 |
|
Ruth Humbert, RN,
assists a family at the village clinic. |
Caring for People in Guatemala
There are a lot of similarities between the Good Samaritan and Ruth Humbert, RN,
who lives in Guatemala. She travels by truck, however, up treacherous roads to
deliver medicines and to train village health workers. Ruth often pulls out her
own money to meet needs that are beyond the financial reach of the villager.
Also like the Samaritan, she doesn’t pass out Bibles or preach to those she
offers care to; her life is her sermon.
Ruth has lived and worked in Guatemala almost five years. She is
an employee of Community of Christ Health Ministries Association (HMA) and
funded by a partnership of HMA and Outreach International to train indigenous
nurses to continue these medical clinics when she leaves. She is using the
Participatory Human Development Process (PHDP) in selected villages to meet
additional needs. Ruth chooses to work with the poorest of the poor to provide
medical care and hope through empowering the villagers.
The trust given to Ruth in healthcare matters quickly spread to other areas of
need. When Ruth returned to a village the third or fourth time, the people
realized she was truly interested in their situation. This trust allowed her to
begin PHDP in villages where she held clinics.
Ruth is training eight indigenous nursing students in remote
areas. Three of them are now ready to conduct their own medical clinics for
their village, as well as for neighboring villages. Medications and supplies are
being collected to fill a backpack for each of them. There are no other rural
health clinics in these mountainous areas and no source of medications for the
families, whose monthly income is $40–$50.
In the recent movie Pay it Forward, the concept of the Good
Samaritan was depicted by helping someone do something they couldn’t do for
themselves. Ruth saw the immense needs in the communities where she worked.
Instead of trying to solve all of these problems, she taught the village women
and men the participatory process to help them help themselves. Last May, Ruth
and 43 women began dialoguing about the issues of greatest concern to them. They
determined that their largest health concerns could be addressed with better
stoves, houses that keep out the elements, clean water, and latrines.
This spring, 44 stoves were built in houses after a year of
working with the village women, who identified the need for smoke-free,
healthier cooking spaces. After looking at several stove designs, they selected
one modified by their suggestions. Each of the three groups of women seeking
funding for the project made a presentation. When the supplies arrived, they
happily carried the materials and began assembling the stoves as they had been
shown.
Next, they turned their attention to providing houses that keep
out the rain, wind, and cold. The women prioritized which houses had the
greatest need for replacement and researched building materials and construction
designs. The first three houses were scheduled for construction this July or
August.
Empowering these nurses with PHDP began an unforeseen chain of
events and changes in additional villages. Ruth takes old tires up to villages
daily in the back of the pick-up truck for container gardens. The tires are cut
and inverted so vegetables can be grown even in the dry season. One community is
transforming a marsh fed by mountain run-off and a ground spring into a tilapia
fish farm for a renewable protein source and income. Additional projects arising
from Ruth’s work are ecofilters in the houses for safe, clean drinking water and
latrines for better sanitation.
E-mail for more information about
Ruth’s program in Guatemala or call (816)
833-1000, ext. 1262, or go to
www.HMACofChrist.org.
—Paula Rummel reporting
|