Friday, December 7, 2012

Guatemala team's last day


Today the well was completed and dedicated to God and the community.  It ended up being 205' deep and has the capability of providing a high flow rate.

The team packed up their belongings, checked out of the motel where they were staying and arrived at the site at 7 AM like they have the other mornings.  When they arrived, they found that the concrete pad for the pump had been completed and the dedication plaque mounted.  The team installed the pump internals and assembled the pump housing while the community prepared the site for the dedication ceremony.

The ceremony lasted about 90 minutes.  One of the community pastors sang three hymns and another pastor gave a message based on Exodus 17 where the Israelites were grumbling against Moses and God for not having water when leaving Egypt.  The President of the community thanked the team, Chapelwood and Living Water for the gift of the well.  Jamie, the Living Water lead driller, Victor Resendiz and several other team members shared the joy they have had in working and playing in the community and sharing God's love.

As the team departed, many hugs and well wishes were shared.  The team returned to Antigua this afternoon and will spend Friday exploring the city before returning to Houston on Saturday.
Los Doce

Children with the completed well

Beautiful plate presented to the team by the community.

Los Doce with the well!

Dedication ceremony watching the water and living water flow.

The pastor leading in singing and prayer.

Prayer dedication of the new well.

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Pictures from our mission

Here are some pictures from our mission this week. Time and again we are met with the incredible grace and love of God displayed in our hosts, the community and our team.









Someone left the inscription at the well of "God loves me, I love God and God loves you."





Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Guatemala - well ready for dedication

“God loves me, I love God, God loves you”. These were the first words we saw today when we arrived at the site where the well is being finished. We don’t know who wrote them in the trench near the drilling area but we definitely got the message and the inspiration for the day. (See pics in the above post) The drill team spent most of their time developing the well and cleaning the well site while some men of the village prepared a concrete pad for the pump.  They were somewhat less busy and afforded them time to explore the village and play with the kids jumping rope, throwing the Frisbee and playing soccer.  The women continued their hygiene classes with the children and women concentrating on nutrition, importance of clean hands and proper pump operation and maintenance of the pump area.

The relationship between the team members and people of the village has been growing and some of their reflections follow.

·         We have seen God’s love in the eyes of the children and their whole hearted trust in the Lord that we are instructed by Him to have.  They have very little but yet are joyful and thankful for each day of life.
·         These women and children are so patient and kind. They are full of love and joy even though they live in poverty. We witnessed little girls and boys caring for babies, cooking, washing clothes, sweeping dirt and thankfully getting a chance to play. The babies don’t even cry.
·         To be among the people from Santa Ana is a true example of what total reliability on God is all about, although limited resources may be what I perceive but in reality they’re complete trust in the Lord is having everything.
·         The joy you saw in the children’s eyes, said it all. You felt like a teenager kicking the ball and playing with them. Tomorrow , God will remind me my age but fill my heart with joy that will last me a life time.
·         We seemed to be able to communicate and bond with the ladies even though we did not speak the same language.  When the ladies were ask, “Will the well make your life easier?”, the question was answered enthusiastically “Si”.

Los Doce


Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Guatemala - Second day of work

Today was the second day of drilling which started at 6:00 AM bright and early. The initial hole was completed yesterday at 215 feet. Today we had to enlarge the hole to seven inches. The team developed a lot more expertise in handling the equipment; however, they were not any cleaner than before. It seems the new fad is putting muddy handprints on everyone’s back! Once the larger hole was completed, the plastic casing was installed. By that time, the children of the neighborhood became even more curious and we had an audience and the workers had even more mud on them. The next process was developing the well by putting air pressure on the casing. Again, more mud was being shared  with everyone. Spectators were laughing and the kids were playing. The next step was flushing out the system and after a quick prayer was answered Clean water flowed. Tomorrow we look forward to finalizing the well and the big boys will miss playing in the mud.

The hygiene classes focused on the importance of clean water and relationships blossomed with the women and children of the village and the volunteers. The ladies and children delighted in making “no word” books and bracelets. Different color pages and beads, representing important aspects of God’s love and salvation, were used. Without a doubt, the women and children will be reminded of these things when they look at their book and bracelet.

We discussed dental hygiene, and toothbrushes were given to the children which were a big hit. “Happy Morning” was the label for the toothbrushes and, of course, they wanted to know what it meant. “ Feliz Manana”  put smiles on their faces, and the hope is that toothbrushes will become a part of their mornings.

The ladies indicated that they are aware of what this well will mean to them and how it will change
their lives. They are excited and that means the world to all of us.

Los Doce

Hill Dishman taking one for the team! Hill is also the resident blogger for the week.

