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Thursday, September 06, 2007
Janice Shaw Crouse :: Townhall.com Columnist
Many Are Called, But Few Are Heroes
by Janice Shaw Crouse
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Having worked nearly two decades “inside the beltway,” I’ve become blasé about the public relations entourages of people with massive ambitions and meager accomplishments. How refreshing then to read about the real thing — a man of humility and faithfulness whose remarkable life includes medical missionary work among the poorest of the poor, as well as founding and building one of the premier mission hospitals in the world. In his newly released book, Miracle at Tenwek, Gregg Lewis provides a gripping account of the heroic life of Dr. Ernie Steury, a medical missionary who established a world renowned hospital in a remote area of Kenya.

Ernie Steury’s life brings reality to St. Augustine’s comment, “It is pride that changes angels into devils; it is humility that makes men as angels.” The account of Steury’s dedication and commitment to excellence “strangely exalts the heart,” as St. Augustine so aptly put it.

Dr. Ernie Steury went to Kenya in 1959 to serve a small clinic and dispensary. Over the years, he turned that clinic into a 300-bed hospital that is recognized around the world as a model medical facility. The outstanding national and missionary staff at Tenwek Hospital — located near the village of Bomet in the highlands of southwest Kenya — continues to serve the medical and spiritual needs of hundreds of thousands of Kenyans. The hospital’s community health and development programs garner praise around the globe. Dr. Steury’s extraordinary dedication to his patients, along with his integration of top-notch medical skills and deep faith, make him a model for medical missionaries.

An Indiana farm boy, Ernie Steury became a medical doctor worthy of being a hero to American young people who want their lives to make a difference. He went into an area of Africa with an uncertain and inadequate electrical supply, and years later, through his efforts and financing, a dam was built on the nearby river to provide hydroelectricity to the whole region. Without any formal training as a surgeon, and with few medical instruments, he saved lives.

Lewis cites numerous examples of medical emergencies where Dr. Steury lacked the equipment to handle a life-and-death situation. One particularly compelling story was about a young boy who was caught in the crossfire of tribal warfare. An arrowhead punctured his abdominal aorta. Lewis described Dr. Steury’s surgical catch-22: if he left the arrowhead in, the boy would slowly bleed to death, and if he removed the arrow in the absence of the necessary clamps and medical equipment, the boy would bleed to death. Dr. Steury prayed and took a few seconds to think. Suddenly, he had an idea. A red rubber catheter and suction tubing could provide a makeshift vascular clamp. “With little time and only one chance to get it right,” Steury carefully, step-by-step, over the next hour gradually performed a miracle of ingenuity and skill. The boy walked out of the hospital just ten days later.

There is, of course, much more to Ernie Steury’s story than a simple “boy-does-good” explanation. Steury’s experiences as a medical student formed a clear vision of his future role; he vowed to become a spiritual as well as physical healer. The route to that vision, however, began in an unpromising way. He was not a serious student when he went to college, but his dad died the next summer prompting him to be more diligent than before. He fell in love with a girl who was also called to be a missionary. By Divine Providence, their dreams for the future merged. Steury took his MCAT exams, passed with flying colors, got a scholarship to Indiana University’s medical school and graduated among the top 10 in his class.

After an internship specializing in tropical medicine, Steury passed the Canadian Boards to become licensed to practice medicine anywhere in the British Commonwealth, making him “the second American missionary doctor so qualified in all of Kenya.” Later, that additional license enabled Dr. Steury to be fully credentialed by the government of Kenya. Prior to their departure for Africa, the Indiana University Medical Center gave Steury all of its older medical equipment that had been replaced when they remodeled and upgraded. All Steury had to do was hire a truck to move it and then ship it to Kenya.

Dr. Steury’s first medical procedure at Tenwek was an emergency Caesarian section (an operation he had never performed by himself). The patient’s uterus was about to rupture; if that happened, both she and her baby would die. So Steury, the only doctor within fifty miles, unpacked the crates containing the operating table and surgical instruments and set up an impromptu operating theatre. His wife Sue, a registered nurse, sterilized the instruments in her pressure cooker while Steury reviewed the procedure in his medical text. As he began the operation, Steury prayed that God would intervene –– certainly to save the woman and child but also because he knew failure would cause the people to distrust him in the future. Continued...

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About The Author
Janice Shaw Crouse is a former speechwriter for George H. W. Bush and now political commentator for the Concerned Women for America Legislative Action Committee.
 
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This needs to be a movie!
Moving Picture Institute! Are you paying attention?

Miracle at Tenwek
What an amazing story! I hope many more people read this book and hear this wonderful story.
Thank you, Dr. Crouse!
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