Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Saturday, December 17, 2011
And Jesus said, "...Go and sin no more."
Jesus was left alone with the woman standing before him. Jesus stood up and said to her,"Woman, where are they? Has no one condemned you?" She said, "No one, Lord." And Jesus said, "Neither do I condemn you; go, and from now on sin no more."
Many were impacted by the story blogged on September 22nd
about a young lady resorting to prostitution to feed her two young girls. Although Lifeline began as an organization
bringing relief to Haiti by meeting the basic needs of children, they have
expanded to offer sustainable change to adults and communities as well through
the trade school and other programs.
The young lady of the Sept. 22nd blog is named Kettma St.
Pierre. After talking to Donald, the
three of us girls: Michelle, Adrian and Candice decided to work with Kettma,
not just on her immediate needs but for a better future for her and her
children.
When Kettma came to us, we addressed the immediate needs of food and
medical care. Kettma had TB but could
not afford her medicine so we bought it for her. Her baby girl Jenima had been very sick and
one day was even in and out of consciousness.
We prayed for healing and sent money with Kettma for her to take the
baby to the clinic. A few days passed
before we were able to do a follow-up with Kettma but before we even called
her, she came to our door to tell us Jenima was well! She hadn’t even had to buy medicine or get
further tests, she just got better.
Kettma said it was our prayers that healed Jenima.
We figured out with Osmy how much rice and beans we could give her to
last a month. Each time she came to us,
we gave her tap-tap money since she lives a few miles from Lifeline.
Our first few visits met the most pressing needs and if that was all we
did, we were likely to see her a few months down the road once again resorting
to prostitution to feed her family. So
we began to work on a long-term plan.
There are no jobs open at Lifeline so we couldn’t give her a job. But just as we began brainstorming microloans
and business ideas, Kettma broke in and said she had an idea. Through Celissa translating, she explained
that she wanted to start a small store selling used clothes. She could buy the clothes in Port au Prince
and sell them here in her village. All
she requested was a loan to start up.
With the help of Donald and Christian Bunse, who sees this as the first
of many such projects with women like Kettma, we came up with a plan.
We first required that she get an HIV test and bring it back to us
before we continued working with her so that we could know what needs had to be
addressed. She took weeks to bring us
the test so we were very worried that she tested positive and was ashamed. When she brought us the unopened test
results, we held our breath; we had been praying and meeting with Kettma for
over a month and had heard there were rumors about her having HIV because of
her rapid weight loss. We opened the
test from Sada Clinic and have never been so happy to see the word
“negative”.
Next we drafted and translated an official loan contract. We met with Kettma two days ago to go over
the loan and terms of the contract. We
could provide the loan and she would pay back the specified amount each
month. Her mother and grandmother, both
widows, were present to hear. Her mother
said she was so thankful for this opportunity for Kettma and wished there were
more people like us to help young women and widows. We later met with her pastor. We are aware that the issue is more than just
financial and that she needs spiritual accountability to grow and succeed. Her pastor said he’s known her all her life
and is so thankful we are helping her.
He prayed over her and promised to continue watching over her as her
spiritual father. He asked us if there
was a way we could help other girls in Kettma’s situation. We said this kind of work is new to us but we
will continue to meet and pray together that God will provide a way for us to
help more girls like Kettma.
Yesterday we took Kettma to the market in Port au Prince to get some
things to start the store. She chose to
buy nice shoes to resell since around Christmas time people like to get new
shoes. Later we’ll take her back to buy
some boxes of used clothes to sell as well.
It has been exciting to start this journey with Kettma. It hasn’t been easy and his has taken some
work to instill some foreign values that she seems to have gone without. Such as not asking for things from multiple
people or sneaking extra shoes from our storage room (she tried to sit on them
so we didn’t see). She is a good girl
and is trying but I think she’s been in survival mode for so long its gonna
take a while for her to develop the pride of working for herself. Right now she calls us her mamas and says she
won’t do anything without permission.
This is better than stealing from us I think but we hope as she grows
and learns, we can be more like partners and less like parents. Keep praying with us for Kettma and for other
girls like her we hope to reach in the future with similar microloans and discipleship
programs. We do have a sewing class and
are starting a paiting class soon and both of thses will help to provide women
with a skill they can market. Praise God
for creativity and new opportunites.
Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Lifeline Garden!
Lifeline's new garden is here! If you read the "Kathy and the Compost" blog a few weeks back, you've been anticipating our garden! The time has come to plant. After weeks of composting, the soil is ready and according to the locals, its the season to plant. A couple weeks ago, plantains were planted on the back part of the garden, and last week a fence was put up around it to keep the goats out. Cayil, our employee in charge of the garden proudly planted the first seeds today with a friend of his we hired for the day. We planted squash, radish, eggplant, watermelon and okra this time around. The kids who have been helping Cayil in the garden made signs with me to label the areas of the garden where each vegetable is planted. We are excited to see the children learning about gardening, Cayil taking leadership and a long anticipated project in motion. The gardens at Lifeline in the past have apparently been ravished by goats or other wandering neighborhood friends. This time, we're hoping the fence will do the job of keeping unwanted snackers out. Along with the trench composting in the garden, our compost bins are getting hot and black and ready to spread as fertilizer to our trees all over the mission. The trees have been growing slowly and looking a bit scraggly to be honest so we're excited to see the home-made fertilizer work its magic.
Keep all of these exciting projects in your prayers. We are currently brainstorming ways to recycle the water used to wash the canteen to water the plants. We'd like to cut down on water wasted during the dry season. The people living outside the gates are also not fond of our waste water that flows past their houses, causing a bit of a stink.
Monday, December 12, 2011
Friday, December 9, 2011
Carpenters from Iowa!
Iowa Team posing with the benches they made for churches and schools in the area.
New shelves for the eye clinic!
Markson with his interesting shelving creation.
One of the team members teaching Markson how to use the drill.
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
We missed our blog last night, we were exhausted after dinner. We all forgot how exhausted new parents are! LOL On Dec. 6 we went to a mountain village approx 45-60 minutes riding in the back of an supply truck with all our equipment. The road was one lane, with an occasional passing spot, with ruts that threw you all over the back end! I will never complain about my gravel road back in IA again! These mountains looked like some of the Rockies, especially when you are looking over the edge praying you didn't go over! We all arrived safely thanks to our great driver Osbe!
People were already waiting for us when we arrived. We were set up in there medical clinic/school. No electricity or running water, that day they decided to run wiring for electricity, we were dodging workers and ladders most of the day! We sat up quickly and got to work. Most of the people had not seen a doctor for 5-10 years. Many people had walked for 4 hours to see the doctor, incredible! We seen 113 people in 5 hours. We seen many children who were incredibly ill, malnourished, worms, worms, worms, many pregnant women, and pneumonia. We had a lady who thought her water had broken last week and had walked several hours to be seen, sweaty and tired. We were thinking at first we might be delivering, but she was not in labor. Many women die during childbirth due to difficulty during labor, sepsis and no help at home with delivery. We seen many abdominal hernias on children and adults. We had to have crowd control at the door again, people desperate to be seen trying to push there way in. People were still waiting when we had to shut down, due to having to have daylight to get back down the mountain. Heartbreaking when we shut those doors, because people had been all day hanging on to the windows begging in Creole, madam, madam, I have walked all day, please see me, I need to see the doctor! It brought tears to your eyes, but if you started crying you wouldn't stop, these people are in despearate need!
Many of the men stayed back and built shelves for the eye doctor. He was extremely thankful! Some men moved rocks from a foundation so they could continue to build on it. Hot, hard manual labor! Craig and Jim road in the back of a truck, with Haitian style driving, to the lumber yard to buy lumber to build the shelves. The first stopped to change the American money at a money changer, which is a man sitting at a table with a roll of bills. Then on to the lumber yard, which they both said was an aweome experience.
When we all returned home, we were so excited to see baby David. Angie weighed him an he gain 5 ounces. He is growing and doing okay.
