The following blog was posted at another site that I write about my work in Haiti on, please click on the link below to read my year end thoughts as I look ahead to 2010. steve
Thursday, December 31, 2009
Tuesday, December 29, 2009
Monday, December 28, 2009
THE ULTIMATE GIFT
A STORY OF CHRISTMAS
This past Spring I received a phone call from a teacher out in Penn. She explained that she had a young lady in her class who had the desire to help the children of Haiti through some sort of class involved project. The teacher had gotten enough information about GAP ministry from the young lady to contact me and get more details about the situation in Haiti and the involvement of our ministry work there. It didn't take me long to figure out who the impassioned young lady might be and I received a call from her father days later confirming my conclusion. As we talked he shared his daughters wish to help out and feed the children of Haiti and asked how I might put the funds raised (at that time unknown) to use. Knowing I would have a team in in Haiti right before Christmas I suggested we use the money to provide a Christmas meal for a school in a mountain village where GAP Ministry had been working this past year.
As Summer concluded and Fall arrived I had long put this out of my mind. Then one day I received an e-mail saying I would soon receive a check for the amount the class of eleven year old students had raised. I had already shared the Christmas meal idea earlier in the summer with my December team so they were prepared to be involved. The amount actually given by the students was $180.00 so the team agreed to add enough to bring the total to $400.00, an amount I hoped could bring a Christmas meal to at least 400 people in the village. I turned the responsibility of bringing all of this together to Diesmy (Jasmine) GAP Ministry's field coordinator for our "Feet Across the Mountains" ministry. Jasmine actually took the funds and purchased the food items in the Montrouis market then took charge of overseeing their transport five miles up into the mountain village of Fretta. He also arranged for the people of the village to prepare the meal on Thursday December 17th our last full day in the Montrouis area. At about 10:00 am that day we took two trucks with about 20 of us and drove as far as the road allowed into the mountains. The remaining distance took us about 45 minutes of hiking to arrive in the village as planned at noon. We (at least I) thought our involvement would be to film, help serve and partake in the meal. It was upon our arrival that Jasmine pulled me aside and asked what program we had prepared to share with the villagers. After a quick timeout and huddle we came up with a game plan. We split our team into two groups, some went with the young children others with teens and adults. The team shared testimonies, songs and prayer with the Haitians, some of those who were Christian also shared with us their testimony and prayer needs. At the conclusion those who desired to accept Jesus were asked to come forward and join us outside to learn how to have Jesus into their lives, twenty plus (20) people did so that day. As I said earlier I thought I knew who the cast of characters were in this story but I had overlooked The Director .
Only God could have brought together a cast of characters to bring the ultimate Christmas gift to a mountain village in Haiti. Consider the following: A father in Penn. sharing his passion for Haiti with his young daughter after his mission trip. An eleven year old inspiring her classmates and teacher to do something for the children in an impoverished country. A teacher having the courage to not only inquire about the situation in Haiti but take it to her principle to involve her class in what some parents might construe as promoting Christian ideals. A ministry team from Indiana not only traveling to Haiti at just the right time but willing to step out of their comfort zone and travel into the mountains of Haiti to deliver a gift of love. A small amount ($180) being blessed to provide enough to feed a whole village of 400 people. An unprepared team of ordinary people being empowered by the Holy Spirit to bring the ultimate gift of salvation to 20 or more people who accepted Christ into their lives .
That day a group of families and friends traveling from a far away place were used by God to bring the true gift of Christmas to a small village in the mountains of Haiti . I believe I can honestly say that for all of us that walked up there that day we went away treasuring our part in having been the bearer of God's eternal gift.
