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Just in case you missed it, the Washington Times this Sunday had a wonderful article on Deirdre Byrne, a Catholic sister, army captain, and surgeon who spends her time caring for the poor and sick of the world:

The statuesque, graying 52-year-old recently exchanged her habit for a helmet and uniform: She spent three months in southern Afghanistan, serving as a doctor (while treating patients, though, she wears scrubs) and reservist in the U.S. Army.

“We were there to support our U.S. soldiers, coalition forces and civilians,” Sister Dede says. Turned out that most of her and the other medical staffs’ effort and time were devoted to mending civilian lives and limbs.

“The Taliban is out there every day trying to wreak havoc,” she says. “One day, the Taliban bombed a village, and we had 17 patients—flown in by helicopter—in our 10-bed hospital.”

While gruesome and heart-wrenching, she says of the experience in Afghanistan: “I was happy to be at the healing end of things.”

Which is what she does whether serving as a nun and doctor for the poor in the District or Kakuma, Kenya, through Catholic Charities, or as a U.S. Army doctor in Afghanistan.

She’s a healer, and in her unique position as a nun and general surgeon (she also is board certified in family medicine) she’s concerned with life here on Earth—and the hereafter.

“I’m not just a pro-life doctor, I’m pro-eternal life,” she says. “God makes it very clear that he is working through me. . . . God gave me the opportunity to be a physician, and he creates the miracles.”

There is also a great audio slide show attached to the online version of the story:

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