You might
think Jim Bevier, newly retired and finally kicking back after a
harrowing hurricane season, would be content on his Mississippi
horse ranch, teaching his grandkids to ride. But this 62-year-old
former FedEx pilot has another passion. Bevier is a volunteer pilot
for Orbis, a nonprofit that has fought blindness in developing
countries for more than 25 years.
One of its weapons is the
Flying Eye Hospital, a converted DC-10 aircraft that houses a
state-of-the-art surgical and teaching facility. Bevier's mission
is to land this giant sight-saving bird (as patients have described
it) on runways that are most definitely not designed for it. "It's
not like flying for FedEx," says Bevier. "We have to make sure the
runway is long enough, get diplomatic clearance, figure out the
fuel load, and find the safest place to park in case of a political
coup." Once he gets the hospital to its destination,it becomes a
place for local doctors to get ophthamologictraining so they can
treat conditions like glaucoma and cataracts and prevent blindness
for thousands of people.
The plane stays on
location for weeks, and while Bevier is free to return home, he
likes to stay and meet those who arrive for screenings. Many walk
on direct roads for miles; many are blind children. "I've seen them
get on the airplane and come out the next day and they can see,"
Bevier says. The volunteer doctors cannot handle all the patients.
A Vietnamese boy who had made Bevier a paper airplane was turned
away. "A pilot's job involves hours and hours of boredom and the
occasional few seconds of stark terror. So you learn to keep your
emotions in check. But when he did not get picked, I broke down,"
he admits.
Challenging as the gig may
be, Bevier isn't looking to retire anytime soon. "I don't golf, I
don't have a recliner, and I tell my kids not to ever buy me those
Velcro tennis shoes," he says. "You beat your body up getting there
and back," he says of the Orbis flights, which can span 30 hours.
"But I think of my grandchildren back home, and all I want is for
those kids to be able to see their own grandparents for the first
time."
From Reader's Digest
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