Day 7-We went to a tent city today! What an experience. We were set up in there church, which was a scantly put together wood frame, covered with tarps. We had a few wooden benches, to work with an a table. Again we got set up and people were there already waiting. The pastor of that tent church ahd complete control. Those people were quite, polite, respectful of each other absolutely amazing. We seen 153 patients in 4 hours, incredible! I love this whole thing of no documentation!!!!! Amazingly the kids seemed to be very healthy, and also the adults. They hear the word doctor and they all want to come see him, and us. We are different, and they are curious! We ALL LOVE THOSE KIDS! They are so receptive, and just love to be close to you and hold your hand! We passed out lots of tylenol, ibuprofen for headaches, and generalized body aches. Also vitamins and sunglasses. We have seen lots of cataracts from sun damage! During the day we had a few little boys come to the side of the tent that had a large rip in it. They hung out and attempted to talk with us, they were selling bracelets. We Learned the one little boy sold bracelets to pay his way and his brothers way through school! Again Amazing children! The men prayed over all the patients after they were seen, and the team gave shoes to each person. People were very happy!
We came back and started working on cleaning out the medical supply storage area. That will take a few days. We will be staying at the mission tomorrow and running the clinic here and working on organizing the storage room. The guys will be building shelves in the medical clinic.
Little David was taken by part of the team to the hospital today, with aunt and grandma, to get checked out. It was a free catholic hospital, and the er had to Ohio residents working in the ER. They said the see at least two kids a day like this. They kept him for IV fluids and feedings, the grandma stayed with him. He has to have someone with him at all times to be able in the hospital. He is doing amazingly well. We will keep everyone up dated on baby David! The pictures are not uploading tonight, will try to upload more pics tomorrow!
People were already waiting for us when we arrived. We were set up in there medical clinic/school. No electricity or running water, that day they decided to run wiring for electricity, we were dodging workers and ladders most of the day! We sat up quickly and got to work. Most of the people had not seen a doctor for 5-10 years. Many people had walked for 4 hours to see the doctor, incredible! We seen 113 people in 5 hours. We seen many children who were incredibly ill, malnourished, worms, worms, worms, many pregnant women, and pneumonia. We had a lady who thought her water had broken last week and had walked several hours to be seen, sweaty and tired. We were thinking at first we might be delivering, but she was not in labor. Many women die during childbirth due to difficulty during labor, sepsis and no help at home with delivery. We seen many abdominal hernias on children and adults. We had to have crowd control at the door again, people desperate to be seen trying to push there way in. People were still waiting when we had to shut down, due to having to have daylight to get back down the mountain. Heartbreaking when we shut those doors, because people had been all day hanging on to the windows begging in Creole, madam, madam, I have walked all day, please see me, I need to see the doctor! It brought tears to your eyes, but if you started crying you wouldn't stop, these people are in despearate need!
Many of the men stayed back and built shelves for the eye doctor. He was extremely thankful! Some men moved rocks from a foundation so they could continue to build on it. Hot, hard manual labor! Craig and Jim road in the back of a truck, with Haitian style driving, to the lumber yard to buy lumber to build the shelves. The first stopped to change the American money at a money changer, which is a man sitting at a table with a roll of bills. Then on to the lumber yard, which they both said was an aweome experience.
When we all returned home, we were so excited to see baby David. Angie weighed him an he gain 5 ounces. He is growing and doing okay.
Day 7-We went to a tent city today! What an experience. We were set up in there church, which was a scantly put together wood frame, covered with tarps. We had a few wooden benches, to work with an a table. Again we got set up and people were there already waiting. The pastor of that tent church ahd complete control. Those people were quite, polite, respectful of each other absolutely amazing. We seen 153 patients in 4 hours, incredible! I love this whole thing of no documentation!!!!! Amazingly the kids seemed to be very healthy, and also the adults. They hear the word doctor and they all want to come see him, and us. We are different, and they are curious! We ALL LOVE THOSE KIDS! They are so receptive, and just love to be close to you and hold your hand! We passed out lots of tylenol, ibuprofen for headaches, and generalized body aches. Also vitamins and sunglasses. We have seen lots of cataracts from sun damage! During the day we had a few little boys come to the side of the tent that had a large rip in it. They hung out and attempted to talk with us, they were selling bracelets. We Learned the one little boy sold bracelets to pay his way and his brothers way through school! Again Amazing children! The men prayed over all the patients after they were seen, and the team gave shoes to each person. People were very happy!
We came back and started working on cleaning out the medical supply storage area. That will take a few days. We will be staying at the mission tomorrow and running the clinic here and working on organizing the storage room. The guys will be building shelves in the medical clinic.
