Los Angeles Times

S. Korea offers thanks with COVID kits

‘ Survival boxes’ pay back a decades- old favor to Peace Corps volunteers from U. S.

- By John Wilkens Wilkens writes for the San Diego Union- Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — Forty years ago, Paul Courtright went to South Korea as a Peace Corps volunteer, helping a developing country find its footing after decades of foreign occupation, poverty, disease and war.

Last month, with the United States reeling under a surge in coronaviru­s cases, South Korea returned the favor. It sent “COVID- 19 survival boxes” to Peace Corps alumni in the U. S.

When his box arrived at the San Diego home he shares with his wife, Courtright found 100 masks, antimicrob­ial gloves, a folding fan, instant coffee, candy and silver chopsticks decorated with turtles ( a symbol in Asian culture of good fortune and long life).

“The irony of having South Korea send us COVID- 19 supplies and gifts is not lost on any of us,” Courtright said.

When he went there in 1979, at age 24, it was a country playing catch- up, industrial­izing rapidly but still dotted with impoverish­ed rural communitie­s. The one where he worked was a resettleme­nt village for people with leprosy.

Courtright was a f ixer who took people to doctor’s appointmen­ts on some days and made his rounds on the others, visiting villagers in their homes — “a lot of walking,” he said — to check on foot and hand ulcers and to make sure they were taking their medication properly.

“My village was poor — many homes still with roofs made from thatch,” he said. “Yet the people used to bring me eggs, sweet potatoes and rice. They looked after me. Now, 40 years later, this same country is sending us a box to say, ‘ thank you’ — incredible.”

The survival kit came with a letter, too, from the president of the Korea Foundation, the diplomacy arm of the government’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

“Thanks in no small part to the help received from the Peace Corps,” the letter said, “Korea has since achieved an economic breakthrou­gh.”

In 1964, as measured by its gross domestic product, South Korea was among the poorest countries in the world. Now it’s one of the richest.

South Korea’s response to the coronaviru­s outbreak — aggressive testing, contact tracing and isolation — has been considered topnotch too, even as it deals with a recent increase in cases. Since the pandemic began, the country has reported more than 49,000 infections and over 670 deaths.

In contrast, the U. S. has seen nearly 18 million cases and over 317,000 deaths.

The Peace Corps program was started in 1961 by President Kennedy to promote world peace with volunteers who worked in education, healthcare and other areas. On hold because of the pandemic, the Peace Corps has deployed more than 235,000 volunteers to about 140 countries throughout its history.

After he got a bachelor’s degree in education from Boise State University, Courtright signed up for the Peace Corps, which assigned him to help leprosy patients in South Korea.

He didn’t know anything about leprosy, an infectious disease that causes nerve damage and skin lesions and was thought to be so contagious and incurable that its victims were sent into isolation in leper colonies on islands and in remote places.

Doctors learned it doesn’t spread easily and is treatable, but stigma still surrounded the patients in South Korea, Courtright found when he arrived there after three months of language training. And he noticed about 10% to 15% of the patients were blind.

“I was amazed by the different eye complicati­ons that they had,” he said. He started taking a four- hour bus ride every Monday to a hospital where an ophthalmol­ogist treated leprosy patients.

He took what he learned back to his village of about 600 people and to other resettleme­nt communitie­s.

And then he turned it into his life’s calling.

When his two- year Peace Corps assignment was over, Courtright returned to the United States and got a master’s degree from Johns Hopkins University and a doctorate from UC Berkeley in public health.

Then he set about trying to prevent blindness, mostly in Africa, where he and his wife, Dr. Susan Lewallen, founded the Kilimanjar­o Center for Community Ophthalmol­ogy.

“Korea taught me many things, and it gave me my career,” Courtright said. “I always felt it had given me far more than I had given it.”

That, he said, made the survival box all the more touching.

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