Lending a hand in the Amazon brings its own reward
Transcription
Lending a hand in the Amazon brings its own reward
Orlando Sentinel: PRODUCT: TRAV / DESK: TRAV / DATE: 11-07-2004 / EDITION: FLA / ZONE: FLA / PAGE: L1.0 / DEADLINE: 19.29 / OP: metzkin Travel / COMPOSETIME: 17.19 CMYK Orlando Sentinel OrlandoSentinel.com SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2004 SECTION L Zion National Park blazes with cactus flowers. Five national parks, practically within spitting distance, make southern Utah a scenic superstar. By PHIL MARTY CHICAGO TRIBUNE ESCALANTE, Utah — We were relaxing in the shade at a table outside the Trailhead Cafe and Grill while smoke from burgers drifted away from the gas grill into a brilliant blue sky. On the road into Escalante, brilliant blue met reddish orange, compliments of otherworldly redrock formations. As if on cue, the radio, set to an oldies station broadcasting from somewhere bigger than Pictographs decorate rocks near Delicate Arch in Andes National Park. Escalante (pop. 900), poured out Billy Joe Royal’s lament, “Down in the Boondocks.” It’s not hard to consider the southern third (or maybe the whole state) of Utah to be the boondocks. After all, there aren’t many people — only 2.3 million for the state, a half-million less than in Chicago. Consequently, there aren’t a lot of fine-dining options. Or highbrow cultural events, Cedar City’s Utah Shakespearean Festival notwithstanding (or Escalante’s Labor Day Weekend “Axles, Hubs and Wheels”). PLEASE SEE UTAH, L10 Quiet glens dot Zion National Park. At Canyonlands National Park’s Island in the Sky, visitors are treated to striking views of the neighboring mountains. PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY LAURIE LAWRENCE/ORLANDO SENTINEL; PHOTOS BY PHIL MARTY/CHICAGO TRIBUNE; GOING GLOBAL Lending a hand in the Amazon brings its own reward This is one of a series of occasional articles on young travelers and their adventures. By T. DELENE BEELAND SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL AMAZONAS, Brazil — I am rocking a 2-week-old baby in a weathered wooden shack supported by splintered stilts that have a tenuous hold on the clay banks of the Rió Negro, one of the Amazon’s largest tributaries. Fatima, the baby’s mother, has complained of lethargy, headaches and abdominal pain. She lounges listlessly on a threadbare couch while Teresa Madedor and Donna Sumrall, registered nurses from Orlando, set up an intravenous line for her. “The family is scared because two months ago a new mother in this village had the same symptoms and died a few weeks later,” Madedor says quietly, her melodic voice skipping lightly across the poverty-darkened room. She’s searching for a nail or hook on a rafter from which to hang the saline bag. It will deliver much-needed fluids to Fatima’s septic postpartum body. The room’s only light streams through a bare window, a borderless aperture to the afternoon rainstorm rolling across the river. Refreshing wind precedes it. Scattered rain soon taps a song on the tin roof. Roosters and chickens squawk outside. “This is so awesome! I feel so alive inside right now!” Sumrall exclaims as she tapes the IV line to the saline bag. Eight years after ending her nursing career for full-time motherhood, it looks as if Sumrall, her face PLEASE SEE BRAZIL, L12 In a village, families gather on a porch for a clinic given by a group of Central Florida doctors, nurses and volunteers. T. DELENE BEELAND FETCH FIDO: MISS YOUR DOG? BORROW ONE DURING YOUR TRIP, L13 COLORSTRIP: Orlando Sentinel: PRODUCT: TRAV / DESK: TRAV / DATE: 11-07-2004 / EDITION: FLA / ZONE: FLA / PAGE: L12.0 L12 DAYTONA BEACH &E V E N T S : Nov. 4 - 14th Volusia County Fair: Featuring thrilling rides and agricultural exhibitions. Nov. 11 - 18th Daytona Beach Film Festival: Featuring more than 30 films from North America and around the world. 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Wide floor planks are set half an inch apart. Through them, I see two goats. The room smells of rain and warm, unwashed bodies that pull sustenance by hand from an indifferent earth. Fatima’s tired eyes look past us. But an hour and two liters of saline later, I watch her eat a full plate of beef and farina (ground and roasted yucca). Her eyes grow brighter each second. My fingers itch to take a photograph. But sensing the snapping of my shutter will take something from her, scoop away her dignity, I stow my camera and return to her baby. We are all relieved by Fatima’s improvement, and despite the oppressive poverty, the mood in the shack is now lighter than moth wings. I am traveling aboard a boat named the Bahamas on a medical and