Monday, December 12, 2011

Our Christmas Miracle

“Have faith in God,” Jesus answered. “Truly I tell you, if anyone says to this mountain, ‘Go, throw yourself into the sea,’ and does not doubt in their heart but believes that what they say will happen, it will be done for them. Therefore I tell you, whatever you ask for in prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours. And when you stand praying, if you hold anything against anyone, forgive them, so that your Father in heaven may forgive you your sins.”

-Mark 11:22-26

   My new roomate Carrie and I had a Christmas miracle.  Lifetime's already asking us for the movie rights.  When I got back to Bristol after Thanksgiving (and a month away) I was broke as a joke.  I honestly prayed, "Lord, please help me find some food because I don't know if I can afford anything when I get back."  Now yes, I have made some great friends in Bristol who would feed me.  I had people take me out and have me over once I got back, but there's still two more meals in a day.  I didn't even have coffee, and that can kill me.  Literally.  I figured I'd start waitressing, but it would be a couple days until I was payed from that.
   Well I walked into our new great big house that first night and figured I'd be the only one there for a month.  Sarah and Rachel are home until January, and I barely knew Carrie.  There was no food in the fridge, and she didn't answer my calls/texts.  She started her own video production company.  I thought she must be out of the country filming.  We currently have no TV or internet at the house.  I was anticipating a miserable December.  
   Back up a year.  Carrie Cannaday begins looking for the perfect desk for her new office building.  She searches far and wide.  Many months of searching go by.  One day, someone gives her an ugly brown desk for free.  She decides since it's free and has the keyboard pad, drawers she was looking for, she'll take it.  Her search got her nowhere anyway.  She calls the company that made the desk.  An eight inch piece of wood was missing from a window pane on the front.  Instead of sending her that piece, they sent an entire new front panel of the desk.  The day Carrie decided she might actually like the desk if someone painted it white/black and put some kind of painting in the panes is the same day Carrie found out I was a painter.
   The night I got back Carrie finally walked in the door.  I learned she practically lives at her office.  She didn't know I'd be back either and was so glad I could start painting the desk right away.  Her office building is so cozy and everyone is so friendly.  Every day someone made lunch for us all.  I even got to drink coffees from a fancy Keurig!  Then, because the company had sent her a whole new front panel, I could paint the mural on a table.  Working at the daycare destroyed my back.  It would have been miserable if I had to paint the desk assembled.  Quoting Carrie, "LOOK at the Lord!"
   God gave me a job I desperately needed, and the amount Carrie thanks me for this desk is almost annoying.  He gave me a friend too!  I have LOVED  hanging out with Carrie and all her friends!!!  Much like a Lifetime movie, you may have found this post a little insipid, however I hope it still gives you a warm fuzzy feeling to know God cares for us.  I mean, He even was watching out for my back!  Carrie has a ton of cool stories of God answering little prayers.  I know these always get ridiculously long, but I have to share one.  


   I asked Carrie why she has a photo of a blue butterfly on her desk.  She said she went up to the mountains one day to spend some time with God/hang out.  A blue butterfly landed next to her.  She thought it was pretty and tried to take a photograph of it, but every time she did, the butterfly flew away.  She asked God for help.  For TWO hours she tried this off and on until she was SO frustrated she finally gave up.  She told God, "I'm really upset right now Lord.  I don't understand why You won't make this butterfly be still for THREE seconds.  It was a pure and simple request.  I only wanted a picture of YOUR creation that I was admiring."  While she told the story I got upset myself.  Seriously, what is God's deal with that?!  Her taking a photograph of a butterfly wasn't going to affect anything.  It really was just a sweet little prayer.  She went there to spend time with HIM anyways.  BUT THEN as Carrie stormed off to her car to leave, she saw about TWENTY butterflies of all different colors fluttering across the road!  It was beautiful, and she was easily able to capture photos of them.  God really does have a better design and plan than we could ever come up with.  We need to remember that even when we can't see a reason for things, God can.





