Showing posts with label Ma'Ahad El-Muhajirin Islamic Center. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ma'Ahad El-Muhajirin Islamic Center. Show all posts

Friday, August 31, 2007

For [US] Navy care providers, Cambodia mission is sobering, rewarding

Cambodian boys wait to be seen outside a makeshift medical clinic at the Ma’Ahad El-Muhajirin Islamic Center Aug. 17. (Photo by: Sgt. Ethan E. Rocke)

Petty Officer 3rd Class Roberto Alberto examines a Cambodian patient Aug. 17. (Photo by: Sgt. Ethan E. Rocke)

Story by: Sgt. Ethan E. Rocke
US Marine Corps News

KAMPONG SOM PROVINCE, Cambodia(Aug. 31, 2007) -- It’s 9 a.m. and the daily crowd of patients is lined up outside the makeshift medical clinic at the Ma’Ahad El-Muhajirin Islamic Center in southern Cambodia. They peer inside the building, watching a Navy medical team at work.

As medical officer, Lt. Jonathan Endres sees his fifth patient of the day, his face is bright and his spirits high. He knows exactly how to help 9-year-old Mutiah Zaynuttin. The rash on her scalp is textbook, and she has a mild cold. Endres writes her prescription, smiles and sends her next door to another dim, shabby room that serves as the team’s pharmacy.

Zaynuttin is one of the approximately 500 residents of the center, located in the midst of Kampong Som Province’s remote farmland. She is the 98th patient Endres and his team of corpsmen from the Okinawa-based Marine Wing Support Squadron 172 have seen since they began a medical civil assistance project here two and a half days earlier. She is one of the 96 whose ailments the “docs” have been able to effectively treat, and she is one of the patients that leaves Endres smiling.

But as Endres and his docs measure their worth with the care and comfort they can provide the sick, and the other patients – those few whose serious illnesses they can’t treat in this environment – weigh on their minds.

Their humanitarian mission is a familiar one that Okinawa service members carry out in countries all over the Pacific.

“It’s very challenging,” said Endres, who is deployed on his first medical civil assistance project. “You do what you can and want to help as many people as you can, and we are able to treat the majority. There are only a few that we got stuck on, and that’s frustrating.”

By the project’s third day, there were two patients Endres could not help. One, he suspects has hepatitis and another appears to be in the beginning stages of tuberculosis.

Many patients U.S. teams see on humanitarian assistance missions have never seen a doctor. And while they are the minority, cases that exceed a deployed team’s capabilities are a disheartening reality for American doctors accustomed to Western health care standards.

The team’s enlisted leader Chief Petty Officer Joe Palmares, a 20-year Navy veteran who planned and coordinated the Cambodia medical project, has been faced with that reality several times; the Cambodia mission marks the ninth medical civil assistance project he has been involved with while stationed on Okinawa.

“There are times that you really wish you could provide more,” he said. “Every time we do this, you can only do so much, so we do the best we can and hope.”

Their best means treating patients every day from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and also providing preventive medicine training that covers topics such as hygiene and preventing heat casualties.

Most patients have several diagnoses many of which are the result of poor living conditions. Infections and parasites are among the most common problems in the small Cambodian community.
The medical team hopes to lengthen its impact beyond the two weeks they are on the ground by showing the residents how to better protect against disease and infection, a responsibility that falls to preventive medicine technician Petty Officer 1st Class Kelly R. Wallen, who is also deployed on his first civil assistance mission.

“This can be an emotionally draining experience,” he said. “It’s backbreaking work at times, but I actually look forward to getting up in the morning, knowing it’s going to be hard, because I know I’m going to help people.”

Wallen and his colleagues share a driving sense of compassion and commitment that is a constant reminder to them that, while they cannot help everyone, there is something very special about helping those they can.

“We come out here and we care,” said Palmares. “That’s our mission, and we do it well. As Americans, we are very blessed. We’re such a strong country, and that’s why we provide this humanitarian relief, because we can and because we should. You can’t provide everything, but to touch somebody’s life, that’s special. They will cherish this; they will remember this.”

Friday, August 24, 2007

[US Marines] Unit builds bonds during civil assistance project

Lance Cpls. Bentley Martin and Derreck Moore, both combat engineers with Marine Wing Support Squadron 172, measure and cut boards Aug. 15 during an engineering civil assistance project at the Ma'Ahad El-Muhajirin Islamic Center in Cambodia's southern province of Kampot. The project is part of the Cambodia Interoperability Program, which is intended to build on the relationship between the U.S. and Cambodian governments and develop interoperability between U.S. forces and the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces. (Photo by Sgt. Ethan E. Rocke).

Sgt. Bradley Wood, a combat engineer, finds a curious bunch of boys anxious to help as he fills a generator with fuel at the Center. (Photo by Sgt. Ethan E. Rocke).

Unit builds bonds during civil assistance project

By Sgt. Ethan E. Rocke
US Marines in Japan


KAMPOT PROVINCE, Cambodia (August 24, 2007) -- In a modest, peaceful compound deep in the rural, southern farmlands of Cambodia's Kampot Province, August 15 was a day for smiles.

Residents of the Ma'Ahad El-Muhajirin Islamic Center had reason to smile as they warmly welcomed Marines and sailors from 1st Marine Aircraft Wing's Marine Wing Support Squadron 172, who came to complete several renovations during a two-week engineering civil assistance project.

The detachment of mostly Marine combat engineers also consists of medical and dental personnel who will provide medical care and preventive medicine training for residents during the project.

The engineers will make several infrastructure and cosmetic improvements at the center including rewiring and improving the electrical equipment that powers the center, installing ceilings in classrooms and ceiling fans in the center's mosque, and painting.

The center is an Islamic school for high school graduates from Cambodia's Cham, an ethnic group of Islamic people in Cambodia, Vietnam and Thailand.

The project is part of the Cambodia Interoperability Program, which is intended to build on the relationship between the U.S. and Cambodian governments and develop interoperability between U.S. forces and the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces.

Nasiet Ly, an English teacher at the center, welcomed the American humanitarians during a small opening ceremony.

"We are very thankful for the help, and we hope to build on the warm relationship between the U.S. and Cambodian people," he said.

Gunnery Sgt. Kirk Taylor, staff noncommissioned officer in charge of the project, followed Ly's remarks, echoing his message of goodwill.

"We're excited to be here helping the Cambodian people," he said. "We hope the friendships we build here will last for generations to come."

The project marks the second time in two years that MWSS-172 has conducted a civil assistance project in Cambodia. In October 2005, the unit completed construction on the Kompong Chhnang Friendship Clinic, a medical clinic in Kompong Chhnang Province that is staffed by local medical personnel.

A spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in Cambodia relayed a message from Chargéd'Affaires Piper A.W. Campbell, praising the Okinawa service members for their role in enhancing the relationship between the two countries as well as the Muslim community.

"Providing assistance to Cambodia's Muslim population is an important part of the United States government's outreach efforts here, and we sincerely appreciate the significant contributions MWSS-172 has made to this ongoing commitment," Campbell said.