Little David was taken by part of the team to the hospital today, with aunt and grandma, to get checked out. It was a free catholic hospital, and the er had to Ohio residents working in the ER. They said the see at least two kids a day like this. They kept him for IV fluids and feedings, the grandma stayed with him. He has to have someone with him at all times to be able in the hospital. He is doing amazingly well. We will keep everyone up dated on baby David! The pictures are not uploading tonight, will try to upload more pics tomorrow!
Monday, December 5, 2011
Baby David
Dec 5-Our team started at the prayer rock for morning devotions. What a beautiful day the Lord has made! We then split up into two groups, part stayed back at the mission to build benches. They built 19 benches to be distributed to several different churches. They did an awesome job! The medical team drove 20-30 minutes away to a nearby school and set up shop in a 3 room school. Some of the team did some VBS activites with the children waiting to be seen and also handed out Love Bundles. The medical team went to work, in the first small room Angie triaged patients, we ended up seeing 91 patients in about 5 hours. It became very chaotic, people were trying to push into the room to be seen. The mission leader talked with the man in charge, and informed him that they needed to talk with the people and get organized or we would not be back. We went to the bus to eat and then went back. The number of people there had decreased significantly, people were sitting down and came up to be seen in an orderly fashion. After triage they stood in line and came in to be seen by the doctor one by one. The doctor saw the patient with an interperter, the triage nurse gave each patient a peice of paper with symptoms on it and the doctor wrote the medicine needed on the back. After being seen they were taken next door to the pharmacy where Lari Jo and Darci, with an interperter passed out meds with instructions and education. Some of the things we treated today were lots of diarrhea, fever, runny noses, some parasites, aspirated a ganglion cyst, & aspirated an abscess on top of a little girl's head.
Things we saw today that we weren't able to fix were twins with heart defects, an elderly lady with a probable bowel obstruction, and a little eight year girl who was blinded during the earthquake, a door blew out and hit her in the left eye. It's heartbreaking when you look at these people and tell them there is nothing you can do, or try something minimal and if it doesn't work they really need to go to the hospital. They will never go to the hospital because it is futile because you need money to be treated, and these people don't have it.
Last and the most heartbreaking, a three month old baby, the team named him David Christian, was brought to us by his grandmother, weighing in at 3.3 lbs. That is right 3.3lbs!!!!! He was born at noon and his mother had died by 8 pm that night of unknown causes. There was no one to breast feed him and the family was poor and had no money to buy formula. The family was mashing up food and feeding him regular food! We ended up bringing him back to the mission and putting an IV in and giving him fluid boluses, and feeding him formula with an eye dropper. I am sure this will be a long night with a baby in the house, getting up every hour or two and feeding him. I'm sure we will all fight over this opportunity, he is the center of attention!!!! We have been back to the mission for about 3 hours and just since the fluid boluses and food he looks amazingly better. We ask that all who read this, to please pray for this little guy!!!! He is a fighter since he has made it this far and was brought to us today, God has a plan for this sweet baby!
Tomorrow we will go into the mountains to a village with our medical team.
Things we saw today that we weren't able to fix were twins with heart defects, an elderly lady with a probable bowel obstruction, and a little eight year girl who was blinded during the earthquake, a door blew out and hit her in the left eye. It's heartbreaking when you look at these people and tell them there is nothing you can do, or try something minimal and if it doesn't work they really need to go to the hospital. They will never go to the hospital because it is futile because you need money to be treated, and these people don't have it.
Last and the most heartbreaking, a three month old baby, the team named him David Christian, was brought to us by his grandmother, weighing in at 3.3 lbs. That is right 3.3lbs!!!!! He was born at noon and his mother had died by 8 pm that night of unknown causes. There was no one to breast feed him and the family was poor and had no money to buy formula. The family was mashing up food and feeding him regular food! We ended up bringing him back to the mission and putting an IV in and giving him fluid boluses, and feeding him formula with an eye dropper. I am sure this will be a long night with a baby in the house, getting up every hour or two and feeding him. I'm sure we will all fight over this opportunity, he is the center of attention!!!! We have been back to the mission for about 3 hours and just since the fluid boluses and food he looks amazingly better. We ask that all who read this, to please pray for this little guy!!!! He is a fighter since he has made it this far and was brought to us today, God has a plan for this sweet baby!
Tomorrow we will go into the mountains to a village with our medical team.
