Friday, March 30, 2007

USA Bound... first stop - the State of Virginia



I flew into Washington, D.C. and it was so nice to have SUNSHINE!!! I had a great few days in Virginia seeing my good friends, Liza and Eric, along with their three FANTASTIC kids - Trinity, Drew and Lilly...


I find it amazing that even though I feel like in many ways I am starting from scratch (as far as 'material' things), I am soooooo rich in friendships. Liza is one of those friends who will be my friend for life. We had the most amazing time together... she and Eric are such generous people. We spent many hours talking and shopping (including in the best shop... Liza's Corner) :-) ... it was the perfect place for a stop off before heading to my next location... Nashville, Tennessee...

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

A Higher Calling...


C.S. Lewis said "The heart never takes the place of the head: but it can, and should, obey it." And that's what I have done... in my heart I knew it was time for a change, so on my way to that change, I stopped in Oxford for a few nights (as she is getting Ph.D. at Oxford University).
I had a great time with my friend, Jenny and her husband Clem. We even got to spend time with friends - Diane and Paula... again more amazing relationships that I carry away in my heart. Until meet again, guys... thanks for all the memories... next stop... U.S.A.

My Last Weekend in Hebburn

My last weekend in Hebburn was a bit bittersweet. Everyone was moving onboard, and I was packing up to head to back to the USA. Eight suitcases later, my life was 'wrapped up'. So how did I spend my last day in Hebburn? On Saturday, I went onboard and watched our crew moving office furniture and equipment onboard. I walked into what would have been my office and I think that's when it really hit me...that my time in Mercy Ships was over. But I take away so many amazing memories and even more amazing friendships.
On Sunday, I went with one of those amazing friends, Pauline to the beautiful city of Durham (only a 10 minute train ride from Hebburn). Above in Durham Castle, such a beauitful place. It ended being a sunny day and we had such a time wandering around seeing the castle and we even ran into Ken, Ann and Jim. What a great way to spend a day.

Thursday, March 22, 2007

My Travel Itinerary for the next few weeks!



This pic is taken downtown Newcastle - one of my favorite places!!

Well, things are winding down for me here in the United Kingdom. My last day at Mercy Ships was last Friday and I am busy finishing up packing (up there on my list of top WORST 10 things to do in life !!) But in spite of having to endure packing, I am excited for what lies ahead. Just so you know, I will be keeping up my blog as I transition to HopeForce to stay tuned for more to come. The email link now works (thanks, Liz, for pointing that out to me!!)

Just to let you know, today is a big day for the Africa Mercy. There's a meeting happening in Paris today that will determine if the ship is ready for Sea Trials. If she (the ship) is ready, the technical crew (along with a few others) will take her out next Wednesday. The Deck and Engineering crew have already moved their offices onboard, and everyone else is on standby to do the same possibly this Saturday). It's an exciting time and a stressful time, so keep the crew in your thoughts and prayers. If all goes well during Sea Trials, the ship will sail directly to Blythe when done (about 30 minutes up the river). The crew will then all board the ship, load everything that's stored in the warehouses, and prepare to head to Africa in May.

It's a strange feeling to know that I, along with hundreds of others, have put in so many hours, who will not sail with the ship, but I have always believed in my heart since the very first time I set foot onboard this ship, that God knew who needed to be onboard during that first sail. There have been literally hundreds of us who have left our fingerprints onboard that ship, and something I am sure all of us will hold dear to our hearts forever. I thought I would be one of them, but that is not to happen, and you know what? I am ok with that!!! I am very excited about my next 'adventure' with HopeForce and being based stateside for awhile.

I thought I'd let you know my itinerary for the next few weeks and ask that you keep me in your prayers during this time. If any of you are living in any of these locations and you want to possibly arrange a time to get together, let me know (even if it's just a chat by phone)!!

