|
Channa Jayasekera, medical student
Reaction and Remedy
 |
| photo:Les
Todd |
First-year medical student Channa Jayasekera
has a morning routine of waking at 7:00, groggily typing in www.bbcnews.com
on the laptop by his bed, and scanning the headlines with eyes
half open. His routine has not changed since he was a high-school
student in Kandy, Sri Lanka, where he grew up and where his father
still lives. (Jayasekera moved to the United States in 1999 to
attend Cornell University.) But on the morning of December 26,
as he was visiting his mother and brother at his brother's home
in Vancouver over winter break, Jayasekera was startled awake.
The headlines he read ("Sri Lanka Searches For Survivors," "Eyewitness:
Sri Lanka Tsunami," "Sea Surges Kill Thousands")
made his heart race, and his hands shook as he picked up the phone
to call his father. "He grew up in the city of Galle, a very
picturesque, very old town, which was one of the worst affected," Jayasekera
says. "It was impossible to get through to him. He finally
called us later that night to tell us that some of our relatives--a
family of five--were 'unaccounted for.' They had gone to a wildlife
reserve by the ocean for the weekend."
Glued to his laptop, Jayasekera forgot about everything else: the
neuroscience textbook he was planning to read, the Halo 2 video
game he was planning to play. And as the estimates of dead rose
by the tens of thousands, he says, "I developed a rather overwhelming
desire to do something--something substantial."
But he wasn't sure what. He'd given money to the Canadian Red Cross,
yet that somehow seemed too easy, and besides he could only give
so much. If he had the funds to do it, he thought, he'd go to Sri
Lanka himself. But the ticket cost much more than he could afford,
and after all, he wondered, what skills could he offer? What help
would he be?
And then an idea came to him. Jayasekera's friend, third-year med
student Allison McCoy, is student-leader of a group called "REMEDY
at Duke," which collects unused medical supplies and sends
them overseas to places in need. "I got a list of the medical
supplies appealed for by the Sri Lankan Health Ministry and called
Allison to see if we could send some boxes to them," Jayasekera
says.
McCoy responded immediately. She gave him access to the warehouse
where the boxes are stored and let him repack them according to
the list. "It was a huge sorting procedure, in excess of a
hundred boxes," Jayasekera recalls. "But we had tremendous
support from medical students, mostly first-years."
While his classmates packed up syringes and needles, surgical gloves
and catheterization kits, Jayasekera took care of the logistics.
He called Sri Lankan Airlines, which agreed to transport the boxes
in collaboration with American Airlines, and found a distributor
on the ground in Sri Lanka: the National Disaster Relief and Rehabilitation
Fund. "They're a very reputable organization," says Jayasekera. "The
supplies will be allocated without discrimination in the conflict
areas."
Less than two weeks after the tsunami hit, Jayasekera was driving
a cargo van, provided by Duke Medical Center's Multicultural Resource
Center, full of supplies to New Jersey, where he met officials
of American Airlines.
"It wasn't a huge intervention," he says. "It was
just something we did very, very fast. In three days, we had it
out of here."
"It was just a gut reaction. I kept seeing scenes of places
I had been to so many times that were just devastated. And I guess
you could say that I made that connection between the two--between
a supplier and people in need."
--Patrick Adams
--Patrick Adams
|