“For my thoughts are not your thoughts, 
   neither are your ways my ways,”
declares the LORD. 
“As the heavens are higher than the earth, 
   so are my ways higher than your ways
and my thoughts than your thoughts."   

-Isaiah 55:8-9

P.S.  Carrie and I are 88% sure we're cousins.  My grandfather grew up within a one-mile radius of where her family has been for generations.

     

Thursday, November 17, 2011

A Call to Nursing

   With my last post you'd think, "how can an American team get anything done at that hospital?"  That's what we thought after the first day.  It took some brainstorming.  I can not say enough how impressed I am with our nurses.  They became doctors on this trip.  I watched them struggle to translate simple things like, "have you had a fever?"  (There are no thermometers.)  I've watched them sit down and do math problems (there are no calculators) to figure out the doses of medicines they had never heard of.  I watched them take notes at 11pm to learn new skills and ways to diagnose.  I watched them drive away in a car to transport a premature, malnourished baby to another hospital- a hospital who's only step up is they have an oxygen machine.  One nurse held the body and hand-pumped air into his lungs while another nurse held his head still on the CRAZY BUMPY african roads.  May I also mention that one of these nurses flipped her car only a couple weeks ago, so she has been extremely scared all week while driving?  None of these things mattered when it came to another human-being's life.
   We've learned that the people here have a very fatalistic way of thinking- they believe that all events are predetermined and therefore inevitable.  Their actions do not matter.  They are not responsible for anything.  As bad as the Ugandan nurses seem to me, the patients seem just as bad.  I remember my mom taking me to the doctor, the doctor prescribing something, and my mom telling the doctor, "No. That is not good enough. We are not leaving until you prescribe her [this]."  The patients will hear what their child was supposed to get, yet not ask for it when they don't see it.  The culture is so different.  People die all the time here.  You grow up watching people die.  They don't understand there are actions (many times simple) that can prevent these deaths, that they can fight for life.  
   Let me tell you the story of the baby that was transported to the hospital.  One of our nurses Alicia, discovered a premature baby whose twin had already died.  The mom was only 16.  I'm pretty sure she said the baby was fine (Another thing we learned is no one here wants to disappoint, so they tell you whatever they think you want to hear.) but Alicia opened the blanket to discover an extremely malnourished and jaundiced baby.  She could see his heart, his ribs, etc. He was only breathing 10x a minute opposed to the 60 something times he should have been.  Finally they got it out of the mom that he had not eaten since birth.  Our nurses said they wanted to cry when they discovered this baby was a full week old.  After much difficulty we learned the mom wasn't breastfeeding because of some kind of superstition.  She believed the baby would be cursed if she breastfed him before certain rituals were done.  The ugandan worker who translated for us was the only assertive ugandan woman I've met here.  She had us pray over the mom and baby (in their language) that the baby would not be cursed and would start sucking.  In Jesus' Name.  Amen.  Immediately another one of our nurses, Amanda, went to put the breast pump (a cut-up plastic water bottle with some kind of suction thing taped to it) to the mom's breast in hopes there was still some left for us to use in an eye dropper to drip milk into the baby's mouth, however our translator wouldn't let her!  She said, "we prayed he would suck so he will suck".  As frustrating as this was our nurses kept their cool the whole trip.  After the translator left they squeezed some milk out for the baby.  By this point he had an I.V. and seemed more alert.  He actually started sucking!  Understandably the nurses were still very worried about him.  The next day he got to the point where he was only breathing six times a minute.  This is when they took the car to the hospital in the city.  (The hospital does have an ambulance (a van with a light?) but it is unreliable.)  Alicia and Katie, our other amazing nurse who transported the baby, did say the mom was shaking and showing emotion.  The Chief Medical Officer of our hospital went and pulled the father out of the local drinking hole and gave the family money for food, expenses.  This morning Katie and Alicia went back to the new hospital to check on the baby.  At first they heard he had died.  Then they heard, no, his parents unplugged his oxygen and left at 5am.  Our Chief Medical Officer said he will go to the village and find the family.  He was not happy, and we're sure he will do it.  He is great, but I'm not sure he would have done all of this without the nurses' persistence.  I think now we understand though, that he knew something like this could happen.  Still, I'm glad our nurses have been fighting since they got here, while at the same time "being patient in affliction".  (Romans 12)
   I went to a surgery while here and started blacking out.  Nursing will never be my gift.  At least I have the privilege of mobilizing nurses.  Thank you all nurses for everything you do.  Nursing is a beautiful calling.  We need you here in Uganda.  We're setting up short and long-term trips.  But let me tell you, the bar has been set.  Thank you Alicia, Amanda, and Katie.


