Doctor Piña: Released From Poverty to Heal Others

Los Mojaos, which translates to “the wet ones,” is a community in San Juan, in the south of the Dominican Republic. The community regularly floods when it rains, overflowing the houses with contaminated water. The locals call the houses “pieces” rather than “homes,” as they only have two rooms — one for a bed and another for living. Most don’t have a bathroom, kitchen or latrine.

The flooding is just part of daily life for Los Mojaos. People are used to losing food, school supplies, furniture and sometimes their entire house. It’s hard to have dreams in these circumstances, and going to school was not a goal for most people when Jose Frank Piña Montero, a graduate of Compassion’s program, was growing up here.

A man leans against a wood and corrugated metal house.

Jose Frank at his childhood home in Los Mojaos.

“I didn’t know I lived in precariousness when I was child,” says Jose Frank. “My only complaint was that my two siblings and I had to sleep all together in the same bed. As a grown up, I realize that this was not our only need.”

Los Mojaos was one of the most dangerous neighborhoods of San Juan. After 6 p.m., no one left home. Children were especially vulnerable to violence, theft and rape if they ventured out. Every night, Jose Frank could hear fights with machetes and guns. He remembers people throwing stones at homes just for fun.

Amid this environment, Jose Frank was meant to be a light and hope.

A man holds a picture of himself as a youth.

Jose Frank holds one of his sponsorship photos from childhood.

Jose Frank was 4 years old when he was registered at a local church’s Compassion center. It immediately became his happy place. He received medical care, proper nutrition and vocational courses in subjects like English and computers.

“As a kid, what I liked the most about Compassion was my good friends,” says Jose Frank. “I also loved the meals. Honestly, at first, food was my biggest motivation to attend. At the center we had access to toys that I couldn’t have even dreamed of having. It was an amazing place because I didn’t have toys at home.”

But the support went far beyond the material. Through his tutor, Ceilin, Jose Frank was motivated to become a leader and a man of God. She encouraged him to never drop out of school and to be responsible with his homework. Through her influence, Jose Frank developed commitment and character.

“My parents didn’t go to school, but my tutor, Ceilin, was a professional, and I wanted to be like her,” says Jose Frank. “The love she showed me and the way she motivated me to move forward were essential to me.”

Knowing his background, Ceilin started to ask Jose Frank questions to make him think about the future and how to make a difference in the world.

“She taught me how to think,” says Jose Frank. “My tutor’s motivation was the foundation to become the man that I am now.”

That motivation paid off.

A man wearing a white doctor's coat and stethoscope around his neck smiles, arms crossed.

With the support of his tutor and the other staff at the center, Jose Frank graduated from high school. He decided that his calling was to heal people, so he went to nursing school. After he completed the courses, Jose Frank decided that he wanted to serve people in a deeper way so he applied for medical school.

But to study medicine, he would need a full-ride scholarship. He would have to have some of the best grades of anyone in the country! The determination and discipline instilled in him by all his tutors at the center came in handy. Jose Frank won a full-ride scholarship to medical school.

“All the things I learned at the center were true. My discipline and dedication had been worth it,” says Jose Frank. “I didn’t have to worry anymore … God answered my prayers.”

Now Jose Frank is helping others be lifted out of poverty.

A man leans against an ambulance van.

After graduating from medical school in Santo Domingo, Jose Frank had two options. He could stay in the capital city and run a successful clinic, or he could go home and give back to the community that God had called him to serve.

His heart and calling were in San Juan, where his family and the love of his life, Dr. Yaneli Suero, another Compassion graduate, were. Jose Frank went back to his hometown, proposed to Yaneli, and started his first job as medical assistant for a hospital road care for the Civil Defense of the Dominican Republic.

“They used to call us ‘the angels of the roads.’ I even received an award for delivering the first baby in an ambulance,” says Jose Frank.

Jose Frank’s hard work is getting noticed. For his outstanding health care efforts, he was selected as secretary of a health movement from his province. Through this, he participates in medical activities all over San Juan, providing medical assistance, clothing and food. Jose Frank also has a television segment on the Exclusive TV show, in which he teaches his community about health every Saturday.

Jose Frank is also bringing spiritual healing to his community.

A man listens to a woman's heartbeat with a stethoscope.

Together with his wife, Yaneli, Jose Frank does medical missions, bringing health and the hope of the gospel to impoverished areas of their province. Passing on what he received, he wants to bring the light of Christ to those he serves.