GAP Ministries " Feet Across the Mountains" outreach is based on Isaiah 52:7 . That day God brought to life these words through a list of characters some of who may never see each other till they meet in Heaven. None of us can deny that on that day we were the feet and voice for God's ultimate gift. " How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him who brings good news, who proclaims peace, who brings glad tidings of good things, who proclaims salvation." In God's love, steve
Saturday, December 26, 2009
OUT OF CONTACT
It has been a week from this morning that I boarded an American Air flight and returned from nearly six weeks of working in Haiti. People often ask how I keep things straight as I juggle my life between two cultures 2500 miles apart. While in Haiti I continually find myself thinking about my family and friends back in the states as I go about my workday. Upon my return it seems my work in Haiti ( projects, ministries, workteams, friends, employees and staff) constantly streams through my mind like a looping video. This last trip was filled with many wonderful and exciting blessings and it was a great way to bring 2009 to a conclusion. More importantly is that I believe it is announcing (at least to me) a new beginning as I start a second decade of mission work in 2010. It was only fitting that my recent trip to Haiti marked my first two months of being in charge of managing Project Help-Haiti a mission organization working in Haiti since 1967. My time in Haiti was split between Project Help and GAP Ministry as I addressed responsiblities, managed projects, directed teams and ministry work in two locations 30 miles apart. With just a few days left in this year and the new year approaching it is only natural to look ahead . I'm really excited at the possiblilities we have in making a difference in not only the coming year but the next decade. I had hoped to share much of the information and highlights about my time in Haiti with you in my two blogsites but I had constant computer problems which even hampered e-mailing on somedays. So I want to attempt to catch you up in the days ahead and upon my return keep you posted with regular updates. In Gods' love, steve
Saturday, October 3, 2009
CELEBRATING A MILESTONE
THE BRAAK FAMILY
Last weekend Shirley and I made a 2.5 hour trip to Grand Haven, Michigan to help fellow Haitian missionary Tom Braak of Faith in Action International celebrate his organization's ten years of work in Haiti. Tom actually has been in Haiti since 1997 and took several years of traveling and working in different areas of Haiti before he was sure of where and what God wanted him to do there. He eventually ended up in the Artibonite valley at a place called Verrettes. Tom's ministry focuses on helping and training Haitians in agricultural endeavors to be able to support their families by using environmentally friendly technology , introducing new improved crops and livestock. They also have started schools, capped springs for safe water , built cisterns and evangelized. Tom has a goal to build an experimental village where new ideas can be put to use in construction technology, agricultural practices demonstrated and alternative energy systems tried out.
Tom and his wife Fecilta recently (Sept. 1st) welcomed little Ryan Curtis into their family and hope to return to Haiti in late October. Almost 100 people turned out at the beautiful Grand Haven Community Center to celebrate with the Braaks and the FIAI board members ten years of wonderful work in Haiti. In God's love, steve
Last weekend Shirley and I made a 2.5 hour trip to Grand Haven, Michigan to help fellow Haitian missionary Tom Braak of Faith in Action International celebrate his organization's ten years of work in Haiti. Tom actually has been in Haiti since 1997 and took several years of traveling and working in different areas of Haiti before he was sure of where and what God wanted him to do there. He eventually ended up in the Artibonite valley at a place called Verrettes. Tom's ministry focuses on helping and training Haitians in agricultural endeavors to be able to support their families by using environmentally friendly technology , introducing new improved crops and livestock. They also have started schools, capped springs for safe water , built cisterns and evangelized. Tom has a goal to build an experimental village where new ideas can be put to use in construction technology, agricultural practices demonstrated and alternative energy systems tried out.
Tom and his wife Fecilta recently (Sept. 1st) welcomed little Ryan Curtis into their family and hope to return to Haiti in late October. Almost 100 people turned out at the beautiful Grand Haven Community Center to celebrate with the Braaks and the FIAI board members ten years of wonderful work in Haiti. In God's love, steve
Saturday, September 12, 2009
TEAM REUNION
STEPHENSON, ERVE AND THE TURKS
CLEAN UP MADE EASY
CREOLE COOKING AT BEAR LAKE
Last evening we had our long awaited team reunion with the bear lake community church. In April they sent a large group of 29 people to work with GAP Ministry in Haiti. These people at Bear Lake have been a blessing to us and our work over the years. On two occasions they have opened up their camp to Canaan students to stay at when they have visited this area on their trips to the A.C. E. International Convention. They have used two Haitian students as summer counselors during church camp and been very supportive of Erve Joseph's attempt to get a nursing degree here the U.S. It was exciting to have them come visit us in Haiti this Spring and help us host a mini youth camp, work at our clinic and do some small construction projects.