...for God's gifts and his call are irrevocable.
-Romans 11:29


The malnourished (really, not nourished at all) baby.

Getting fluids 
About to get air hand-pumped.

Alicia, Katie, baby on route to hospital in Mbale

What to [Not] Expect in a Third World Hospital

Today was our last day at the hospital.  I realize I have failed to communicate what I mean when calling this a "hospital".  People come here to be treated, even Kenyans because we are so far east.  However, there are some major differences from the healthcare facilities you're used to.  Before I tell any more stories I think I should paint this picture for you.  


1.  There is no running water.  If someone chooses to wash hands/equipment (and it is a choice), they pour water over their hands from one bucket to another.  They do not always use soap.
2.  There is no electricity.  There IS a generator used in the one Operating Room to power some sort of sterilizing machine that I believe is from the '70s.  Neither the generator or machine always work.
3.  Trash is thrown in an old cardboard box, totally open, if it is thrown away at all.  I know I saw bloody bandages on top of patient files in the children's ward.
4.  By "ward" I mean bitty room with 12 beds shoved right next to each other. 
5.  Food is not provided.  You must bring your own.  Many family members cook/do laundry right in the yard of the hospital.
6.  Linens are not provided.  You have to duck under clotheslines as you walk from ward to ward. 
7.  Clothes are not required.  Toddler's go around with their behinds flappin' in the breeze.  I definitely saw poop on the back of a child's leg today walking around in the children's ward.  I think he was there with a sibling who was admitted.  If you are a nurse and want to bring your toddler to work with you that is fine too.  
8.  You must bring your own toilet paper for the hole you squat over in the outhouse.  Let me tell you, you can't call yourself a World Traveler until you've gone "number two" in this place.  I am now a World Traveler squared.
9.  You wait in line ALL DAY.  You first see someone who gives you a consultation.  Then you wait in line for treatment.  That person may then tell you to wait in line for the doctor.  Hopefully you don't need surgery and you are then just in line for pharmacy.  There is a government pharmacy you go to first.  If they don't have what you need, you wait in line for the private pharmacy.  The line waiting is even MORE complicated than this believeitornot.
10.  The private pharmacy pretty much tells everyone, "out of stock", and turns people away.
11.  The drugs they DO have sit out with the tops off, barely organized.  Some are even in containers for different drugs, but at least they write over the containers in sharpie right?  
12.  Any writing is a miracle and deserves much praise.  If you are able to find a patient's records/treatment sheet, THAT is extraordinary.  If it actually has notes in it- THAT is a supernatural phenomenon.  
13.  If you get upset with a nurse for not writing anything, not giving medication, you are the biggest jerk in Uganda.
14.  She may even put a curse on you.  Some of the nurses are also witch doctors.
15.  There are zero consequences for any of these actions.      


I'm not always trying to be Negative Nancy, but I know people (Mom, Grandma) who were probably picturing something else when I said I was working in a hospital.  This hospital has actually improved a great deal from what I understand.  Hopefully more will come from my being here and witnessing these things.  (Of course not everything I mentioned needs to change necessarily.  It's a different place with different customs.)  A lot of good came from the amazing nurses/doctor who accompanied us.  I'll share more soon.  Thanks for praying :)
Bugobero Hospital

Lines. Hopefully we can figure out how to get these shorter.
Part of pharmacy...definitely needs organization.

