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RNS NEWS FEATURE Nun creates impromptu oasis to heal Haitian bodies and souls By
BOB BRAUN PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (RNS)
— Wearing a bright, floral blouse and pink shorts, Mita Jean Louis
stares into a mirror, unmindful of the people around her. She is smiling,
and someone asks if she’s smiling because she sees the reflection
of such a beautiful young woman. The smile vanishes. “I don’t know,” says the 19-year-old, instantly shy. She puts the mirror away in a makeshift cabinet, and lowers herself onto her bed. The bandage that covers the stump of her thigh shows through below her shorts.
Sue Morrison of Mountain
Lakes, N.J., a surgeon who had been involved in the twinning parishes
program, came to help. A friend, medical student Sarah Connelly from
the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, contacted a
prosthetics company that put together a foundation to help those, like
Mita, who lost limbs when concrete walls fell on them. “We’re here to
provide quality care to people like Mita,” says Dennis Acton of
Manchester, N.H., a prosethetics producer who began the foundation. “All kinds of people
have come through here,” says Finnick, including Acupuncturists
without Borders and a plumber who donated and installed modern dual-flush
toilets. The camp also drew a group
that wants to start a business building geodesic dome homes for Haitians,
and another seeking to create organic compost-based toilet systems. “I think having the
word ‘sister’ in your name makes people guilty,” says
Finnick, who once headed her order, the Grey Nuns of Yardley, Pa. She
recently retired as a nursing professor at the University of Buffalo. One recent night, guests
included coaches from an organization in Massachusetts who want to train
Haitian players and coaches, and a teacher from White Plains, N.Y.,
who had come to volunteer. A local artist named Einstein Albert sells
his works there. “I guess I have a knack
for putting people together who want to do something good for others,”
Finnick says. Braun writes for The
Star-Ledger in Newark, N.J. Copyright 2010 Religion News Service. All rights reserved. No part of this transmission may be distributed or reproduced without written permission. |
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