“To provide the transforming gift of mobility to the physically disabled poor in
developing countries." That is the mission of the Free Wheelchair Mission and a goal of the
student organization, LECOM CARES.
LECOM Cares presented more than $25,000 to the Free
Wheelchair Mission. The donation will provide 625 wheelchairs for disabled people in under served
countries.
LECOM Director of International Affairs Reza Nassiri, D.Sc. developed LECOM
Cares to coordinate humanitarian relief efforts by LECOM students following the December 2004
tsunami. The International Medical Society, Muslim Student Association, Student Government,
Christian Medical & Dental Society and other student organizations have contributed to LECOM
Cares fund drives for victims of recent hurricanes in the United States and the Pakistani
earthquake.
LECOM travel coordinator Dina Nassiri saw an article in Readers Digest and
later in People Magazine about Don Schoendorfer, Ph.D., the President and Founder of the Free
Wheelchair Mission. His story compelled Mrs. Nassiri to organize a fund drive to purchase
wheelchairs.

Dr. Schoendorfer attended the dinner and received the contribution. He described his invention and
told how he plans to give away twenty million chairs free by 2010. A visit to Africa moved Dr.
Shoendorfer to take action when he saw disabled people dragging themselves along the ground. In
1999, Dr. Schoendorfer, using his engineering expertise, constructed a wheelchair that could be
inexpensively made and shipped to the disabled poor in developing countries. The simple design is
made from lawn chairs and bicycle tires which create a wheelchair rugged enough to endure the dirt
roads and rough terrain. These wheelchairs cost just $41.17 each, but are priceless to the people
who receive them.
Today, the project has grown to become the worldwide Free Wheelchair
Mission.
“I was absolutely in awe of the community involvement and compassion which
was demonstrated by those speaking on behalf of LECOM,” Jeanne Sykes of Erie told Provost
Silvia Ferretti, D.O. Sykes attended the dinner with her friend Stephany Esper, D.O. “Thank
you does not begin to express my feelings of gratitude for all you and your staff do for this
community and now obviously on an international level.”
Locally, the organization
has helped train LECOM students to become HIV/AIDs awareness educators for the Erie County (PA)
Health Department. They have made presentations at churches, community centers, middle schools,
high schools, and social clubs in raising the awareness for HIV and STDs.