Seven years ago, John Mather visited the Mercy Ships headquarters in East Texas to conduct a routine compliance audit. Mather, who earned a bachelorās degree in naval architecture and marine engineering from the »Ø½·Ö±²„, left the office with a new purpose.
āOver the course of that two-day audit, a seed was planted that I couldnāt uproot,ā Mather said. āI was just taken aback by the genuine authenticity of the people I was meeting with; they had a love for each other ⦠they had a passion for what the organization did. I wanted to be a part.ā
Mercy Ships is a nonprofit international organization that builds and operates āfloating hospitalsā that provide free medical services to those in need, particularly targeting people who live in poor countries with limited access to hospitals.
During the audit, when he asked workers about the organization their eyes would ālight up,ā Mather said.
āThey are like, let me show you some pictures of what some of these people have to deal with on a day-to-day basis and they wave the banner high,ā he said. āI didnāt know what it would look like, but I just wanted to lend my skillset, my unusual skillset, as a naval architect to these people.ā
Mather has worked with Mercy Ships for nearly six years and is currently the director of marine projects. In that capacity, he is chiefly responsible for planning, coordinating and executing the upgrades and modifications carried out on board the ships.
āOur ācustomers,ā if you will, are the other departments within the organization whose teams live and work on board,ā Mather said. āAs equipment and machinery approach the end of their lifecycle, or the arrangement of spaces on board no longer suit the organizationās needs, my team facilitates for those changes to keep things moving forward.ā
Mather, who said heās always had a love for sailing, estimates that heās spent more than 40 weeks on board the various ships in the fleet. Most of those times were for three-week stints to check on projects, he said.
āIn my previous role with the organization, I had the privilege of spending two consecutive summers on board the Africa Mercy with my wife and kids, which included lengthy sails from Cameroon and Benin to the Canary Islands,ā said Mather, who lives in Texas. āTwo of my three children have been to several African countries and the Canary Islands before they were 4-years-old.ā
A career aptitude test led Mather to enroll at the »Ø½·Ö±²„, he said. The first college he attended in Florida didnāt offer the naval architecture and marine engineering major, so he went to the internet.
āBy the end of that day, I had discovered »Ø½·Ö±²„, applied, forwarded my transcripts, and called my parents to tell them I was moving,ā Mather said.
The academic program was difficult, Mather said, but he was determined to finish.
āI would suggest that Iām positioned to be an inspiration for the average man because Iām really not that exceptional in terms of my skillset as an engineer,ā said Mather, who graduated in 2006. āIt was not easy for me. You just surround yourself with people that are pulling for you and people that want to help you. You just stay the course and you get through it.ā
At Mercy Ships, Mather said heās able to exhibit his outgoing personality, a trait he had attempted to stifle earlier in his career, thinking it āwasnāt professional.ā
āIāve realized now that unless youāre working with robots, youāre better off just being who you are,ā he said. āWhen youāre working with people, a little humanity goes a long way.ā
Mather said he was attracted to Mercy Ships because of its mission in helping those in need and the ārare context where someone with a degree in naval architecture and marine engineering could use their skillset to serve the worldās forgotten poor⦠beyond just throwing money at them.ā
The organization, founded in 1978, currently has two ships, both of which are longer than football fields. The Africa Mercy is 500 feet in length and Global Mercy is about 570 feet. For reference, a football field is 360 feet, Mather said.
āInside you have all the trappings of a cruise ship, minus the bar and the casino,ā Mather said. āConsidering that several hundred volunteers call the ship 'home' during a given field service, itās got to feel like it, too. Weāve got a pool, playground for the kids, a gym, Wi-Fi everywhere.
āMost importantly, though, weāve got several decks which make up the hospital on board, which includes everything youād expect to see in a hospital here in the States,ā Mather said.
The ships typically dock for about 10 months in one location in order to provide medical services, including surgery, at no cost.
The Global Mercy is the nonprofitās newest ship and its first āpurpose-builtā vessel, Mather said.
āAll of our ships to date were purchased secondhand and repurposed, which has limited what weāve been able to do with them, programmatically,ā he said. āThe Global Mercy allowed us to take 40 years of experience serving the worldās forgotten poor, include elements we loved about the other ships, leave out what we didnāt, and build a ship with the capacity to literally double what weāve been doing with Africa Mercy since that ship was put into service in 2007.ā
With 12 decks, the 37,000-ton Global Mercy is equipped with six operating rooms, hospital beds for 200 patients, a full laboratory and simulation training areas. More than 640 medical, maritime and programmatic crew live and serve onboard with space for up to 950 on ship when it is docked.
āEveryone seems to show up to Mercy Ships with the attitude of, āThis is not about me,ā and that permeates every part of life on board our ships,ā Mather said. āItās infectious, and itās hard to leave behind when it comes time to walk down the gangway and go back to āreality.āā