When a fire destroyed thousands of dollars of 
medicine at a Christian hospital in Africa in 2009, an American couple 
set out on a quest to send them a used fire truck.
But finding the truck was just the beginning. How would they get it to Africa?  
The Bongolo Call
Putting out fires in Tropical Gabon is not easy. At 
the Christian and Missionary Alliance Hospital in Bongolo, a series of 
fires several years ago set the ministry's work back for months.
"The third one almost burned down our entire 
warehouse, $100,000 worth of medicines and supplies," the Christian and 
Missionary Alliance's Dr. David Thompson said.
The devastating loss moved Diann and Dave Conquest, the parents-in-law of one of the one missionary doctors, to take action.
"He didn't hear God audibly, but he just had a 
sense, he just felt called, that Bongolo needed a fire truck and that we
 were meant to be a part of it," Diann Conquest recalled.
In Pittsford, N.Y., the couple turned to eBay where 
they found a 1975 Mack fire truck. They bought it for $3,000 and then 
raised the funds to have it repaired and outfitted with the necessary 
equipment and professional signage.
"And God has blessed us with friends and family and 
associates, people we don't even know, who've given over $20,000 to 
repair this," Diann said.
Journey to Africa
The truck that once sped to fires in New York City 
was on its way to a new career in Africa, arriving at the port of 
Libreville, capital of Gabon.
That's where the Christian Broadcasting Network's 
West Africa Director Jon Cassel took over, using his credentials as a 
volunteer fireman to drive the truck 320 miles across the equator and 
down to Bongolo.
Pressing through the tropical heat, Cassel passed 
the village of Lambarene, where Nobel Prize-winning missionary doctor 
Albert Schweitzer built his hospital in the early 1900s.
At the damaged Komo River Bridge, he had to wait for
 a barge to carry the truck across the river. Finally, after an eventful
 trip, Cassel and his companions neared the hospital and an excited 
crowd.
There the townspeople welcomed the area's very first
 fire fighting machine. For local officials, the refurbished fire truck 
represents saved buildings, businesses, and even lives.
"They've had several fires among storekeepers in 
town and those buildings have burned to the ground," Thompson said. 
"People just stood there and watched them burn to the ground. There was 
no way to put out those fires."
"So what we're hoping is that we'll be able to get 
the fire truck there quickly enough and with the trained people put some
 of those fires out and save the businesses of some of these, 
particularly Muslim storekeepers," he added.
Cassel set about training select hospital staff and 
townspeople in fire-fighting techniques, the truck's equipment, and how 
to use, drain, and pack hoses.   
Today, Bongolo's Christian and Missionary Alliance 
Hospital, one of the best medical facilities in this part of Africa, has
 found one more way to serve their community.
"I think there are great opportunities to share 
Christ and to show the love of Christ and really to demonstrate to the 
community that we're there for them," Thompson said.
 
 


 
 
