For
most people, summer is a time to slow down, relax,
take vacations and get away from it all.
There are some, however, who see summer as the season
to get into it all. Call them purposeful travelers,
those who pass up the traditional vacation getaways to
help others, go on mission trips, take an educational
excursion or make a road trip for a sports competition
or a band performance.
In the next two months, AJC Gwinnett News is planning to
share the experiences of some people with local
connections who are taking "Vacations With a Purpose".
We will be publishing updates in the newspaper and posting
reports and photographs on ajc.com/gwinnett.
So far, the lineup of planned contributors includes:
* A special ed teacher from Norcross who will teach
English to orphaned children on the Thai island of Phi
Phi.
* A Suwanee dentist who will be pulling teeth in El
Salvador.
*
An English lit teacher at Shiloh High School who will be
showing her students the actual places that inspired "A
Tale Of Two Cities".
Gwinnett's purposeful travelers have compelling stories to
share.
Trip will mix dental, divine
For nearly two decades, Dr. David Hayward has been
donating his time and expertise.
Hayward has a traditional dental practice in Suwanee but
he also shares his skills with some of the poorest people
in the farthest corners of the globe.
Often traveling with his wife, Barbara, Hayward combines
Christian missionary work with dentistry. The spiritual
side of his work can be like, well, pulling teeth, he
said. But his willingness to pull teeth makes him welcome
in some of the most remote and sometimes foreboding parts
of the world.
"Dentistry
is like gold," Hayward said. "I've been able to get into
unreached areas, where other agencies couldn't get in,
even with a doctor."
Sometimes, he has been the first dentist people have ever
seen, he said. He often treats people suffering in great
pain.
Hayward makes from two to four dental missionary trips per
year, mostly to remote sections of western Africa, Central
America or Eastern Europe. This year, he plans to make
what will be his 31st trip abroad, going to El Salvador
and possibly to Sri Lanka, if he can obtain official
permission.
He travels with a portable dental office in a large
suitcase, and he can set up to work anywhere he can find
electrical power or a generator.
He has formed a nonprofit company called International
Dental Outreach. It operates under the umbrella of an
international charitable mission organization called
Helping Hands, which does much of the administrative work
for his agency.
While Hayward is seeing to people's dental needs, an
accompanying delegation from Crossroads Christian Church
in Suwanee will be doing the more traditional missionary
work.
Hayward traces his global dental practice to a deal he
made with God. He prayed for divine help to make it
through dental school; in return, he promised to help
wherever he was called. So far, he's been called to dozens
of the poorest places in the world.
"I see he need is so great," Hayward said. "At first, I
felt what I had done was just a drop in the bucket." But
now, he sees that a well can be filled drop by drop.
Among the other travelers will be Julie Mearon, an English
literature teacher at Shiloh High School, who will be
giving some of her students a firsthand look at the
locales that inspired great authors such as Charles
Dickens; and Richard Pruitt, a youth pastor at the Church
of the Redeemer in Snellville, who will be part of church
mission group that will be installing a water-purification
system for villagers in the mountains of the Dominican
Republic, who now use a polluted stream for all their
needs.
Thai orphans touch teacher
Stacy Hanley, a 1999 graduate of Norcross High School,
went last year to Phi Phi, an island about 30 miles off
the Thai resort area of Phuket. Her vacation turned into a
life-altering adventure, she said.
"After 40 hours of flight, at least 20 pad Thais (a Thai
dish) and banana pancakes, countless beers, an attack by a
monkey, a couple of boat rides when I wasn't sure the boat
would bring me back to shore, a stubbed toe and leg
infection, I decided that I'm moving to Thailand," Hanley
said.
She's not going back for the banana pancakes. Much of Phi
Phi was obliterated in the tsunami of Christmas weekend
2004. Nearly one-fourth of the estimated population of
slightly less than 10,000 was killed. About 70 percent of
the buildings on the island were destroyed. When she
visited, no cars or even scooters were on the island; the
only thing remaining was poverty.
It was when she saw some of the more than 100 children who
had lost one or both parents that Hanley was moved to act.
She said she was touched deeply by the children, who
seemed lost and hungry. So she and a friend have formed
the Thailand Teachers Project.
Working under the auspices of a Connecticut-based agency
named Volunteers on Call, Hanley will teach English to
elementary schoolchildren and to local volunteers. To do
this, Hanley had to take a leave from her most recent
position, teaching at a school for children with learning
disabilities in Greenwich, Conn.
She has no guarantee that she'll be able to resume that
job when she returns, probably in 2007. But to her, Phi
Phi was more important.
"This was something I could do," Hanley said.
There is still time to arrange to
contribute to: "A SUMMER CALLING: Vacations
With a Purpose." If you or your
group would like to participate, call Bill Osinski at
770-263-3853, or e-mail bosinski@ajc.com.