Lindsey Smith decided writing a check wouldn't do after attending a Twin Cities fundraiser for the nonprofit Syrian American Medical Society in November.
The nurse practitioner applied to travel with one of the organization's medical missions overseas to help some of the millions of Syrians displaced by the war in their homeland. In April, she got word: She was leaving for Greece in just more than a week.
Smith, who returned recently after roughly 10 days in Europe, says her time volunteering in a sprawling encampment near the border with Macedonia left her shaken.
"It was heartbreaking. It was rewarding. It was amazing," said Smith, who is speaking about her experiences Thursday night in St. Paul.
Smith became passionate about the plight of Syrian refugees during recent travels across the Middle East. As a hospice nurse in the Twin Cities, she became interested in end-of-life practices in the Muslim world. A trip to find out more took her to some of Syria's neighboring countries, where refugees from the country's devastating five-year civil war have fled.
She wanted to help, but she wasn't sure how. Then came the November fundraiser at a south Minneapolis church, featuring a Rochester-based Syrian-American physician and volunteer for the Syrian American Medical Society, or SAMS. He spoke of his time helping volunteers at a camp in Jordan and about the perils medical professionals face inside Syria.
The event raised $11,000. Smith's decision to join a medical mission was a surprise — and "the icing on the cake," said Andy Berman, one of the organizers: "Here a wonderful nurse stands up and says, 'I am going.' "
The April mission to the Greece-Macedonia border was the society's first to Europe, and it was organized within weeks after Macedonia's move to close its border to migrants headed farther west. In a widely publicized incident days before Smith left for Eastern Europe, Macedonian police used tear gas and rubber bullets to stop a group of refugees from breaching a border fence.