Monday, December 12, 2011

RECYCLE H.O.P.E. gives back to their community

Saturday morning, the ladies were giddy with excitement as Ermis & Jane arrived with boxes and boxes of food in the back of the truck to be distributed. A portion of their earnings had been set aside to purchase enough food to make 49 bags of food which would be given mainly to the seniors but also to a few of the most needy families in villa Esperanza. The ladies made Christmas cards for each individual and placed them inside the bags along with the food. After a blessing was given, they loaded the truck and eagerly set off to distribute the food. I think the excitement of riding in the back of the truck was as much fun as the blessings they distributed. Life is difficult enough for the average family…but for a senior who is unable to work….a week’s supply of food was received with grateful thanks. Fifa was surprised with a kiss for their generosity to this man. It was awesome to see the lady pictured below putting her Christmas card on the outside of her home to share with all who passed by. Thank you to Luckny and Mateo for going door to door the week previously to compile a list of all the seniors and for overseeing the distribution. We could not have done this in such an orderly fashion without your help.
As we reflect back on 2011, we would like to thank our heavenly father for his many blessings in providing a steady income and employment for 9 people through the RECYCLE H.O.P.E. jewelry program. Many thanks also to the mission teams and individuals who became ambassadors for the poor by purchasing the jewelry. You are making a difference in these families who can in turn bless others. Last month we received some Tim Horton boxes and were able to make more than 90 sets of jewelry which are going back to the manager of the Gleaners in Cambridge, Ontario. If you have a favorite brand please send Jane a note along with the cardboard ….we do custom orders also.
Visit our website at http://www.recycle-hope.org/ to learn more about RECYCLE H.O.P.E. and how you too can “Help Other People Eat”.Currently, we are in the process of updating the profiles of the individual jewelry team members and hope to have this information posted soon. 2012 is just around the corner and we are excited to show you some new jewelry items. Big hoop earrings and more to come.
Blessed are the merciful, for they will be shown mercy…Matthew 5: 7

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

York Maranatha CRC

Our final team of the year was from a church very near our home in Canada. In fact…some of the team members attended school with our boys, and one young lady was a student on my school bus route.
Their excitement, wonder and enthusiasm were contagious as they not only worked on the construction site building a home, but also as they embarked on the ministry outreaches. We would like to thank them for blessing the people through their actions and deeds. One day they saw the poverty and tin shacks in Poncho Mateo then headed off to Ascension village to help feed the kids a delicious bowl of Gleaners soup. Afterwards, some of the kids literally scrape the pot clean. That afternoon they distributed hygiene packs, prayed and ministered to the patients in the public hospital with the help of Dennis and Isachar. Three people accepted Jesus as their Saviour. What an emotional day this was!
The team kept a blog so it was awesome to read how each day had impacted them. http://www.maranathamissionteam2011.wordpress.com/
They finished their house and after the dedication moved Josle and family’s belongings into their new home. Wow...the tears keep coming. Tearing down the 2 room tin shack took maybe 15 minutes in total but the significance of what they accomplished will last a lifetime. This may have been their first mission trip but we doubt it will be their last.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Nutrition + Learning = Success

The students in Juan Calvino School in villa Esperanza have just received an additional blessing in conjunction with their education. It has always been a dream to have a cafeteria built and nutritional program added to the school program. When the team arrived, the kitchen addition was taking shape but was a long way from being finished. Each day they directed their energy into pouring the concrete floors, building the cabinets, varnishing the benches, and painting a large portion of the school while loving the children. To the delight of all, their dream was realized as the team assisted in serving the first meal of Gleaner’s soup to the students with the satisfaction of a job well done. Handwashing is important aspect of health and nutrition. Two cooks have been hired to manage the kitchen & cafeteria. The students stand while praying for a blessing on their meal. A cup of cold water in the name of love.The students & staff of Juan Calvino School were grateful for the blessings they have been given during the dedication ceremony and enjoyed a delicious meal afterwards. Nuitrition + learning = success. Shelley Stone, manager of the Ontario Christian Gleaners was in the Dominican Republic and visited the cafeteria on their opening day to witness another ministry being blessed by the distribution of their dried soup mix. A young boy head to class with a full stomach and is eager to learn. Thank you all for making this dream come true. May God bless you all.

