Chiropractic mission to Cuba a first

Arriving in Havana — with its like-new 1950s cars — felt like entering a time warp for some members of the Mission-Chiropractic team. Photo by Alex Bramwell, iStock.
by Timothy Morgan

Earlier this year, a team of three chiropractors, three chiropractic students, three chiropractic advocates and one chiropractic office manager brought chiropractic care and humanitarian supplies to the people of Cuba.

Peter Morgan, DC, founder of Mission-Chiropractic, led the five-day mission to the communist nation at a time when new hope has emerged among the Cuban residents. The group made new friendships and brought home a better understanding of the plight of people on the island. It’s believed to have been the first successful major chiropractic mission ever to visit Cuba.

From Nassau in the Bahamas, the team boarded a small, old Russian propeller plane. We encountered turbulence for the entire hour ride and were happy (and relieved!) to touch down in Havana, where we were greeted by hundreds of Cuban workers wearing swine flu masks. It was really eerie, as was going through an extensive and exceedingly thorough customs protocol.

When we finally exited the airport, we felt as though we had stepped back in time. Most of the cars were made in the 1950s—but they all ran and looked as if they were brand new.

We stayed in a beautiful hotel overlooking Havana’s majestic harbor. The entrance to the harbor is guarded by a 400-year-old fort, built by the Spanish between 1589 and 1630, to ward off attacks by pirates and enemy fleets. In 1845, a huge lighthouse was built adjacent to the fort, which makes the entrance to the city even more picturesque. Havana looks like a combination of Spain, the Caribbean and Italy, with statues and fountains gracing many of the spacious squares.

We spent the first day like typical tourists, eating at great restaurants and even watching Cuban soldiers dressed in the uniforms of British redcoats performing a curfew time firing of the canon, as they did when the British captured Havana in 1762.

The following day, we set aside our tourist hats and went to work on our chiropractic mission. We boarded a ferry that took us across the harbor to Regla, a poorer part of the island, completely different from the downtown tourist area of “Old Havana.”

We arrived about 8 a.m. and were met by a large group of local residents who had put on their “Sunday best” clothes for us. They had been waiting patiently to see the chiropractors from the United States and now jockeyed for position to get a glimpse of us. We told them the chiropractic story and set up our adjusting rooms. We had not been allowed to bring portable chiropractic tables into Cuba, but our hosts had made a number of tables for us and set them up in several rooms of the converted church building.

The next day, part of our team was driven out to the countryside about an hour outside Havana. We set up adjusting rooms in a small church and attached house. Many of the Cubans living in the home had severe disabilities. The beds were simple slabs of wood, many without a pillow or even a cover. The floors were manufactured by the pastor in order to make more room for the people who lived there.

When we broke for lunch or dinner we were told that honored guests eat first, everyone else later. They had so little yet they offered it to us! They are so generous that when one of us made a comment on how much we liked their small, old-fashioned coffee machine, they wanted to give it to us as a gift!

The floor of the kitchen and eating area was plain concrete but swept and mopped perfectly clean. Life there is simple, slow. Generations have been born on this property and shacks have been added to accommodate the new marriages. They work hard to live; it shows on the roughness of their feet, hands and faces, but their hearts are as warm and innocent as children.

Speaking of children, they followed us everywhere. We felt like Pied Pipers! Our digital cameras always caused fun, laughter and smiles as the children transformed themselves into athletes, circus artists, clowns and acrobats for the camera. They all posed and began doing cartwheels and flips. They immediately wanted to see their pictures. As we were leaving, kids ran alongside us, waving.

“What an incredible experience I had in Cuba,” one of the team doctors said to me. “It was five of the most meaningful days of my life. …We were humbled to see many chiropractic miracles while we were there. We saw God working through us as we taught and adjusted in Havana and Regla, Cuba.”

The Cuba trip was one of a number of humanitarian efforts by Mission-Chiropractic, which has also brought chiropractic care to poor communities in Central America and the Caribbean, including Guatemala, the Dominican Republic, and Haiti. Trips to Ethiopia and Ghana are scheduled for 2010.

To help fund the missions, Mission-Chiropractic has partnered with Mission Life International and “7 Weeks to Wellness Ministry” to create an evangelistic health ministry geared to generating new patients.

Doctors and students interested in learning more about the Mission-Chiropractic trips or the new program should contact Dr. Peter Morgan at .