So last night my wife (Shirley) cooked up a large pot of rice, bean and creole sauce, pickles and banann peze ( plantains). Others brought desserts, salads and drinks and we (45) people all enjoyed a Haitian potluck. I brought everyone up to date on things in Haiti, Canaan and Bobi and Marcus's romance, see Bobi Bender's blog on the Canaan website. I gave an update on the medical clinic project and we discussed possible funding projects that the might be able to help with. I think everyone had a good time and went away saying "I will get back on my diet tomorrow." In God's love , steve
Saturday, September 5, 2009
MY FRIEND THE WITCH DOCTOR
PRESWA THE FORMER WITCH DOCTOR
IN THE MEDIKA MAMBA PROGRAM
CUTTING DOWN COCONUTS
The Preswa story began back in 2005 when I took a team from Pa. back to a village in the mountains called Dauphine. We had taken along some Bible tracts and were doing evangelizing in the different villages we passed through. I had met Preswa on a previous trip to Dauphine and he had explained to us he was a witch doctor. He made his living this way because people would come to him to cure them through potions, herbs and magic spells. Likewise they depended on him to put curses on those they might be having problems with and on occasion bring harm or death to their enemies. He showed a vast knowledge of the Bible, of God and His son Jesus Christ but explained that he needed the income, produce and occasional livestock from being a witch doctor to provide for his meager livelihood. He had two homes in the village one over along the Mountrouis River and one along the road leading into Dauphine, where he spent most of his time and performed his witch craft. Inside this house he had built a stone and mud alter and kept his paraphernalia, even to my suprise a book of spells and potions.
Whatever the reason on that trip when we encountered him and asked him if he was ready to accept and follow Christ he answered yes. We followed him to his hut where we laid on hands and prayed for him and his willingness to accept Christ into his life. We then dismantled the alter and took all of his witch craft stuff outside and burned it. One of the most moving moments occurred when we removed the sacrificial cross where animals ,usually chickens were sacrificed from inside the house. Lorah Styere one of the team leaders took off her necklace with a small wooden cross hanging from it and told him that from now on this cross the cross of Christ would replace the cross of voodoo in his life.
That was four summers ago I pass through the village on a regular basis and often stop with groups to visit with Preswa and his wife. It never fails that they will offer all the hospitality to us they can, bringing out whatever they can round up for us to set on and cutting down coconuts for us to drink and eat. Preswa even worked with us this Spring on the road project to the village of Freta the next village beyond Dauphine.
This is one of many examples of people reaching people and making a difference. On our most recent trip from which the pictures were taken we also encountered two mothers with malnourished babies. They are part of the Medika Mamba program we are involved with and directed by Bobi Bender to save undernourished infants in Haiti another example of progarms that are making a difference in the lives of Haitian families. In God's love, steve
Saturday, August 29, 2009
Jo'burg Video and Botswana...
I have shared some previous blogs and videos from my friend Liz Froba who is leading a team of missionaries in the World Race 2009, these two videos come from her team in Africa. In God's love , steve
Thursday, August 27, 2009
THE BRIDGE
SEPT. FLOODING 2008
CONSTRUCTION AUG. 2009
Finally after almost eleven months the National Route #1 Bridge in Montrouis is nearing completion. The local gossip says it will be ready for traffic sometime in Sept. If you read the GAP newsletters you know that last Summer's hurricanes and flooding took out the center support of the old bridge making it unsafe for vehicles to use. At that time Montrouis only had one bridge crossing the river. This required that all transportation of people and cargo had to stop on the East and West sides cross by foot and all cargo unloaded carried across by porters and reloaded.
Eventually a bridge was established out near the the ocean where the old railroad crossed the river though this was a tortuous detour it once again allowed vehicles to cross the river. Sometime early this year the old bridge was removed and in April construction started on the new replacement bridge which is now nearing completion. The blessing from all of this is that now Montrouis will have two routes across the the river which is is a rarity in the Haiti transportation network.
