A Heart For Africa

Dr. Deborah Sherman first visited Sierra Leone, West Africa, in the summer of 1983. During this first visit, she worked in the Baptist Eye Hospital in Sierra Leone, where they have a large number of cataracts and blinding eye diseases due onchocerchiasis, an infectious disease endemic to the area.

Many years later, she and her husband, Tim, returned to the area to help support the Lunsar Eye Hospital and the Christian Education Center in Lunsar. Her husband worked with a team of Americans and Africans to rebuild the Christian Education Center that was previously destroyed in the civil war. Tim has also been instrumental in implementing a new generator for the hospital so that more patients can receive eye surgery.

Dr. Sherman’s husband, Tim Siktberg, with an African co-worker in front of the Christian Educational Center. Tim and other members of his team worked together to rebuild this building, which was destroyed in the civil war.

Because of the prevalence of blindness in the area, there are two eye hospitals, the United Methodist Eye Hospital in Kissy, Sierra Leone, and the Lunsar Eye Hospital in nearby Lunsar, Sierra Leone. Dr. Sherman has examined patients and performed surgeries with the staff surgeons.

Dr. Sherman and a local missionary surgeon worked together to restore this man’s vision by lifting his upper eyelids.

A man is overjoyed as he sees his hands for the very first time, thanks to a successful cataract surgery.

Donations of Medical Supplies

Medical supplies such as eye drops, eye ointment, and ophthalmic examining equipment are essential to providing sight-saving eye care. In many cases, patients lose their eyes to disease and do not have access to an artificial eye to make them look more acceptable to the other members of their community. Dr. Sherman has helped organize donations of medical supplies in order to help the medical staff better care for the eye patients in Lunsar, Sierra Leone, Africa.

Artificial eyes donated by Steve Sanders, Ocularist

Dr. Sherman delivers donation of eye drops used to treat infections to Dr. Mattia, Chief Surgeon at Lunsar Eye Hospital

A Lunsar Eye Hospital worker using a donated focometer, a device that allows the examiner to calculate the correct prescription of glasses for the patient. This single focometer will allow for thousands to be examined and given glasses which can improve their vision immeasurably.

Help for the Orphans of Africa

In Sierra Leone, there are a tremendous number of African children that were orphaned in the brutal civil war, and therefore do not have opportunities for education. Some of these orphans are being sponsored to receive education, thanks to a partnership between Nashville’s Woodmont Baptist Church and the Cotton Tree Foundation, an African non-profit charitable organization dedicated to helping educate needy children in the West African nation of Sierra Leone.

While in Sierra Leone, Dr. Sherman, her husband Tim, and their son Jackson helped deliver educational supplies to the local school through their participation in Nashville’s Woodmont Baptist Church’s mission program “Diamonds in the Rough.” This is a charitable program through which orphans in Sierra Leone are sponsored to receive educational scholarships so that they can go to school to gain an education and skills for independent living. This mission partnership has donated school supplies to the students, as seen in the pictures below.

Orphans in classroom with little educational resources

Dr. Sherman’s son Jackson gives backpacks to the school children.

Click here to learn more about missions opportunities in Sierra Leone.

Contact Us

Warning: Email Not Sent !

Please fillout these required fields and submit your inquiry again..!

See Our Results

Request a Live Consult

Request a Consultation

Please fill out this form to let us know when you would like to come in and we will do our best to accommodate your schedule.

  • Subscribe to E-mail Newsletter