Akissi Nalalene
Akissi is a spirited teenager. Her gleaming white teeth brighten her contagious smile. Some things get lost in translation, but not Akissi's gregarious behavior. When asked for a photo, she swiftly poses with clenched fists showing off her buff arms – accompanied by her award-winning smile.
However, Akissi's life has not always been filled with smiles and laughter. She grew up in a rural village in the northern part of Togo. From a family of farmers, she learned to work long days under the brutal sun at a very young age.
At sixteen she moved to Cote d'Ivoire to be married to a man there. When she went into labor with her first child, she struggled for several days before finally going to a hospital. She received a cesarean section, but the baby was stillborn. Akissi was devastated.
Akissi noticed that she could no longer control her bladder. Her condition is called vesico-vaginal fistula, or VVF, and is caused by damage resulting from obstructed labor. It is very common in countries where there is little or no obstetric care.
At this point, Akissi's husband no longer wanted her, and he sent her home. It was a very long voyage from Cote d'Ivoire back to her village in northern Togo. Akissi did her best to cover up her condition. But the other people on the bus noticed the foul smell coming from her, and she was humiliated.
Finally she was back with her family in her village, Pkaple. Akissi struggled to endure everyday life. Her vivacious personality was stifled, and her head remained bowed in shame.
Then Akissi heard on the radio that doctors from Mercy Ships were coming near her village to see women with a leaking problem like hers. She attended the patient screening and received a date to make the journey to the hospital ship in Lomé. Excitement and hope filled her heart.
Mercy Ships arranged transportation for the women from the northern areas to get to Lomé. When Akissi arrived, she was overwhelmed by the bustle and commercialization of a large city, but she remained focused on her hope that in a matter of days she would have her life back.
VVF surgeon Dr. Steve Arrowsmith performed surgery on Akissi. When the nurses removed the catheter a few days later, Akissi was cured! For the first time in a year and a half, she was dry!
A few days later Akissi took part in a ceremony honoring the women who were blessed with successful surgeries. The sounds of drums, clapping and singing echoed through the ward as the women filed into the room in traditional African dress. Akissi wore a new cobalt blue gown with touches of golden yellow. Her face was lit up with joy.
Akissi stood up among her peers and a large crowd attending the ceremony and said, “Thank you to all the doctors and the nurses. Now, I can be among people. I no longer hide at home. Thank you Mercy Ships for all you have done.”
Thanks to the entire Mercy Ships VVF team, Akissi will return to her village and regain her sparkling, bubbly spirit. She looks forward to a normal life – a life free from shame and filled with joy.
Story by Claire Bufe
Edited by Nancy Predaina
Edited by Nancy Predaina
Love getting to hear the stories of your ladies! Seeing the work that God has done in each of their lives, knowing that they have touched your heart forever! Praying as you wind down this outreach, for rest and some time to regroup before you come home and face the next chapter. Also, for traveling mercies as you get to go to Ghana on one more trip. So glad that I can trust your protection to God who watches over all!
ReplyDeletePraying still....
Mom
In that day you will say: "Give thanks to the LORD, call on his name; make known among the nations what he has done, and proclaim that his name is exalted.”- Isaiah 12:4
so beautiful,so young..so thankful God healed her..trusting all to His care. praying ..
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