Another transportation blessing is that the new highway though not completely finished from Port au Prince to Montrouis is much improved. Paving across the worst areas now allows quick, smooth and dust free travel for our vehicles that go back and forth every week. This is the best the road has been in my ten years of work in Haiti. In God's love , steve
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
IT'S DONE
Well after nine months and countless work teams the new dorm is finished for the smaller boys who live at Canaan. It all started last Thanksgiving when a large work team of 31 people arrived from Pasco ,Washington. There church donated the money to get this project restarted, after several years of waiting we were finally ready to pour a concrete roof for the building. Many GAP teams came in January, Feb, March and April to do plumbing, electrical and other finish work. Over the summer other teams came and painted and did the murals that brighten up the interior and add a personal touch.
Sometimes that is all it takes to get a project going , someone in this case a church to give some funds. Once we get started others help out with more funding and eventually we get another much needed project done.
Saturday, August 22, 2009
WHAT'S AHEAD ?
MONTROUIS BEACH
It's Sat. morning and I'm sitting in the dining room at New Life Childrens Home in PAUP writing this blog and drinking good Haitian coffee. In about four hours I will be somewhere over the Caribbean heading back home. Once home I have a tight schedule of completing a new addition onto a house and getting it finished in time to get back to Haiti in early November. I'm not sure what's ahead I just try to follow God's leading, that's not to be taken as I'm planning on leaving missions anytime soon. It's just that I operate under the assumption that God puts people and situations in your in your lives for a reason. Every since coming to Haiti to work as a missionary that has proven so true. I can sense something is in the works from what I've seen this trip , the conversations I've had, the things that have happened and the people I've met lead me to believe God is at work with some sort of new action plan in my life.
When I started GAP go and produce Ministries my thought was one of creating workable partnerships that didn't duplicate the wasteful spending of valuable mission resources. When you have different mission organizations working and living in the same communities they should work together instead of each recreating over and over the same things. The coordinated efforts of bringing organizations together is always on my mind when I meet new missionaries and visit new organizations in Haiti. I actually maintain a vast network of missions organizations and people dating back to my first days in Haiti. When I see the possiblity of putting something together either for my organization or someone else's I make a suggestion and wait to see what happens. I have met some very wonderful people and great organizations this year and now I'm beginning to see some possibilities of " fruit being produced". In God's love , steve
Thursday, August 20, 2009
ANOTHER TRIP
Ti Artibonnite
Tomorrow evening will see be back at the New Life Childrens Home in Paup, where I stayed the evening I arrived in Haiti three weeks ago. After so many years of getting up early to catch a plane back to the states ,I recently started going in the night before and having a good nights rest, a leisure several cups of coffee in the morning and a wonderful breakfast before taking the 12 minute ride over to the airport. I'm not going to say that I even came close to accomplishing what I thought I would this trip but I did take care of some long overdue situations that had caused some problems this past year and I got to spend some much enjoyed time with the Binkley's who are going through a difficult medical situation. I also was able to take care of getting Jasmine (Diesmey) relocated back in Montrouis after his recent completion of college . He is now the new G.A.P. Field Director for the Feet Across the Mountains ministry. His responsibilities are assisting the villages we work in and overseeing the varied ministry projects in the mountains. He also may be assisting Bobbi Bender in implementing the infant nutrition program (Medika Mamba) into some of the rural villages we work in. We also had two teams during my three weeks here so all in all considering the intense heat and humidity it was a good trip. In God's love, steve
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
A WONDERFUL LADY OF GOD
GLADYS' MOM (on left)
We woke up Saturday to the sad news that Gladys mother had passed away unexpectedly Friday evening in California. She had just had a routine surgery that morning to remove a tube from a gall stone surgery and everything seemed fine but she later had a heart attack. She was a remarkable lady who had an intense love for serving her Lord Jesus where ever He placed her. Even though she was 83 she loved making trips back to Haiti to visit the churches she and her late husband started in Port and south Haiti. Her funeral will take place Sat. in California and then her body will be brought to Haiti for 2 funeral services here on Aug. 29th before burial at Petite Goave in south Haiti. She will be missed by those of us who were lucky enough to know her. In God's love , steve