  • Tuesday, Mar 27 - Drive down to Harpenden and Oxford, England
    Pray for safe travels as I've never driven this before and even though I am comfortable driving in England, it's always a bit harder for me when I don't know the route or the road signs and I am by myself ... it's about a 4 hour drive.
  • Thursday, Mar 29 - Fly from Heathrow, London (7:55 am) to Washington D.C. where I will stay with my good friends , Liza and Eric , along with their children - Liza's family all live in Nashville, so that will be a good connection for me.
  • Sunday, April 1, fly to Nashville (around 12:45 noon)
    I will be in Nashville from Apr 1 - 17. Some of the things I will be doing while I am there:
    ~ Staff Retreat April 2 and 3
    ~ HopeForce Reservist Training April 13 and 14
    ~ Looking for a potential place to live
    ~ See the area to get my bearings a bit
    ~ Visit a few contacts there for potential church, potential home, etc
    ~ Please pray that I will have a sense of 'coming home'. I am really desiring this and look forward to telling you all about my experiences that I have while I am there
  • SundayApril 17 - 30: I fly to California (San Jose). A friend there has offered me a room and a car to use while I am there - such a blessing!! I hope to visit my supporting churches, as well as visiting other individuals who support me. I am also hoping to take a few days to see friends in Modesto and San Luis Obispo to see some friends and of course, to see some of you!!
  • April 30: Fly to Bend, Oregon where my family lives!

During this time, I hope to get a bit of rest as it will have been a very hectic time up til now I need to also buy a car at this time . My plan is to buy a car so pray that I can find a good deal on a very dependable vehicle (I'm praying for a good deal on a RAV4 - either 2005 or 2006 with low mileage). I am looking forward to spending a few weeks with family before heading back to Nashville. I haven't figured out the route yet, but hope to stay with various friends along the way back (so I may be calling you!!). It will be a long trip, but I think it may also provide a good 'self-debriefing' time.

I will leave Bend most likely the 3rd week of May (we'll see how it all goes from there! )...
I don't have a phone number yet where you can reach me, but I am hoping to purchase a cell phone while I am in Nashville, but as soon as I have one, I will let you know what it is. I hope to see many of you along the way

I will hopefully be able to check emails fairly regularly. Send all emails to wraya@hopeforce.org.

Can't wait to be on the same continent as many of you :)

love, Alberta

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Hands Across the World

Diversity is a good thing!!! And working in Mercy Ships definitely provides me with that experience. Here I am pictured with Alfred from Ghana, David from the USA, and Andrei and Dmitri from Latvia, and of course, me... originally from California, but the world is my home :-) (soon to be Nashville)...

It's people who really make up the experiences in life, whether it be in England, the US, West Africa... here's just a glimpse of some of the wonderful people I get to work with:

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Here's Oebele...He's Friesian (from Holland) and a good friend. I love his accent. He's an amazingly hard worker - works in our Engineering Dept although right now he's focused on projects in the hospital. He just finished his DTS in Switzerland with a two month field service in India. Welcome back, Oebele. I will miss you!

This is Lorah (you met her earlier in my blog... she's amazing! Everything I 'throw at her' she completes with excellence. Here is a photo of her in our Duty Mess blessing our hard working deckies and engineering guys with a lovely dessert. Thanks, Lorah, for being such a team player and for being a big part of the glue that has held our crew together. Lorah is well known for her organizing 'Ultimate Frisbee' on Sunday afternoons in the park!



Here's a pic of a our Chief Officer, Tim from Seattle (middle), along with our Bosun, Lawrence from Ghana (right) and Alfred from Ghana (on left)... these guys are the best. They, along with all the other technical folks, have been so accommodating, always willing to do what's asked of them. I am privileged not only to work with them, but to also call them friends! God's blessings on you, Tim - Lawrence - Alfred, as you head to the finish line in preparations for the Africa Mercy to sail to Liberia...



Here's my dear friend, Tatyana, from Brazil. She and her husband, Rodrigo, are expecting a little one - woohoo!! Taty will return to Brazil to have her little one. She's been working with me in Human Resources (helping out occasionally in Hospitality) and has done a fantastic job! She's also an amazing cook ;-) ... lucky Rodrigo! I know our paths will cross again some time...don't forget to send me a pic of the baby (and don't feel obligated to name her after me :-)....

