Mercy Volunteer Corps

Mercy Volunteer Corps

Why choose Mercy Volunteer Corps?

Mercy Volunteers promote social change through one or two years of compassionate service in Georgetown, Guyana. While serving in the spirit of mutuality, Mercy Volunteers commit to social justice, spiritual growth, and a simple lifestyle in community. Opportunities are available to serve in education, healthcare, or social services. Mercy Volunteer Corps has four service sites in Guyana including a primary school at a boys orphanage, a technical secondary school, a hospital, and a long-term care facility. Mercy Volunteers receive housing, transportation, stipends, health insurance, retreats, and more.

Volunteers begin with a collaborative cross-cultural orientation in late July prior to the Mercy Volunteer Corps Orientation in August. Applications are accepted on a rolling basis. The priority deadline for applications is January 22, 2024, and the final deadline is March 22, 2024.

Founded
1978

Reviews

imavolunteer2
4/5
Yes, I recommend this program

An Experience That Informs Your Life.

Spending 2 years in Guyana with MVC was one of the greatest ways I have used my life to do good.

The power of living in a faith-based, intentional community has shaped me in a way that I did not anticipate, and have not experienced before or since. Sharing a vision of Mercy in the world and supporting the work of a Hospital's HIV programming, an Orphanage's swimming program and a Vocational School's arts curriculum were all unique experiences. Each one encouraged me to learn, stretch and grow and to live a life of deeper understanding and service, and to watch the fruits of that service blossom in the relationships, moments and memories shared by my MVC community and my Guyanese community.

Guyana is a place of pluralism - in foods, language, religion & cultural customs, music, local humor and even its holidays - all of these layers of intriguing complexity made this site an interdisciplinary dream come true. It's even possible to find conversation classes to keep up your Spanish in this English-speaking country!

I left Guyana wondering if I could have made MORE of a difference, and that is a question I struggled with both on site and since my return. I had a lot of learning to do about what "making a difference" means, and what are reasonable, tangible goals in an unfamiliar host environment. As a recent college grad, I had no defined skill set, and it took a while to find a good occupational fit.

However, in the absence of a profession, I learned the value of the intangible ways that my choice to be open, present and engaged with people in another country has made a difference in the organizations and communities where I served. The MVC staff were very valuable in their ability to listen, help me process and be flexible in their programming to allow me to explore where I could do the most good.

Though I was deeply challenged many times by this experience, on the whole I enjoyed myself, my mission, the support offered by MVC staff and our receiving communities immensely.

I have recommend this and other MVC programs to friends and acquaintances looking to live deeply and be of service, and will continue to recommend and support the program my whole life long.

BB
5/5
Yes, I recommend this program

Greatest accomplishment? Serving with MVC

Serving for 2 years with Mercy Volunteers Corps in Guyana was a life-changing experience for me. I worked at Mercy Wings and at the boys orphanage, as a teacher and tutor and lived in an intentional community with one other volunteer. The program is very well run and was established with a quality, holistic, cross-cultural experience in mind for the volunteer. The local support is tremendous for those who are open and desiring of an immersion experience in the culture, and reflection on their own growth in the values of the program and the reality of what it means to live in a country that is economically and otherwise marginalized by the U.S. and other "developed" countries. Living and working in another country does not automatically mean one comes to understand how the world is viewed from another's point of view, however, if you are willing and able to engage in meaningful relationships and authentic dialogue with the Sisters of Mercy and other Guyanese, it will be a transformative experience beyond anything you can study or "accomplish" in your work.

SaraGravez
5/5
Yes, I recommend this program

Mercy Volunteer Corps

When I decided to serve internationally, I was looking for some specific things. Healthcare, Catholic, Community Living, and English Speaking. MVC internation provided all of those and so much more. I work as a volunteer nurse in the highest level of care in one of the best hospitals in Guyana. I get to be at the bedside changing lives and helping people. I get to teach at the nursing school to provide a lasting change in Guyana. We are supported spiritually and emotionally by the Catholic Community here and the Sisters of Mercy. I live with three other volunteers and have been blessed by a supportive and friendly bunch. Guyana has a rich mix cultures: African, East Indian, Caribbean, Portugese, British, Amerindian.

Read my full story
Guyanavolunteer
5/5
Yes, I recommend this program

Chaos can be calming and change your life!

Working of Mercy Volunteer Corps in Guyana at first seemed like chaos. Georgetown is a busy city and I felt like I was going to get lost. Slowly but surely I became comfortable in my surrounds and what I once considered the chaos of the city became a comfortable hum to which I was happy to be in.