We woke up Saturday to the sad news that Gladys mother had passed away unexpectedly Friday evening in California. She had just had a routine surgery that morning to remove a tube from a gall stone surgery and everything seemed fine but she later had a heart attack. She was a remarkable lady who had an intense love for serving her Lord Jesus where ever He placed her. Even though she was 83 she loved making trips back to Haiti to visit the churches she and her late husband started in Port and south Haiti. Her funeral will take place Sat. in California and then her body will be brought to Haiti for 2 funeral services here on Aug. 29th before burial at Petite Goave in south Haiti. She will be missed by those of us who were lucky enough to know her. In God's love , steve
Monday, August 17, 2009
ONE MORE TRIP
THE BINKLEY'S EXITING THE AIRPORT
I picked my friends Vic and Donna Binkley at the airport in Port au Prince yesterday afternoon as they returned to Haiti two months after Vic was diagnosed with inoperable pancreatic cancer. He is undergoing chemeo and had a short pause between treatments to work in a 10 day return to Haiti. The hope is that the chemo will shrink the tumor enough that they can go in with a cyberknife and eradicate the tumor. Vic is scheduled to do one surgery a day while here which is ironic for that is what he hopes for himself. One chance for the surgery that could remove his tumor, his only hope at this point beyond a miracle from God. Vic has been the only person here in our area of Haiti who has given so many Haitians hope from injuries, cancers and other medical issues with his skilled surgeon's hands. On our ride out to Pierre Payen we reminisced about the changes in Haiti and our hopes for a country we both love. Vic and Donna have been coming here since the mid seventies to do surgeries at the Pierre Payen clinic and later the new hospital across the street. Vic is the guy who recruited me and convinced me that I should come here and work with my construction talents and I spent 5 months finishing the hospital at his urging. He became my mentor as I went on again at his urging after God's leading to start G.A.P. go and produce ministry in 2002. I honestly can't imagine Haiti without Donna and him just down the road at Pierre Payen. So my hope is though some of you may not know him lift him and his wife up in your prayers. In God's love , steve
I picked my friends Vic and Donna Binkley at the airport in Port au Prince yesterday afternoon as they returned to Haiti two months after Vic was diagnosed with inoperable pancreatic cancer. He is undergoing chemeo and had a short pause between treatments to work in a 10 day return to Haiti. The hope is that the chemo will shrink the tumor enough that they can go in with a cyberknife and eradicate the tumor. Vic is scheduled to do one surgery a day while here which is ironic for that is what he hopes for himself. One chance for the surgery that could remove his tumor, his only hope at this point beyond a miracle from God. Vic has been the only person here in our area of Haiti who has given so many Haitians hope from injuries, cancers and other medical issues with his skilled surgeon's hands. On our ride out to Pierre Payen we reminisced about the changes in Haiti and our hopes for a country we both love. Vic and Donna have been coming here since the mid seventies to do surgeries at the Pierre Payen clinic and later the new hospital across the street. Vic is the guy who recruited me and convinced me that I should come here and work with my construction talents and I spent 5 months finishing the hospital at his urging. He became my mentor as I went on again at his urging after God's leading to start G.A.P. go and produce ministry in 2002. I honestly can't imagine Haiti without Donna and him just down the road at Pierre Payen. So my hope is though some of you may not know him lift him and his wife up in your prayers. In God's love , steve
Sunday, August 16, 2009
THIS AND THAT
It's been a busy week in Haiti, a team of six University of Illinois fraternity brothers arrived last Sat. and a medical team of 17 from S. Carolina, Mo., Kansas and Texas came on Monday. The last of them departed for home this morning which leaves me in Port au Prince to pick up Vic and Donna Binkley later to take out to Pierre Payen this evening.
The college team was led by Jason Marquis who came to visit his cousin Marcus Throneburg who is working at the Canaan School this next year. They worked on pouring some sidewalks and a patio at the staff houses and also with construction onto the girls dorm.
The medical team was led by Dr. Tony Hlavacek and Dr. Ric Bonnell. Tony comes twice a year and brings along lots of medical help, this time he brought mom and dad along too. Ric comes four times a year and brings his wife Wendy who is also a doctor and their three kids ages 7-12 on two of those trips each year. The pictures show the medical team on the night they arrived unpacking medical supplies and making a Medika Mamba type nutrition supplement to give to malnourished babies. They had the the refreshing and also unpleasant experience of riding in the back of an open truck most of the way to Canaan in a serious Haitian downpour.
