An Abundance of Hope

Life offers many forms of personal growth. This has been my thought since the day that I was extended an invitation to participate with Servicio Pan Americano de Salud/ Pan American Health Service, Inc in hosting a visiting Medical Team to serve in field clinics to the mountains.

From this experience, I noted that many times our own pride and other sentiments related to greed and envy hinder us from seeing that even the air that we breathe is an enormous blessing since it is, after all, indispensable to life. We believe that all things are given to us “JUST BECAUSE” and we never stop to think about why we have them.I had the opportunity to see, indeed to palpate the hunger, the despair, the pain, and to experience the feeling of being forgotten. Even though I see many people in our cities daily living in total poverty, I can assure you this was my first experience in experiencing utter misery. I also experienced an abundance of HOPE that exists in this measure of poverty.

And it is in this hope that we are all called to participate in with our full energy, with our all for a childhood free of abuses.It is striking to observe how in our classic families the brand of our shoes, our clothing, and our toys dominate our existence. I ask myself: Are we really educating our children for Life? Are the children we gave life to conscious of what the World is living outside the windows of our warm home?

Counting Our Blessings...

GIVING-300x133.jpg

At Thanksgiving here thinking back over this fading year, we stand in awe at God’s ability to preserve, protect, and provide.

Just a few of the blessings we are thankful for:

Andrews University School of Architecture and Design’s 15 graduate students who are working on a Master Plan for our 100+ acre campus that will strengthen our mission: “Breaking the cycle of poverty and ignorance through nutritional rehabilitation and education.” For 40 years our village has been pressing in on one side and in the last 5 years it has engulfed us. Praise God for creative expertise!

Bountiful bean crops – 3 crops this year!

Children’s ward, nearly ready for up to 48 malnourished 1 to 8 year-olds, after 6 years of being in the playhouse while we rebuilt on the old foundation. Tropical winter storm bring bone-chilling humid 50 degree temperatures that can cause respiratory distress among little ones recovering from malnutrition.

Diane Ward, long-term volunteer whose work for 4 years has improved the quality of care for the children (usually between 15 to 32 little patients) in nutritional rehabilitation. She has helped implement procedures and protocols, so her influence will continue to be felt.

Eco-tourist accommodations in the rain forests near the top of 9000 foot Mount Santa Barbara that rises near our campus. Courses to train young people to be guides through the forest and provide services for tourists will be given at USAID-built Stephen Youngberg Vocational School.

Finding land in the hills for agricultural, forestry, and hydro-power that is now under option for us to buy to generate sustainable income and expand the agricultural course at the vocational school

Graduates from the PAHS Family this year include: Arturo, Kevin, Miguel, Sam, Emily, Jansen, Daisy, Elias & Alejandro.

Honduras’ nutritional crisis having finally been recognized by World’s health organizations… They state it has the highest percentage of malnutrition in Latin America among children under the age of 5. Dr Stephen Youngberg suspected this back in 1960, but there were no statistics to confirm it.

Investments you have made in the lives of these undernourished children that provide evidence that childhood deprivation does not permanently relegate these children to poor performance academically, or failure in adult life, nor inferior progeny. Among the PAHS family there are many with excellent grades, and a growing community of professionals providing services to their fellowmen with merit.

Jesus – who is coming back soon to put an end to the suffering and misery that selfishness and self-serving has brought to this hijacked planet.

Kindnesses we see the children offer to one another, especially to the weak and handicapped

Loma Linda University’s SIMS (Students in International Mission Service) outreach team who is planning its annual New Year’s trip to celebrate with the children and meet dental and other health needs.

Medical Mission groups from Central Texas Medical Center and Helping Hands as well as other individuals who give of their professional skills to helps us bring health and healing to our community.

Nourishing food – though low at times, never ran out!

Our Father God, who reminds us that He regards all members of the human race as One Family.

Prayer that sustains our hope and re-affirms our faith in our mission to God’s less fortunate children even in tough times. Staff members’ united prayer continues each morning steadily yielding answers.

Quality care, which you help us provide to malnourished children, that has been acknowledged by visiting health care workers who report: “We were told that your center is able to recover children from malnutrition in half the time of any other rehab center” – Praise God!

Regulation by new Honduran government entities that provide both challenges and new opportunities.

Scripture memorization, with its re-creative power, which is to be implemented into our educational scholarships program at every level, from kindergarten to university; we are very excited about this new program!

