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INTERVIEWS BY REBECCA GRACE | AFA Journal Staff Writer
July 26 was a beautiful day in Guaimaca, Honduras. A team of 30
mission volunteers, some from the small town of New Albany, Mississippi,
prepared to spend the day in the rural village of La Union high
in the mountains of Honduras. The team traveled two hours to set
up a medical and dental clinic where they ministered to the physical
and spiritual needs of many Hondurans.
Little did they know just how life-changing this day would be as
they drove down the mountainside and into the unexpected. Their
journey downhill turned fatal when the brakes failed on one of the
trucks carrying 17 people. (See AFA Journal, 1/06.)
Dr. Ronald L. Feather, of New Albany, died at the scene and several
were critically injured.
A sense of desertion came over the the landscape of broken bodies.
Although the following hours seemed hopeless, Gods provisions
were powerful. Below, a registered nurse, an injured volunteer and
a grieving son reflect on that eventful day when God came near.
Charlotte
Grisham, the nurse
We were about 20 minutes down the mountain when it happened.
I realized something was wrong because I could hear screams coming
from the truck full of team members that sped past our vehicle.
The truck veered toward the ravine and then to the mountainside,
hitting a ditch and then the mountain. Everyone was thrown from
the vehicle.
We immediately jumped out and ran to the scene. I remember saying,
"My daughter was in that truck." Another nurse grabbed
my arm and said, "Youve got to get yourself together.
Weve got work to do."
All you could hear were moans and screams. I looked down at my
feet and there was Ron [Feather]. I just touched his face and said,
"I love you, my brother. I know youre going through the
gates." And I had to move on.
I quickly found my daughter among all the injured. We had only
packed one suitcase of supplies. By the grace of God, it was all
we needed at this time. It was amazing to see a team of people,
some with no medical knowledge, who overcame fears and worked together
as a medical team.
After what seemed like an eternity, a vehicle came up the mountain.
We decided the most critically-injured would go down in the first
ambulance. Dr. [Shane]Scott told me I needed to go down with one
of these victims [that being Katherine Skinner]. I said, "I
cant leave my Katy Anna."
He said, "You can. Youve got to go down and make sure
everything is done that needs to be done."
So I went over to Katy Anna and told her I needed to go down with
Katherine. She said, "You go, Mama. You go and take care of
Katherine."
Leaving my daughter on the mountain was probably the hardest thing
Ive ever done, but God gave Katy Anna the strength to tell
me to leave her. I kissed her and got into the ambulance to find
that it was basically a vehicle with no medical supplies .
Katherine was hurt badly. She had a lot of facial injuries and
a lot of swelling, which would soon obstruct her breathing. I had
nothing to put in her airway, then the swelling stopped right at
the jaw. That was another act of God.
After an hour-and-a-half trip down the mountain, we got to the
mission clinic in Guaimaca where we did a few extra things to stabilize
the patients before transferring them into a van and on to a more
well-equipped hospital in the countrys capital.
The van ride was another hour-and-a-half. The wreck happened about
4:00 p.m., and we got the first group to the hospital at 9:01 p.m.
By the time the last ones got to the hospital, it was 12:21 that
morning.
Upon our first entry in the emergency room, a doctor came to me
face-to-face, and he spoke to me in the most perfect English. I
said, "I know God brought us here to you."
We conversed briefly about the patients, and I told him I couldnt
be a fly on the wall. So we worked for many hours getting everyone
x-rayed, but we needed to get them to the United States as quickly
as possible.
After waiting almost 24 hours following the wreck, the first medically
equipped airplane arrived and the injured were flown to U.S. hospitals
on various flights. Within a few days all were discharged except
Katherine.
Although the physical and spiritual healing process continues,
I can honestly say, God is good!
When we didnt think we had enough supplies, we had some left
over. When I didnt know what I was going to do for an airway
in Katherines throat, God stopped the swelling. Hondurans
prayed for my daughter. Prayers that began before this trip continued
on that mountainside.
Everyday, I think about this, and I am reminded of another way
God provided that day.
Katherine
Skinner, the injured
I dont remember anything that happened during the accident
or after the accident or for the next several days. But in the days
since then Ive learned a lot
and God has been real
near to me.
Most of us probably would have been a bit hesitant to go if we had
known this wreck was going to happen. But God chose to let us have
this experience and chose to speak to people through us.
The other night I was praying and saying, Thank you, God,
for these people who saved my life. Thats something that has
never happened to me before.
And God said, Yes, it has! I saved your life. And I
thought about that, and thats not how I remember it when I
was young and I said the prayer to be saved, and everything was
good. Of course, as Ive grown up, Ive learned more about
salvation and what God really did for me.
Now, it has a whole new meaning. I was on the side of the road.
I didnt know I was hurt. I was lying on the side of the road
bleeding and dying and not even able to ask for help. I was unrecognizable,
and God provided folks who knew what they were doing and who had
the ability to save me, and it wasnt just doctors and nurses.
It was the folks at the bottom of the mountain who were praying
the whole time.
Thats how salvation is, too. There may be one person who leads
someone to Christ, but there are many people praying for that persons
salvation.
Its a huge act of God. We dont realize how much is done
on His part. Were inactive in the whole thing.
Ive learned a lot about inability, and Im still learning.
We dont ask for help. Were not even aware of our need.
He gives us that awareness, and He supplies the cure.
Randall
Feather, the son
I was at home watching the 10 p.m. local news when my aunt called
and said she needed to drop something off at my house. I began to
wonder if something was wrong.
When I opened the door, there were some family friends and my pastor
with her. I knew then what had happened.
My immediate thought was that they had received wrong information.
Surely what they were telling me couldnt be right.
My dad was so excited about being a part of this mission team. My
biggest fear was that he would lose some luggage or have some sort
of stomach bug.
There hasnt been a day since that accident that I dont
think about my dad. It sometimes still seems unreal, but God has
been so good. The Bible says that He will never leave us or forsake
us, and we take great comfort in that promise.
It would not have surprised me at all if this was the first of many
trips my dad would have gone on, which is why I decided to go on
a foreign mission trip only weeks after my dads death.
I had made plans earlier in the year to go with a local group on
a medical/dental trip to Ecuador. After the accident, I decided
there was no way I could go on this trip and leave my expectant
wife, my 2-year-old-son and my grieving mom.
But one of the Honduras team members came by the house. She grabbed
me by the cheeks and looked me in the eyes and said, Yes,
you can go because your dad would have wanted you to go. After
much prayer and talking with my wife, family and pastor, I decided
I would go to Ecuador.
I am so glad that I did. God worked mightily that week and I also
had two opportunities to share the story about my dad.
It is overwhelming to think about how many people have heard about
the accident. My dads story has touched the lives of so many
in Honduras, Ecuador and the U.S. We have already heard reports
about peoples lives that have been changed forever because
of this accident. A church has been started on the mountain in Honduras
not far from the accident scene.
People in Honduras are asking why my dad left his comfortable life
in Mississippi to go to Honduras. He did it because he loved those
people and wanted to meet their physical needs. But most of all,
he wanted to share that Jesus loved them, that He died for them.
He prayed they would come to the saving knowledge of Jesus Christ.
I hope that people will continue to go and serve where God leads
them and find their place of service. Be sensitive to what He asks
you to do.
I believe that my dad received the affirmation from Christ that
is found in Matthew 25:21, Well done, good and faithful servant.
May all of us be found as faithful when we meet our Savior face
to face.
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