What does it take to change one small corner of the world? … against all odds? …against force? …without the predictability of resources? What does it mean to persevere over years? …over decades? How does one bring about real, sustainable change, when everything screams at you to give up?
CALLED, by Marlena Fiol and Ed O’Connor, provides insight into these questions by examining the lives of John and Clara Schmidt and their life-long saga of doing just this. John was a medical doctor and Clara, his wife, a nurse, and together they held tightly to a mission to change how the medical world understood and treated leprosy. Not an easy task, going against the entombed wisdom of the medical world! But that challenge was exacerbated by doing it in an outback Mennonite colony in Paraguay, in the harshest of conditions, without any infrastructure and in the face of spotty financial support.
Planned change is hard to create in the best of circumstances. Sustainable change is most rare. Fiol and O’Connor help us see the human challenge of creating a sustainable change. The story of John and Clara Schmidt deserves our attention. It is about more than vision, more than mission. It is about living fully into one’s life purpose and holding it so dearly that letting go is never an option. In doing so, they also speak to the human drama that such a narrow focus and strong commitment creates. They describe a megalomania of sorts that underlies accomplishing the impossible, and the human toll that such a megalomania can produce.
Read this story. Learn about doing the impossible. See how the world conspires against change and how two people met this challenge one day at a time, over decades. Be inspired to lead the change you really care about in your corner of the world, and see what it might take based on the lives of John and Clara Schmidt.