Hi there. I have created this site so that you my friends, family and sponsors can keep in the loop during my year on the Anastasis - in Ghana and Liberia. I will update it as often as I am able, and hope that you can get the feel of life on board a volunteer hospital ship!

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Peace's Story

Hi there. Those of you who recieved my newsletter would have seen some photos of one of our patients - Peace. I was wanting to share Peace's story with you a while ago - but it has now been officially published by Mercy Ships - so I can now pass on to you her remarkable story.

Ashamed, hurt and embarrassed, Peace Mensah suffered for years with a huge tumour sprouting out of her mouth. The fear of not knowing why the tumor began or how large it would grow, combined with the intense pain would have shattered most people’s faith in a loving God. But for Peace it was her faith that carried her through. “I want to tell my testimony to everyone of what God has done for me,”Peace says as she begins her remarkable story of faith.


As she perches on the side of her bed in the Mercy ships recovery ward, Peace holds a mirror in one hand. She can’t stop looking at her face, the transformation is amazing. Her smile gradually grows wider and wider until a gasp of laughter comes rushing out. In 1998 Peace first felt the beginnings of discomfort in her mouth. Four years later the swelling had grown considerably and the pain was intense. Blood and pus constantly oozed out of the mass that swelled out of her mouth. A local hospital had diagnosed the facial tumor but there was little that would be done to help.



Knowing there was little hope, Peace gave her condition up to God and prayed that He would keep her faith strong. Life grew tougher and tougher for the Mensah family. Running a small farm and trading vegetables and cassava kept them economically stable but as Peace’s tumour grew, work for her became impossible. Her husband was forced to take over the running of the entire family. Unable to sleep due to the intense pain and only able to drink liquids through a straw, Peace gradually grew more and more weak. “I used to cry out and pray for God to hear,” she says while looking at her new reflection, “and God heard my cry.”


In June 2006, a doctor from Peace’s village came to the family with the exciting news that a floating hospital ship was coming to Ghana. “He told me to pray,” Peace remembers, “and I did. I never stopped praying!” Along with thousands of others, Peace traveled to the port city of Tema to attend the Mercy Ships medical screening in late June, 2006. She stood for hours in a line, a line that would lead to a new face and a new life. Amazed and overjoyed, Peace left the screening site with a Mercy Ship surgical appointment card. The floating hospital was the answer to endless prayers; surgeons assured her they could remove the tumor and restore her face.


The 27th June, 2006 marked the start of the transformation process for Peace. She endured two surgeries over three months, spending twenty-seven days in the ship’s recovery ward. At times she recalls that it was humiliating, “I had lost so much weight and was so light that I couldn’t really walk. I had to be bathed and I always wet the bed. But the result was incredible and the nurses were amazing. Mercy Ships has done a big job.” “God has blessed me so much,” Peace murmured over and over again.


Throughout the whole eight years her husband loyally stayed by her side, looking after the whole family and reminding her that he loved her for who she was, not what she looked like. But she knows God loves her even more than this. “God is an amazing God, He is always by our side.” After her final surgery Peace remained another fifteen days onboard the Anastasis. “She was a delight to look after”, one ward nurse commented.


Ecstatic about her transformation and excited about returning home to her village, Peace talked about how the family would celebrate in style. She knew that it was her faith in God that had kept her going through all the emotional turmoil of the last eight years and to Him she gave the glory.


Peace is one of our many patients who suffer from benign tumours of the mandible or maxilla (jaw bones) It is heartbreaking to see these patients when they arrive - such a massive deformity would not be tolerated in our society. It is certainly a priviledge to be part of the team that can bring such a transformation to the lives of these people. Peace was certainly a delight to look after - and If I am not mistaking - that quote was of me!

2 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi Soph

Mike here, just had a dream with you in it and realised I hadn't heard from you in a while...

Hope you're doing ok, miss you, hope you have a good Christmas (-:

1:15 pm

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi Sophie
...wishing you a great Christmas time. It's really interesting to read about the work you are doing and the lives you are changing. Last week one of my friends who came to the Movie Night asked how you were getting on and I was able to relate some of the "miracles" that have been worked on the ship. She wishes you well and was pleased to hear that things are going well for you and the the experiences you are having were so interesting.
We're almost ready to head off to the Coromandel and Ryan's going to Summer Harvest after that.
Love and prayers

Carolyn & Chris

9:24 pm

 

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