Photo Gallery
Posted on July 27, 2011
Sanyati Baptist Hospital in rural Sanyati, Zimbabwe, helps many broken lives, including 9-year-old Talent, whose hip broke from being trampled by a cow.
The hospital is a safe haven for even its smallest patients. Many expecting mothers move into housing on the hospital grounds so they will be near when the time for delivery comes.
Patients from all over Zimbabwe come to Sanyati Baptist Hospital for treatment because they know they will receive quality care and will not be turned away even if they can’t pay.
Visiting missionaries accompany long-term volunteer Angie Byler for a walk through the hospital. Byler’s husband, Mark, is the hospital’s medical superintendent.
Sanyati Baptist Hospital is in great need of repairs and, over the next five years, will receive an “extreme makeover” from visiting volunteer teams. To learn more, visit www.sanyatimakeover.com.
Nicola MacRobert (right), a visiting medical student, makes the morning rounds through the wards with Dr. Mark Byler.
Mother Lillian and newborn Tadewa spend a few quiet moments in the maternity ward.
A woman in physical therapy talks to the nurses about her recovery progress.
The chapel at Sanyati Baptist Hospital hosts services every morning for the staff and patients.
Dr. Mark Byler, a long-term volunteer missionary with IMB, is currently the only doctor for the hospital and the outpatient clinic. He attends to everything from major surgeries to the common cold.
Dr. Byler performs a cesarean section shortly after finishing the morning rounds and before heading to the outpatient clinic.
Gladys has worked at the hospital for 30 years, previously in the medical wards and now in the lab. “It’s better here [than other hospitals],” she says. “… God’s people work here.”
The hospital compound also has several residences, a boarding school and a nursing school. The compound is often without water and electricity, so when the pump is working everyone rushes to collect water.
Sanyati Baptist Hospital ministers both physically and spiritually to approximately 3,000 patients a month.

















