Dan, Heather, Jeremiah, Tory, Emma, Tye, Claire, Levi, Josie, Jane and Ethan

Sunday, December 22, 2019

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year from the Galats!



Dan and Heather

What an amazing and blessed year 2019 was for our family!  In July, after a three year term at Kijabe  Hospital in Kenya, we transitioned back to the U.S. for a time of furlough.  We are so grateful to be together again with our growing family and are seeing the answer to so many of our prayers over the years.  In 2020, Heather and I will celebrate 25 years of marriage as a testimony of God's continual faithfulness in our lives.  


The Galats!

Hard to believe that we are 11 in our family now (12 if you count our new granddog Hobbs). 



Jeremiah, Tory and Hobbs Galat

 Jeremiah and Tory are doing so well, and are now married almost 3 years after eloping in 2017.  They purchased their first home in May and are busy with school, work and a rapidly growing german shepherd puppy.  In June 2020, they plan to "formalize" their union with a wedding celebration in Alaska (where Tory is from).  We are looking forward to this special time together as a family!



Tye and Emma Dutcher 

Shortly after our return from Kenya, we discovered that Emma and her boyfriend Tye eloped on July 31, 2019, and are now husband and wife.  Although this was quite a shock for us, we see Tye as God's gift to Emma (and vice versa) and we love Tye (he is a perfect fit for our family).  He has an amazing testimony of God's grace after loosing his leg in an accident at age 12.  Determined not to let this define him, he started swimming and is now a member of the U.S. paralympic swim team.  Emma and Tye live in Phoenix, and we love regularly spending time with them.  



 Tye won the gold in the backstroke (and three other medals) at the PanAm games in Lima, Peru this summer.  He is currently training for the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.  What we love about Tye is that he uses this platform as a way to share the gospel of Christ with many people.



Claire and her roommate Daria.  

Claire began at Princeton in the Fall and is discovering how challenging college is!  All last year, we  prayed that God would provide the perfect roommate for Claire, and He answered far above our expectations.  Daria is from Russia and is on the tennis team at Princeton. She is such a great friend for Claire!   



Heather and Levi 

Levi is now a sophomore in high school at Veritas Preparatory Academy here in Phoenix.  He greatly misses his friends and life at the Rift Valley Academy in Kenya but has been determined to integrate well into school in the U.S.  He played American football in the fall, and would have finished the season had we not discovered a scaphoid fracture from an injury he sustained several months earlier in Kenya.



 Levi had only mild wrist pain despite having a chronic scaphoid fracture.  He required open reduction and internal fixation of the fracture with vascularized bone grafting. 



 Ethan, Josie and Jane

And then there's the three little ones who keep Heather and I young, and perpetually active!  They are loved by everyone in our family.  



A recent total shoulder replacement I did on a patient with severe osteoarthritis

I (Dan) am halfway through my year-long fellowship in adult reconstruction (hip, knee and shoulder replacement) at the Mayo Clinic Arizona.  This has been an incredible learning experience for me, as I gain greater skills in these procedures including Mako robotic assisted surgery.  




We are so grateful for our friends and colleagues at Kijabe Hospital, Tenwek Hospital and within WGM. We are grateful for the years which God has given us in Kenya, and for the things which God has done in and through us.  We are grateful for the growth of the orthopaedic training programs at Tenwek, Kijabe and Soddo/CURE in Ethiopia through PAACS, and amazed that there are now 20 residents being educated in orthopaedics and discipled in Christian maturity.  We are also grateful for you who have been praying with us about the next steps for our family, and God is beginning to clearly show us the way!!  Stay tuned for more updates in the near future, but for now, know that our commitment remains to the healthy growth and development of the PAACS orthopaedic training programs in Africa.  



The PAACS graduates and residents are the future of orthopaedic surgery in Africa.  In my mind, the most strategic way to reach underserved populations (who have massive needs surgically and spiritually) is through these national surgeons. We do this by multiplying ourselves in these incredibly intelligent, skillful, committed, and godly surgeons, who will then pass their knowledge on to others who come after them.  What a privilege to invest in their lives in this way!

Would you consider a year end donation to help support the PAACS ortho residency programs?

May God richly bless you with grace and peace this Christmas and coming New Year!



