What could possibly compel a poor
woman in West Africa to travel over 1000 kilometers – a journey that
would take six months and exhaust all of her resources and ingenuity –
to get to a hospital ship? The answer is stark in its simplicity – the
journey was born out of a desperate, fragile hope that she could find
healing and restoration.
Binta lives in southeast Guinea. Six
months ago, a man in her village told her about news he had heard on
the radio – a hospital ship was coming to the nation’s capital,
Conakry. “The ship has doctors that can help you,” the man said.
Binta is in her late thirties and
has suffered from vesicovaginal fistula (VVF), a devastating childbirth
injury, since she was a teenager. During several days of prolonged,
obstructed labor, Binta’s baby was stillborn during a traumatizing
delivery. The injury to her birth canal made Binta incontinent; she has
been continuously leaking urine for years. Her condition made her an
outcast within her own remote village. But now there was news that she
could be “fixed” and she dared to hope.
With the little money she had, Binta set out on her journey.
She traveled from her village in the
dense rainforest region to the city of Senko. Once there, she used what
little money she had to pay for transportation to the next city –
Beyla. It was her first time to ever ride in a car.
From Beyla to Nzerekore to Macenta
to Gueckedou to Kissidougou to Conakry – a blur of new sights and
sounds. She stopped when she had to, staying in one city for up to two
months where she worked doing laundry to save enough money for the next
leg of her journey. She paid people with cars or motorbikes to give her a
lift. Binta traveled more than 661 miles (1063 km) in 6 months to seek
help from Mercy Ships.
Finally, she arrived on the dock –
with no money and only the clothes on her back. “It was something inside
of me that told me, ‘Do it!’” Binta said. The Africa Mercy is the first
ship she has ever seen.
Last week, Mercy Ships volunteer
surgeon Dr. Steve Arrowsmith repaired Binta’s fistula. Today she is dry.
She no longer leaks urine; she no longer smells. And now, Binta longs
to return home to her sister’s children, triplets, whom she has cared
for since her sister passed away in 2011. Because there are no phones
there, Binta hasn’t spoken with her family since she left. Fortunately,
she will get home to them soon – a much simpler journey this time, with
assistance from Mercy Ships.
And Binta will return home with a dry skirt, a full heart and a new life.
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