Jamaica Gleaner

NO MISSION ordinary

J’can chaplain happy to serve countrymen on US hospital ship

- Judana Murphy/ Gleaner Writer judana.murphy@gleanerjm.com

LT COM Devon Foster was a picture of fulfilment as he spoke to The Gleaner aboard a vessel in the Kingston Harbour yesterday.

Having migrated to the United States at the age of 13, he was happy to be home once again.

This was no ordinary trip. Nor was it an ordinary vessel.

Foster is back in his homeland as part of a 1,000-man team on a medical mission he helped to plan aboard the US Navy hospital ship, USNS Comfort, which is aiming to complete 150 free surgeries during the weeklong trip.

“I’m happy to be back home,” he said, reflecting on his journey.

“Jamaica will always be the place of my birth, and to have the opportunit­y to come back and to participat­e in this small way is very meaningful, and I hope that I can touch some lives, and I hope others will be inspired by the fact that they can migrate and then come back and be a blessing and a help to their country,” added Foster, the US Navy Command chaplain and community relations coordinato­r.

GROWING UP IN JAMAICA

Foster grew up in Spanish Town, St Catherine, and recalls that he was one of the first students to attend Ensom City All-Age School (now Ensom City Primary).

“I remember being on the morning shift and then switching over to evening shift. That was an experience – to do half a day of school,” he said. “My Jamaican upbringing is my actual formation. The person that I am is from that formation. That’s where I learnt to be kind to people, to have manners. That’s where I learnt to have decency and, most importantl­y, go to church.”

Foster joined the Navy in 1985, and after serving for a few years, he left to further his education, but he would come full circle.

“I pursued a master’s degree in theology. [I’m] almost finished with my doctorate in church history. I also have a doctorate in divinity and I have my undergradu­ate degree in accounting,” he said.

“I was enlisted in the Navy and I honestly feel that it was a calling. I was practising accounting, working as a state auditor in New York City for several years. Then the opportunit­y came and I prayed about it and felt that this is what God wanted for me at this particular time in my life,” he further explained.

Foster has been a chaplain for 13 years, and he is serving on the USNS Comfort for the first time, although he has been on eight previous missions.

“We do a lot of counsellin­g, but the numbers vary. Most of the times, we have formal counsellin­g sessions, where people make an appointmen­t and come in, but we have counsellin­g where we just meet people on the ship or at the med sites and we have counsellin­g with them for different things – stress, marriage, or other relationsh­ips.”

The father of two revealed that his daughter could follow in his footsteps as she is now registered in the Naval Academy.

The USNS Comfort, an oil tanker-turned-hospital ship, is in Kingston for its 11th stop in a 12-country mission. It is the ship’s third visit to the island and the final docking will be in Haiti next week.

 ?? PHOTOS BY RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? The USNS Comfort sitting in the Kingston Harbour yesterday.
PHOTOS BY RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER The USNS Comfort sitting in the Kingston Harbour yesterday.
 ??  ?? US military officers pushing a patient after his surgery aboard the USNS Comfort yesterday.
US military officers pushing a patient after his surgery aboard the USNS Comfort yesterday.
 ??  ?? From left: Jamaicans Demerce Young, Lt Com Devon Foster and Danielle Rae Walters engage journalist­s during a media tour aboard the US Navy hospital ship USNS Comfort at Victoria Pier in downtown Kingston yesterday.
From left: Jamaicans Demerce Young, Lt Com Devon Foster and Danielle Rae Walters engage journalist­s during a media tour aboard the US Navy hospital ship USNS Comfort at Victoria Pier in downtown Kingston yesterday.
 ??  ?? Dentists attending to patients at Sabina Park, where members of the USNS Comfort mission were also providing free services.
Dentists attending to patients at Sabina Park, where members of the USNS Comfort mission were also providing free services.

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