Victor Resendiz and Dave Luther working hard. Who has seen a wrench that big?

Living Water en español.

Rebecca Blakely, Donelle Dishman, Victor Resendiz and Jacki Lammert with the children of the community.


Guatemala--First full work day!


Well, the morning started early with a 5:00 am wake up call.  After a quick breakfast, the team assembled and we left out of our compound and headed to a little village called Santa Ana about 30 minutes up the road.  We were met by the local village dignitaries who welcomed us, thanked us, and then offered up very heartfelt prayer before our work commenced.   The drilling lasted all day, and by 6:00 pm this evening we had drilled down to 215 feet.  We encountered three productive aquifers during our drilling today, so a completion of a productive water well is within reach.    

The women on the mission team spent their day teaching hygiene to the local women and children of the village.  They also spent time doing arts and crafts and telling Bible stories to the children and women who seemed so eager to hear God’s word. Before the classes were held the ladies walked all over the village and met many of the women and children in their homes. The people were so kind and hospitable.

Quote of the day came from a few of the children who were visiting with Victor Resendiz and Jacki Lammert.   When the children were asked if they knew Jesus, they warmly replied, “Yes!”.  Then, Jacki asked how they knew Jesus, and they responded by saying, “Loving one another, respecting one another, and always telling the truth”.  Powerful considering these children were between the ages of 10 and 13.  Victor told them that he and Jacki could see God’s love in them through their smiles and joy of having the Mission Team here in their home.  
Until tomorrow,

Los Doce

Bernie and the children of the community.

A hard day at the "office"

The women's hygiene teaching team with the LWI staff.

Victor learning to drill!

Nadine takes a turn at drilling.

Dave Luther inspects the progress.

Bernie and Victor working hard!

Dave Magdanz and Evan enjoying the dirty work.

Dave Magdanz and Jacki Lammert and Bernie talk through the next steps with the Living Water staff.







Sunday, December 2, 2012

Guatemala Mission with Living Water


The Chapelwood Guatemala Mission team safely arrived in Guatemala City, Guatemala on Saturday afternoon.  (The mission is from December 1 -  8 and the goal is to provide clean water for a rural community and teach basic hygiene and health classes.)

We overnighted in the beautiful city of Antigua at the Living Water International compound where we met our hosts for the week Jamie, Vivian, and Byron.  After a hearty breakfast in this lovely, old colonial town (which was the capital of all of Central America back in the 1500’s) and an inspirational church service, we packed up the van and made the 5 hour trek northwest towards the Mexican border.  We arrived just before dark on Sunday evening in the coastal town of Champerico where we checked into our “5-star hotel”, the Posada del Mar, which will be our home for the next four nights. 

Monday morning we wake up at 5:00 and have a quick breakfast before heading to a local village to commence the drilling of a water well which will hopefully provide them with clean water for many years to come.  Half of our group will also be working with local women and children in the village where they’ll be leading hygiene training classes.   Thanks to everyone for your thoughts and prayers.  
We are blessed to be a blessing!
-Team member Hill Dishman

Please be praying for our Guatemala mission team members. Team members are from nearly EVERY community at Chapelwood--The Table, Esperanza, Sunday Morning, Mercy Street and the Upper Room.
Dave and Joan Magdanz, Dave and Kathie Luther, Rebecca Blakely, Early Denison, Bernie Palmer, Hill and Donelle Dishman, Victor Resendiz, Evan Jackson and Nadine Herrera.

Also Chapelwood member Jacki Lammert works for Living Water International and is working with the team for the week.

Here are a few pictures:






Sunday, October 14, 2012

Hear the Cry: Child Trafficking

Trafficking in children is a global problem affecting large numbers of children. Some estimates have as many as 1.2 million children being trafficked every year. There is a demand for trafficked children as cheap labor or for sexual exploitation. Children and their families are often unaware of the dangers of trafficking, believing that better employment and lives lie in other countries. Child trafficking is lucrative and linked with criminal activity and corruption. It is often hidden and hard to address. Trafficking always violates the child’s right to grow up in a family environment. In addition, children who have been trafficked face a range of dangers, including violence and sexual abuse. Trafficked children sometimes are arrested and detained as illegal aliens.

Essmerelda, age 14, Albania: Prostitution

In the seedy Kafe Bar Berlin, Essmerelda Seferi throws back her head and croons in a husky Edith Piaf voice. Hard-drinking men leer across the smoke-filled room. This hell in a dirt-track town in Macedonia is the end of the road and of her young life. At 14, she claims, she was sold to a man who took her virginity, prostituted her and then discarded her. That was two years ago. Now she has rotten teeth and quickly aging skin. A hard and worldly veneer barely disguises her vulnerability, and she longs to return home to her parents in Albania. “In my dreams at night, I see how my mother cries,” Seferi said, her own eyes brimming with tears. “But I know my family, I know our traditions. They would never take me back.”

