Monday, September 9, 2013

Eyes to See


One of my friends, who had prayed for me during the trip, asked me on Sunday if I had "eyes to see" while I was in the DR.  I had asked for prayer before the trip for eyes to see God at work on my trip, because often times, I think I miss that in my busyness.
I shared all of the stories I have on this blog because I see God's work in them.  That God uses Rod and Nancy and the pastor in Bavaro as his hands to reach out in love and  give those people a chance.  And those people are in turn being given the opportunity to be God's hands and feet to other people who cross their path.

One story I forgot to share about our trip down: we were delayed on the ground in Chicago due to lightening, we were certain we would miss our connecting flight.  Sue asked the passing flight attendant, who was walking by with connection information, what the status of our flight was.  The woman turned to us and said, "God must be with you, because honey, we're the crew for that flight!"  So the flight couldn't leave without us because it couldn't leave without them!  And I loved that she put it that way.  God must be with you.  Romans 31 What, then, shall we say in response to these things? If God is for us, who can be against us?

I was working in my garden today.  I have this humungous  butterfly bush that I trim the dead flowers off of every week.  And it gets kind of annoying because there are so many and I start thinking, it would be much easier to cut the whole branch off and forget this.  So why do I trim all the dead flowers off weekly?  Because I'm trimming those off, new ones are growing.  I'm sure Rod and Nancy and all those who are in missions get tired of working to eliminate the ugly stuff that they see, because new ugly stuff pops up every time they're there.  But because they work, one situation at a time, one relationship at a time against that ugly, new beauty appears.  It takes time. 

Some of those kids come from a great family who loves them and provides for them the best they can.  Sponsorship can help them out in providing an education and an opportunity to learn more about Jesus through their school.  But some of the kids, don't know what love is.  They don't know what it means to be loved and have never seen love modeled for them.  God's love can be made complete in you, if you can invest a little time and write them an encouraging letter.  Or a little more time and money and go for a visit.  Sponsorship, is about giving, yes, but it's about giving of yourself as well.  Please invest in these children.  I know translating is hard, I'll help you if you want.  It doesn't even have to be long, just a little note to show there's someone out there that cares.  Someone that thinks they're special.

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Karina and Food Sponsors


Karina on her moto.  She cooks the food at home
and brings it in to the school
Karina is a special lady who works at the school.  She has 6 kids, 5 boys and 1 girl that go to the school.  At first she started at the school as a janitor and she sold food on the side.  Rod tried some of it and liked it so they started having her cook homestyle healthy food at the school.  150 kids, those who need it the most, get food each day.  2nd Mile is looking for food sponsors who want to help the kids, but aren’t interested in writing letters.
Karina is a good mom and a hard worker.  Now she is the social worker for the school, visiting the homes of the students to make sure they are taken care of.

Cintia's Story

Cintia, a young girl living in Monteverde with her parents and 6 siblings, was at the school from the beginning, always smiling, always helpful, always special to Rod and Nancy.  And then they found out her background, and that her father had died.  Some time after that, a new stepdad moved in who didn’t like Cintia.  He picked on her and accused her of stealing things. 

In November, on my trip, she wanted to meet with Rod and Nancy.  She told them that she needed a new place to live because her stepfather was beating her,  because she would not give in to his sexual advances.  She felt unsafe and that he might try something more.  They suggested she live with an older married sister.  They didn’t have anywhere for her to go.

The following week, Cintia was beaten and raped by her stepfather.  Flabia (a friend of 2nd Mile) found out and took her to the city to a safehouse and helped her press charges against him.  Because of the charges, her mom and stepfather left, but Cintia stayed for 2 or 3 months at the home in the city.  She was afraid to go back to Monteverde. 
When Rod and Nancy were back in March, she came back.  She tried to live with a sister and her husband in a one room house but ended up living with Pascual (the pastor) and his family for several months so she could finish school.  This school year she does not yet have the papers necessary to go to school.  But when she gets them, she’ll attend the adult school.  She is 16.  In the meantime, she’s working at the 2nd Mile school and living with a different sister and husband.  Cintia was kind of the push for exploring the safehouse/orphanage idea.

