| Susan Shaw- Epiphany
inspires wheelchair providing
Susan Shaw received
divine inspiration in a likely place. Well, outside of a likely place.
Two years ago, after
attending church, the Newport Coast resident walked outside and realized
her life mission as a volunteer.
What she saw was a simple
wheelchair that was designed for the 100-million disabled poor around
the world.
“It was one of
those experiences [that] people always talk about, where I found out
what I’m supposed to do for being blessed,” Shaw said.
Shaw, who founded Divegear,
a clothing company for the scuba diving industry, was transformed.
She decided she wanted to help Don Schoendorfer, founder and president
of the Free Wheelchair Mission, in his efforts. But she wanted to start
helping the disabled poor in an area of the world popular with divers – Fiji.
“I chose Fiji
first primarily because the people I experienced were some of the most
wonderful people I ever met,” Shaw said. “They’re
the most giving and gracious.”
Shoendorfer designed
the wheelchairs with the attitude that what was really needed was a
simple chair on wheels that could be made for $40 or less. All it took
was a patio chair with mountain bike tires. He ships containers of
550 wheelchairs to countries such as India, Mexico, and China.
Shaw decided to initially
raise funds for one container to send to Fiji. She solicited gamily
and friends and talked to people at trade shows, dive shops, resorts
and through her business travels. She said the fund-raising was easier
because she loved the idea that a $40 donation would go directly to
the chair and not be spent on anything else.
“I wanted a pure
charity,” Shaw said. “The $40 will pay for the chair and
pay for it to be shipped anywhere in the world.”
It took her about a
year to raise the funds. But she couldn’t sit by idly while the
chairs were being delivered to those in need in Fiji. So, as
soon as the chairs arrived there, she hopped on a plane. She also convinced
Schoendorfer to accompany her.
Shaw’s photo
albums are full of people who received the chairs – victims of
diabetes and stroke, some with blackened knees from crawling for years
just to get around.
“It was incredible,” Shaw
said. “I really had thought I would fall apart at every home
I visited, but I didn’t. You couldn’t show your sorrow
while you were there.”
In some of the more
remote areas of Fiji, men carried the wheelchairs through tall brush
to their destinations.
Her favorite memory
is delivering a chair to a man who had a condition similar to cerebral
palsy. He had been paralyzed for a long time, and his father would
carry him to school and to work. Then his father took the man’s
brother out of school to care for him.
“Until this night,
this boy carried him to work every day,” Shaw said, referring
to the night the family received a wheelchair. “Now his life
has changed. He has dignity. He doesn’t have to be carried like
a baby.”
Shaw’s ultimate
goal in Fiji is to distribute the wheelchairs to the outer islands.
Then it’s on to the rest of the South Pacific, she declared.
“I’m just
going to make it happen because I’ve never found a charity that
can change [people’s] lives so quickly,” Shaw said.
Shaw is raising funds
for her next shipment of wheelchairs to Fiji. Anyone who would like
to donate can call (949)644-4930 or email her at info@DivegearUSA.com for more information.
-Story by Deirdre Newman, Photo by Steve
Clark |