[Vision2020] The Rev. Chester Cook . . . Paying It Forward

Tom Hansen thansen at moscow.com
Thu Sep 10 11:14:33 PDT 2009


"Your heart goes out, and sometimes you can't do anything. It's not always
a quick fix. It's not always a little solution."

- The Rev. Chester Cook

Courtesy of National Public radio (NPR) at:

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=112679029

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Chester Cook knows he can always find a lost soul at the re-ticketing
counter in Terminal A at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport.
So he goes there each day, plants himself near the line and scans faces.

"I'm normally looking for someone who's having a meltdown," Cook says.

Soon enough, he spots a woman. She's near tears, looks to be in her 60s
and is lugging a heavy bag. Cook approaches her.

"I've been changed again to [gate] C57," she says, gasping for breath. "I
can't walk any farther."

"OK, I'm going to go check it out with you," he says as he hails down a
motorized cart and helps her on. "I'm going to ride with you back here,
OK?"

"I thank you for your help," she says. "Who are you?"

"I'm Chaplain Cook," he says. "I'm your little angel today."

Largest Church In The Country

By some definitions, Cook has the largest church in the country. As the
full-time chaplain of Atlanta's international airport, his flock includes
the 56,000 employees and a quarter of a million travelers who pass through
each day.

The United Methodist minister models his ministry on the parable of the
good Samaritan — a stranger who helps a traveler in crisis and practices
kindness, often without mentioning religion. Cook says he gets a lot of
practice in these days of inflexible airline rules. He often pays a
traveler's $150 change fee from his chaplain's budget or his own wallet.
And sometimes he manages to bend the rules.

On a walk back toward the airport's chapel, Cook recalls the time he found
an elderly woman stranded in the airport. She wasn't supposed to fly out
for three days, and the airline wouldn't change her ticket. So Cook
confronted an airline manager.

"I said, 'This is a dilemma, because if that was your 81-year-old
grandmother sitting out there, you would be fit to be tied,' " Cook says.
"And I said, 'I'm sure the news channels would love this story if I gave
them a phone call.' "

The woman was put on the next flight.

'One Emergency After Another'

These are the easy fixes, Cook says. The harder ones involve the runaways,
the abused women and the people who end up at the airport with nowhere
else to go.

"It's literally the last stop," he says. "And then they end up in the
atrium, which is right out front of our chapel. And they don't really know
what to do next. They don't know where to turn."

Dale Campbell is one of those people. He and his wife turned up at the
chapel three weeks ago. They fled the Virgin Islands after some burglars
broke into their hotel room, shot Campbell in the foot and took everything
they owned.

"So we hit Atlanta with nada, nothing," Campbell says. "That's when we met
Chester, and he saved us."

The chaplain found them shelter, food and spending money. He invited
Campbell to use the office phone and computer to look for a job. Campbell
says he's had plenty of company.

"You know there are stories every day that walk through the door. I've
been there and seen them," Campbell says, laughing. "It's one emergency
after another. It's like an ER room."

Cook seems embarrassed by the praise. He changes the subject.

"OK, I gotta eat something," Cook says.

The two men decide on Chinese — Cook is paying — but first the chaplain
peeks into the chapel. It's an interfaith chapel: There is an altar with
flowers, but no cross or other religious symbol. A Muslim man is on his
knees, facing east. A woman sits in the corner. Cook walks over to her.

"Excuse me," he says. "I noticed you were here this morning."

The woman is in her 40s, rail thin and fidgeting anxiously. She whispers
that she came from downtown to meet someone who never showed up. She's run
out of money and can't leave the airport. Cook says he'll buy her a
transit card for a week. At this small gesture, she begins to cry.

"I'm so embarrassed," she whispers.

"Aw, we do this all the time, darling," he says, resting his hand on her
shoulder. "I'm sorry you're going through this."

The woman begins to weep. "You're OK here," he says softly. "We're gonna
get you something to eat. That'll help you feel better. You won't feel so
stressed, OK. OK?"

She nods. In between deep breaths, the woman confesses she often feels
like running away from God.

"He doesn't want you to get away from him," Cook says. "He wants to live
life with you. God says, like the prodigal son, 'I've been waiting for you
with open arms. Come on home.' "

Theology on the run and expedited prayers — that's typically all that Cook
has time for. And it's not just for distressed travelers, but also for the
tens of thousands of flight attendants, baggage handlers, cashiers and
others who work at the airport. Cook has 40 part-time chaplains who help
him serve this huge operation, and they often specialize: Former pilots
minister to pilots, retired military tend to the soldiers.

Deployment: Amplified Anxiety

Each day, hundreds of soldiers and Marines pass through this airport going
to or from Afghanistan and Iraq. It's a sea of tan and green. These people
have a very different set of spiritual needs. Cook says he's seen a sharp
surge in anxiety in the past year — not about fighting, but about the toll
that repeated deployments take on their families.

"It's tough to have a newborn and then have to leave," he says. "Or to
have a boy just starting T-ball and you have leave. And the wives, who
said, 'I married you to have a life with you, and now I've had 10 years of
separation.' There's no answer."

Just a week ago, Cook says, a soldier walked into the chapel, which is
only a few yards from the USO.

"And he said he was on the third floor and he was going to throw himself
off. And I talked to him, and he said, 'Everything I live for is gone now.
My wife has left me, I can't be with my children, I'm on my third
deployment, and I've only got two years left — so I don't have a lot of
options,' " Cook says.

For a few moments, Cook talked to the soldier about what he had to live
for. He thinks the man left with a bit more hope, but he'll never know.

When Cook chats with the military personnel at the ticketing line on this
day, the stories he hears are happier.

"Are these guys going back?" he asks a man in fatigues.

"No," says Maj. Tim Sanders with a laugh. "We're going home!"

"Home! Ah, we do celebrate sometimes," Cook says, shaking his hand.

At the end of his day, the Rev. Cook stands in front of the chapel,
looking down at the people swarming in the atrium below. He admits that at
times their problems seem overwhelming.

"Your heart goes out, and sometimes you can't do anything," he says,
adding that it's tough leaving people at the end of the day, knowing their
problems will still be there tomorrow. "It's not always a quick fix. It's
not always a little solution."

But Cook will go home and recharge. And the next morning, he'll return
ready to help one or two or 10 souls of the thousands who pass through the
airport each day.

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The Rev. Chester Cook, the chaplain at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta
International Airport, counsels a woman who has been stranded at the
airport.

http://media.npr.org/assets/news/2009/09/09/chaplain-action.jpg

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Seeya at Farmers' market, Moscow.

Tom Hansen
Moscow, Idaho

"The Pessimist complains about the wind, the Optimist expects it to change
and the Realist adjusts his sails."

- Unknown




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