You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
When registered nurse Vicki Augustiniak received the phone call in the fall of 2003 that she would be traveling to Bangladesh to provide medical care to the country's citizens, she felt both anxious and gratified. For years, she had dreamed of using her talents to help others, and now the time had come. In her memoir, Augustiniak details her journey. Based on journal entries, she shares the story of how a young woman born and raised in Detroit, Michigan, received the call from God to serve others in a foreign country. Beginning with her early years and continuing through adulthood, she narrates her life story being the oldest of nine children in a family filled with turmoil, attending nursing school, marrying her husband in 1973, and traveling abroad. Really, God Bangladesh? tells the inspiring story of Augustiniak providing help and hope around the globe and how that work brought her peace and changed her life through the goal of hoping to build a hospital in Bangladesh.
At the core of her being, author and registered nurse Vicki Augustiniak is a helper. In Really, God—South Africa? she shares the experiences of her travels abroad to assist others with their health needs. Through her story, she shows how God uses an ordinary person like her to be of aid to others. Through a series of journal entries, she chronicles her trip to South Africa in 2013 with others to provide health care to people of all ages. Augustiniak discusses her work abroad, the daily routine, the challenges and trials, and the joys. A continuation of Augustiniak’s previous travels to Bangladesh, Really, God—South Africa? offers insight into the work of medical missions in a foreign country. It chornicles how God’s work is being accomplished by those who selflessly serve others.
None
Chiefly record of the history of the Arrol family name and origins. Contains descendants of various families from Scotland. Descendants lived in Canada, Germany, England, New Zealand, Scotland, Australia, India, France, and various areas of the United States.
There's so much more to a police officer's badge that all first responders wear. But that's what the world sees. What's behind and beyond that badge is what people need to know-the person. Those behind the badge may wear a different uniform, but they too have families and love their communities. Each one faces all that life has to offer.
None