Saturday, December 3, 2011
Jean Fritz Pierre in the Christmas Spirit!
Jean Fritz at the Kalico Resort posing in front of his first Christmas tree!
A close up of Jean Fritz at the Christmas tree.
Thursday, December 1, 2011
IV HOPE for Haiti Dec. 1
Pastor Bob and
Jeremiah led a team that finished putting up all the framing for the 2 houses
for Pastor Louisainte’s orphanage. This is where they laid one foundation
several days before and the other foundation was already there from a previous
trip – that one was the last foundation Filiberto did in Haiti.
The rest of the men
finished pouring an 1800 sq. ft. foundation for our guest house behind the
orphanage on our new property.
The farmer who we are
paying to take care of our plantain trees came to Ryan and brought him our
first profit of $300. Ryan instructed him on where to plant more trees on
our new property so that will be a growing source of income for the orphanage –
Ryan thinks it will bring in several hundred dollars per month until we need
that property for orphanage expansion if necessary. Later, he will have
him plant other kinds of trees too.
There was a man in the
village who came up to Ryan and thanked him for the blessing we are to their
community. He asked if we have any children and when Ryan told him, yes,
one little daughter, the man took a bracelet off his wrist that he had just
made and told him to take it as a gift for her. Ryan was very touched by
this sweet gesture of gratitude.
In the afternoon,
Candice took Sally, Kerstin, Aly and I to a beach resort about 10 miles down
the road. It was very nice, but not Haiti’s nicest resort, there are
others, but they are more expensive to get into. It was SO
beautiful. The water was warm, the sand was lovely, the views were like
any other gorgeous Caribbean Island would be. We felt very spoiled having
a snack to share of lobster, shrimp and drank straight out of a coconut that a
man opened skillfully with a machete. Candice said that they bring every
team here for an afternoon during their trip to enjoy a relaxing/refreshing
break from the work, but also so that we can have the opportunity to see
another side of Haiti. She said that so many people see the poverty and
ugliness and see it as a barren land without God. But God has always been
in Haiti. He made it an absolutely beautiful land that has much
potential. This place that has been ravaged over the centuries due to the
consequences of making pacts with the devil and dedicating the country to
Voodoo twice over the years and then continually making poor decisions, has the
potential to be a beautiful place if they will turn from their ways back to the
God who loves them and created them and this lovely land. Ryan has never
been to the beach and we found out that his teams are the ONLY ones that don’t
get to experience this because he just wants to get as much work done as
possible! Oh my goodness…that’s Ryan! He gets tunnel vision when he
arrives in Haiti and never stops till the last possible minute. I realize
that when we go to Haiti, it is to serve God and the people and we aren’t there
to be pampered or to be on vacation, but now that I have seen it, I will make
sure that all of our teams in the future get to experience it too, if only for
a couple of hours, even Ryan’s teams, ha ha.
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
IV HOPE for Haiti Nov. 29th
It was a wonderful day
– no injuries and lots accomplished. The building team is separated
– the one at the Lifeline/IV HOPE property continued assembling panels for the
buildings and began the foundation for an 1800 sq. ft. guest house that will
include two Agriboard buildings next to each other with an expansion in the
middle for a common area. This means that many of you can come down here
in the future and stay right on our property next to the orphanage and
experience it for yourself.
Ryan’s quote for the
day, “I love backhoes.” They got so much done on the property with the
backhoe it was amazing – they are going to rent it for 2 more days. The
kids were jumping in the powder the backhoe left behind thinking it was so
great – they had never seen in – only hard dirt with rocks. There are
sooooo many rocks here.
The team at Pastor
Louissainte’s orphanage down the road finished the 2ndfoundation for
them. We are giving them a building to house the girls and a building to
house the boys. I wish you could see their living conditions and then the
heart of this pastor to know what a blessing this is.
John Ming is building
a pulpit for Pastor Benis so he’s been busy in the woodshop at Lifeline.
Monday, November 28, 2011
IV HOPE for Haiti Nov. 28th
Today Ryan went into
the city to pick up Joe and Sally from the airport, work on paperwork, purchase
the property, rent a trencher and a backhoe – he was there all day and for a
while tonight, we were getting worried because Joe and Sally got a ride back to
the mission but then we never heard from Ryan. We went out on the porch
to make phone calls to find out where he could be and low and behold, a backhoe
comes driving through the front gate and there is Ryan – some people were
surprised, but to me, that was just Ryan – ha!