Friday, September 6, 2013

Things We Take for Granted


  • Open yards and houses not surrounded by gates or bars

  • Kleenexes

  • Child Protective Services

  • Running water all the time

  • Clean water you can drink

  • Water pressure

  • Flushing toilet paper

  • Traffic laws

  • Laws against grown men sitting on a wall outside of a school watching kids

  • School attendance

  • Paved roads

Avoiding the Storm


So on Wednesday night we heard the report that a tropical storm was coming our way.  High winds and heavy rain.  We got all worried that we would not be able to get our work done because the kids don’t come to school in the rain.  That night, we went to church and Sue Vercauteren ended up giving the message!  It was great, she had a translator and did very well talking about transformation.  During the service someone also prayed about the storm.  After the service a little girl came up to Sue and wanted to accept Christ.  And Robinson, a friend of 2nd Mile who translates, just happened be there to be able to translate between them.  It was very special.  And Thursday ended up being a beautiful day, no rain or wind except for the morning and we were able to go to the school and accomplish most of what we came to do.

House of Hope

The church and the school in the distance
The trade school
The high school

2nd Mile has purchased 610 sq. meters of land to build an orphanage.  Today we're going to look at other orphanages in the DR. Pray for wisdom for Nancy and Rod as they make decisions about the future.


The future

More photos for sponsors!

Jeremy remembers you Ross!

Oliver

Claribel and Nicole






When Claribel was 13 and Nicole was 3, they lived with their grandmother because their mother was a drug addict and prostitute.  Their grandmother was a member of the church here so 2nd Mile went to fix up her house.  When they broke into the crumbling concrete, cockroaches came scurrying out from underneath the floor.  And then tarantulas followed.  Termites were eating the wood of the walls and roof.
Because they made the house nicer, Claribel and Nicole's mother's boyfriend decided to move in.  So the 5 of them shared two rooms.  Their mother was strung out on drugs and prostituting herself in the same room where her 13 year old and 3 year old slept. 
One night the grandmother and the mom's boyfriend started fighting and the grandmother ended up dead.  Claribel ran to the church to get the nightguard and he called an ambulance and took the girls away from the home to stay at the pastor's house.  Where else would she have come if the church wasn't here?
 
The next day, a 2nd Mile trip arrived and they were there and able to spend time with Claribel for the week.  Do you think that's a coincidence?  That a young girl
who would need the love and care of a mother after witnessing the death of the closest thing she had to a mother, would be sent 8 mothers! 
Later they took the girls from their mother and took them out to a farm about 6 hours away in the mountains to a grandmother and grandfather who were very poor coffee and tomato farmers.  Rod says that he had the best coffee ever there.  They had many cousins also living there.  2nd Mile paid for Claribel to go to a Christian school there. 

After a year of  both of them living there, Claribel moved to Santa Domingo with her father and Nicole moved back to Bavaro with an
aunt and lived across the street from Karina who works at the school.  Nicole was quite wild, now she is much better as she has more structure.  The aunt she was staying with got sick and went to the hospital.  Nicole lived with Karina for a few weeks.  Claribel, who is very protective of Nicole, moved back to help take care of her and they both moved back in with their mom. 
Now at 16, Claribel is working at the school and going to the adult school on the weekends.  Her mother attended church with her Sunday when we were there and accepted Christ. 
Claribel helped us today with passing out gifts to the kids at the school and she was amazing.  She is a young leader, willing to help.
I asked Nicole the other day what she wants to be when she grows up and she told me she wants to work at the school.  Like her big sister.

