Archive
MAF video – famine relief support Northern Kenya
MAF has been involved in supplying some relief to those suffering from the famine in northern Kenya, here is a short video from one of our staff. Listen as those involved share what it’s like and imagine your family in that situation – it’s hard to do.
MAF Papua New Guinea – 3 First days for P2-MEW
MAF has been flying into remote jungle areas of Papua New Guinea for 60 years. P2-MEW is one of MAF’s GA8 Airvans based in Papua New Guinea. It is the newest aircraft – a turbo charged airvan – to be based in PNG.
These were the first 4 days of MEW’s service in the Western Province in Papua New Guinea. Not all days are quite this action packed, but you can see that in the course of only 4 days with MEW we were able to provide an invaluable ministry to national pastors, teachers, and health workers, missionaries, and save the lives 4 four people in serious need. Thank you for your gift of P2-MEW it has already made a difference in the lives of many here in PNG and will serve countless more through the course of its life here in PNG.
18/06/11
Loaded up all of my family in MEW and headed to Rumginae to provide a week of coverage in the area for a pilot on leave. After the trip to Rumginae I headed back to Muluma airstrip to bring another mother with a retained placenta to the Rumginae hospital. This young mom had had and lost the baby 3 days earlier and was still bleeding. She had been carried for 4 hours to get to the airstrip that afternoon. As we loaded her on the aircraft we noted that in addition to the problem of blood loss she also had a fever from the toxins in her body. I flew her and her husband 55 minutes to Rumginae Hospital. The doctors at Rumginae commented to me that they were glad I had brought her in she was in very bad shape and would probably not have lasted much more than another day in the bush. The trip to the hospital by ground would have required over a week of trekking and crossed two major rivers that terrify even able body travelers. It was a relief to see her husband at the aircraft a few days later reporting that she was well and looking for a flight home.
19/06/11

Matthew Scheurich was speared in the chest by two arrows after stepping in to protect his girlfriend from a tribesman
Enjoying a quiet Sunday afternoon at Rumginae when a radio call came in for a medivac from at Suabi. A French anthropologist and her boyfriend from New Zealand were studying in the area and he had been attacked. The initial report was that he had been stabbed, had lost a lot of blood and was having a lot of trouble breathing. I readied the aircraft for the 45 minute flight as Dr Daniel and Dr Sharon from the Rumginae Mission Hospital boarded the aircraft with their medical equipment. Upon arrival at Suabi we found the young man had been speared in both lungs and in the stomach as well as having been beaten in the head with a rock. As the doctors assessed him and stabilized him for the flight I provided the aircraft oxygen tank and pilots oxygen mask from the plane to help him breath for the 50 minute flight to the Kiunga Hospital. We left Suabi with two doctors, the anthropologist, the patient on a stretcher and one more empty seat to spare, had we needed it. By Gods grace there were doctors, surgeons, a pilot, and a capable aircraft all in the right place to save this young man’s life that day. The doctors commented on the way home that evening that, had we been an hour or two later he would likely not have been alive.
20/06/11
I flew 3 pastors and their wives from Rumginae to Obo, the pastors and their wives had just completed a course on marriage with about 50 other couples. At Obo there was another patient in bad shape. The day before this young mother who lived about 5 hours up river from Obo had successfully delivered a baby, but it’s twin was still stuck inside and refused to come out. With no other options she canoed 5 hrs down river to the Obo aid post. The community health workers at the Obo aid post could do little to help her, so called for the aircraft to take her to Rumginae Hospital for surgery. Upon arriving at Rumginae doctors spent over seven hours in surgery to remove the unborn baby and repair the damage inside.
As the doctors worked on her I flew another plane load of pastors and their wives (who had completed the same course at Rumginae) to their villages at Suabi and Hesalibi. As I left Rumginae I was advised by the doctor that a lady had been bit by a death adder (snake) at Hesalibi. As he had been unable to get radio contact with the community since the initial report that morning, Doctor Daniel said “examine the patient when you get there and if she shows any signs of envenomation bring her in”. As I flew from Suabi to Hesalibi I was relieved to hear via radio from Rumginae that the patient was doing much better and I would not be required to bring her into the hospital, or examine her for symptoms of envenomation.
After Hesalibi I picked up Sr. Missionaries Tom and Salome Howey from Mogalu to Kiunga where they would depart on an international flight for Australia the next morning. With them I also carried 4 Papua New Guinean teachers and health workers who were headed out to Kiunga for supplies for the next term at the remote school at Mogulu.
Nick Swalm
MAF Pilot – Papua New Guinea
Bible Celebrations in Indonesia – Kimyal receive Bibles
It has been 42 years since missionaries Phil Masters and Stan Dale were martyred in the Seng valley of Papua, Indonesia, by members of the Yale tribe. Phil’s daughter Crissie Rask is today serving with MAF.
Phil and Stan’s sacrifice helped sow the seeds of the Gospel in that remote area. Those seeds have matured, reproduced and are spreading the Good News from generation to generation, including Kimyal people.
“One MAF pilot said that he alone had made 20 flights into Korupun for the Bible dedication. The celebrating was going on almost day and night. Singing and dancing could be heard throughout the valley late into the night.