This morning, the
girls sorted through some love bundles (gift bags prepared by people back home
for specific ages and genders of kids) and took some to Pastor Louissainte’s
orphanage to pass out to the kids. This is the orphanage that they came
across last year where the pastor has such a good heart, but no money, and the
kids were starving and living in horrible conditions. Since then, Lifeline
has been giving them food and the kids are doing much better. While we
were there we ran into Pastor Moore and John Hawk who were teaching about 12
Haitians how to lay form boards for a foundation for a building they are going
to build for the orphanage – this one is right down the road from our orphanage
property. The rest of the men were up at our site working away with
another crew of Haitians, who basically get on waiting lists in hope of work
with us – it’s a blessing to be able to bless them.
Now that we are buying
the property, we are working on re-designing some of our plans. They are
going to lay the foundation for the guest house we are building for future
teams that come in as well as for a small building to house our generator that
was donated by a Valley farmer that will power the whole compound.
In the afternoon,
Sally, Aly and Kerstin sorted through a whole bunch of donated shoes in the
Lifeline storage room and labeled them for specific kids at another orphanage
based on a list Candice had with names and sizes. I think they will take
those tomorrow.
The dinner the Haitian
ladies made tonight was really good! This team is just wonderful.
The men are such hard workers, have huge hearts, are great with the people and
children here – the community loves them. It makes my heart proud of our
Valley boys. J God has really
blessed this ministry with wonderful people and I can hardly wait to see the
fruits of their labors when this orphanage opens – but even in the process, God
is doing wonderful things.
Sunday, November 27, 2011
Imperial Valley's HOPE for Haiti
There is a team of 14
in Haiti and this time, I’m reporting live instead of via Ryan on his satellite
phone! The 7 with Pastor Moore arrived yesterday and went to Haitian
church this morning next to Lifeline and then worked all afternoon getting our
building supplies out of storage and sorting them – that was a big job.
They believe there are enough parts for 10 or 12 more small houses (I think
that’s what he said). Today Ryan, Ernie, Kerstin, Aly and I arrived.
Tomorrow Sally and Joe Colace arrive.
We got a tour of
Port-au-Prince by Candice and Michelle (and Jack, the driver) and even got to
go to a small market where they had beautiful hand-carve souvenirs. This
is Ryan’s 7th trip and he didn’t even think they had souvenirs
to buy here, so we were thankful for the girls to give us the tour, they knew
the shopping spots, ha ha. In front of the Presidential palace we stopped
to buy some paintings by Haitians for $5 and I almost caused a big fight
because the artists were all coming around me shoving paintings in my hand to
buy and I gave the wrong ones back to the wrong guys. Ryan banished me
back to the bus at both stops, lol. Ryan noticed that they have come a
long way in cleaning up the rubble in the city, so that’s a good thing.
On the way from the
city out through the countryside we stopped at the place where the largest mass
gravesite is. 200,000 bodies were buried with backhoes and dump trucks
here after the earthquake. It was a sad place to be. Among all the
small rocks covering the site, we found a human femur bone.
Next we went to the
orphanage site in the village of Barbancourt. This is where the cholera
outbreak originated and 2000 people died. Because it’s more rural and has
trees, it’s a much lovelier area than in the crazy, polluted, congested city of
PAP. The orphanage site looks great and we are going to be able to
purchase some more property right next door that wasn’t for sale last
year. It will double the size of our property and give us much more
opportunity for expansion later on if necessary and for self-sufficient type
projects such as raising rabbits, tilapia, a garden, etc – so that is
exciting. I got to meet the pastor from the church right across the
street from the orphanage as well as the principal of the Lifeline school right
next door – good contacts!
Saturday, November 19, 2011
In our short stay here with the Haitian people we have learned a lot about their culture, work ethic, and their love for God. How humbling to see a people that have so little, but yet live abundantly. One specific occasion comes to mind when handing out a love bundle early this week. A young boy of maybe 7 received his bundle and he continuously repeated saying, "Thank you Jesus, Thank you Jesus". For something that was so small, he was so thankful, and gave God the glory. Yet in our own lives we take so much for granted and feel so entitled to everything we have and even want. This little boy taught many of us a valuable lesson in gratitude.