And now at home, he is playing one of the most important roles: that of father.

“Compassion gave me the best things I’ve ever had. They gave me love, hope and the opportunity to dream and overcome,” says Jose Frank. “Because of Compassion, I met the most beautiful woman on the planet, my wife, and now I am enjoying the fruit of our love: our daughter, Sofia Arlette.”

A man and woman sit on a couch, holding a baby. A man holds a baby up to his face, smiling.

Jose Frank is confident that he broke the cycle of poverty. He knows it because his daughter doesn’t need to be sponsored. On the contrary, together with his wife, they will be sponsoring a child with Compassion soon.

“After I graduated from the center and high school, a man from the neighborhood told me something I will never forget,” says Jose Frank. “He said, ‘You walked in the mud but didn’t get dirty.’ He meant that even though I grew up in a corrupt neighborhood, I broke the cycle of poverty. The evil didn’t contaminate my heart.”

Thank you to our sponsors who are helping young people break the cycle of poverty in their lives and neighborhoods!


8 Comments |Add a comment

  1. Alice Kalombo January 6, 2022

    My name is Alice kalombo am 22 years and am from Zambia,Please I need help,am university drop out due to luck of money.please help me I really want to finish my program anyone ? please..

    1. Nicole January 6, 2022

      Hi, Alice. I am so sorry to hear of the difficulty that you are having while trying to finish school. Would you kindly send us an email to [email protected], so we can discuss this further? Because our platforms are only for Compassion-related content, we kindly ask that you refrain from requesting money from our supporters.

  2. Mark Mannenbach April 9, 2021

    Thank you for sharing the positive impact Compassion has had for Jose. We often are impacted by the sins of the generations before us. I am encouraged by huge changes that will continue for the generations to come for Jose, Yaneli, and Sofia. May we all take heart in their story and the work of Compassion. Amen and amen!

  3. Genevieve McKinley October 5, 2019

    My husband and I had our first child in 1986. We felt so blessed as new parents, that we decided to start sponsoring a child through Compassion International. She was from the Dominican Republic, just like Jose. We sponsored her from ages 3 through 17 when she graduated from the program. Flash forward to 2015, and our oldest child Kalen gave birth to our first grandchild, a girl. As new grandparents, we again felt blessed by this new life, and decided to once again, sponsor a child living in poverty; this time she lives in El Salvador, and dreams of one day becoming a nurse. What a wonderful privilege it is to support her, pray for her each day, and encourage her to learn, grow, and follow God’s plan for her life! We look forward to seeing the unfolding of that plan, and hopefully will be able to visit her one day. Thank you Compassion International, for all you do for these children! May God continue to bless your wonderful ministry.

    1. Christina October 7, 2019

      Hi Genny! Thank you so much for sharing your amazing and touching story of how you have come to sponsor two children in poverty! We very much appreciate your heart for children in need and your partnership in our mission! God bless you and your beautiful, growing family!

  4. Rick October 2, 2019

    It is so good to here some great news since there is so much bad on the news these days. God is a great God and God will truly bless these people. My wife and I have the opportunity to sponsor 5 children I wish we could sponsor all off them. It is such a blessing to see the lives of these children turned around. Thank you Compassion for what you do and allow us to be part of it. Thanks be to Jesus!

    1. Shannon October 3, 2019

      Rick,
      Thank you so much for your amazing support of our ministry and your sweet children! We are so honored by all that you do to support your five sponsored kiddos! Thank you for choosing to be part of our Compassion family!

  5. RICHARD NYEKO October 2, 2019

    I BELIEVED THAT GOD HAS HIS OWN WAY OF DOING THINGS BECAUSE DR. JOSE WAS NOT EXPECTING THIS BUT GOD DID IT FOR HIM IN AMAZING WAYS THAT NO MAN CAN’T UNDERSTAND.SO AM IMPRESSED OF JOSE TESTIMONY AND HIS COMMITMENT OF HELPING OTHERS AND LASTLY I WOULD LIKE TO ENCOURAGE HIM TO CONTINUES SERVING THIS GOD AND GIVING HAND OF HELP TO HELPLESS CHILDREN AND THE BIG REWARD AWAITING HIM.
    THANK YOU AND BE BLESSED.
    SENIOR PASTOR RICHARD NYEKO
    LIVING HOPE HEALING POWER CHURCH EASTERN UGANDA, MAGAMAGA JINJA

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