© 2017 Mo Siegel
© 2017 Urantia Foundation
Welcome & Contact Details | Volume 11, Issue 4, Dec. 2017 — Index | Noteworthy Decisions from the October 2017 Board of Trustees Meeting |
By Mo Siegel, president, Urantia Foundation, Colorado, United States
For the past two years l’ve been blessed with the opportunity of assisting Dr. Geoff Tabin, cofounder of the Himalayan Cataract Project, as he cured cataract blindness in Ethiopia. During the last week of August 2017, our small surgical team of three experienced and three resident doctors performed 1100 cataract surgeries on blind men, women, and children. With that many surgeries being performed in such a short span of time, it felt like an assembly line delivering light to those lost in darkness. When you see the despair caused by blindness, you can easily understand why the merciful soul of Jesus felt compelled to cure the blind. It took several weeks after returning to the United States for me to go a day without thinking about the experience, tearing up, or dreaming of those souls who found relief from Dr. Geoff’s scalpel.
This year we worked in a small eye clinic in a remote town in southern Ethiopia. The clinic had two “hole in the floor” toilets without running water and one old AC unit that didn’t function. Electricity generally worked but would frequently shut down during surgery. From seven thirty in the morning to eight thirty at night, the blind patients, often the poorest of the poor, streamed in, busload after busload. For me, it was an endurance test that I could only pass when I remembered Jesus’ words, “What you do for the least of my fellows you do to me also.” From my pampered American perspective I frequently felt overwhelmed by germs, suffering, and the seemingly endless waiting room of patients. Intertwined among the wafting unfamiliar smells of Ethiopia came moments of joy, medical success, and hopefulness. One look at Geoff, eyes steady on the microscope, and you felt humbled by his selfless and tireless determination to end unnecessary blindness. From the viewpoint of the patients and their families, they must have felt love, care, and the total transformation of their lives.
Imagine being completely blind before surgery on Monday, and after your bandages are removed Tuesday morning, you have nearperfect eyesight again. In an instant a blind person goes from helplessness to self-sufficiency. Despair, coupled with deep depression, turns into promise for the future. No longer does the blind person suffer the fate of being perceived by his or her family as “a mouth with no hands,” nor will the blind child endure the taunts of other children.
Dr. Geoff’s tenacity is a great lesson in life. Two decades ago Geoff was on the first climbing team to successfully summit the east face of Mount Everest, a route considered unclimbable. Today Geoff attacks blindness like he attacked the sheer ice and rock walls of the east face. I had the “runner” job in the operating room working for Geoff and his two highly skilled pleasure of doing the nurses. I wore my Fitbit and clocked 12,000 steps a day putting on bandages, moving patients, getting supplies, and being the nonsterile hands for the operating team. Geoff worked tirelessly, often going five hours without eating, drinking, or going to the bathroom. His average operation took about eight minutes and resulted in a success rate of over 99%. Those who didn’t have success had other eye complications. He’s like a dog with a bone in his mouth. Nothing blocks his relentless drive to cure the blind. When the electricity goes out, he operates with a headlamp. When food comes at lunch, he’s the last to eat. When the clock strikes 8:00 p.m. and the final few patients are ready to be operated on, instead of quickly finishing, Geoff invites the resident doctors to watch so he can teach them.
Over the last twenty-one years the Himalayan Cataract Project (HCP) doctors have operated on over one hundred fifty thousand blind people. Even more extraordinary is the fact that the doctors trained by HCP have cured over three million blind people. Boundless determination, medical excellence, and a grand blindness drive this selfless team.
Since returning home I’ve doubled down on my commitment to living and sharing the teachings in The Urantia Book. This book is “God-sent,” literally. These teachings cure spiritual blindness. Knowing God and loving others is the pearl of great price that I want for you and me! Sharing the good news from The Urantia Book is salvation for this world. A mighty and great miracle has descended upon our lives. For, by some stroke of fate, you and I were blessed to discover this revelation in its early days.
If there were one message I could leave with you, it’s that you envision the Thought Adjuster in others and tirelessly act upon that knowledge.
Welcome & Contact Details | Volume 11, Issue 4, Dec. 2017 — Index | Noteworthy Decisions from the October 2017 Board of Trustees Meeting |