Our Hawk Creek Love Loud Mission Team includes ten member ranging in ages 29 to 56. For the majority of us this was our first overseas mission trip. Our vision for our mission trip to Haiti was to Love Loud... to show the love of Christ to all those we come in contact with. We didn't have set task in mind to complete during our stay here, but rather wanted to be used how ever the Lord revealed. Our team is diverse in both age and talent.
No one would put the ten of us together, but God. Our group contains a jack of all trades, an artist, a nurse, two respiratory therapists, a pastor, an accountant, a realtor, a biologist, and a collection specialist.
No one would put the ten of us together, but God. Our group contains a jack of all trades, an artist, a nurse, two respiratory therapists, a pastor, an accountant, a realtor, a biologist, and a collection specialist.
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Kathy Cadden and the Compost
At first the children were confused why the crazy “blan”
wanted sacks of donkey poop but soon caught on that this was a job they could
help with and get to spend some time at Lifeline and maybe get a pair of
shoes and/or a hot meal. Kathy worked with many of the
kids until she found a group of dependable workers (about six young teenagers)
and she taught them about composting and gardening.
The groundskeepers at Lifeline became the
overseers of the project and they learned alongside the kids what goes in a
compost heap and how to turn it, etc.
They dug holes and made a three section cement bin for the donkey poop,
leaves, and organic food waste to compost.
The soil here at Lifeline is not the best and our little seedlings seem
to be growing at half speed. Once we
begin to produce our own fertilizer we can improve the quality of our soil,
grow more, produce good vegetables in our garden and possibly begin to sell or
donate bucket gardens with good soil to villagers.
The process: we collect organic food waste in buckets from the kitchen at Lifeline, sacks of donkey poop from the village and dead leaves and plantain stalks from the fields and compost it in the bins (for later use as fertilize all over Lifeline) and in the garden trenches. We’re excited to see if this catches on and waste no longer becomes wasteful!
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Hawk Creek & Love Bundles
A team of 10 from Hawk Creek Baptist Church from London, Kentucky arrived today! The main projects for this team will be distributing Love Bundles to schools and orphanages in the area. A Love Bundle is a bag of necessities for children. They are packed by churches, schools and individuals in the US. Each bundle has a towel, hygiene supplies, school supplies, a jar of peanut butter and clothes. Find out more: http://www.childrenslifeline.com/help-us/love-bundles/
Monday, November 14, 2011
One Child at a Time
Clayson on my lap last year |
Last year, I met a boy named Clayson that stole my
heart. He was skinny and sickly but had
such a cheerful smile on his face.
Clayson lived at Pastor Louisainte’s orphanage in Barbancourt. His orphanage just began receiving food from
Kid’s Against Hunger (KAH) through Lifeline.
This past year over multiple trips, I have watched the health get better
and better for most of the orphans. KAH
food has the nutrients they need to be healthy and strong. As the children gained weight, strength and a
healthy glow, Clayson’s health deteriorated.
The waiting extends outside the two waiting rooms at Arcahaie clinic |
One of Clayson's few smiles after receiving a Love Bundle |
When I moved to Haiti full time I was able to visit Clayson more often and learn that he has always been sick. His caretakers have neither the money nor the time to figure out what is wrong with him. They have tried giving him basic antibiotics, as recommended by a clinic but nothing seems to change.
Last week Lifeline Director Osmy, Michelle, Adrian and I were visiting the Children of Hope orphanage under construction in Barbancourt. We decided to stop by and check on Clayson. He did not smile like the other kids and did not seem to have any energy at all. We decided it was time we do something about it. He has had many tests, but no records have been kept. We brought him back to Lifeline and over the course of a few days, had him tested HIV, x-rayed for TB in his lungs, and tested for worms. We made him drink water and insured he was eating regularly. The HIV test was negative and the TB test inconclusive. The doctor in Arcahaie recommended we take him to a specialist in Port au Prince where he can have more tests done, since their lab is limited. He was given some medications which we were able to purchase with donation money.
