Monday Recap: Esperanza in Nicaragua
So you haven’t signed up for the Friday Story yet, eh? Well, we’re going to let it slide…this time… Of course, you could always click here and get these stories hot-off-the-press every Friday morning. Just sayin’…
MONDAY MORNING (er…afternoon…) RECAP:
The Big Push: Over the next 40 days Free Wheelchair Mission has the goal of shipping 12,000 wheelchairs to nine countries, on three continents where the need is imminent.
This week we’re highlighting Nicaragua:
Esperanza is a 56-year-old Nicaraguan woman. She has suffered from diabetes for 18 years. Due to a lack of access to proper medicine and medical care, her left leg had to be amputated six years ago. Prior to the operation, she worked washing and ironing in private homes receiving a wage of $30 per month. While Esperanza now lives with her two sisters and daughter whom try to support her, their income alone simply isn’t enough.
In 2011, Esperanza received a wheelchair and is now able to visit the doctor and her friends without assistance. Slowly but surely, she is regaining her independence. Though her surroundings are humble, her spirit is strong. With a renewed sense of purpose, she has rejoined the community enabling her to contribute and thrive.
Esperanza, in English, means hope. Help us create more Esperanzas—help give hope.






One of our distribution partners in Bangladesh is Karmirhath, a nonprofit organization based in the northern part of the country. It was established in 1985 to cater to the needs of the very poor. In addition to their work in wheelchair distribution, it now serves the needy with a focus on eye care, diabetes, prenatal services, and pediatrics. Karmirhath is also engaged in humanitarian activities to increase the earning capacities of impoverished families, educating the teens with training in tailoring, cooking, and even livestock rearing. They recently sent us this story:
Life has not been easy for Isaac. Born without the use of his legs, his father told him he could not go to school, not just because he was needed at home, but because the other children would make fun of him. As a young man, Isaac worked shaping stones for use in building walls at a local quarry, until machines replaced the workers and he lost his job. Now he must rely upon the charity of others for his survival.
I asked him the biggest thing the chair did to change his life, and his answer saddened me. He told me he uses the chair to leave the house so that he is not in anyone’s way. 