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Healing the World One Village at a Time

Stern Students Lead Health Mission to Nicaragua Driven by their passion to help people in developing countries, Eveline Mordechai and Annie Press, Stern College seniors, initiated the first student-run health mission at YU. In January, ten students traveled to Limon, Nicaragua under the auspices of the Foundation for International Medical Relief of Children (FIMRC) as a result of their efforts. In September, Eveline and Annie created a chapter of the organization at Stern with the goal of heightening awareness about global health among the student body. All the students raised money on their own to pay for their travel arrangements as required by FIMRC. See photo gallery. Armed with lofty ambitions and heartfelt idealism, the students assembled pots and pans, utensils, kosher food and the necessary accoutrements for a proper Shabbat as part of their preparation for the mission. “We hired a cook in the village and one of the boys got up every morning to bring out the utensils and ignite the fire for the wonderful local woman who was helping us to ensure that everything was kosher,” said Eveline. As pre-med students, they arranged to volunteer at a clinic to help treat children and shadowed a doctor and nurse in a tiny clinic in Limon. “On the second day, we went to Rivas, the “big” city near Limon, and observed a number of surgeries at the local hospital,” said Annie. “We observed pediatric, bone and eye surgeries and were able to stand right next to the patients’ beds.” A father of one of the students is a dentist and he donated 100 toothbrushes which some students used to educate the local children about brushing their teeth. Others spoke to women whose children suffer from malnutrition disorders and also tried to provide them with information about taking better care of their health during pregnancy. When the group returned to Limon, they learned that the community had lost power in the hospital for three days and that there wasn’t any running water. The students took up a collection and donated funds for a massive water tank that would provide them with fresh water and they would no longer have to rely on the sporadic electricity. “We plan to continue our chapter for years to come and to keep sending missions to Limon,” said Eveline. “We launched an opportunity for YU students to be active in the developing world and will make sure to keep the ball rolling.”