On the front lines
Dunns serve the exploited and dying in Addis Ababa
Amanda Dunn drove through the streets of Kore, Ethiopia, in the pouring rain. She was looking for her friend Hannah, who was out selling bread she had made as part of her job skills training program in the kitchen at Hareg House that morning. Amanda expected to see her huddled and miserable under cover, but there she was, boldly walking through the rain, determined to find buyers for her products.
Beza was living alone in abject poverty in the town dump in Kore. Dying from both cancer and AIDS, she was so lonely that she didn’t even mind when some young boys came by to taunt and torment her every day, because that was her only human interaction. Then the hospice team from Strong Hearts found her and were able to give her the compassion and medical care she desperately needed.
Shared passion
Team members Nick and Amanda Dunn’s shared passion to care for the poor, marginalized and exploited people of the world has put them on the front lines of service to the urban poor in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. They visited the CMF home office in Indianapolis recently, and shared some stories from their remarkable ministries.
Hospice care
Nick, a nurse, works with the hospice program run by CMF partner Strong Hearts, managing a team of three nurses and a Public Health Officer (nurse practitioner) to provide home care to the dying poor in a 20-miles radius of Kore, a sub-city of Addis Ababa. A chaplain/evangelist from Serving Hearts Ministries, a division of Strong Hearts, is also a part of the team.
“When the program first began we found our patients through word of mouth,” said Nick. “Now, after a couple years of educating the hospitals on how we can help, we receive referrals from three hospitals and three clinics, which is a huge victory for us. We carry a continuous caseload of about 25 patients.” |