Saturday, May 4, 2013

Tour of Eben Ezer Léogâne village


Today, I’d like to take you on a picture tour of the campus of the Eben Ezer Léogâne village. I’ll share what I have learned from various GO project websites and stories. Until we go there next year, we’ll have to let our imaginations fill in the gaps. If you have specific questions let me know and I’ll try my best to find out the answers.
Léogâne is a seaside town in Ouest Department, Haiti. The town is located about 29 km (18 mi) west of the Haitian capital, Port au Prince. The town was at the epicenter of the earthquake on January 12, 2010 and was catastrophically affected, with 80-90% of buildings damaged. It also had been destroyed in an earthquake in 1770. You can see it near the center of the map below, the little orange icons denoting locations where Global Orphan Project has established villages.


This history of Eben Ezer Léogâne began in 2011 when Pastor Claude Mondiser created a new church in Léogâne, Eben-Ezer Evangelic Church, which was the only church in the area. Pastor Claude and the church’s members have a heart for caring for orphaned and abandoned children in the Léogâne area. He had previously partnered with Global Orphan Project for other orphan villages. The construction began at Eben Ezer Léogâne in the summer of 2012. By October of 2012, about 60 children live here.

As you see the following pictures, the 3 signature components of Global Orphan project’s orphan care become apparent.  As we “tour”, I’ll point out how the care is: 1) Local Church Owned, 2) Base Level (culturally relevant) and 3) Sustainable
Here are the outside and inside of the Eben Ezer Evangelic Church.  The church is the heart of the village. GO Project does not own the day-to-day care of the children. The local church does.  The local church leadership selects and supports the staff to help care for children.  This way the children have a steady assurance through the Gospel of grace in Jesus Christ.




Next you’ll see a side by side view of the children’s homes. These are the homes that have roof damage from previous hurricanes.  We are praising God that, thanks to a generous first donation, the roof repairs can start soon before the rainy season begins and the houses become a mess.  The construction of the village buildings is done by Haitian workers, and the staff leading the village are Haitian as well.


Here's a closer view of the girls' home and a picture of some of the children living at the village.

The next picture shows the inside the one of the children’s homes with some of the children who live there. With triple bunks and cribs when needed, each home can house 24 children. Here you can see the base level of care represented.  Living here gives the children a ‘bump up’ into a humble, base level of care within the church family.  The homes and standards of care blend into the community, rather than jump over the top of it, so that intact families will not try to send their children here in hopes of “getting them a better life”.


The latrines, bathhouse, and kitchen are each separate buildings from the children’s homes.  Here are pictures of the bath house and kitchen constructed this past summer.  No comment is even necessary on the stark difference between this and what we have in our American homes. 


The campus has a garden with a variety of plants, including mangoes, which help feed the children who live there.
The village well is a source of clean water for those who live there.  Apparently it is easy enough to draw water that the children are able to do it too.

The garden and the well, in addition to a chicken coop on property, all offer opportunities for future sustainability for the village, the 3rd facet of GO project’s model.  In addition to using these to provide for the kids who live there, there is an opportunity to sell the extra water and food in the community, proceeds of which could help offset some village expenses.
The campus has a large soccer field where games and fun can be had. Below, you can see jump rope and soccer fun when a GO Project group came to visit.





Lastly and importantly for our piece of the project, there is a school on campus, divided into 2 buildings. The crux of orphan prevention is the school.  By funding the school budget of $3000 per month, each child can attend for a nominal fee.  The fee is enough to keep the families engaged but small enough that they can afford it.  The children who attend receive a Christian education and one meal a day.  This sounds so common and basic to us where we live, but to these Haitians, it is a huge step forward. Currently, there are 160 children at the school, including all the Eben Ezer Léogâne Village orphans, but there is capacity to grow. The church leadership provides the oversight for the school choosing the staff and making decisions for the school. Ultimately, as the school is able to open up to the at-risk kids of the community, the church will be able to identify the kids most in the need to join the school in the upcoming year.
The first building is for the kindergarten.  Adrien said it is not uncommon to have multiple ages represented in the kindergarten as children who have never been to school get their first start.


The primary school has room for more students in the upcoming school year too.


