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CRC MISSION PROFILE:
Medical Missions in Costa Rica
2002 Report: San Jose Cabecar, Costa Rica
Dean C. Lohse, MD

COSTA RICA MISSION REPORTS
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007

“But now in Christ Jesus you who once were far away have been brought near through the blood of Christ. For He Himself is our peace, who has made the two one and has destroyed the barrier, the dividing wall of hostility” -- Ephesians 2: 13-14 (NIV)

Just before sunset on Feb. 10 we were witnesses to, and participants in, a miracle. A Bribri family came to our hut and asked us to pray for them. Their prayer was no more specific than that. Then they stayed, and without any further explanation, they spent the night sleeping on the floor and disappeared back to their homes just after sunrise.

As to why this simple and odd incident would be considered a miracle requires some explanation. The Bribri have been living in the mountains and coastal plain jungles of Costa Rica for at least a thousand years. Their history is what they remember, and what outsiders have written. Four hundred years ago, Spaniards in search of gold and converts occupied San Jose Cabecar. Unsuccessful in attempts to find gold, they enslaved the indigenous people. Two hundred years ago the Bribri and Cabecar tribes rebelled and threw out their oppressors. One hundred years ago, capitalists invaded Costa Rica and cleared jungles to plant bananas and cacao trees, leaving behind an unprofitable banana and plantain agriculture, diseased cacao trees, and a vastly changed environment on the coastal plain. Fifty years ago, the Costa Rican government established the Talamanca Reservation to protect the indigenous tribes from outside exploitation. The unfortunate side effect is that they are also relatively isolated from any government or social services. Small wonder that the Bribri word for any non-Bribri is “sepequeé,” loosely translated, “bad seed.”

Five years ago, John Whited of AguaViva Ministries along with Pastor Miguel and a Bribri guide went to visit San Jose Cabecar. After three days of rain, mud, difficult river crossings, and sleeping in hammocks on the jungle hillside, they came to a home. They were welcomed to spend the night. Then they explained to their host that they were hoping and planning to lay the foundations to tell about the good news of Jesus Christ. They were then informed that although they could still spend the night, they would be expected to pay rent, and leave in the morning. To my knowledge that was the last visit of any missionaries to San Jose Cabecar.

Since then lots of things have happened to build trust among the Bribri in Talamanca. A church welcoming indigenous people and refugees from other Central American nations has been established in the town of Bribri where Miguel is now the full time pastor. Several medical clinics have been held in the village of Bajo Coen and Dururpe (three of which were from CrossRoad teams). Men who once live in San Jose Cabecar now go to church at the AguaViva Church in Bribri. Last summer, a CrossRoad team attempted to do a medical clinic in San Jose Cabecar, was but was rained out.
 
This time the weather was perfect. No rain. The rivers were not too high to cross by foot, nor too low to get transport for a few miles by canoe. The trails were repaired to their best condition and with minimal mud. A picnic. A veritable walk in the park. Well, not quite. On Feb. 8, John Whited, John Armenta of St. Augustine (a.k.a. “the Chief”), Adam Lohse and myself set out from the church at Bribri with six days of camping provisions, three bags of used eyeglasses, and as much medicine and dressings that we could cram in our packs.

The first leg was one hour by a pick-up truck taxi to the river edge at the village of Surecka. The next leg was about ninety minutes by canoe going upstream. We were met at the river edge by Porfilio of Bajo Coen with one of his sons and three horses. The horses carried the packs for the two hour hike to Porfilio’s house in Bajo Coen where we would spend the night. Porfilio has hosted several medical clinics at his home in Bajo Coen. He and his wife and five sons are good friends of John Whited and have always provided invaluable assistance. On this trip, he arranged for Bribri guides and pack carriers to accompany us from his house to San Jose Cabecar. He also came with as our interpreter from Spanish to Bribri and Cabecar.

The following morning, the four Anglos, Porfilio, and five Bribri men set out for San Jose Cabecar. Three large river crossings, several smaller stream crossings, a 1700 foot net elevation gain, seven hours and three blisters later, we came to the village of San Jose Cabecar. This was in the best of all possible hiking conditions.

