Best of America: He Delivers to the Blind 杜丽梅

标签:
people杂谈 |
News topic:Inspiring people
News headline:
In his spare time, this former FedEx pilot helps distribute cures for blindness around the globe.
News
website:
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 (orbis.org).
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 clearances, 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 ophthalmologic training 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 dirt 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
can't 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 didn't 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."