Thursday, July 4, 2019

Endings and New Beginnings

Happy 4th of July from Kenya!
It seems fitting on this cloudy and cold 4thof July in Kenya to reflect on what God has done in the past three years since we made the challenging transition from Tenwek to Kijabe Hospital. So, I’ve built a blazing fire, and I’m sipping a cup of hot chai as I write, all the while wishing we could be in the U.S. for a blazing hot Independence day cookout with burgers, beans and sweet corn followed by fireworks as the sun sets.  

Change is inevitable, and endings and new beginnings are a common part of this walk with Christ as strangers in this world.  We often don’t take the time to grieve the multiple “deaths” that we experience regularly, and as a result, can get stuck in confusion, disillusionment, and stunted growth.  But if we take the time to be honest with ourselves, and God, we can begin to see the new life that springs forth from the ashes (“Unless a grain of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit. John 12:24)

If we would have been told 4 years ago that we would leave Tenwek (endings) and start again at Kijabe (new beginnings), we would have thought that would be impossible.  We had worked too hard, invested too much, and planned to spend years, if not decades there.  And I admit, we did not grieve well the loses we experienced and spent many months in a fog after first moving to Kijabe. 

But God, in His mercy, began to reveal the bigger picture of his sovereign plan, and one by one, new beginnings unfolded. In December 2016, Emma graduated from Mercy Multiplied in Nashville and returned to Kenya to complete her junior and senior year at RVA. In February 2017, we discovered we were expecting another child, and Ethan Benjamin was born at Kijabe Hospital on October 11, 2017.  Now he is a little toddler, running around the house and trying to compete with his two, very doting older sisters.  


In March 2017, our oldest, Jeremiah, eloped, and although this was a complete surprise to us, we see God’s hand in this new beginning for him and Tory!

Jeremiah and Tory visited us in December 2017 when we found out the news!


In July 2018, I became the first orthopaedic surgeon to complete the American Board of Orthopaedic Surgery certification process overseas in a mission/humanitarian setting.  In January 2019, PAACS Orthopaedics added two new programs (Kijabe and Soddo/CURE) to join Tenwek (which graduated their first two residents) bringing to total number of ortho residents to more than 20 (of which I have the privilege of overseeing as the PAACS Orthopaedics Regional Director). 

Fasto and Victor as the first two graduates from the PAACS Tenwek program.  Victor is working part-time at Tenwek and Fasto is a fellow in paediatric orthopaedics at CURE Kijabe. 

Francis Mbugua and James Kinyua, the program directors at Kijabe. 

PAACS site visit to Soddo Christian Hospital in Ethiopia.
John Weston, recent graduate from the Mayo ortho residency program, visited us twice at Kijabe and had decided to join the team here. However, when Tenwek lost Dr. Kiprono and Dr. Nugent, he and his family changed gears and decided to make Tenwek their place of service.  They plan to arrive in September 2019!

And as of this month, we will have graduated two of our daughters from high school to send off to college (yes more endings/new beginnings).  

Emma is now a Voice Performance Major at Biola in La Mirada, CA
Claire plans to start at Princeton in the fall. 

The orthopaedic work at Kijabe Hospital thrived over the past three years, and I grew tremendously as I was pushed to more challenging cases such as revision total hip arthroplasty and bone transport for huge bony defects. 

22 year old young lady with gaucher's disease.  She required bilateral total hip replacements. 
Pelvic X-ray of above patient. 

14 year old boy with large femoral bone defect requiring "bone transport."
Pins and rail used to "transport" bone over a distance at 1mm per day to fill the defect. 

And as the Head of Orthopaedics, I was challenged to lead in deeper ways, including a book study for the consultants entitled “Emotionally Healthy Leadership” By Pete Scazzero (in which the last chapter is entitled “Endings and new beginnings.”  Yes, you could say this book has had a profound impact on me!) 


Heather and I also experienced a rebirth of regular prayer and a new conviction for sabbath rest.  We, for the first time in our missions career, began to experience the joy of intentionally leading together, in ministry, from our marriage (yep, another chapter in EHL).  Heather was involved with multiple prayer ministry groups around the Kijabe campus, and we met weekly with a group of peers (couples with young kids, most of whom were 10+ years younger than Heather and I!).  

And we were able to really connect with our older kids during this critical time of development in their high school years.  Many painful endings led us to beautiful new beginnings.  

Over the past three years, we have made more pizzas than we can count. 


Each Friday night, we have between 5-12 students with  large appetites!
Levi was baptized in the Indian Ocean in April 2019. 