These are but a few of the wonderful people with whom I work... I am a blessed person!

Tuesday, March 13, 2007


The M/V Anastasis has just completed their field service in Tema, Ghana and is now docked in the port of Monrovia, Liberia.

Here is an overview of their time in Ghana (of which I was a part of for a short time)...

The Mercy Ship Anastasis arrived in the port of Tema in June 2006 for her third visit to Ghana. During the nine months of field service that followed, the Mercy Ship offered free specialized surgeries, developmental assistance, and educational programs benefiting thousands of individuals and many communities in Ghana.

HealthCare Services

Reconstructive Surgery - 590 maxillo-facial and plastic surgeries provided

AfterHealthCare Services began the Ghana field service with a two day mass patient screening June 25 and 26 in Tema. Over the next eight months volunteer surgeons performed 590 life-changing surgeries on 441 patients; including 34 jaw or cheekbone tumor removals, 84 cleft lip and/or palate repairs, skin grafts, and hernia repairs. Patients recuperated in the ship’s ward – some for a few days, others for several months before returning home.

Vesico-Vaginal Fistula (VVF) Surgery - 62 vesico-vaginal fistula surgeries provided, 2 surgeons trained

An estimated 2 million women worldwide suffer extreme incontinence due to a vesico-vaginal fistulas (VVF) resulting from child birth injuries. 62 women received free fistula repair surgeries during the Ghana field service. 2 Ghanaian surgeons received additional training in VVF repair. To celebrate the woman’s return to family and community life, Mercy Ships provided each woman with a new dress and head scarf for the trip home.

Ophthalmic Surgery - 1,364 eye surgeries performed following 19,106 field assessments

Candidates for eye surgery were selected at the main medical screening June 25 and daily at smaller dockside screenings. In addition, 19,106 ophthalmic assessments were performed by the Mobile Eye Team, a service offered for the first time during the Ghana field service. 15 community health workers were trained to perform eye examinations while 17 surgeons received additional ophthalmic training.

Dental Care - 10,211 procedures were performed for 5,435 patients.

The Dental Team established a clinic in the poor Tema New Town community at the Manheim School. A total of 5,435 patients were treated while 3,528 received lessons in oral health. In one case, dentists discovered and removed a broken knife point embedded for more than a decade in a patient’s cheek.

Health Education - 30 trained in Maternal Health, 243 received HIV/AIDS instruction, and 73 trained as Community Health trainers.

Sustainability is the goal of all Mercy Ships health education. Community health instructors are trained to teach course material to their neighbors. New instructors are now at work in at least 8 communities in the Tema region. 15 churches submitted plans for conducting ongoing HIV/AIDS training in their communities. 2,207 individuals watched the “Starting Over” HIV/AIDS video.

Community Development Services

Construction Projects - Completed three construction projects.

A 845 m2 addition to the Fountain Head Christian School. Classrooms, offices, science lab and a washroom were built. The school is operated by Youth With A Mission – Ghana.
A 566 m2 Maternity Ward for the Tema Polyclinic. The clinic provides prenatal services to more than 8,000 women a year, but did not have a birthing facility.
A 200 m2 Youth Health Clinic on the grounds of the Ashaiman Health Centre.

Water and Sanitation Project - 24 freshwater bore hole wells completed & 7 demonstration latrine

Twenty-four villages in south central Ghana now enjoy clean and abundant water. The water and sanitation project not only provides safe water and sanitary facilities, but also serves as a catalyst for community action through participatory educational methods. The team provided hygiene training to 960 individuals primarily in local schools.

Women’s Empowerment Projects - 206 trained in mushroom farming, beekeeping, or raising snails and rabbits

The Women’s Empowerment Projects provided micro-enterprise training, husbandry or horicultural skills, as well as the equipment and initial breeding/crop stock required. The beekeeping project was located in an area north of Accra where farming is in decline due to depletion of the soil. The other three projects were concentrated in Tema’s poorest communities: Ashaiman and Tema New Town.