Katie getting the J-O-B DONE!

No shoes, no britches, no problem.




Monday, November 14, 2011

First Days in Uganda

   Saturday we went to the hospital here by Mbale.  It's slow on Saturday, being Market Day, so we mostly just got a tour and met everyone.  Yesterday we went on the. best. hike. you. will. ever. take. in. your. life. oh. my. gosh.  It was in Sipi Falls.  We drove through the mountains, walked through the bush right by families hanging out by their thatched roofs, went under waterfalls, went through jungles, ran from gorillas, slid down cliffs, and saw the most amazing views.  A couple boys joined us on our hike.  A boy named Peter helped Alicia most of the way.  I think if he had a jacket he would have put it over the puddles for her.
   Today was our first real day in the hospital.  SafeWorld has been working in Luwero since 2008, but this is our first time in Mbale.  (Will share the cool reason for that eventually.)  Because of this however it was a big learning experience.  We're taking notes and will have an awesome prep packet for the next trip.  This team has been great.  They're excited to be the guinea pigs and help us design what we hope will be a long partnership with this hospital.  We struggled understanding the flow of the place at first.  There definitely needs to be more organization.  Most of the time at the hospital for me has consisted of getting records and inventory in order.  Dear Pharmacy Friends, the Ugandan nurse Annette quickly took over my job taking inventory of the drugs.  I was writing the pharmaceutical company's name instead of the drug's.  Really could have used y'all there.
   Some Stories:
   Our surgeon Jeremy went in the operating room to help with a hernia surgery.  What he thought would have been a small incision and quick operation was not.  He walked in to the man's intestines hanging out.  I'm not that familiar with hernias, but I think because the man had had it for so long a lot of other stuff got messed up.  They also had to remove his appendix and a testes.  Yeah.   
   One of our nurses, Alicia, helped deliver a baby.  THEN a mom who had delivered twins (boy/girl) asked Alicia what she would name them.  First she said, "Alicia".  The mom didn't seem to like that one, haha.  Then she said she likes the names "Jude" and "Joy".  When she walked by later she heard someone say, "yeah so the twins Jude and Joy..."  She got to name Ugandan babies! So jealous!  It's probably for the best.  I would have had too much fun with that.    "Do you like the name Gamecock?  It's really popular in the U.S."
   You know those adorable photos all your friends who've been to Africa have of them surrounded by dozens of black children hugging them with the biggest grins?  Yeah I won't have those.  Some school let out kids around 4 and they MOBBED us.  Alicia did a good job singing songs/running around with them.  Sarah and Rachel seemed to like it.  Not my thing.  In Haiti I could kind of communicate with the kids.  The language barrier here seems impassable.  The kids just stare at you expecting you to entertain them.  (Also I think they're perfectly entertained staring at us, but come on, that's weird.)  I feel so much pressure to perform!  I did sketch some portraits.  That was up my alley and theirs too it seemed.  
   I'm excited for tomorrow.  We had a team meeting and now know what to expect, where we can help,  what we need to ask.  
   What You Can Pray For:
-Better communication between our team and the staff.  Hopefully we can all learn from eachother.  Remember, there's not only a language barrier, but often times a culture barrier.
-It's my first rodeo.  Matt and Blake leave for meetings tomorrow.  We won't meet up with them until Friday.  Please pray that I don't mess anything up too bad leading the team.  I'm going to be watching everything at the hospital tomorrow.  I need to figure out how we can improve things for patients, the staff, and teams.  Seeing as I don't know common drugs vs. pharmaceutical companies, I'm worried my expertise in the medical sector could hinder this job.







Group shot.  Sarah said she could photoshop sunglasses on me.

The Interns.  Obviously I missed the attire memo.

Peter helping Alicia.

Didn't know they were there.

I stopped and did this approximately every 17 seconds.