humanitarian mission trip. There are 54 other volunteers, most from Central Florida churches. Doctors, nurses, pharmacists, a dentist and willing volunteers without medical backgrounds, like me, are offering their hands and skills. We are visiting areas along the rivers that are so remote and poor that residents lack necessities such as clothing and medicine. Rivers are the highways of the Amazon basin. From this village, Saraca, the nearest hospital is three days away by boat in Manaus, the capital of Amazonas state. “There are villages that are weeks away from a hospital,” says Dr. Jonathas Moreira, from Orlando. He is the liaison between the Presbyterian Church in Manaus and the volunteers. “Can you imagine, if you are sick . . . weeks!” Life on the margins DAYTONA BEACH OCEANFRONT • • • • • • • • • / BRAZIL FROM L1 To receive your free Visitors Guide, call 1-866-250-6187 or www.over2.daytonabeach.com Things to do: DEADLINE: 17.52 In remote villages, even necessities are luxuries With clear, blue skies and 23 miles of soft, warm sand, Daytona Beach is the prefect setting for any event or weekend getaway. Enjoy great golfing, incredible seafood restaurants, family attractions and more. It’s more than a destination...it’s an experience. ACTIVITIES / Ribeirorhos means “river people” in Portuguese but might as well translate to “forgotten people.” It refers to persons of mixed ethnicity descending from indigenous Indians, whites and blacks. They speak Portuguese and farm yucca, cocoa and plantains, and fish. Along with indigenous Indians of Brazil, those with preserved languages and customs, they are marginalized by their government. Back on the river, the water curls behind the boat’s motors in humped, black waves with crests of deep tannin-orange. The wake’s hypnotic undulations lull me into meditation. I imagine living here by trying to erase luxuries such as treated water, refrigeration and paved roads, and stepping down a few levels to simply having food, shelter and health. Throughout the trip, I assist my cabinmate, Dr. Cassia Portugal, in the boat’s pediatrics clinic. She is a petite Brazilian with milky-white skin who engages patients in lively Portuguese. (Most of the American doctors aboard require translators. Without them, our presence is an impotent gesture.) Portugal bids me to run to our cramped pharmacy for bottles of albendazole. All six children of a family around her exam table have worms. I pour the liquid into the mouth of a 5-year-old girl, who stares at me wide-eyed and open-mouthed while the medicine pools around her tongue. She is unsure what this stranger is pouring down her throat, but, trusting all the same, she swallows. Her mother asks me something, and Portugal translates. “She wants to know how many kids you have?” “None,” I reply, surprised, “I’m not married.” I wiggle my naked ring finger in the air. The woman’s eyes fly wide, and she looks me up and down. A spew of Portuguese ensues. The doctor shakes her head, then says, “She asked if you are barren, but I told her, no, you just don’t have kids.” If I had been born to a ribeirorhos community, I would certainly be, at age 27, mothering eight or 10 kids by three or four men. Dr. Tom O’Leary, an Orlando gynecologist, says many river women have asked him about birth control, and a few T. DELENE BEELAND Volunteers from Central Florida paint a house in an Amazon village. It’s a simple but significant act that can extend the life of the building. have the place ready for families to come “shopping.” Kids hang on windowsills and door frames as they eyeball the growing stacks we create. Giving the clothes away is the best part. Each family is given a bag, then they pick five or six items. If anything remains after everyone had picked, we invite them to walk through again until it’s all gone. Judging by the ribeirorhos’ Food isn’t a certainty smiles, which seemed wider By 10 a.m., the boat’s clinic is than the river outside, this realbusy. Our two waiting benches ly is Christmas in July. are packed, and a line stretches along the boat railing outside. I Boy holds no grudge One afternoon, when the pecount 26 people — four mothers and 22 children. Every mouth in diatrics clinic is slow, I head the room is smacking gum or ashore to the village, a clear-cut sucking a lollipop — Madedor span of dry earth. I find our and Sumrall have been busy painting crew clustered around giving out candy at triage again. two homes, roller brushes atop scavenged Dugout canoes begin arriv- jammed ing around 11 a.m. Families, branches for extra reach. Paint who have paddled hours crowd extends the longevity of meager housing by protecting it from beneath frayed