Agricultural Training - 37 participants trained in agriculture

Participants were trained in faith based agricultural workshops. Students were taught basic agricultural knowledge and practical techniques, and gained an understanding of the impact of humans on the environment. Three at-risk communities were chosen to receive the training. The first involved both inmates and wardens at Ghana’s largest women’s prison. The second group lives in a community of HIV/AIDS patients in a poor Tema neighborhood. Third group included farmers near Tema New Town.

Church Empowerment

Pastors Conference - 350 pastors attend a 2 day Unity in Ministry conference.

January 15 and 16 the Anastasis Church Empowerment Team held a two day conference on the subject of unity in ministry. The event was planned and executed in conjunction with a steering committee of 6 local pastors. The event was well received and the steering committee has already discussed the possibility of making the unity conference an annual event in Tema.

Counselors - Counselors/Disciplers available to our patients 24/7

Counselors provided prayer, counsel, and comfort to thousands of our patients, those in the 42 bed ward, at the dental clinic site and for the pre and post operative patients on the dockside. Weekly Sunday morning services were held for the patients along with various Bible studies. They provided our patients with spiritual and emotional support.

Mercy Ministries - 385 crewmembers volunteered to assist in 3 projects

Mercy Ships volunteers contribute more than 10,000 hours a week in service to the poor. In addition, they often persued additional service opportunities during their off duty hours; primarily weekends. During the Ghana field service crewmembers routinely visited children in 3 local children’s home – Missionaries of Charity, Save Them Young and Kinder Paradise to provide much needed attention and affection. In addition, some practical assistance was provided to one of the homes to improve their living conditions.

Additional Projects

Crew Projects

Hundreds of hours in crew time donated

In addition to the official projects, the volunteer crew involved themselves on a regular basis with 9 crew projects. They included visiting various children’s homes and the psychiatric hospital, building a playground & water tower, renovating the kitchen at the women’s prison, and establishing a youth drop in centre.

Monday, March 12, 2007

New Season in Life



Growing up in California, we didn't experience a lot of 'seasons' (in terms of weather)... Last week I flew over to Switzerland to visit some good friends of mine and the weather changed daily (lots of sunshine though which was very nice!!). Often in life, we experience the seasons of 'change'... and now I am embarking on a new change...

I have decided to resign from Mercy Ships after an absolutely amazing 7 1/2 years. I am excited about the upcoming change, but also a bit sad that I won't be on the Africa Mercy as she sails into Liberia. For those of you in Ghana, I am so grateful that I had that time with many of you. God, in His infinite wisdom, allowed me that time to say goodbye and put closure on some things, as well as having one more time on a functioning ship - what a blessing. And even though I thought I was saying goodbye to many of you as I was anticipating a different job, little did I know what God had up ahead for me (although He spoke to my heart early on in Feb 2006 that 2007 was going to bring about a major change).

I am soon to be Nashville Bound where I will be working with HopeForce International - http://www.hopeforece.org/ (and great friends - many of whom are ex Mercy Shippers) so I will be in great company!!! The way God is working all of this out is showing me that His hand is in this, and that makes me all the more excited.

I will still be available via instant message (albertawray - both AIM and Hotmail - and skype - albertawray - so do please keep in touch. For your address books, my email will change to wraya@hopeforce.org (already active).

I have one more week in the office (last day is Mar 16), then will take the remainder of my time here in the UK to finish packing up and spending some time with friends. I fly out of London Mar 28.

I know that many of us have experienced how small our world is, and yet how BIG our God is, so I know that my path will cross with many of you again at some point in time. Please stay in touch and know that I love each and every one of you. You are each dear to my heart. I will work on keeping my blog updated (http://www.albertasantecdotes.blogspot.com/), although I will be travelling for a bit once I leave England, so bear with me! I look forward to watching your journey in many of your blogs and websites as well.

May our Lord go before you in whatever part of the world you are in and know that you are always welcome wherever I am. I hear Nashville's not only a great place to live, but also a great place to visit (hint, hint!!).

Blessings,
Alberta