Clayson trying to share his new shoes with Jean Fritz |
We took Clayson back to the orphanage (he was excited to see his twin sister and friends again but sad to leave his new mamas). We brought his vitamins, strong worm medicine, and bronchitis medicine and instructed his caretaker how often to administer them. They seem to love Clayson but do not have the means to care for his needs, especially since we’ve yet to discover what they are. Too often kids like this get left to deteriorate. There are about thirty children at his orphanage and only a few mamas and no money for expensive tests for one little sickly boy they say is probably sick because he’s a twin. We thank God that KAH is provided for the other children and they seem to be maintaining health. Please pray for healing for Clayson, for wisdom for the doctors, and money for his next set of tests.
Waiting for TB X-Rays |
Clayson laying on the table at the TB Center |
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Changing Lives...One Family at a Time
The Russells brought a team with them this week not only to bless Lifeline but to bless the community. Here at Lifeline they had a hand in fixing pipes, water heaters and other odds-and-ends all over Lifeline, helping install a new generator, teaching daily English classes, continuing plans for the new orphanage, painting artistic scenes in the preschool, and so much more. They brought shoes and clothes to bless those in need in the community and began construction on a house for a family up on the mountain. This family lives on the side of the mountain, next to the glowing cross above Lifeline. They are extremely poor with only tarps to shelter them from the heat and rain. The Russells and their team decided to make a lasting difference and provide in a miraculous way for the Adil family.
Construction on the a new house for the Adil family of 8.
Kids in front of their old house made of tarps.
The outdoor kitchen of the old house.
The VERY steep road up to the house after much work to make it more accessible for the construction.
One of the youngest children with a belly swollen from worms.
All the kids in the clinic after getting new clothes and shoes and being treated for stomach worms.
*Keep checking for updates on the construction
Powering Lifeline
NEW GENERATOR!
The new generator is working great! We've already saved a ton on diesel costs because its so fuel efficient. We also got new batteries for the house so the generator only has to be on a few hours a day and the mission stays charged. Praise GOD!
Monday, October 31, 2011
Jean Fritz goes to School
Jean Fritz, the 2-year-old Haitian living at
Lifeline, began school last Thursday. He is in the preschool-A class at Lifeline's
school.
First day of school breakfast |
Dropping him off has been a challenge the past few days, but he calms down eventually. Osmy’s 2-year-old daughter Doe is in his class as well, which is perfect because they are best friends!
School gets out around noon and on Thursday we
were watching for him to be released from class so we began checking around
11:30, but each time we looked the Lifeline yard was still silent. All the
sudden around a quarter to noon, little Jean Fritz nonchalantly walked up the
stairs and into the living room and started playing with a puzzle. The three of
us (Adrian, Candice, and Michelle) starred out of disbelief for a brief second
before we rushed to him and asked him how he got up here and how school was.
After getting no answers from the 2-year-old (shocking), Adrian ran outside to
see who brought him from his classroom down near the front gate all the way up
to the second story of our living quarters. There was no one around. We eventually
asked Osmy and Jacques and it turns out he walked himself home!!
Since then, we have made sure to have someone down there around 11:30 so he doesn't have to walk home alone even though everyone here knows him and he is safe.
Little Jean Fritz is growing up!
Friday, October 28, 2011
La Gonave Outreach
Lifeline took its first team (a team of doctors) to La Gonave Island, off the coast of Haiti, to hold a clinic at the mission of Pastors Benis and Dominique Guerrier. The Guerriers are missionaries from Florida and have been living full time in Haiti since February. They have already started a church, school and have more projects in the works.
We arrived two hours later-- all wet, some seasick-- but ready for the next leg of our adventure. We loaded about twenty people and at least six crates of medical supplies on two small rusty trucks and two small SUVS and began the ascent to the tip top of the island to the town of Mapua. The roads we took were more like donkey paths, boulder piles, and flood ponds but by the grace of God and our expert drivers we arrived at the Guerrier mission.
The children ended school early so that we could convert the school rooms into doctor's office's. We set up clinic right away and served over a hundred children and adults from the community.
Please continue to pray for Pastors Benis and Dominique Guerrier. Benis grew up in this very village but lived his adult life in the US. Years later, he felt called back as a missionary to his people. He took his wife, a New York native, and their three children to move to Haiti full time last February. They have done so much for their community already. Lifeline has been helping provide Kids Against Hunger food to the village children and hopes to continue to find new ways to partner with the Guerrier's mission.
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