June 2008
25,000 adjustments in four days!
by Dr. Peter Morgan
DC mission breaks world record
This April, the
ChiroMission Foundation brought 32 chiropractors and 31 chiropractic
students to the jungles and remote villages of Haiti and the Dominican
Republic. Their mission was to bring the healing touch of chiropractic to as
many people as possible. During their four-day stay, they broke the world
record for chiropractic adjustments, caring for more than 25,000 people. A
PBS film crew joined the foundation and recorded the amazing accomplishment.
ChiroMission doctors
spread out throughout the two countries, reaching and serving hundreds of
Haitians in the town of Ouanaminthe and thousands in Dominican Republic
cities, villages and hilltop towns.
Breaking up into 30
doctor/student teams and led by a mission guide, the group visited places
like Santiago, La Vega, Ranchito and San Francisco de Marqoris, Imber,
Luperon, Caberette and the Puerta Plata region of the Dominican Republic.
While the effort was
just a chiropractic pebble in the pond, given the extreme poverty of many of
these places, the rippling effect of is already spreading.
"There was a lot of
uncertainty on both sides as to how this was going to work," said Jason
O'Connor, DC, from Antioch, Calif., the primary mission organizer. "I was
organizing with people who have never received an adjustment, and who do not
know what chiropractic is. I have never been to Haiti and do not speak
Creole. I was nervous and apprehensive regarding our physical safety. I was
concerned about the sanitary conditions. However, since our mission was so
important, I was willing to try. I trusted that God would see that things
would work out. We were pleasantly surprised!"
Yet, the initial
surprises they encountered were far from pleasant.
When Dr. O'Connor --
along with fellow mission leader David Hecht, DC, from New York and John
Palmer, a student at Life University and student mission leader -- tried to
drive across the border into Haiti, they were informed that they would not
be allowed to take their rental cars into the country. They were weary,
hungry and sweaty from their long trip from Puerta Plata to the Haitian
border, and not a little nervous about being stranded in a poor and often
violence-ridden area.
"We couldn't reach
Hugues Bastien, our contact person, by phone," O'Connor recalled. "Stranded
for hours, we were stuck!"
They considered leaving
their car and walking into Haiti, but images of returning to a dismantled
vehicle (or no vehicle at all) ran through their minds. They might have
decided to turn back but they were given a chance to see first-hand how
desperately they were needed.
"Little children were
coming from Haiti begging for money," O'Connor said. "Several of them,
wearing filthy rags for clothes, approached the car windows and we could see
their skin riddled with all sorts of skin diseases, teeth that were decayed
to the roots. We could see across the border to the outskirts of a very poor
town, very sparse vegetation, and garbage everywhere."
After witnessing this,
it was hard to think of turning back. Still, as the hours passed, they faced
the possibility that it could be their only choice. Just as they were making
plans to leave, they received a call from Mr. Bastien. He confirmed that
they couldn't bring the vehicle across the border but gave them instructions
where to leave it.
"We really had no other
choice, so we left our car, and the keys, and the team crossed the border to
be picked up by Bastien's four-wheel drive van and driven into Ouanaminthe,
a city of about 100,000 people at the northeast corner of Haiti, on the
border with Dominican Republic. More than 90% of the people live in tiny
two- or three-room homes made of concrete block or recycled wood lacking
piped-in fresh water (water is normally obtained from community wells), a
sewage disposal system or electricity.
Despite the hardships
and worries the team members experienced, they were glad they persevered.
"We would have missed out on a great opportunity to serve and the people who
were expecting us would have been severely disappointed," O'Connor admitted.
He quickly checked with
the Medical Center and found that its staff had scheduled 100 patients per
hour. The doctors worked non-stop, seeing all the scheduled patients plus
walk-ins for the days that they were in Ouanaminthe. O'Connor noted that
"each member put in a good 12-plus hours of solid work per day."
To help with the
language barrier, the chiropractors had help from translators who delivered
the chiropractic story to educate the people as they waited. Emphasis was
placed on the vitalistic principle… the power that made the body heals the
body.
Back in the Dominican
Republic, the 30 teams were stationed all over the country. Many of the
chiropractors were on their first mission trip but all of them had prepared
for an incredibly powerful week of love and service. They went to mountain
villages, city ghettos, orphanages, nursing homes, prisons, baseball fields
and villages that were devastated by a recent hurricane. Some teams adjusted
as many as 1,000 people in a day. The average team adjusted 400 people a
day. Almost every team adjusted all the students in each local school.
All types of people
presented to the teams. We saw new-born infants, elders more than 100 years
old, people with hatchet wounds, on crutches and in wheel chairs, with
bleeding goiters, huge tumors. Priests, pastors, ministers, and curious
passersby wandered over. There was an endless procession of people with all
kinds of ailments, all looking for a miracle from the chiropractic "miracle
workers." We explained that chiropractors analyzed and adjusted solely for
the purpose of removing nerve interference.
During one trip, I
dropped off one team to the exact site I'd visited on the previous mission.
I saw the pastor I'd met at that time, and we spoke about the wonderful
night he'd invited me to his house for dinner.
As I was leaving, three
women came up to me and asked if I could adjust them. I told them that this
was not my station and the young women chiropractors would take care of
them. One replied, "Oh no, doctor, you have to take care of me. The
last time you were here you created a miracle in my life."
I explained that I
didn't perform any miracles but was an instrument of the universe there to
remove vertebral subluxations, which would allow the body to work better.
The other two women had
the same story. One of the women had had a tumor, another a goiter and the
third, digestive problems. After their adjustments, all of their problems
seemed to just "go away" and I had been credited with a miracle cure!
Of course, I adjusted
these three women and got a big hug and a lot of love in return! I also
ended up staying and helping the two assigned chiropractors because hundreds
of people had already come two hours early and were waiting. People cried,
laughed, smiled and grinned after they got adjusted; they all respected the
sacred art of adjusting the spine.
Over the next three
years, the ChiroMission Foundation plans to bring chiropractors to Trinidad,
Haiti, Guatemala, the Dominican Republic, Mexico, Jamaica, and Argentina to
adjust some 600,000 people whose lives can be made better through
chiropractic adjustments.
I have made contacts
with health officials, churches, and community leaders and have even
arranged to sponsor a weekly radio spot in Trinidad.
The Trinidad trip is
scheduled for January 2009 and there is still room for five doctors and ten
students. The next Haiti trip is planned for April 2009.
Doctors and students
interested in learning more about future missions, or in signing up for the
Trinidad trip can contact me at chirorye@aol.com or 914-424-6773, or visit
www.chiromission.com .