Will you pray for God’s work here in this part of Haiti?  Will you give to the orphan prevention effort at Eben Ezer Léogâne to help these children?  A one-time gift or a recurring gift can make a big difference here!  Click here to be directed to the myGOproject page which allows for a one time gift directly towards this project.  If you’d like to set up a recurring monthly gift, use this link instead and please make sure to specify “Gilmans Loving Leogane Kids project” in the box for specifying about the donation.
As a side note, for some reason I was having writers’ block as I started this blog, so I took a break to read my bible.  I had been reading in 1 Samuel and came across this verse: “Then Samuel took a stone and set it up between Mizpah and Shen.  He named it Ebenezer, saying ‘Thus far has the Lord helped us’” 1 Samuel 7:12 (with the note saying Ebenezer means stone of help).  May God use each of us as He continues to be the rock and the help for these children.
Thanks for joining the tour! We thank God for your open and interested hearts.


Monday, April 29, 2013

Have you ever met an Orphan?


Have you ever met an orphan? I haven’t. I’ve met foster kids living tough lives. But even then, by the time I’ve met them, they were already in loving foster families who wanted to adopt them and often had biological family still in the picture too. I can’t empathize with or even imagine accurately the life of an orphan. I think I consider this term, orphan, like it’s a concept and use it in everyday writing all too frequently without thinking of the depth of what it means.

Orphan. Child. Alone. Without champion. Survivor. Someone who lacks Family, the very thing that enriches my life. Families torn into pieces by tragedy are heart-wrenching, but in many circumstances, the children have at least one adult still involved in their lives. I fail to realize just how dire the life of an orphan truly is. And yet God loves these children desperately, and He will find a way to care for them.
As we’ve started our new journey with Global Orphan Project, a few things have made me really ponder the life of an orphan.

One night Derek and I were looking at pictures on from the Eben Ezer Leogane orphan village. This was the 2nd or 3rd time through this set of pictures, but for some reason this view had captions, including the name of each kid. We both paused in silent realization of the magnitude of what we just saw. “These kids have NAMES”, Derek said aloud and we both almost cried. As much as we had become excited about the work God was asking us to do, we had missed the stark realization of the individuality of each kid until that moment.
Blansley, Age 7
Riana, Age 4
Adriano
Last week, we had the pleasure of meeting Adrien Lewis, our contact from Global Orphan Project, who came to dinner on his way back to Kansas City. As we were talking about the daily life in the orphan villages, Derek said “Man I bet those house mamas go to bed exhausted every night!” Their current ratio is 10 kids to 1 mama. Wow that hit home! I go to bed thinking I’m exhausted caring for my 3, well-adjusted kids with every modern convenience possible, not to mention a roof over my head.  Adrien reminded us that while the Global Orphan Project villages and the involvement of the local church in caring for these orphans is a huge improvement from them, the emotional wear and tear on these kids from all they’ve been through will take much to repair. He gestured to my kids and said something about them being “great kids” but reminded us that it’s the basics that we take for granted: knowing they are loved, that they will not be hungry, and that they will always have a place to live that is helping our kids to thrive.

This fall God began to use scripture and teaching from some passionate Christian leaders (Jen Hatmaker, Brandon Hatmaker, and Jeremy Plymale) to show me how “orphan” was more than just a concept. I used to read scripture like James 1: 27 “Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world” and translate it to mean “take care of the poor”. As we strive to embrace this verse and another, Isaiah 1:17 (NLT) “Learn to do good. Seek justice. Help the oppressed. Defend the cause of orphans. Fight for the rights of widows”, we are learning that God is very specific about these 2 groups of people. Orphans and widows are so alone in this world, that I believe He is calling the church to be their champions for lack of any other.
Lord, please help me to pray for these orphans with the tenderness you have for them. Please help me to see them not as a cause, a concept, a group of people, but as individual beautiful children with names and personalities who are in the midst of the worst of circumstances, needing adult champions and most importantly your love. God please shower them with your love and raise up people to love them as you do. Amen.

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

An adventure to Haiti - from home

God is calling us on a new adventure and we’re excited to tell you about it. Well, a few adventures actually…As many of you know, we’ll be leaving St Louis and moving to Fort Walton Beach, Florida in July. Even in the midst of getting ready to move, He’s calling us to a bigger, more impactful adventure as well. He is calling us to ‘adopt’ a community of children in Léogâne, Haiti by becoming their advocates.

We have felt God changing our hearts and opening our eyes towards the truly poor and needy in many ways over the past year. Particularly He has grown our heart for children in need. God has been showing us how blessed we are to have a healthy, loving, intact family and our own passion for the importance of family has been growing as we enjoy the addition of each new child. But what are we supposed to do about it? How can we personally make a dent in what seems to be such a huge world problem? We didn’t and don’t feel God calling us towards adoption or foster parenting, particularly at this time in our lives when we’re moving so frequently.