Teach A Man To Fish, who recently completed a 2-year in-residence consulting period with PAHS. The vocational school advanced from 30% sustainability of operating costs to now covering 57% of expenses while serving 201 students from our community studying auto mechanics, carpentry, elementary and high school for adults, sewing and woodcarving.

Universidad Cristiana Nuevo Milenio which has opened a branch campus half-a-mile from our front gate, making it possible for many more of our students and staff to attain higher education.

Volunteers who are very important to our under-staffed mission; they are a great support and encouragement!

Willing hands, so vital to all campus activities – the willing hands of volunteers hauled cement and laid blocks for our new buildings; willing hands bathe, diaper, give water, food, and medicine to the children; children’s willing hands sweep, mop and loving care for each other; the willing hands and hearts of staff in the offices, on the farm, and in the classrooms and study halls make this family possible.

Xceeding great and precious promises” (II Peter 2:4) which are our most valuable asset. Our Almighty Provider is anxious to answer our request for “daily bread.” He chides and goads our faith by telling us, even when our hands are empty, that the hungry “need not depart; Give ye them to eat.” (Matt 14:16)

Your help, which has been essential! Thank you for joining the effort to offer nourishing food and a loving spirit to perishing little ones, and to help satisfy the thirst for knowledge among the poor.

Zeal of the many helping do this work!

A Girl Named Dilia

Dilia and her mother, the day she came to the Casita Feliz

Dilia and her mother, the day she came to the Casita Feliz

La Casita Feliz – the heart of the Pan American Health Service Nutritional Rehab Center – is decorated for Christmas. On the wall is a mural where Santa Claus is pulling a sleigh filled with presents… except these presents are the photo of each of the 32 children who are patients receiving nutritious foodand tender loving care. What a precious gift each childis!

This Christmas is a particularly special one for Dilia – the most fragile patient to be admitted to Nutrition Center in 2013 – it will be her first away from her family however it will be a happy one regardless, for she has received the gift of life and restoration of health. In her short 13 years this very small teenager has experienced the extreme effects of hunger in ways that few can survive. Dilia arrived at la Casita Feliz on October 31, 2013 having been referred to the PAHS program by another nutritional rehab program in the city of San Pedro Sula.

Dilia’s medical treatment had begun sometime in late September when she was admitted to the acute care government hospital in the city with third degree malnutrition – extremely swollen and bloated by the protein deficiency in her body. Additionally she was profoundly anemic and presented with a parasite infestation. Worst of all the nutrient deficiency had an effect on her neurological health and she had cerebral atrophy and the motor and verbal skills of a one-year-old baby. The medical personnel knew she would need long-term care and they eventually found placement at PAHS.

The irony is that Dilia’s struggle for survival was waged on the fringes of the most prosperous city in Honduras – its industrial capital, San Pedro Sula – on the edges of the river where thousands of families, seeking a way out of extreme poverty, gather in hopes of finding a better life for themselves and where in many cases their misery grows instead of dissipating.  Such is the story of Dilia’s mother, a woman who collects plastic bottles and aluminum cans from the garbage to sell in order to have money to feed her three daughters. She relates that many days she would return home empty-handed and experience the pain of watching her children suffer hunger pangs just like herself.

To make matters worse Dilia suffered from a speech impediment and although she had been referred to therapy which was free of charge her mother could not manage the logistics of transportation when she could barely feed her children.

Dilia smiling after two weeks in our Campus

Dilia smiling after two weeks in our Campus

One month after her arrival at the PAHS Nutritional Rehab Center in Peña Blanca, Dilia – who had been getting around in a wheelchair – took her first steps unaided. The love, good food and motivation received from her caretakers have made a profound difference in her life. Her mother came to visit shortly after Dilia started walking. Hardly able to believe what she was seeing her eyes filled with tears as she repeated: “She’s walking”.

Dilia’s speedy recovery is miraculous and a joy to behold. Perhaps soon she will be able to be more self-sufficient and be able to enjoy a childhood which hunger has stolen from her.

“Mommy”

“Mommy, I want a baleada,” (the Honduran version of a “burrito.”)“Mommy, I want to jump on the trampoline.”“Mommy, I want juice. Mommy, I want candy.”I looked down into the faces of 6 little girls surrounding me at their school Open House. Instead of feeling annoyed at the whining sounds directed at me, I felt pure joy!

