Here are some excerpts from his latest update (pictures to follow when I figure it out):
I would like to start by saying thank you to the many who have donated coats, shoes and women’s hygiene products. I am fortunate that our mail clerk is a friend of mine and attends the chapel because I may have been admonished long ago by any other mail clerk for taking up so much of the mail space on the flights coming in. I have received about 100 boxes, over 3,000 lbs and about 1,000 coats, 800 shoes, 900 hats/mits/socks, and thousands of female hygiene items. I am the envy of every other person on the FOB because of the amount of mail I have been getting- I have attempted to tell them it is not for me but to them mail is mail regardless of who receives the items in the box, and every mail drop I have more boxes piling up. I will save the pictures of the coats for a later email as we are still getting some of them out to people. This month has been extremely busy, but incredibly encouraging at the same time. I have felt the prayers of many and have enjoyed the email reminders that you have been lifting me and my team before the Lord in prayer on a regular basis. The memorial for Tom, my friend who was killed about a month ago, was a healing. We just finished putting together a video for his family today. We have been pressing forward with a renewed vigor as we realize that the reconstruction we are working toward as a Provincial Reconstruction Team will really be the thing that changes the environment more than the thousands of troops fighting here in Afghanistan.
As an effort to help this problem, I recommended to the director of health that we hold a month long education and information campaign for women’s health. She really liked the idea and we have been doing many different activities relating to women’s health this month. A total of 850 healthcare workers have been trained in safe motherhood and other women’s health topics. These health workers have done public health education that has reached more than 30,000 people in our province.
The greatest challenge is to counter some of the prejudices against women and the health care necessary for women. During the Taliban, all the clinics except for a couple hospitals in the country were designated as male only. To combat some of these ideas, we have been putting a lot of health messages on the radio/TV and in the newspaper. This has been a very rewarding job and it really will be a strange transition back into seeing patients in my own little office in the clinic back in CT. Here are some pictures of the activities.
As I look back at the few months prior to my deployment when our family was struggling with why God would be taking me away from my family for 15 months and sending me to Afghanistan, I now have a few answers to those question. God is good, God is loving, and God is in the process of using me while He shapes me for a greater work, probably in a different country, but definitely using the same skills He has taught through work and play, sorrow and joy while here in
I will be making my way back home for my 15 day leave period in 12 days, not that anyone is counting. It has been a long time since I left on the 1st of January, 11 months ago, and in that time I have reaffirmed my realization that I have a more incredible wife than I could have ever imagined or hoped for. All I can say is that I am glad I was the one deployed because I could never do all that she does on a daily basis as a single mother of three extremely active children halfway across the country from either of our families. We continue to covet your prayers for us and pray that you may know our Comforter as He has made himself known to us during this year. With Love, Keith.
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