Although it is marked on maps as a village, it is a community of family dwellings that are spread out throughout a mountain valley. There are no stores, no roads, no schools, no government buildings. In the middle of a pasture there is a simple shelter that was constructed simply for the rare visitors who did not have family with whom to stay. This was to be our home for the next five nights, as well as our clinic and chapel. It was constructed out of native materials, had a waterproof roof and a snake proof floor about five feet off the ground. There was good ventilation, but no walls. It was only about one hundred yards to the river to bathe and fetch water. Latrine facilities were as close or as far as modesty would allow. The advantage of the herd of pigs living beneath the hut was that it added to snake protection. The disadvantage was that they were quite loud about late night arguments about whatever it is that pigs fight about.

Our porters disappeared. We set up camp, unpacked the medicines, cooked dinner and took to our hammocks and sleeping bags at about 7 p.m. For the most part, exhaustion overcame pig and jungle noises, and we slept until about 5:30 the next morning when the sun came up. By 7 a.m. we were ready to see patients, but nobody came until 9:00. They waited until then because they had to walk a long way, they took time to dress up -- especially the little children, or maybe just because they were giving the "gringos" time to get up. By the end of the day we had seen 57 patients, and played the Gospel of Mark in Bribri on a portable tape recorder in for people who were waiting. The day ended with the sweet and puzzling episode noted in the first paragraph.

The next morning we saw fewer patients (27 for the day), but we made a house call. We crossed the river, with our Bribri guides helping a lot, and walked about 15 minutes up the mountainside, looking down on our hut and valley. The little old lady we had been asked to see had taken to her hammock for several weeks, had abdominal pains, and had lost her appetite. She had almost disappeared into the folds of the hammock. We saw all the other women and children in the home who had not been able to come to the clinic, and after we returned to our clinic we sent back medicines for everyone. When they had gone, John told me that the home we visited was exactly the same one that he had visited with Miguel five years previously, where he had received such a cool welcome.

Later that evening, all the members of the family that could travel came to our hut to ask us to pray for them. John prayed in Spanish, Porfilio translated into Bribri, and the Chief translated back to English for Adam and me. More people from the village gathered to talk and listen to the Gospel tapes. They expressed their thanks that we had come: “No one has ever carried medicines here, spoke to us in our language, and stayed with us.”

John explained that we had been sent by Jesus who loved them as much as anybody in the world. They told us that they were grateful, and it was their custom to express their gratitude by having a family stay with us every night we were there. So every night a group of people would gather and some would spend the night. One night there was a two month old baby. The last night there were at least a dozen people who gathered, and in the morning even more came to say good-by. We were able to witness to the love of Jesus by words, tapes, and shared food.

Our trip back to the AguaViva Church in the town of Bribri was blessed by good weather, lighter packs, porters to Bajo Coen, horses to the river landing, an available canoe, and a truck to pick us up at Surecka. We left San Jose Cabecar at seven in the morning and by the grace of God were in the church by 5 p.m. on Valentine’s Day. Calls home, showers, clean clothes and sleeping without the pigs were welcome changes.

On Friday we attended the evening service. Pastor Miguel asked John to tell a little about the trip. John told about the families spending the night. Timeteo Jackson, a grandfather who lives now just outside the town of Bribri, was originally from San Jose Cabecar. He stood up to explain to John.

“Once,a long time ago, there was an outsider who came to our village. It was recognized that he did good things for us. Because he was alone, every night a family would stay with him, and when he left, people would travel with him to the next village, so that he would never be lonely. Since then it has become our custom.”

I don’t know how long ago “a long time” is to an elderly Indian living in a place and culture where time takes on a totally different feel. I don’t know who the man Timeteo described was; only that he was an outsider -- “bad seed” -- and he had transcended the differences of culture and ages of injustice with compassion.

I do know that we were honored greatly by the resurrection of an old custom. More importantly, since we came in the name of Jesus, Christ was honored in a place where his representative had previously been sent away.


For information about CRC OutReach and various mission opportunities at CrossRoad Church, contact us at 904.493.1245 or email outreach@crcumc.org.

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