Alicia got to deliver a baby!!
Alicia playing Follow The Leader.

Singing

Friday, November 11, 2011

Witch Doctors

So after a day of flying we finally made it to Kampala.  We stayed in a gorgeous hotel with an amazing breakfast.  This morning we started driving to Mbale.  On our way we stopped somewhere to meet up with one of Matt's friends.  He told us to wait for him in this conference that was going on.  We found a bunch of Ugandan men in their dress shirts sitting at fancy tables.  There was no room for us so we went to a side room and ordered lunch.  After awhile Matt's friend came by to say, "hi".  His friend was Bob Goff.  I had never heard of him until working for SafeWorld, but have found out he is awesome.  That's his thing though.  He says you should be awesome, but secretly.  Goff is a lawyer who found a loophole in the Ugandan constitution so that he could get on Uganda's Supreme Court.  He's an American on Uganda's Supreme Court.  It's crazy!!!  He brings over his team and expedites all these cases that have been in limbo for years.  He told us if a dad doesn't like the young man his daughter has been hanging out with then he will accuse the man of assaulting her.  This is a common thing and these young men will just sit in jail for years!  I don't know why he's making things go so much faster, but whatever he's doing is working.  
   Unfortunately child sacrifice has been on the rise in Uganda.  He doesn't know why but people will see witch doctors and ask them for a child's body/blood thinking it will help them grow crops or something.  Before Goff came over no one would try a witch doctor.  They were too scared of them.  Goff said he finally found a scrappy judge to try them.  There was a little boy named Rodrick we saw on the compound today.  He looked about eight.  Evidently a witch doctor cut off his penis.  Rodrick miraculously escaped.  He was found collapsed on the side of the road.  Goff has been given temporary custody of him.  Roderick didn't know it, but Goff is flying him out to the US tonight for surgery.  A plastic surgeon said he could fix Rodrick!
   Goff was able to have the witch doctor tried and sent to jail for life.  This is the first time this has happened.  Oh, and so the conference we were at- those were all witch doctors.  Goff held this nice conference for all the witch doctors in the area to let them know what the laws are.  Once he got them there he made sure they understood that all he needed to know was "when" and "where" and he would put them in jail for life.  Hopefully now the witch doctors know he's the real deal, or if not, other judges start to see that this can be done.
   The most beautiful thing Goff told us today was how he wants to see redemption for people through this.  He visited the witch doctor who mutilated Roderick today in prison.  I mean, how many lawyers do that?  He wanted to see how he was doing (at this 3,000 man prison that was built for 600).  At the end of the conversation they got to talking about Jesus.  Goff said the witch said he wanted what Goff had.  He wanted Jesus to forgive his sins.  Wow.  Let's pray that child sacrifice/mutilation ends in Uganda and that the love of Jesus would change hearts.
   Tonight we are sleeping in Mbale- not Luwero like I said before.  I don't have time to explain all the new stuff going on, exciting as it is, but I will soon.  Because of this "new stuff" we will be in Mbale for the most part, traveling to Luwero some.  Tomorrow we go to a hospital here.  There will be some tough stuff to see.  Blake and Matt visited a hospital back by Luwero the other day. You can read about that on Blake's blog: http://beyondblake.wordpress.com/  and then Matt's blog: http://ethoshift.wordpress.com/ .  Follow along with them too.


Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.
-Romans 12:21


Matt, Bob, Blake

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Leaving for Uganda

   Tomorrow we fly out of Dulles Airport to UGANDA!  I would have never dreamed I would be doing this a year ago.  The cool thing is that it doesn't seem that weird to be going now though.  I've heard about our Ugandan staff Henry and Grace for a year.  I'm dying to finally meet these people who are my coworkers.  For a year I've read up on Ugandan news, looked at Ugandan maps, read bunches of blogs.  It's not THAT foreign of a place to me as it is for the stranger who asks what I do for a living.  It's just another piece of God's creation that happens to be a little farther from the piece I grew up on. 
   I wish the language barrier wasn't there!  We will have translators though.  We meet our team of doctors, nurses, and laypeople in the morning.  In Uganda we will set up medical clinics, distribute mosquito nets, check on hygiene/sanitation, and more.  I will try to blog while we are there, but only God knows if there's enough time/internet for that.  Our director Matt has been doing the tweet thing.  I can't always tell who's talking to who, but if you like Twitter you can follow Matt at @chambers_matt.  
   Finally I just ask you pray God's will would be done.  There's some BIG changes for SafeWorld I haven't shared on here yet.  I can tell you a lot more coming back from this trip.  Can't wait!

 Then Moses said to him, “If your Presence does not go with us, do not send us up from here.  How will anyone know that you are pleased with me and with your people unless you go with us? What else will distinguish me and your people from all the other people on the face of the earth?”
  And the LORD said to Moses, “I will do the very thing you have asked, because I am pleased with you and I know you by name.”
-Exodus 33:15-17

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Praise God for Answered Prayers!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Megan and Gabriel.  Pray as she works to get him back.
-  The Son of God Orphanage was closed down.  Um.... this is a miracle.  I mean, this just doesn't happen in Haiti.  Only a couple days after our friend Megan Boudreaux asked for your help signing the petition to close it down, she had a meeting at the presidential palace.  The next day Haitian authorities removed the children from the orphanage.  The Associated Press covered the story: http://www.seattlepi.com/news/article/Haiti-closes-orphanage-for-child-neglect-2229995.php#photo-1688710  As you can see, these kids are scared.  That could be the only home they've ever known.  PLEASE CONTINUE TO PRAY FOR THEM!  Continue to pray for Megan too.  Here is the link to her most recent post: http://blessedwithaburden.wordpress.com/2011/10/25/as-the-dust-settles…/  She and others are still trying to locate 34 children that should have been at the orphanage!  
Moses
- Baby Moses has a family!!!  All I know is his dad is a surgeon and his mom's name is Lisa.  What awesome people to adopt a special needs baby!  PLEASE CONTINUE TO PRAY THAT HE'D BE WITH THEM SOON!  The process can take awhile, and he needs to start getting therapy.  I'm sure the Livesays will have updates soon on their blog: http://livesayhaiti.blogspot.com 


Rachel caught me working hard unpacking.
-  We moved into our new place and all have our own rooms!  No longer will Sarah wake us up at 6AM to go to the cafe.  No longer will I wake them up at 4AM as I clean up from painting.  All our new friends in Bristol have been so generous housing us while we waited for our place to be finished.  None of us have furniture here either because we don't know how long we'll be in Bristol.  So many people here we've just met have donated furniture.  Without them I'd continue to sleep on the floor.


-  I get to spend Sunday to Thursday at USC!!!!! HOW AWESOME IS MY JOB?!  I am meeting with some big people to talk about USC students getting involved with SafeWorldNexus.  If we could start a partnership between SafeWorld and Carolina, I think all of my desires on this earth would be fulfilled.  

Psalm 34
1 I will extol the LORD at all times;
   his praise will always be on my lips. 

2 I will glory in the LORD;
   let the afflicted hear and rejoice. 

3 Glorify the LORD with me;
   let us exalt his name together.

 4 I sought the LORD, and he answered me;
   he delivered me from all my fears. 

5 Those who look to him are radiant;
   their faces are never covered with shame. 

6 This poor man called, and the LORD heard him;
   he saved him out of all his troubles. 

7 The angel of the LORD encamps around those who fear him,
   and he delivers them.

 8 Taste and see that the LORD is good;
   blessed is the one who takes refuge in him. 

9 Fear the LORD, you his holy people,
   for those who fear him lack nothing. 

10 The lions may grow weak and hungry,
   but those who seek the LORD lack no good thing. 

11 Come, my children, listen to me;
   I will teach you the fear of the LORD. 

12 Whoever of you loves life
   and desires to see many good days, 

13 keep your tongue from evil
   and your lips from telling lies. 