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Roger's Story

 
Roger is the one in the white shirt
Roger and his mom came to Bavaro from Haiti and lived in Monteverde (Haitian village nearby) and at 11 years old he had a job working in the tourist area selling items on the street.  Everyone in Roger's immediate family left and moved back to Haiti leaving Roger with an uncle.  After a month, the uncle ended up in jail, leaving Roger on his own at 11 years old.  A friend of his told him to go to the 2nd Mile School.  He said he couldn't afford school and the friend told him it was free so he ended up working in the mornings and on the weekends and going to school in the afternoon.  He was living in an 8x8 tin roofed apartment with no windows, only a door, sleeping on the floor. 
His generous sponsor donated money to get him a bed and a cook stove.  He was so happy to have those things because when it would rain during the night, he would get wet on the floor. 
Roger learned English on the streets as well as Spanish, French, and a little German. 
He recently lost his job selling on the streets when the business he worked for closed down.  Roger is now 16 and works for the church and goes to school in the afternoon.  He's still a kid, but he's very smart and wise.  He has good character and wants to be a pastor.  He sometimes translates for 2nd Mile.  He  helped me today- some of the sponsors wrote letters in English so I've been trying to translate them to Spanish and he went through and double checked them for me.  Extremely respectful kid.
Last November when I was here, I ran across Roger without knowing anything about him.  He had a nice looking Bible on his desk and I touched it.  He said "That's an English Bible."  I said, "Oh, you speak English?" and he said, "A little."  and then I found out he does translating!  And he could read those letters today as well as I can! 

Leana's Story

Leana moved to the DR from New Jersey after finishing 8th grade because of family problems.  She didn't know any Spanish and didn't have any friends. She was hanging out at the school offices and Rod ran into her and she said hello and spoke to him in English.  He got her to sign up for the school, despite her protests that she had already graduated from 8th grade, and she has stuck with it and now knows Spanish, English, Creole and some French.  She translates for 2nd Mile sometimes.  Wants to use her language skills in the resorts.  Once in the car, Rod talked to Leana and said something about  talking to her like a father and she said, "I've never had a father."
It seems like a coincidence doesn't it?  She's a friendless, lost teenage girl wandering around Bavaro and she ends up in a place where Rod runs across her and takes the time to invest in her and her future.  What if he hadn't?  Where would Leana be?  If you're familiar at all with the DR you probably know where she'd be.
I wonder if we have these opportunities to impact lives.  And I wonder if we take them.

Christopher's Story

Christopher is in blue
I think the truth in God's work here can be seen in individual stories and lives.  It's often, when we talk about how great one of the kids is, that Rod or Nancy will say- "Have you heard their story?" Many of these stories are of teenagers who have been nurtured through 2nd Mile and who are truly changed as a result of someone showing them care.  There will be new stories as children are sponsored and feel your love and learn of God's love for them. 
Christopher (now 20) came from Haiti after the earthquake when he lost most of his family.  He didn't have anything  He showed up at the missionary house here, next to the school and the church, one night in the pouring rain when Rod was here alone.  He came back the next day and was given a job, food, schooling and a place to stay. 
He stayed here for a year and then went back to Haiti to see what remaining family he had.  But when he tried to return to the Dominican Republic, he couldn't get back in to the country.  He was gone for  4 or 5 months.  2nd Mile and Pascual (pastor at the church) helped him sneak back in.  He came back changed, with a bad attitude and got into
trouble at school.  They had to remove him from the school for stealing. 
He disappeared for 4 or 5 months and when he did show up he only asked for money.  But they didn't forget him here.  Didn't give him the money but paid for his schooling at another school and told him to show them his grades until he could prove he was able to be responsible.  He ended up graduating 8th grade from the other school with good grades about a year ago.  So he was able to return and go to the adult school in the 2nd Mile school building and started working for the church.  Now he is in charge of two others, Roger and Cale and is becoming a role model for them. 
The Christopher I see today is respectful and works hard- we saw him hauling trash today in the rain covered with plastic bags.  And the first time he saw Nancy, he ran all the way home on his moto to get his grades to show her and he's so proud. 

A few photos for special people

Ross and Lana Deatsman's sponsored boy


Cathy Laker's sponsored boy

Nancy with a few of her many fans