Monday, October 24, 2011

Paraiso Landscape Changes





Paraiso has truly become a beautiful place to live…. even more so now. Under the tutorage of Larry Neese and using local labourers and volunteers, what was once just a meeting place where people would sit on the roots of the big tree has now become a beautiful park with benches to sit on. The ground in front of the cistern has become a beautiful garden and much more has changed. Please check out our facebook page to see the before and after photos.
Front & side view of the clinic.


Paraiso is truly living up to its name of Paradise with many thanks to a generous benefactor from Italy who funded this project.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

HAPPY THANKSGIVING

Give thanks to the Lord for He is good, His love endures forever. Psalm 107.1
We would like to wish everyone a very happy and blessed Thanksgiving weekend to all our Canadian friends and family. May the Lord bless your families as greatly as we also have been truly blest. I hear that the leaves are turning their colours and the sun is shining in southern Ontario with a balmy 25 degrees. How perfect is that? God is good. We are thankful for health and safety, friendships of co-workers in Christ, a vibrant English speaking church, mission teams, and the opportunities to make a difference in the lives of the poor in the Dominican Republic. But most of all, we are thankful for the saving grace of our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ who died on the cross to save us from our sins.Bibles and concordances were distributed to local pastors by Pastor Dale Bitting to enrich their study and preaching of the Word of God.









Eight bags of donated baseball equipment and uniforms were distributed to some local teams including this team from Paraiso called the “Sons of God”.

Cans of Nourish donated by Campbells Soup, and dried soup mix by the Gleaners have been making their way into the tummies of children and seniors alike at a number of different feeding programs that operate both in the Dominican Republic and in Haiti. Friday afternoon, the Spruce land team participated in a village feeding & shoe distribution in villa Emmanuel. In his thanks, the pastor told the teams that earlier, he had prayed for help since many of the members were out of work and hungry…and the Lord has provided.Give thanks with a grateful heart, give thanks to the holy one,
Give thanks because He has given, Jesus Christ his Son,
And now let the weak say I am strong, let the poor say I am rich,
Because of what the Lord has done for us. Give thanks.


Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and comes down from the Father of lights with whom there is no variation or shadow. James 1:17.
Did you know that TheSamaritanFoundation is on facebook too? Check it out!

