| Jibla hospital reopens
with fewer beds and workers but future is bright, manager
says
By Mark Kelly
CHARLESTON, S.C. (BP) -- Barely a month after
three Southern Baptist medical workers were murdered, the
Baptist hospital in Jibla, Yemen, has reopened, the medical
center's business manager told a group of Baptist editors
Feb. 7.
Although not yet operating at the same capacity
as before, workers at the hospital are excited about the
future, Lee Hixon told members of the Association of State
Baptist Papers meeting in Charleston, S.C.
Talking with the group by speakerphone from
Yemen, Hixon said the 45-bed hospital opened 14 beds in
three wards on Feb. 1 and is averaging about 40 clinic patients
and a half-dozen surgeries a day. Last year, hospital staff
members were seeing 120 to 140 patients a day and conducting
400 to 500 surgeries a month.
The hospital, which was preparing for a transition
to Yemeni administration before the killings, now is operating
with a little more than half its normal staffing, Hixon
said.
"When we announced that we would be turning
the hospital over to an indigenous group, we lost about
half our [contract workers]. After Dec. 30, we lost another
half," Hixon said.
Hixon said the hospital's contract workers
were not angry about the transition to Yemeni administration
and flatly rejected the idea that the shootings were caused
by local anger toward the hospital. Police sources said
the gunman came from a town several hours away, and the
Jibla community responded to the murders with an outpouring
of grief.
Two Yemeni surgeons have joined the medical
staff, according to the administrative associate for International
Mission Board work in Northern Africa and the Middle East.
Hospital leaders also have received inquiries from four
doctors in other countries interested in serving for at
least several months.
MOVING AHEAD
While staff members still are coping with
their grief over the murders, they are moving ahead, Hixon
said.
"What I'm seeing at the hospital now
is normal, but it's a new normal, a different normal,"
he said. "There's a new boldness and a reinforced love
for the people here. It's an exciting time. We're very excited
to see what the Father's going to do."
Complications in making the transition to
Yemeni administration had left staff members feeling discouraged
about the hospital's future. The murders of Bill Koehn,
Kathy Gariety and Martha Myers changed that, Hixon told
the editors.
"Two months ago, we were not very hopeful
the hospital would reopen," he said. "But God
moved to reopen it."
In the aftermath of the murders, the Yemeni
government stepped in and pledged to keep the hospital open.
The minister of health appointed a hospital administrator
and a nursing director, both of whom have more than 20 years
of experience working at the hospital. He also said other
Christian organizations are welcome to send workers as well.
'BRIGHT FUTURE'
"The agreement with the Yemeni government
provides for Southern Baptist medical workers to serve alongside
Yemenis and other international workers," said the
regional administrator. "We believe this agreement
will carry the hospital to a new level of cooperation between
the IMB, the Yemeni people and other Christian organizations
with a heart for the people of Yemen.
"This will allow Southern Baptist workers
to have an undiminished opportunity to exercise their medical
skills and fulfill their calling to minister to Yemenis.
It ensures that the people of Jibla will continue to have
access to good medical care. It also allows the hospital
to be rooted in Yemeni soil. We look for a bright future
of service to the people of central Yemen."
Staff members were glad to see that the government
appointed administrators who knew the hospital from the
inside, Hixon said.
"Not one member of the new team came
from outside the hospital. I think that's a real testimony
about what's happening in the reopening," he said.
"The new administrative team is excited about prospect
of doctors and nurses coming from America, Australia, Europe
or the Philippines. They are encouraging me to encourage
others to come here and help out."
TIME TO RESPOND
Southern Baptists need to respond to the opportunity
to serve in Yemen, the regional administrator said.
"Since the deaths of Martha Myers, Kathy
Gariety and Bill Koehn, doors are open in Yemen as never
before," he said. "Doctors and other medical professionals
who want to work at Jibla hospital are encouraged to contact
the International Mission Board. If God is calling you to
go to Yemen, here is your opportunity. Who is willing to
come?"
Hixon asked Southern Baptists to pray that
security concerns will ease so hospital staff will not have
to be accompanied by a security detail every time they venture
out of the hospital.
"Since Dec. 30, we have been under incredible
security restrictions," he said. "The government
imposed those restrictions in our interest. After what happened,
they want to do their best to be sure it doesn't happen
again.
"But that's a big concern for us. We
need a little freedom to move about and do our jobs."
A NEW NAME
The murders of Gariety, Myers and Koehn enlarged
the reservoir of goodwill Yemenis feel toward the hospital,
Hixon said. One evidence is the effort to find a new name
for the medical center.
"On Dec. 16, as we were getting ready
for the transition, Bill Koehn painted out the word 'Baptist'
on the hospital sign," Hixon said. "The government's
temporary documents for the hospital say 'Jibla Hospital.'
"But the newspapers in Yemen are calling
it the 'Hospital of Peace.' We're really hoping that is
what the hospital will be called."
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