Why Ebola Fighters Are TIME's Person of the Year 2014

"For decades, Ebola haunted rural African villages like some mythic monster that every few years rose to demand a human sacrifice and then returned to its cave. It reached the West only in nightmare form, a Hollywood horror that makes eyes bleed and organs dissolve and doctors despair because they have no cure.
But 2014 is the year an outbreak turned into an epidemic, powered by the very progress that has paved roads and raised cities and lifted millions out of poverty. This time it reached crowded slums in Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone; it traveled to Nigeria and Mali, to Spain, Germany and the U.S. It struck doctors and nurses in unprecedented numbers, wiping out a public-health infrastructure that was weak in the first place. One August day in Liberia, six pregnant women lost their babies when hospitals couldn’t admit them for complications. Anyone willing to treat Ebola victims ran the risk of becoming one.
Which brings us to the hero’s heart. There was little to stop the
disease from spreading further. Governments weren’t equipped to respond;
the World Health Organization was in denial and snarled in red tape.
First responders were accused of crying wolf, even as the danger grew.
But the people in the field, the special forces of Doctors Without
Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), the Christian medical-relief
workers of Samaritan’s Purse and many others from all over the world
fought side by side with local doctors and nurses, ambulance drivers and
burial teams."
read the article by Nancy Gibbs
Why Ebola Fighters Are TIME's Person of the Year 2014: F
read the article by Nancy Gibbs