Friday, September 30, 2011

A TRIP TO THE MAILBOX



MAIL ...How I love to receive mail. To open the mailbox that is attached to your home or take a stroll down the street to the super box in your neighbourhood and see what has been delivered. Handwritten notes of encouragement or a birthday card are slowly becoming dinosaurs in our electronic age but the bills always seem to find their way into my box. Since neither of those options are available here, yesterday, Ermis and Jane took a road trip to Santo Domingo to meet the plane from Agape Flights (a missionary mail service). A few times each year we are required to make the 4.5 hour journey to the capital city to pick up the mail for all the Santiago members as part of our co-op duties. Let me say this…it was truly a Dominican adventure. Bright- eyed and bushy tailed we arrange to leave at 7:30 am, and after checking all the fluids in the truck & stopping at a nearby gas station to fill up we realized that we had forgotten to take the map along. A quick return trip home and we were off again. Across the mountain range on the “tourist” highway we swerved from one pothole to the next never exceeding more than 25 km per hour. A blind man and a crazy, drunk man (at 9 a.m.?)tried to flag us down but we were not to be deterred… we pressed onward even though the 40 km seems to take forever.
We arrived at the mail center in Santiago 1.5 hours later to pick up the outgoing mail and carried on our day. In true Dutch fashion…nothing is ever accomplished as just one errand. A trip to the big city usually includes SHOPPING… even if it is just to a large hardware store to check out prices on doors, lights and other exciting things such as generators. We couldn’t find the plastic cafeteria tables we sought either so our next choice to go was “Price Smart” {Costco). Although my membership card had expired because the last time I was in the big city was more than 1 year ago...looking was free.
Times flies when you are having fun and before we knew it, it was time to carry on to the next leg of our journey. Beautiful sunshine and clear skies made the trip go so much faster, even if the directions we received were a little wonky. In the end we arrived at the Santo Domingo airport right on Dominican time.
As we waited for the plane to arrive and clear customs, we spent some memorable moments getting to know the other missionaries from the Santo Domingo area. God blessed each one of us as we enjoyed a few laughs while listening to stories of other ministry work and prayed for safety for us all. Unfortunately, robberies and the horrors of driving were all too common happenings as we were soon to discover.
The rain began to fall as we loaded 567 lbs of parcels and letters on the back of the truck and securely tucked them under a tarp. We successfully purchased the 12 cafeteria tables at Price Smart in Santo Domingo which when secured on top of the parcels kept the mail dry. Our next hurdle was dealing with rush hour traffic (in a city of 2.5 million people) and a massive traffic jam caused by a taxi cab that was fully engulfed in flames. Thankfully, all the passengers had escaped the car without injury along with many bystanders and stood watching the fire consume the car. Oh, no…we accidentally missed the turnoff to the highway and had to find a place to turn around. There we sat, trying to crawl forward a few inches at a time with 4 lanes of traffic attempting to squeeze into 2, each vehicle edging into the slimmest of openings while darkness is fast approaching. Anyone who has ever been caught in this situation knows how stressful this can be. The bombero forced its way through the opposing traffic (with 3 smart taxi drivers directly on his tail), extinguished the car fire and promptly left. Finally, we were moving again. Happy trails or so we thought. We encountered several near misses as drivers would approach to pass between our truck and the vehicle in the next lane, only to actually get side swiped by a taxi as we entered the city of Santiago. Fact: 99% of the local drivers do NOT have any form of driver training/defensive driving skills or even have a driver’s license. The consequences of their actions do not seem to faze them at all and as we have been told many times before…no matter what causes the accident…it is always our fault…because we are white and have money to pay the damages. Defensive driving takes on an entirely new meaning in this light. Watching out for motorcycles with no lights at all and being blinded by the favoured high beams of the oncoming traffic our anxiety mounted. After returning to the mail center in Santiago & unloading the cargo, glad that the rain had stopped, we finally were on our way home carrying the remaining mail for the North Coast members. At 11:30 pm we arrived home exhausted but safe. Thank you Lord for watching over our travels. I was glad to see there was one piece of mail for me…a Better Homes and Garden magazine which I will enjoy reading as I reflect back on our trip of the day, its perils and the joys of meeting fellow missionaries serving our Lord and Saviour. Thank you Ermis for being my most capable chauffeur and man of God… who was asked today by a fellow missionary if I was his mom. I would be honoured to call you “son”.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

SOUP DISTRIBUTION IN HAITI




Kim & Gerry who have a heart for missions in Haiti took their first team of 10 youths from the Korean church in Canada on a mission trip recently. During their 10 day trip, they encountered many obstacles along the way….one of them being Hurricane Irene on their drive to the border. God was with them throughout their trials and difficulties of even getting to Port-au-Prince but the team was eager to serve and did whatever was necessary to make a difference in the lives of many Haitan children. They were involved in door to door ministry in the tent city and working through the church to feed many hungry children. We received this note of encouragement and thanks from them.

"We would like to just take the time to thank you for providing the bags of dried soup mix from the Ontario Christian Gleaners and cases of “Nutrition” from the Campbell Soup Company.
The more we thought about it, the food distribution was the focus of this mission trip. I know the food is gone and so are we, but we realize that we not only fed the hungry but supported a church with an appetite for God in the heart of this tent city. This church is a symbol of hope and a future for Haiti. The team would also like to thank-you for giving them the ability to feed 250 children on a daily basis. The parents of these youth cannot believe the transformation in them
Without your support we would not have been able to make this possible. Cans of Nourish were distributed to seniors and individuals who were severly malnourished.
Tears of joy upon receiving bags of dry soup mix from the Gleaners.
The time you spent with us giving words of wisdom and encouragement have completely changed the way we hope to do missions in the future with a focus on helping and not hurting."

If you have heard any more info on the well drilling project I’m sure we could raise the necessary funds. The best way to deal with the cholera situation in Haiti is clean water and we hope to use it in the remote regions where there is no medical aid.

Your friends and neighbours
Kim and Gerry
God Bless
Looking forward to seeing you