parasols. A young man hobbles from a the elements. The village leader canoe with an angry, infected decides which homes will rewound on the back of his calf. ceive new life. I pick up a roller The ragged gash is rimmed and begin helping. As I take a break, I spy Lucas with green, and I realize it’s gangrenous. (Later, at dinner, I downhill. I had held the boy for hear that he had cut himself Portugal this morning as she with a machete seven weeks tried to remove impacted earearlier. That he escaped blood wax. “His mom says he’s 7, but he looks like he’s 5, he’s so poisoning is a miracle.) Guilt strikes me when we small. He’s also mute.” Portugal close for lunch. Our cook is cre- told me. As she peered into his ear ative and energetic, and a feast of fresh fish, vegetables, beans, with an otoscope, she found rice and melon awaits us on the wax so compacted that it looked like black pebbles. boat. Food is an uncertain pros- Could he hear at all? The boy may not be able to pect for many of our patients, who drift home until we reopen speak, but he had lungs. He at 2 p.m. I wonder how many howled as I held him, sweating will eat. Poor families may have and squirming as he resisted only one meal a day. This morn- the doctor. All gum-smacking ing, a few kids with swollen ceased in the clinic, and I felt stomachs passed through the apprehension growing. “Hang in there, I’m hot, too,” clinic, an indication of protein I whispered in his ear, knowing malnutrition. Portugal inquires about the he couldn’t understand me, but diet of one family when she no- hoping that, if he could hear me, it sounded soothing. tices extreme tooth decay. Now he is playing happily in “The mom said she feeds them powdered milk mixed a cooking pavilion. His mother with sugar,” she tells me, exas- is making farina by toasting yucca grain over a huge iron peration cutting her words. stove, turning and tossing it Flip-Flop Express with a wooden paddle. If Brazil has an unofficial naHe recognizes me, waves tional symbol, it’s the flip-flop. and smiles. And just like that, in Whether you are on a remote a child’s condensed time span, I jungle tributary of the Amazon am forgiven. or in the thumping urban heart of Rio de Janeiro, everyone Eager to return I rise with the sun each wears flips. “We should call our boat the Flip-Flop Express!” morning amid the stillness left says Ginnie Poe, an Orlando behind by our boat’s diesel genvolunteer. We are sorting erator, which cuts off on a prethrough 750 pairs of flip-flops cise schedule. Because I’m craon the boat’s deck, packing do- dled in white noise through the nated items for distribution in a night, the sudden silence at 6 a.m. seems deafening. village that evening. This morning I emerge from As I assist with the donated items, I feel like a behind-the- my cabin to discover that Impa, scenes Santa. Mounds of sun- our captain, moved the boat warmed clothing flutter in the during the night. We are breeze. Someone stopping in moored off a small village of might think Goodwill has relo- perhaps 30 families. A rambunctious brouhaha of colors cated to a boat on the Amazon. We haul a few filled suitcas- announces the new day 21⁄2 dees to a school or church build- grees below the equator. I start the morning talking ing and, within 20 minutes, with Dr. Mark Sand, an Orlando cardiologist.“I have to step outside of my skin to do this . . . step outside the operating room and become a general practiThe Amazonas missionary trip tioner,” he tells me.“I feel torn was arranged through Global between using the skills I have Hope Network International (P.O. and letting myself be stretched Box 781112, Orlando 32878; 407into new areas. Surgery is cura207-3256; globalhopenetwork tive and life saving. I know I .org). Cost was $1,280, including have an immediate impact air and ground transportation, there. But these trips also open lodging and meals aboard the the opportunity for me to learn boat. new areas.” Monetary donations also are welcome, as are donations of such It is our last day in the villagthings as adult or children’s sumes. By serving the ribeirorhos, mer clothing, soccer balls, chilI’ve tasted this addictive inner dren’s toys and hygeine supplies. glow, and I depart the Amazon — T. DELENE BEELAND hungry for more. about sterilization. Unfortunately, we have only limited means to address these issues — sex education and condoms. When I later tell Moreira about the conversation, he says, chuckling, “I have a saying that, if you see a young girl in the Amazon, 13 years old or so, then she has a baby either here or here,” pointing to his shoulder then his belly. IF YOU WANT TO GO T. DeLene Beeland lives in Gainesville.