At the MCC library in Akron, PA

This week I met my parents — for the third time. Like most of you, I met them for the first time as a child, and then as we grew older together. I came to know them for the second time in the years following their deaths. My parents wrote prolifically about their lives in diaries, memoirs and in what they called Personal Glimpses, which they sent out to hundreds of people.

I met them for the third time this week in Akron, Pennsylvania, at the library of the Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) headquarters. My husband Ed and I are writing an historical novel about their lives. We spent three intense days sorting through and photographing a large collection of professional papers written by them, to them and about them.

MCC sponsored my parents as medical missionaries in Paraguay, South America. In their thirties, they devoted themselves to caring for people in the remote, nearly uninhabitable Gran Chaco of western Paraguay. In the decades that followed, they founded and ran a leprosy station hundreds of kilometers to the east. They were acknowledged by then president of the American Leprosy Mission, O. W. Hasselblad, as the people who carried out the courageous and pioneering work that serves as the basis for the way leprosy is treated in the world today.

My parents were humble people. They never bragged about their work. I grew up on the leprosy station knowing that what they were doing was important; it was God’s work that always came first. What I didn’t know until last week in the Akron library was how genuinely difficult life was for them.

They pushed the edges of the envelope year after year after year. They went where most people would fear to tread. They strove to change the way things were done in each of the worlds they entered. And the people around them who believed in the old ways and didn’t see the need for change pushed back. Hard. For example, the government of Paraguay threatened them with jail, the American Leprosy Mission and the Mennonite Central Committee pushed back by cutting their funding, and neighbors surrounding the leprosy station came out with a truck full of rocks to destroy their buildings and kill them if necessary. And yet they continued forward, believing that they were guided by a higher power to care for those in need.

I knew they had led a challenging life. But I had no idea how hard the years had been for them. Over and over again, the documents we found in the library reveal how my parents were consistently badgered by others, and how they courageously badgered back in return. It was an ongoing war. But they never complained, so I didn’t know.

As Ed and I dug into the decades of official documents last week, I saw my parents newly. I felt sadness. I felt compassion. And I felt a deep desire to know them better. But they have long ago left this planet. As an adult, I should have realized that life was often difficult for them. But like many of you, I was busy. And probably self-centered. I failed to ask the questions that I wish I could pose to them today.

Why am I interested? Why do I write about my parents? The easy answer is that they were great people and I wish to share their story with the world. And like many of you, I want to preserve my family’s history.

All true. But I’m probably more selfish than that, consistent with what Bob Brody said in his column, Why I Write About My Parents. “We look at our parents in order to see ourselves and even our futures.” By knowing my parents and the lives they lived — maybe I can better know and understand myself and possibly even my children.

I want to meet myself — again.

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This