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Dinelli combines vocation, avocation to care for animals in Honduras

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While in Honduras on a veterinary mission trip last month, Heidi Dinelli of South Wilmington performed a number of surgical procedures on pets and livestock. With an average income of $450 per year, Hondurans are often unable to pay for routine medical care for their animals. (Photo provided )
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SOUTH WILMINGTON – Most people have heard of Christian mission trips, where the devoted travel to sometimes far-flung outreaches of poverty-ridden cities or villages to help how they can.

Heidi Dinelli, of South Wilmington, recently went on a rather unusual mission trip. Hers was a veterinary mission trip.

A third-year veterinary medicine student at the University of Illinois, Dinelli accompanied two veterinarians, four other U of I vet med students, three vet students from Auburn University and two from Louisiana State University to rural Honduras, a country where 24 percent of its people live on less than $1 a day.

It’s such a poor country, Dinelli said, that many people there don’t have the resources to take proper medical care of their pets and livestock.

The group went to Honduras the last two weeks of May with a program called Honduras Outreach Inc., through the national organization, Christian Veterinary Missions.

“It was so much fun,” Dinelli said. “We were so blessed by all the people who came along on the trip. It was an amazing group. We bonded really well. I learned so much about veterinary medicine, but I also learned a lot about how to combine a Christian life with veterinary medicine.”

Dinelli was not a newcomer to mission trips. She’s even been south of the equator before, traveling to Bolivia during college to work in orphanages.

But growing up, she was not familiar with missions trips.

“In high school,” she said, “I didn’t even know what a mission was. I didn’t even know what was out there.”

It was when she was a freshman at the University of Saint Francis that she was talked into going on a Christian retreat.

“That opened up my eyes to retreats and to mission work,” she said.

That spring, Dinelli went to a poverty-stricken area of West Virginia on a missions trip and helped a community with home improvements. It was a great experience, she said.

Helping those in need is what God wants of us, she said, and the camaraderie with fellow mission workers was a bonus. There were students there from four different colleges, and they all got together for devotionals and prayer.

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