Our family was just finishing up a month of volunteer work supervising children’s activities at the PAHS campus. We had become acquainted with the children when we came as part of a volunteer building team months before. Why was their whining sweet to me? Because you cannot whine with that intensity at someone you don’t love, someone you are not 100% sure loves you back unconditionally. Their whines meant one thing to me -- they truly meant “Mommy” when they called me that! People ask me, “What do you do in Honduras?”They want to hear about some amazing building project, a medical/dental clinic that helps hundreds of people a day, or at the very least an energetic vacation bible school in the evenings. These important activities God has called others to do.

What He called our family to do is very simple and may seem unimpressive….to model and provide the love of family and a home for these beautiful children who are separated from their own parents and homes for a variety of reasons.No, it is not impressive. It is not the type of calling that fills one with pride in the re-telling of mission stories when returning home, but it is a calling of deep joy and immense satisfaction: I am called here to be “Mommy.”Our days are filled with homework, applying band-aids accompanied by hugs and kisses, attending school functions, fixing healthy snacks, playing -- and just plain being there. We have had many children sitting around our table at night, learning (hopefully) manners and how a family functions in a home. We have been able to enjoy the normalcy of life…baking a cake to take to a class party, watching “our kids” play soccer, seeing “our kids” in the school program, talking to the teachers to know what is happening at school and how the grades are going.

No, it is nothing extraordinary, but it is the very “ordinary-ness” of it that makes it so special. Sometimes God’s greatest gifts come in very simple packages….and that is what He has given us here in our Honduras home.“As far as lies in your power, make a home for the homeless,” Ellen White reminds us. “Let everyone stand ready to act a part in helping forward this work. The Lord said to Peter, ’Feed my lambs.’ This command is to us, and by opening our homes for the orphans we aid in its fulfillment. Let not Jesus be disappointed in you.”I am honored that God has called us to serve by just being a family.

I am honored to be called “Mommy”. 

Up until now, God has helped us

Maui-004b7.jpg

Linares Family

I had the opportunity to attend the Convention of Adventist Services and Industries (ASI) in Sacramento, California this past August. I witnessed how God continues to give food and support in these times of crisis. As I walked the aisles of the Exhibit Hall, I found myself standing in front of and photographing the booth of Gospel Ministries International directed by David Gates. Previously I had had the privilege of meeting him when he visited Honduras a few years ago, where I had also heard him talk about his ministry. 

I later learned more about his missionary work through his two books which narrate some incredible miracles that God has manifested in the life of this man. I was in awe of the simple and extensive faith that connects Mr. Gates and his family to God as they have witnessed miracle after miracle expanding their ministry, and similarly, all those missionaries who with the help of Our Lord left behind the comforts of “The Land of Opportunities”, strike out on the adventure of cultivating souls for Christ. Reflecting on this I thought of two couples whose presence and testimonies have blessed me. During ASI, we had the opportunity to meet up once again with John and Cathy Sage Linares, who we had the pleasure of meeting in February when they came to the Pan American Health Service Campus as part of the Oakhurst Seventh-Day Adventist Church Mission Team from California.  John and Cathy felt moved to sponsor two of our students to give them the opportunity to receive an education according to Biblical Principles.

Both, John and Cathy, were impressed by our mission in Honduras and they have expressed their intention to visit once again next year to carry out a special project. Cathy - a Speech Therapist by profession – plans to have special sessions with the children of the Casita Feliz to give extra support to those who are a little behind developmentally because of their malnutrition.

Another faithful couple, Paul and Kay Newby, participated as part of the Mission in Motion medical team of Central Texas Medical Center in May. They also brought us good news and reminded us of God’s promises for these difficult times. Paul, a pastor and paramedic, felt the call of God to give of his time for missionary service on our campus and in the mountains surrounding our Peña Blanca Community. He and his wife, Kay, have witnessed God’s providence as others in the Dallas area have been raised up who wish to support the construction of a Fire Station and  Emergency Medical Service in our community. They also wish to support the training of young people who would staff such a facility.

Through these two couples with missionary hearts, we have been able to confirm that God still works miracles for us as well, and in the same way that he has manifested amazing miracles in the life and ministry of David Gates, providing millions of dollars as well as security, He is also doing great things for us. We depend on You Heavenly Father!