And now, in two weeks, we will experience yet another ending as we leave this season at Kijabe, and head back to the States to begin a year of Home Ministry Assignment (HMA).  During this time, I will be doing a year-long fellowship at Mayo Arizona in shoulder, hip and knee arthroplasty.  At this point, we are planning to return to Kenya after the fellowship ends in July 2020, but we have learned to hold plans very loosely and are continuing to ask God for discernment of his will (Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect. Rom. 12:2).

We will miss sunsets (daily endings) like this at Kijabe!


We continue to be thankful for each one of you, who have supported us prayerfully and financially over the past 10+ years we have spent in Kenya.  Without your faithful work in our lives, we would not be here!   

Saturday, March 23, 2019

A Beloved Flower


Aimé's case of Blount's Disease or Tibia Vara was quite severe.


X-rays showing that the inside portions of both proximal tibia are severely sloped downward causing the bow-legged deformity. 


Ted (Samaritan's Purse Post Resident in General Surgery) drilling a K-wire to help fix the cut bones. 



After shot of both legs now straight and with good rotation (God was present!)


Aimé Fleury, the Beloved Flower

This past week, I’ve been at Hope Kibuye Hospital in rural Burundi, East Africa participating in World Medical Mission’s first sub-specialty orthopaedic outreach.  The fact that I am even here is a miracle, because in my busyness of life and work at Kijabe, I didn’t even think to confirm that I needed a visa to enter the country (unlike all other African countries I’ve visited where my American passport allows me to buy a visa at the airport).  And so, on Sunday morning, as Dr. Jomo (my 4thyear resident at Kijabe and accomplice to Kibuye) were about to board our flight, I was denied. “Go on ahead without me,” I encouraged Jomo as he looked at me wide-eyed.  “You get started on cases tomorrow, and I’ll catch up with you as soon as I can,” I said, knowing that to get a visa to join the outreach that week would take an absolute miracle.   

Little did I know, however, that there was a boy in Burundi named Aimé Fleury whose father and mother, along with their entire church had been praying and fasting for Aimés needed surgery to correct his severely crooked legs.  And little did I know that after Jomo and I parted ways, he called his Burundian friend Gad, whose father has serious connections in the Burundi Department of Immigrations.  Long story short, by Monday afternoon I had a visa stamped in my passport and by Tuesday morning, I was scrubbing cases with a grateful Jomo and the team here in Kibuye. The repeated response from everyone was, “How are you even here?” as the normal time to get a visa for Burundi is more than 10 days.  

I met Aimé the following afternoon as he was being prepared for surgery; an active, muscular 9-year-old boy with the worst case of Blount’s disease I’ve ever seen.  As an orthopod who does very little pediatric orthopaedics, I prayed to myself, “God, unless you help me with this one, it won't be pretty.”  As the patient was being wheeled to theatre, I met Aimé’s father, who explained that the meaning of his son’s name was “A Beloved Flower” and that his entire church had been praying and fasting for the success of his surgery since Sunday.  It was clear that this son was truly loved, and that God brought him to this small hospital for a purpose.  I relaxed a little as I realized I had no choice but to somehow let God work through our feeble hands to be an answer to the faithful prayers of so many.  

There are times in the operating room when we can sense the presence of God with us, and this was one of those times.  Fixing Amié's crooked legs required multiple cuts in multiple planes to realign, and then stabilize the bones with wires through the skin – all without the benefit of any intraoperative imaging (no C-ARM available at Kibuye).  But after finishing the case, I was pleasantly surprised at how normal the legs looked.  Ted (World Medical Mission post-resident general surgeon at Kibuye) and I bumped fists as all in the room felt like we were on sacred ground.  We said a prayer of healing and protection for Aimé and wheeled him back to his father.  David (Samaritan’s Purse photographer who snapped all photos) showed him the before and after pictures, and his father said in amazement, “Those are his legs?!”

So many deep and humbling lessons from this story: the power of faithful prayers of a small congregation in rural Africa, the love of a father, God’s help and strength in our absolute weakness.  In the end, I was reminded that there is much going on behind the scenes that is so far beyond us (it’s not about us), but as we make ourselves available to God in our weakness, we see His miracles unfold firsthand, as we become the hands and feet of Christ to one another. Not for our glory, but for His alone!  Please pray for Aimé, that he would heal without complications or infections, that he would walk with perfectly straight legs someday, and realize that he is a Beloved Flower of his Father in Heaven.  

Thanks for all your prayers and support!