Ingida Asfaw Archives - 91短视频 News /now/news/tag/ingida-asfaw/ News from the 91短视频 community. Fri, 26 Sep 2014 20:24:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Alumni Honored for Service Efforts at Homecoming /now/news/2007/alumni-honored-for-service-efforts-at-homecoming/ Mon, 15 Oct 2007 04:00:00 +0000 http://www.emu.edu/blog/news/?p=1523 The Alumni Association of 91短视频 honored two of its graduates Sunday, Oct. 14, for their work in reflecting the school’s vision, mission and values.

Ingida Asfaw and Claire Schnupp, 91短视频 alumni and honorees
91短视频 President Loren Swartzendruber (right) offers a blessing during the Sunday morning worship service. Pictured from left: Brian Boettger, president of the 91短视频 alumni association; Clair Schnupp, Distinguished Service Award recipient; Ingida Asfaw, Alumnus of the Year honoree. Photo by Jim Bishop

Dr. Ingida Asfaw, 67, of Grosse Pointe, Mich., a 1962 91短视频 graduate with a double major in biology and chemistry and originally from Ethiopia, received 91短视频’s 2007 “alumnus of the year” award during the Sunday morning worship service of homecoming and family weekend.

The award is presented annually to a graduate who has been recognized for significant achievements in their profession, community or church.

Dr. Clair E. Schnupp, 70, of Dryden, Ont., was presented the 2007 “distinguished service award” in recognition of nearly five decades as a missionary, working under “challenging conditions” in the extreme Arctic north.

The annual “distinguished service” award seeks to recognize graduates who have demonstrated in notable ways the Christian service and peacemaking emphases of the university.

Ingida Asfaw

Ingida Asfaw, 91短视频 alum and honoree, and wife Elizabeth
Ingida Asfaw and wife Elizabeth. Photo by Jim Bishop.

Dr. Asfaw is chief of cardiovascular surgery at Sinai-Grace Hospital, Detroit, Mich., while devoting consider time to improving healthcare standards and providing greater access to medical care and supplies in his native Ethiopia through the Ethiopian North American Health Professionals Organization. He founded the volunteer network in 1999.

The organization today includes some 500 doctors, nurses and other members who offer their time and skills in Ethiopia, where there is only one doctor for every 100,000 people. Asfaw leads health professional volunteers on semi-annual medical missions to perform surgical procedures, conduct training programs and donate medical equipment. In 2003, Asfaw performed the first open-heart surgery in Ethiopia.

Asfaw came to the US in 1958 on a cargo ship from Ethiopia, arriving late on campus for the start of classes and with limited English skills.

This fall, nearly 50 years later, he returned to his alma mater as a distinguished surgeon to be recognized as alumnus of the year. In 2006, he received a national “Everyday Hero” award for charitable service sponsored by Volvo automobiles, selected from a field of some 4,300 nominees.

Saturday morning of homecoming, Asfaw led a Suter Science Center seminar on “the importance of spirituality in healing the cardiac patient.”

“Technology has forever altered the way in which we think about the cardiovascular system and the way that it heals,” Asfaw noted. “However, one thing has remained constant – those with strong spiritual connections seem to recover from insults to their cardiovascular system more quickly.”

Asfaw is married to Elizabeth Asfaw, originally from Memphis, Tenn., and they have two daughters and a son. He is a deacon in his congregation, the Plymouth United Church of Christ in Detroit.

Clair Schnupp

Clair Schnupp, 91短视频 alum and honoree, and wife Clara
Clair Schnupp with wife Clara and the traditional gift to alumni award recipients: a clock with a personalized engraved plaque. Photo by Jim Bishop.

Schnupp, a 1959 graduate with a double major in Bible/philosophy and social science, and his wife Clara have spent nearly five decades in mission work in hundreds of remote Aboriginal communities in northern Canada, Alaska and Greenland.

Aviation plays a key role in the couple’s ministry. Over the years they have flown different planes – on flats, skis and wheels – and have logged more than 12,000 hours to relate to thousands of Cree, Ojibway and Inuit people. Today, Schnupp pilos a Piper Cheyenne II dual engine, turbo prop plane.

Schnupp is chairman of the board for Northern Youth Program (), a multi-faceted organization for Aboriginal ministry started in 1967. Under its rubric are Arctic Ministries and Beaver Lake Camp, used for youth and children’s camps as well as for counseling. Another program serves urban youth in Thunder Bay, while prison outreaches serve several cities.

Earlier this year, the Schnupps did biblical counseling for three weeks in the community of Sisimiut, Greenland. They termed this trip “a special joy,” as they observed sessions of lay counseling being carried out by earlier graduates of their program.

Clair Schnupp, 91短视频 alum and honoree, and wife Clara
Clair and Clara Schnupp

“My four years at [the former Eastern Mennonite College] gave me a missiological, theological and biblical foundation for ministry,” Schnupp said. “I thank God for that training.”

He went on to complete a masters degree in biblical counseling at Providence Seminary, Otterburne, Manitoba, where he is now an adjunct professor. He earned a doctoral degree in philosophy of religion and society at Oxford Graduate School, Dayton, Tenn., in 1995.

In 1997, Schnupp received a “Distinguished Service Award in Christian Psychology” from the Dr. Clyde Narramore Foundation. He is a member of the Society of Oxford Scholars and he and wife Clara are members of the Professional Association of Canadian Christian Counselors.

Clara is a certified teacher and also received a masters degree in counseling from Providence Seminary. They have five married daughters and 25 grandchildren.

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Alumni Award Recipient to Speak at Homecoming /now/news/2007/alumni-award-recipient-to-speak-at-homecoming/ Wed, 03 Oct 2007 04:00:00 +0000 http://www.emu.edu/blog/news/?p=1517 Dr. Ingida Asfaw, 91短视频’s 2007 “alumnus of the year,” will speak at the next Suter Science Seminar during the school’s homecoming and family weekend.

Dr. Ingida Asfaw, 91短视频 alum
Dr. Ingida Asfaw, 91短视频’s 2007 ‘alumnus of the year’

Dr. Asfaw, chief of cardiovascular surgery at Sinai-Grace Hospital, Detroit, Mich., will speak 9 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 13, in room 106 of the Suter Science Center on the theme, “Heart and Soul: The Evolution of Cardiovascular Medicine and the Importance of Spirituality in Healing the Cardiac Patient.”

“Technology has forever altered the way in which we think about the cardiovascular system and the way that it heals,” Asfaw noted. “However, one thing has remained constant – those with strong spiritual connections seem to recover from insults to their cardiovascular system more quickly.” He will develop this theme in his presentation at 91短视频.

A 1962 91短视频 graduate, Asfaw came to the US on a cargo ship from his native Ethiopia, arriving late for the start of classes and with limited English skills.

Returning After Five Decades

This fall, nearly 50 years later, he is returning to his alma mater as a distinguished surgeon, the recipient of a 2006 national award for charitable service sponsored by Volvo automobiles. He will receive the university’s 2007 “alumnus of the year” award during homecoming weekend.

Read more about Ingida Asfaw in the 90th anniversary edition of Crossroads magazine.

Along with his cardiovascular work that includes several other medical centers, Asfaw devotes a major portion of his life to the Ethiopian North American Health Professionals Organization, a volunteer network he founded in 1999.

The organization today includes some 500 doctors, nurses and other members who devote their time and skills in Ethiopia, where there is only one doctor for every 100,000 people.

The program is open to the public free of charge. For more information, contact Dr. Roman Miller at 540-432-4412; e-mail millerrj@emu.edu.

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