The noise was very loud until after the plane [carrying the New Testaments] had landed and one of the Kimyals started bringing the first box of Bibles out of the plane.
“Then, if you could have heard a pin drop in gravel and mud, you would have heard a pin drop. Four of the local pastors went forward to receive the Bibles. Behind them followed a group of some of the oldest believers in our area.”The first box was very solemnly given to the pilot, who placed it into the hands of the pastors. It was then passed on to the elder believers, who gave the box to a group of young people, challenging them to take the Word and apply it to their lives, thus symbolising how the Word of God is passed from generation to generation.
Work on the translation of the New Testament into Kimyal was begun in 1963 by Regions Beyond Mission Union (now World Team) missionaries Phil and Phyliss Masters who moved to West Papua, Indonesia, to evangelise the Kimyal people. Sadly, Phil Masters and a fellow missionary Stan Dale were killed by members of the neighbouring Yali tribe and the translation work was halted. However, the work eventually resumed and the New Testament was completed in early 2010 by a Kimyal translation team led by another World Team missionary, Rosa Kidd.
The Kimyal translators Welega Pusup and Menas Mirin, who had received instruction in translation principles during UBS Translation Workshops, played a key role in the translation team. UBS Translation Consultant Dr Lourens de Vries was also involved in ensuring the high standard of the translation. As is the case with many other translation projects in Indonesian Papua, the Kimyal project was a joint effort of the mission, the regional and local churches, the Indonesian Bible Society and UBS, each contributing crucial elements to the translation project.
The Kimyal New Testament was published by the Indonesian Bible Society in March 2010, and was welcomed by the community during a highly emotional celebration in Korupun, West Papua.
This momentous day was long awaited by the Kimyal church. The terrain is so rough and isolated that virtually every Bible translator and all of their supplies had to be delivered by aircraft. Our planes also supported the work of the missionaries throughout this translation project. MAF has seen that God is faithful throughout all generations, and has been part of bringing God’s Word to this remote community for the very first time.
MAF Work Vital to Ongoing Relief, Rebuilding Effort in Haiti
Clinton Commends Organization’s Critical Role; MAF Makes Work of 60 Relief Agencies Possible
One year after a devastating earthquake struck Haiti, MAF (Mission Aviation Fellowship) is still hard at work, providing vital air transportation to fight cholera, enable relief efforts and aid in the rebuilding of the crippled nation.
“This has been a year of tragedy for Haiti, and MAF has been there from the beginning, standing alongside the Haitian people and doing all we can to improve the situation of the suffering,” said John Boyd, MAF president and CEO.Former President Bill Clinton of the Clinton Bush Haiti Fund recently commended MAF for its vital role in the relief and rebuilding efforts.
“By organizing hundreds of relief flights and delivering thousands of pounds of supplies, you’ve had a critical impact on Haiti’s recovery,” said Clinton.
While the earthquake grabbed all the major headlines, 2010 has been a disaster-filled year for the impoverished Caribbean nation. Haiti has also suffered from Hurricane Tomas, a cholera outbreak that has killed an estimated 3,300 people and hospitalized more than 100,000, and political upheaval that has at times stifled Port-au-Prince and surrounding cities.
MAF has been working in Haiti since 1986, and has four aircraft at a permanent base at the Port-au-Prince airport. After the earthquake that crippled Haiti’s already weak infrastructure, MAF partnered with some 60 relief agencies, transported medical personnel and aid workers, delivered critical relief supplies and performed many emergency medical evacuations. Since then, MAF has continued flying provisions, such as food, water and medical supplies – including IV solution – to help combat the country’s cholera outbreak.
“We recently flew a medical team and some 900 pounds of IV solution to a hospital in Port-de-Paix that was running short of staff and supplies,” said Boyd. Upon landing, the MAF pilot also drove the medical team and supplies to the hospital, where more than 100 cholera patients were being treated, most of them children under age 12. Because their veins had collapsed due to severe dehydration, traditional IVs could not be used. The doctors taught hospital staff how to administer IVs through the bone marrow, a painful but life-saving treatment. Since beginning the bone marrow procedures, the hospital has drastically reduced the number of deaths.
As a result of the earthquake and subsequent misfortunes that have struck Haiti, the need for MAF services has pushed its Haiti operations to full capacity. The ministry serves some 16 airstrips, and has added an additional plane to its fleet to meet the demand.While already a challenging place, new obstacles have emerged. Many Haitians are disabled, having lost limbs after being trapped under the rubble of collapsed buildings. Haitian doctors are struggling to make a living with the sudden influx of free health care and clinics. And more than one million people remain in tent cities.
“MAF’s role has increased exponentially because the infrastructure has been so compromised,” Boyd says. “MAF’s services have become paramount to the rebuilding process of Haiti. Every week we are called upon to transport work teams and building supplies, or special equipment like water purification systems.”
MAF Haiti staff recently had an opportunity to minister in a different way by building homes for families whose houses collapsed in the earthquake. Through gifts from generous donors, MAF purchased 26 pre-fabricated structures and built them on the existing foundations. Though small by U.S. standards, the houses are well-anchored, sturdy and much appreciated by the families that were previously living in tents.