14 Turn from evil and do good;
   seek peace and pursue it.

 15 The eyes of the LORD are on the righteous,
   and his ears are attentive to their cry; 

16 but the face of the LORD is against those who do evil,
   to blot out their name from the earth.

 17 The righteous cry out, and the LORD hears them;
   he delivers them from all their troubles. 

18 The LORD is close to the brokenhearted
   and saves those who are crushed in spirit.

 19 The righteous person may have many troubles,
   but the LORD delivers him from them all; 

20 he protects all his bones,
   not one of them will be broken.

 21 Evil will slay the wicked;
   the foes of the righteous will be condemned. 

22 The LORD will rescue his servants;
   no one who takes refuge in him will be condemned.

-  There are a lot of other personal prayers and prayers for SafeWorld I'm watching God answer.  It. is. insane.  If you have prayer requests, I tell ya now's the month to ask them.  I think in America we are so easily distracted, and brought up thinking if you just work harder, find the right self-help book, things will come together, when what we need to do is STOP.  It's not about us.  We're here for God.  Ask Him.  Enjoy Him.  He's smarter than us.  He'll do something we never thought possible.  It might not be WHEN we want though.  While waiting, this is a great song (Thank you Livesays for introducing me to Sara Groves):










Monday, October 17, 2011

Help Expose This Orphanage!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

The least graphic picture I could have shared.  A child who had severe burns, left on a dirty floor.  She went 13 days without her wounds being treated.
Part of the reason I went down to Haiti was to meet this girl my age named Megan Boudreaux. She started a school for children who are pretty much slaves. We wanted to see if SafeWorld could help in any way.  Megan is also the primary caretaker of two girls, former slaves. If raising these girls in a language she's only been speaking for ten months, while trying to run a school for the first time wasn't hard enough, she is also trying to save the lives of children in a downright evil environment. The Son of God Orphanage in Haiti had 53 children go "missing" from October 2010 to March 2011.  They are trafficking children and even trafficking children's organs!!!  There was a five year old there who only weighed 11lbs due to starvation!!!  Along with her two girls, Megan was caring for a young boy from this orphanage named Gabriel.  Megan worked with the police to bust this orphanage, only to have the police take Gabriel AWAY from her, and the orphanage to REMAIN OPEN!  Haiti is corrupt.  Even though the orphanage has known trafficking (sexual and organ), known abuse, known neglect, it is still open.  Megan is petitioning CNN to expose these atrocities.  The government won't act so we are going to the media.  I am begging you to share this with all of your friends, coworkers, family.  Here is the petition: http://www.change.org/petitions/the-freedom-project-expose-human-trafficking-at-son-of-god-orphanage-in-haiti 

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Catalyst 2011 and then some.

I got to go to the Catalyst Leadership Conference in Atlanta for the first time this year.  It was filled with 13,000 Christian leaders.  Matt would introduce us to someone and then say, "You know who that was right?"  We'd reply, "no".  Then he'd say, "he worked with Eva Longoria on her campaign for Haiti after the earthquake."
Oh OK.  
That's pretty much how the weekend went.  
"Hi what do you do?"  
"I change the world."
I got to meet Katie Davis' youngest two daughters.  If you haven't heard of Katie Davis yet, you will.  Her book Kisses from Katie just came out.  Here is her interview backstage of Catalyst: http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/17711160  
I wish I could have heard all of the crazy awesome speakers like Katie or Francis Chan or Andy Stanley. I got to hear maybe ten minutes of Andy Stanley.  Then I heard Mark Driscoll, Judah Smith, and the TOMS shoes founder.  I think the best parts inside the conference were moments like Catalyst telling Katie they would pay for her daughters' college education, or when the men in Jeff Foxworthy's Bible Study were presented with a car!  I did not know Jeff Foxworthy lead a Bible Study. So cool!  Check out his backstage interview here: http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/17734404 

Here's what SafeWorld did all weekend:

