On a mission for mobility
It isn’t every day that Don Schoendorfer gets a call from the White
House.
In fact, the Santa Ana resident had never gotten any calls from
the White House, which is why he was skeptical when a woman claiming
to be with the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community
Initiatives called and said President Bush wanted to meet with him.
This was no prank call -- the president wanted to meet
Schoendorfer to commend him for his work with the Free Wheelchair
Mission.
“I still feel like it was a dream,” Schoendorfer said of his trip
to the Oval Office three weeks ago.
He said the president wanted to encourage the project and asked if
there was any way he could help.
“I gave him a few ideas,” Schoendorfer said.
Schoendorfer founded the Costa Mesa-based organization -- which
has a goal of distributing 20 million wheelchairs to physically
disabled people in underdeveloped countries by the year 2010 -- four
years ago.
The project became a dream of his when he and his wife vacationed
in Morocco several years ago and saw a woman with a physical handicap
trying to cross the street by digging her nails into the ground and
dragging her body through the dirt.
He said that image has stayed with him.
In 1999, Schoendorfer decided it was time to do something for the
millions of people who suffer from handicaps and cannot move around
very well on their own.
After doing some research, Schoendorfer discovered that
wheelchairs are extremely expensive.
As an engineer, Schoendorfer has always loved designing and
building useful gadgets. He started tinkering with different designs
and eventually came up with a relatively comfortable, inexpensive and
easy-to-assemble wheelchair prototype -- a plastic lawn chair with
mountain-bike tires and metal tubing as its frame. The cost of one of
these chairs is $41.17.
He started by making 100 of the chairs in his garage. He then
heard that Mariner’s Church in Irvine was looking for doctors and
nurses to assist on a mission trip to India.
Although he is not a medical doctor, Schoendorfer felt this would
be a good way to empty his garage while fulfilling his mission of
sharing the gift of mobility.
Reactions to his idea were less than encouraging -- people told
him that poor people in underdeveloped countries would not know how
to use them.
Schoendorfer persisted and wound up tagging along on the India
trip with four of his wheelchairs.
“The very first one turned out to be a success,” Schoendorfer
said. “We realized it was going to be a hit.”
That was in February of 2001.
The Free Wheelchair Mission has since distributed about 73,000 of
the converted lawn chairs, which are now manufactured by a company in
China, to people in 45 countries.
Schoendorfer credits God with all the success of Free Wheelchair
Mission and said he feels it’s his calling to spread the gift of
mobility.
“All we have to do is work as hard as we can and have faith,” he
said.
Although the organization has religious roots, the beliefs of
recipients do not matter. The only requirements are: They must be
poor; they must need a wheelchair; and they must have a family member
or someone who is willing to help them around.
Schoendorfer said he does not preach to the recipients, but just
tells them the wheelchair came from God.
“When you give a wheelchair to a person, it really will change
their life forever,” Schoendorfer said.
Most of the people who have been given chairs were previously
confined to a very small area.
“This is the nicest thing they’ve ever received.”
Although he keeps himself busy operating the Costa Mesa warehouse,
Schoendorfer still goes on trips himself once or twice a year. He
went to Peru in February and is planning a trip to India in the fall.
For more information on the Free Wheelchair Mission, call (714)
708-2100 or visit o7www.freewheelchairmission.orgf7.
* LINDSAY SANDHAM is the news assistant. She can be reached at
(714) 966-4625 or at [email protected]
f7
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