Calgary Herald

Aunt Edna’s limitless ability to love changed young lives forever

Missionary’s life gives us reason for hope in these increasing­ly irreligiou­s times

- MARK MILKE Mark Milke is a Calgary author.

Eleven years ago, my Aunt Edna passed away, and thus moved on to her eternal reward — one that was richly deserved.

My mother’s sister, you see, spent much of her life in the service of sick children and orphans in Villavicen­cio, in the mountains of Colombia.

The “place of miracles,” as it would be called, possessed little medicine. It was then a four-hour drive from Bogota on ThirdWorld mountain roads.

Its official name, Paraiso Infantil, resulted from an early 1960s matchup between a Colombian preacher who publicized a need, and two American Protestant nurses who saw that same need as their faith’s calling.

As a later history of the mission would recount, it soon became evident that “the greatest need in Colombia was the children.”

The nurses, after their arrival in the then-small city of 30,000, soon became acquainted with a house run by the Colombian health department. Children whose mothers had been hospitaliz­ed for tuberculos­is were placed there for their own protection.

In addition to such assumed temporary charges, abandoned babies also increasing­ly ended up in the government home.

Thus, it was this break-yourheart reality that drew in the nurses; they believed in God and in this purpose for their lives — to save the most vulnerable.

The first child, Frankie, was sick and malnourish­ed. They asked if they could care for him in their own apartment. They did and Frankie survived.

That first baby was followed by others whose illnesses were life-threatenin­g: tuberculos­is, parasites, malnutriti­on and cystic diseases, among others.

After moving into a larger apartment that was soon overflowin­g with children, the Americans found a 2-1/2-acre parcel of land four miles outside Villavicen­cio. It was there that an orphanage, clinic, nursery and school would be built.

It was also where my Aunt Edna from Calgary would join them in 1967, after a brief stint working at a mission hospital in Bogota.

Edna and an American southerner, Nancy, would together run Paraiso Infantil for most of the next three decades.

Here’s how my aunt was described by one who recounted her own time at the mission with fondness and in the present tense: “Edna is small in stature, blond, with intense blue eyes. She has a warm personalit­y and quickly endeared herself to the children and the workers.”

The writer also captured this element of my aunt’s personalit­y: “She loved intensely, but she also moved swiftly to deal with a problem,” wrote the author.

“The children knew they could not misbehave when Miss Edna was around.”

My aunt always visited us when she returned to Canada. As a boy, I was mesmerized by Edna’s stories, especially if they involved snakes. Apparently, one slithery creature swallowed the favourite compound dog.

Somehow, the snake was found, trapped and killed. If memory serves, it was my swiftly moving aunt who freed the canine from the snake’s stomach — and the dog lived.

Apparently, miracles weren’t limited to children.

Single her entire life, my Aunt Edna loved Colombia, the people who lived there and the Spanish language. She loved her nieces, nephews and her God-given gifts — the children in her Colombian mission.

For Edna, love was unlimited and never needed to be apportione­d.

I recall my missionary aunt in 2017, and not just because her life is a metaphor for Easter — she believed her Christian faith, and intensely so — but for another reason: In an increasing­ly irreligiou­s age, faith (especially in a post 9/11 world) is seen by some as only problemati­c.

A few years back, one of my sisters met one of the many children who had been adopted from the Colombian mission decades before. Now an adult with her own children, this lady and my sister shared tears of remembranc­e, of lives changed forever by my aunt and her loving faith.

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