Matt ran a lab panel with Pastor Charles Jenkins, Lisa Harper, and Jim Reese.  He also was interviewed backstage of Catalyst.  You HAVE to check that out to better understand what we do and hear Caroline's story.  I'll get to meet her in November.  Here's Matt's interview: http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/17718850  While he was shmoozing with the best of them, Sarah, Rachel, and I manned SafeWorld's booth in the Justice Tent.  Throughout the conference area there were organization's booths, however SafeWorld was FEATURED with top social justice organizations.  It's pretty amazing that little ol' SafeWorld was in the tent with groups like Compassion International, Blood Water Mission,  International Justice Mission, Adventures in Missions, etc.  Pretty much we talked to people about coming on medical trips to Uganda with us, but every now and then we run into people from other organizations that were interested in helping us do really big things for the people in Luwero, Uganda.  I really look forward to talking more with everyone we met in the next couple of weeks/months.  
Again, SafeWorldNexus is kind of unique in the fact that we have been working with the same people over the last couple of years, with no plans to leave them.  If you go on a trip with us we will be introducing you to friends.  You will pass out mosquito nets with no quota, meaning if you pass out one net to one family and spend the evening with them then WE LOVE IT!  We want you to get to know people and make friends.  Our board member, and Senior Producer of The Dave Ramsey Show, Blake Thompson, just wrote a great piece on the Luwero people and our upcoming trip.  I'm copying this straight from his blog http://beyondblake.wordpress.com/ :  

I'm headed to Luwero Triangle, Uganda at the beginning of November (a few weeks away) for 11 days w/ SafeWorldNexus.  Devastated by war in the mid-1980s that killed more than 100,000 and displaced 750,000, Luwero struggles to regain traction. The use of child soldiers was commonplace, which has led to a deterioration of the family unit, and leaving over 123,000 children listed as “at-risk” for reasons of AIDS, malnutrition, slavery, etc. Upwards of 50,000 of those children are known orphans, some left to care for several younger siblings alone. Fresh water sources are scarce, and many residents have to walk up to six miles roundtrip to have access. SafeWorld is pretty established here providing/maintaining water sources, etc.  One of the most important parts of this trip will be mosquito net distribution. We have been working to find ways to connect personally with each area that we work. Our delivery method is door-to-door. We don’t have a quota for each day, but instead we’re wanting to spend as much time as is needed in each home. Representatives from the village leadership (frequently including the chief) will be traveling with us to make sure their people understand just how important the use of their nets are to help avoid malaria. Distributing in this way helps us build trust and relationships, and build demographics for the area. Each house will be marked by GPS, and basic information on each household will be recorded. This gives us a specific picture of the needs in each area.  We will also be taking a medical team to help with medical needs.
This is where I can use YOUR help to make a MAJOR impact.  I’ve personally already paid for my trip, but could use your help in raising an extra $2500 for medical supplies needed.  If you can help w/ $10 or $100…I can reach this goal in the next week or so, alowing us time to purchase what is needed before leaving in November.  If you decide to participate, please make your checks out to: SafeWorld Nexus (put Uganda Trip in the memo line).  You can hand them to me personally or you can mail them within the next two week deadline to: SafeWorld Nexus 516 Holston Ave. STE 204 Bristol, TN 37620
Thanks for your continued support with our work in Haiti and Uganda.
-Blake
If you would like to donate any bit of money (again, just $10 even) towards medical supplies on our November trip then you can also go to our giving page.  (Seriously if you've read this much there's no excuse.)  In the dropdown menu select "Mission Trips" (don't worry about the second dropdown that will come up), put in your amount, and then in the comments section say "November Medical Supplies".  THANK YOU THANK YOU!


Updates:
If you read my post on baby Moses, he was just moved to an orphanage.  You can read about it HERE.  So far there have been no applications to adopt him.  Pray for his future family.


He has shown you, O mortal, what is good.  And what does the Lord require of you?  To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God. 
 -Micah 6:8