We heard first-hand about the orphan crisis in Haiti when a couple came to our church in November for ‘Orphan Sunday’ to speak about how they had built an orphanage in Haiti for about 40 children. “That’s so cool, I didn’t know a couple could just ‘build an orphanage’ we thought!” It immediately sparked our imaginations. There was so much about building an orphanage that appealed to us: it was tangible, it was hugely impactful for current and future orphans, it was something we could do as a family and involve our kids in, it was sustainable (more about that later), it did not depend on where we lived, it was a place we could visit periodically to truly connect with the kids…and the list went on. Over the next couple of months God was working on us, because He sure didn’t let us forget it!  After the holiday festivities and illness slowed down, we came to the point where we contacted Global Orphan Project (GO for short) to express our interest in getting involved.  Global Orphan Project is the organization the couple had partnered with to build the orphanage they’d described to us. 

Global Orphan Project supports 22 orphan “villages” in Haiti. Each village consists of multiple children’s homes, a school, and essential facilities.  There are 3 key elements to a successful GO village. The village is partnered with a local church that owns all of the day-to-day orphan care. Praise God, these children are not just cared for but are taught and shown the grace of Jesus Christ daily. Secondly, the children’s home is not fancy but provides a base level of housing.  The result is an improved situation for the orphans, without making it so “nice” that a parent is tempted to give up their children just to get them a “spot at the orphanage”. Lastly, the villages become self-sufficient as GO works with each to develop a business.  These businesses ultimately fund the orphan care after the first 3 years. 100% of all funds raised go directly to orphan care, which is also quite amazing for a ministry. I could tell you more but I hope you’ll read about it at www.goproject.org.

As we began to speak with a leader at GO, we learned that, yes, there was a need and they were happy to have our help…but it wasn’t a need for a new orphanage right now. In many ways, it’s bigger. GO has been learning over the past few years of building orphanages in Haiti, that there is also a way to prevent the family breakdown that results in the orphaning of children.  Today there are many children in families on the brink of collapse.  If a family member cannot afford to feed a child or send him or her to school (most schools in Haiti are private), the family member sometimes gives up and orphans the child. GO has learned that by funding the school in a community they can provide one meal a day and schooling for at risk children, which in many cases is enough to keep them with their families. That’s exciting!  Not to mention the fact that the school also benefits the village orphans who already attend.   Giving these children a Christian education helps prepare them to be leaders for Haiti’s future.  We refer to this as orphan prevention, and that’s where we’ve been led to engage.

God doesn’t want us to be helping only at-risk children in Léogâne, however, He wants us to embrace all the kids in the community and the multiple types of needs they have. For the at-risk kids, the urgent need is food and education to keep them with their families. For the orphans living in the GO children’s homes, the current need is roof repairs for the homes so they can stay dry. 

Léogâne, 18 miles southwest of Port au Prince, was at the epicenter of the 2010 earthquake and has approximately 134,000 people in it.  The church that supports the orphans, Eben Ezer Evangelique Church, is the only one in the area. The school associated with the church is attended by children from the community and the 58 orphans from the GO village named Eben Ezer Léogâne. About 160 children attend the school now, but there is room for more in the school! The amount needed to fund the school is $3000 each month. A gift of about $20 per month can make the difference for a child in Léogâne to receive a meal and education consistently. In addition to the school need, the orphan village’s roof repair need is $3400 to fix previous hurricane damage.

Is it possible to go from knowing almost nothing about a country and people group to thinking about it daily? Is it possible to take on a new large family project just as all the work of moving is ramping up? Is it possible that we can raise the funds that this group of children desperately needs? “Jesus looked at them and said, ‘With man this is impossible, but not with God; all things are possible with God’”(Mark 10:27)

This is just the beginning of the story. There is so much more we’d like to tell you now and as we proceed. We’ll be making plans to go to Léogâne, Haiti, hopefully within the next year, but we have to get settled into a new job and location first. We’ve started a FB page at https://www.facebook.com/GilmansLovingLeoganeKids and this blog that will be populated with frequent updates on the fundraising and the children in the village. For now you can find information about the Eben Ezer Léogâne orphan village at https://goproject.org/village/eben-ezer-leogane/.
If you like email or mail better, let us know and we’ll send you updates that way too. We will be praying for you as you read and receive this. Who knows how many of you God will send on this journey to Haiti with us – to pray, to give, and maybe even to go with us when we go next year. These children’s lives are going to be changed because of God’s work through all of us; we truly believe it!

P.S. We’re still working out all the electronic communication and details but if you are stirred to give now, contact us directly by email or phone so we can help you. 

Here are just a few pictures to start with:

Many of the children living at the Eben Ezer Léogâne Orphan Village


The outside of the primary school at Eben Ezer Léogâne


The spacious inside of the primary school