I work both at a school for at risk teenagers and at a hospital which has a program for individuals with HIV. I find both jobs very fulfilling and challenging. I feel like I am never bored and always have the opportunity to learn more and become a better person. Volunteering here has helped me to learn how important it is to focus on the here and now. Life is precious.

I wouldn't enjoy my experience here nearly as much if I had not tried to become part of the local community. Having local friends that are more like family has transformed my life. I will be forever grateful for the experience MVC has given me by allowing me to work with these wonderful people.

In the end, Georgetown may seem a little chaotic but it's really quite peaceful. Everything has a reason whether we see it or not. Every person a story and every place a new adventure.

FormerMVCVolunteer
5/5
Yes, I recommend this program

The most defining experience of my life...

I spent two years working with the Mercy Volunteer Corps after I graduated from college. I worked in a hospital, an orphanage and a vocational high school. I was both challenged and empowered in all of these experiences. I lived with a community of people who were also working with MVC. These people have become some of my closest friends. My experience wasn't all butterflies and roses, but when people ask how my experience was...I always respond it was the most defining experience of my life. I met amazing people and discovered a new side of myself. My Guyanese family took care of me. The Sisters of Mercy have an incredible support system for their volunteers and they uniquely made me feel like an intimate part of their family. Guyana is a thread that weaves through the fabric of my life and find that it has helped to shape me into the person that I have become.

Read my full story

Programs

Displaying 1 - 1 of 1

Alumni Interviews

These are in-depth Q&A sessions with verified alumni.

Sarah Graves

Why did you decide to volunteer with Mercy Volunteer Corps in Guyana?

Sarah: I had felt the desire to do international volunteer work and began to search for programs. I had a list of things I was looking for in a program...International, Catholic, Community Living, and Nursing Service. My search led me to Mercy Volunteer Corps and through my application, interviews, and discernment weekend, I felt I had found the program for me.

Describe your day to day activities as a volunteer.

Sarah: In August 2010, I moved Georgetown and began living by the MVC tenets: Simple Lifestyle, Community Living, Spirituality, and Compassionate Service. We live simply by keeping a strict monthly budget for the community and a small personal stipend. The MVC-Guyana community is currently four young women who recently graduated college. We live together, eat together, and share our experiences. We are also in community with the Sisters of Mercy here in Guyana and often interact with them. Each week we have a spirituality night where we discuss, sing, or pray together. Our service is all in the city of Georgetown at the hospital, boys orphanage, or vocational school.

Image removed.

This is my typical work day... At six o'clock the sun rises and it becomes too bright and hot for me to sleep much longer, so I get up. I eat a simple breakfast of fruit, peanut butter and bread with instant coffee. I dress for work then I catch a minibus(public transportation small van) to work. In Georgetown, there is one large public hospital and many other small hospitals. I work at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, it is a small private hospital with attached nursing school. I work in the Intensive Care Unit of the hospital as a full-time nurse. My work day starts at 7am and finishes at 7pm. My unit has up to two patients at a time for me to look after. They are attached to cardiac monitoring and recieve total nursing care by the ICU nurse. The most common conditions I deal with are: Stroke, Heart Attack, Uncontrolled Hypertension, Uncontrolled Diabetes, Seizure Disorders, Congestive Heart Failure, Pulmonary Emolism, Pneumonia, Complicated Malaria, Complicated Post-Operative Recovery, Suicide Attempts, and Psychosis.

I like my job because it puts me into such close contact with the Guyanese people. I feel I have become very connected with those I am serving because of the nature of my work and the close quarters. The ICU is my classroom too and I teach the nursing students about assessment skills. I take a taxi home from work because at 7pm, it is too dark to walk alone to catch a bus. I get home and dinner has usually been prepared by one of my community members. I eat and we talk about our days and unwind. Around 9pm, the mosquitoes start biting so I bathe and get under my mosquito net to read until I fall asleep. I work seven 12-hour shifts on each two week schedule, so I also have seven off-days. On my off days, I run house errands such as: go to the bank, pay bills, buy groceries, go to the market for fruits and veggies. I also like to socialize with friends, exercise on the seawall, go to daily Mass, and play with the boys at the Orphanage. Although my life may seem difficult to some, it is my life and I love it.

What advice do you have for future volunteers?

Sarah: My advice to future volunteers is to make the most of your time in service. You may think that two years is a long time, but it goes very fast. If someone invites you to do something new or go somewhere new...DO IT! Go to a Hindu prayer service! Swim in the black creek water! Eat wild meat! Try natural coconut oil instead of lotion! Whine to a Dancehall beat! I will never forget the hospitality of the Guyanese people who have made me feel at home here!