I think after that they were ready for anything the week might bring. Along with the sweltering August heat we got some relief with having Haitian electric power Wednsday through this morning which meant fans all night long. Some of them were up early for a hike on Friday and a picnic and great afternoon at the beach afterward. I spent most of Sat. in Port au Prince looking for and buying truck parts, maybe I can write about that later. This next week sees Canaan hosting several Haitian schools as they come to an ACE seminar to help them learn how to start similar schools across Haiti. Anyway as you can see life in Haiti can be a little of this and that always challenging but more often than not rewarding. In God's love , steve
Sunday, August 9, 2009
SURPRISE
DAVID AND ELONJ
Ok one more wedding blog. I know I said I wasn't going to be able to attend the Sat. morning wedding but plans change quickly here and we always tell our teams stay flexible. I really wasn't planning on duplicating my trip of the previous day for back to back weddings but I got a pleasant surprise late Friday night. Someone knocked on my door about 9:00 pm , it's not unusual to have someone knocking on my door but not often at that time of evening. I yelled out to find out who was there, it was Edgard, so I put on some shorts, I was in my underwear because it is so darn hot here right now and went to the door. I saw 2 guys standing there and at first it didn't register who the second guy was but to my surprise it was Erve. He had just arrived at Canaan specifically to go to the wedding the next morning. So being one of the few people who drives and more importantly owns a vehicle they wanted to see if I would take them up to Liancourt . Those who may not know Erve is a former student and resident from Canaan who is living with my cousin and his family in the states while attending college.
It was a nice small wedding that went very close to on schedule. We were even able to stay for the reception over at the pastor's house. I have know Pastor Gerrard since 2001 so when he saw me at the wedding he asked me to give the closing prayer and blessing on the newlyweds who like Erve had also grown up at Caanaan. We made it back to Montrouis and then it was off to Port au Prince to pick up my team. In God's love , steve
Friday, August 7, 2009
ANOTHER WEDDING
This morning I drove up to a small village called Borel for a wedding, this is a place I worked and lived at for three months when I was working with the Project Help Mission in Haiti. When I moved up there from the Project Help Compound at Pierre Payen in Jan. of 2002 I took a young Haitian man in his early 20's with me, his name was Djony. I left in April and went down to Montrouis to found G.A.P. go and produce Ministries. Johnny stayed on at Borel and is now the overseer of mission teams there for P-H as well as maintenance for the facilites. He eventually met a young Haitian lady living in the community, her name was Suze which sound like (seas) when pronounced, today was their wedding day.
This was my fifth Haitian wedding in the last 10 years I have been to 3 this year alone and have an invitation to another one tomorrow morning that I won't be able to attend because of the arrival of a work team. If you haven't already read my previous blog titled
CELEBRATIONS you might want too . In that blog I talk about the biggest events in the lives of Haitians, wedding of course are one those events.
CELEBRATIONS you might want too . In that blog I talk about the biggest events in the lives of Haitians, wedding of course are one those events.
I always marvel at the amount of money spent at Haitian weddings and wonder how long they have to save to afford these celebrations. Yet look at American weddings in comparison, $10,000 on up seems to be the norm in the states anymore. Through out other cultures weddings are big events if not the biggest one. Even Jesus' first miracle occurred at a wedding where the family didn't want to be embarrassed because they ran out of wine.
