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HCJB Global nurse Ian McFarland prepares to dispense vitamins and medicine for an inmate with little access to basic healthcare. |
Then trying out the reading glasses I'd handed across the desk, a man would at times smile and say, "Yes, I see. I can read it."
"Yes, I see" were the words that hit me hard because our medical team was in Quito's main penitentiary to help the men with more than physical needs. We were pleased to meet many who had also embraced that divine love that John 3:16 refers to. They're studying the Scriptures and growing in God's grace.
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Going to Prison ... by Choice
We arrived about 9 a.m. and presented our documents to access the building. Once inside we surrendered our documents, got patted down and frisked and had our boxes of supplies rummaged through, which included smelling the bottled water we brought to drink. About 45 minutes and several steel gates later we were inside, an inked stamp on our arms to show that we were visitors.
Dr. Steve Nelson checks an inmate. |
We quickly set up for our doctor, Steve Nelson, and a Hospital Vozandes-Quito intern who accompanied us. Helping out was another doctor, one who did not wear the magic ink mark on his arm-the ticket out of those steel doors later that day. Though trained in surgery, his clinical skills were excellent, according to Steve. He even found one inmate's eardrum to have been ruptured.
Smiling and sharing some chocolates she'd brought, nurse Rita Whaley set to work applying a blood pressure cuff to those waiting on chairs across from me. She's experienced at prison visits, having helped several Polish inmates inside and upon their release.
Nurse Rita Whaley takes a prisoner's blood pressure. |
HCJB Global's medical outreach ministries in Latin America include community development programs such as mobile clinics and clean water projects.
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A Vision to Share Christ
Aguirre's vision to reach inmates with the love of Christ is clear, stemming from his own conversion when he was behind bars a couple of decades ago. Surely there are aspects of Ecuador's prison system that have changed since that time, when prison reform advocate Chuck Colson wrote of his visit to the García Moreno Penitentiary that is part of the same complex as Carcel 2.
The García Moreno Prison in Quito, Ecuador (photo credit: Public Agency of News of Ecuador and Latin America). |
While horrible scenes did not greet our HCJB Global team upon entering Ex-Penal García Moreno, we experienced the grayish environment (even amid brightly colored walls) and the gritty feel during our visit. It was not only in the prison but also in the surrounding neighborhood that we felt more change is needed. We passed through narrow, dimly lit corridors. We saw peeling paint (exposing several shades of mildew) and watched able-bodied men while away their time with gambling and games in the exercise yard. "It's soul destroying" was how Ian summarized the scene.
Three-fourths of the men in Carcel 2 have drugs to blame for their incarceration, including some of those I met from Nigeria, Spain, Bulgaria, Colombia and Ecuador.
The prisons (five cover the complex, each autonomously administered, I was told) collectively have a personality that in a psychiatrist's office would be diagnosed as neurotic. After two days in Carcel 2, we took our supplies to Carcel 3 where again the rules dictate that drugs-even basics such as ibuprofen-are prohibited. Moreover, during one of our morning friskings, we watched as main gate guards confiscated the fruits that, if carried inside, would be fermented into an alcoholic concoction, "hootch."
Yet in conversations we learned that drugs are freely available for those who've come up with the money. How else would a heroin user be able to feed his habit? Drugs provide the pain deadening tranquilizer that helps dampen the violence, one man told us.
In contrast, Aguirre and Vallejo pursue an approach that emphasizes reform and hope, not emotional escape through a drug-induced experience. "Things are tranquil here [Carcel 2], and it's because God is here," Vallejo told me, adding that prisoners request assignment to Prison No. 2 rather than some of the others.
Hope for New Life
Did you know that our ministry also has a robust leadership development program? One of the ministries in the Latin America region is called Corrientes.
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"The studies help the men pass the time?" I asked Vallejo, a 42-year-old Colombian. "No, much more important than that," he responded, illustrating the transformative impact on the men's lives. "Without the Bible, the Narcotics Anonymous people do not recover."
Self-described as a former gang member and urban guerrilla, Vallejo had sought fulfillment in alcohol, drugs and sex before landing in prison. He can name the day and hour inside the walls when, despite his hardened state, he felt a compelling urge to cry.
"I just knelt down and cried for an hour," he described, adding that he learned later of how his friend thousands of miles away in Canada had prayed for him at that exact time. Others too had prayed with that friend.
"That was a start for me," Vallejo continued. "That was something that changed my life-unexplainable but very beautiful." His own experience with Christ fired in Vallejo a passion to see other prisoners enjoy liberty even if they remain behind the bars of penitentiaries and jails.
The shape of his program has changed, but Vallejo began three years ago with what he called "the worst"-assassins, killers and rapists-exactly the ones that he'd requested. Describing their conversions, Vallejo said, "But now they're like me. They're tenderhearted and easily brought to tears."
Ralph Kurtenbach |
Editor's Note: Ralph Kurtenbach is an HCJB Global missionary in Quito who serves as communications coordinator for the Latin America Region.
Source: HCJB Global
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Increasing prison populations worldwide have made prison inmates one of the fastest growing unreached people groups. Share your comments about this global issue below.