A
man of devout faith, Dravecky strongly believes his
many physical and emotional struggles with cancer and
amputation have had a higher purpose.
“We
started Outreach of Hope as a result of people coming
face‑to‑face with our story and writing
us to share theirs,” said Dravecky in a telephone interview
from his Colorado Springs office, referring to the nonprofit
organization he and his wife Jan founded in 1991.
The
group and what it does has been one of his passions
the last 15 years.
Primarily,
Outreach of Hope receives from around the nation referrals
from families or individuals dealing with various physical
challenges, usually cancer or amputation, and sends
them free literature meant to encourage, comfort and
offer hope.
“We
send out books on our story, pamphlets, magazines, and
as long as they last, copies of the
Encouragement Bible” said Dravecky. “We also work with
cancer support groups, hospitals, churches and doctors’
offices, reaching about a thousand families a year.”
Of
the many thousands of people helped, Dravecky remembered
one in particular. “One day an older man walked into
our Colorado Springs office,” he said. “He’d been diagnosed
with cancer, but was doing well, and wanted to volunteer
to help others. At the time we didn’t know Wayne was
a retired Air Force colonel. He’d take boxes off the
shelves, unpack them, stuff envelopes, do
anything.”
That
is, until his cancer returned. Just weeks before Wayne
died, the organization interviewed him for a video.
In it, he said that many people had visited him for
a few moments, asked if they could do anything for him,
and then left. He said the most important thing they
could have done for him would have been to stay and
simply “be there,” perhaps even in silence.
“That
was powerful,” said Dravecky. “I will never forget Wayne’s
life and journey in connecting
to God with pain and suffering.”
For
more information, visit danieljvance.com
or www.outreachofhope.org.
This column is made possible by a grant from Blue Valley
Sod, www.bluevalley
sod.com.