That approach, combined with the appreciation and gratitude of the people they met, gives Jacobs reason to believe this won’t be her last mission to Papua-New Guinea.

“When you go with an organization that wants to help the lives of the kind of people we met, it’s absolutely heartwarming,” said Jacobs. “It’s how we’re supposed to be in this life, I think: not just isolated and self-absorbed in this society where we have everything at our fingertips.”

Murley agreed, saying she was a little concerned at first about how receptive the residents would be to this ship of foreigners coming to show them how to live their lives better.

“It was amazing,” said Murley. “It’s a different world. They have what we would consider nothing, but they are very happy people and were very appreciative of what we could do.”

Murley was also impressed with how Youth With a Mission conducted community assessments to determine how to make their future missions even more effective in addressing the needs of those they’re trying to help.

While it was the two of them in person, Jacobs and Murley said there was much more of Corner Brook with them on this mission. Along with nearly 50 pairs of eyeglasses donated by the staff of optometrist Dr. George Colbourne and eye drops donated by ophthalmologist Dr. Joe Wijay’s office, Jacobs and Murley said they would not have had this experience without the tremendous support of their families and friends.

Everyone else who bought some of the red pepper jelly they sold to raise funds for the trip were a big boost too.

Jacobs offered a challenge to anyone looking for this sort of experience, or a health care professional able to offer their expertise on such a mission, to get in touch with her for more information and to join them next time.

Retired teacher Debbie Murley educates a classroom full of children in Papua-New Guinea about how to protect their eyes before they have vision tests and get fitted for glasses.
Retired teacher Debbie Murley educates a classroom full of children in Papua-New Guinea about how to protect their eyes before they have vision tests and get fitted for glasses.

 

Youth With a Mission:

Youth With A Mission, also known as YWAM (pronounced “WHY-wham”), is a global movement of Christians from many cultures, age groups and Christian traditions dedicated to serving throughout the world.

Back when it began in 1960, YWAM’s main focus was to get youth involved in missions. Today, it still focuses on youth, but also involve people aged nine to 90. The organization currently works in more than 1,100 locations in more than 180 countries, with a staff of more than 18,000.

Source: Youth With a Mission

Weblink: www.ywam.org

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