The wedding was suppose to start at 8:00 am but as is typical in Haiti was an hour late it concluded at 12:30. When the wedding concluded at the church the reception moved across the street to the huge dining hall at the P-H compound where Johnny lives. It was great to able to participate in this wonderful event in my friends life. In God's love , steve
Monday, August 3, 2009
DOING A NEW THING
Well I made it out to Canaan Monday afternoon no one knew I was arriving so it was a surprise. We had a small team arrive led by Chris Hlaveck, they shot a video about the Medika Mamba program that is run out of the Canaan Clinic. Saturday we have a group of college students arriving from Illinois and on Monday our medical team of 17 people arrives. I spent all of today
in St. Marc getting the AC working on my small truck but it was worth the 5 hours it took to repair it.The pictures of the portable chicken coop and the rabbit hutch was taken at World Harvest Mission in Port au Prince where I stayed Sunday night. These are some of the many changes my friend Sam has instituted and experimented with since he went to live there. I hope to try similar new ideas in our Feet Across the Mountains Ministry. One of the 9 objectives of this new ministry is in agriculture. We hope to introduce new agriculture techniques that will be good for the environment. We also will be setting up community tool banks and seed banks. People can come and borrow tools for projects or farming and seed where after our initial investment it will be sustained by the farmers paying us back in a little extra seed than they borrowed. We will also be setting up community operated plant and tree nurseries for the farmers to help reforest the stripped mountain sides of Haiti. Hopefully I can fill you in the other objectives in some of my future blogs . In God's love , steve
OASIS IN THE CITY
WORLD HARVEST MISSION
Well last evening I finally made it back to Haiti around 9:oo pm . Things were going pretty smoothly and right on time till we boarded the plane in Miami but finally after sitting on two different planes for 3.5 hours and one 1.5 hours between planes we took off for Haiti at 7:15 pm.
Before I arrived I had contacted Sam Streau a long time missionary friend here in Haiti to arrange to be picked up and stay in the guesthouse at the orphanage where he works in Port au Prince. That was a good choice seeing how I arrived five hours past our 3:45 scheduled arrival. Anyway arriving here after a long day of travel feels like that oasis in the desert you read about so often for weary travelers.
Later on today I will head up the coast to the town of Montrouis where I live at Canaan Christian Community. We have two groups coming this month. One is a group of college age young men from Illinois and another is a large medical group from different states led by Drs. Tony Hlavecek and Ric Bonnell. Also this month we will restart construction on the new clinic and be looking for new projects for the "Feet Across the Mountain" ministry. In God's love, steve
Sunday, July 19, 2009
SUMMER WEDDINGS
Through out my years as a missionary in Haiti I have become good friends with many of the young high school and college students who come work with GAP Ministry. Some of these young people actually have been on their mission trips with people they end up marrying later on after college. So my wife and I receive several wedding invitations every year, some close by others out of state. This summer we have gotten three wedding announcements and will be able to attend two of them. We would have gone to all of them except I will be in Haiti during August and miss one that will be out in up state New York.
Last evening we were able to attend the wedding of Wendy Weimer and Stephan Dingeldein. I first met Wendy when she came on a mission trip to Haiti in 2003. I think what cemented our relationship was on a hiking trip into the mountains we were knocked off the narrow trail by a donkey carrying a wide load of sticks and wood. On one side of the trail was an irrigation canal on the other where we were walking was a very steep mountain slope. The thing that saved us from sliding off the mountainside was we grabbed hold of each other and between the two of us kept our footing. Wendy and I have been together on three more trips since then two in Haiti and one in the Dominican Republic.
In April of 2008 she brought along her boyfriend from Indiana Wesleyan University, Stephen Dingeldein. Later that year they became engaged and set a date to get married after graduation in 2009. After returning from their honeymoon to the Bahamas they will be living in Cary, North Carolina where they have both found employment. These fine young people are representative of the many we see who make missions a priority in their lives and marriage, we wish them the best. In God's love , steve
Friday, July 17, 2009
COMMUNITY GARDENS
This Spring and Summer gardening has been making a BIG come back in communities across America. These aren't new innovative ideas but a rebirth of historical concepts that were once important to communities around the world. The phrase community garden might be relatively new but during the depression years of the 1930's Greenbelt communities were an innovative concept to community self sufficiency. WWII brought us Liberty Gardens and into the 1960's and 70's the back to the land movement was born. The past several years has seen a resurgence of and interest in ideas with the phrase "Green Living".
My own church here in the states started a community garden called Son Shine Garden. The idea is to use some of our 40 acres to allow church members and others from outside the church to have garden plots. Excess produce will be made available at our food pantry and inside the Church Narthex on Sunday mornings. Some individuals and Sunday school classes have plots just for these worthy purposes.
These ideas have encouraged me to jump start some ideas I have long had about agricultural projects in Haiti. In fact part of the concept and one of our objectives for the new "Feet Across the Mountains Ministry" we have started is about developing innovative ways to help in food production in Haiti. Quite a bit of my postings over the next several weeks will be about this new ministry outreach , stay tuned. In God's love , steve