Seferi is one of hundreds, perhaps thousands of girls being lured from their native Albania and sold across the border in Macedonia as prostitutes, brides for elderly men or menial workers.  Seferi’s fate may be typical. A woman relief teacher and the teacher’s male friend, she said, offered her a weekend in Macedonia. It promised to be a glittering adventure for the pretty, spirited schoolgirl. Until three years ago, Albania had been in Stalinist isolation for almost half a century under its paranoid and brutal dictator, Enver Hoxha, and his successor. Seferi, like most Albanians, had lived an isolated life in conditions of medieval poverty. Her parents had been declared “enemies of the people,” spent time in prison and were exiled to forbidding, mountainous Merdita, the Albanian Siberia.

 
The jaunt went wrong soon after Seferi arrived at the southern village of Celopeka. The teacher, according to Seferi, told her she should stay alone in a bar and wait for her escorts to take a trip to the border and return. Seferi did not mind. She had been given Coca-Cola for the first time in her life. “It was a real thrill,” she said.  She was joined by two young men and a waitress. The next she knew she felt dizzy and began to hallucinate. “I woke up the next day. I was not in this village any more.

When I got up, the sheets were all bloodied. I was 14,” she said. Her new “owner,” whom she knew only by the name of “Ayat,” took her on trips to Turkey and Bulgaria as his mistress, occasionally forcing her to go with other men. She believes her parents were told she had been married.
When I met her, she said the Kafe Bar Berlin had an edge over the countless other bars she had worked in, “because here they don’t abuse me.” At the time she was animated and so desperate to return home that I agreed to see her parents in Albania, tell them what had happened, and ask if they would take her back. I went back the following week by arrangement to take photos and to obtain her parents’ exact address. But she appeared to be drugged or drunk. The bar owner and an assistant sat at the table. Looking at them constantly, she refused to have photos taken. She said it was no longer necessary to go to her parents. She was going herself two days later, she said. No, a brother was coming to get her the next month, she contradicted. She was ranting, changing her story from minute to minute. “I want to go, even if they shut me in a room and don’t allow me to see another person, man or woman, for a year,” she said. It was unclear if she was afraid of her parents or of the owners of the bar. When I suggested she come with me immediately, the men stood up menacingly.  Seferi looked longingly at the car as I left. “Please come back tonight,” she said. “Just for a coffee, just to hear me sing.”




On further surreptitious visits by friends, when a blurred photograph was taken during a performance despite the danger of retaliation by local gangsters, she appeared to have been beaten, a broken young woman already mentally unhinged and heading for a breakdown. If she had stayed at home, she would still have been a schoolgirl.  She sang a popular song, “Black Kurbet.” Kurbet is the word used for Albanians who go overseas to work and send money back to their families. “Oh, Black Kurbet, why are you so black? They’ve left me all alone. So far away from home—home, where I left my childhood.” Albanian girls who end up in Macedonia are trapped. As illegal residents, they cannot seek legal protection. The traditions of rural Albania make it virtually impossible to flee back home: a girl who has lost her virginity is an outcast.

Reflection: Hearing a story like this can bring up so many feelings. Anger, compassion, hopelessness, fear. Even as I type these words I sense a tsunami of conflicting thoughts and emotions building up within me. One of the great injustices of  human trafficking begins with our sight. Not our eye sight. Instead our inner vission. In situations of human trafficking people are stripped of thier dignity. The grand dignity of being a human being and not a human commodity.  These people are not "resources": in some global economy instead they are human beings created by God, beloved in every way. They have value, abilities and destinies.  These men and women are created  "in his (God's) likeness"

We must recover our sight if we are to respond as God would have us. Recovery of our inner sight. It is God who opens the eyes of the blind. Mine. Yours. Ours together.

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Hearing the Cry: Human Trafficking. Hearing the Stories..


“You, Lord, hear the desire of the afflicted; you encourage them, and you listen to their cry, …..”  Psalm 10:17

Statics are important in understanding issues of global significance. We must hear the numbers because they can tell us important facts and help us in our strategies of response. However we must also hear at another level if we are to respond from the heart and from our innermost being. We must hear the stories of the oppressed and the broken from the heart of a parent who agonizes at the pain of THIER child.  We must hear with the ears of Gods Spirit ...theie cries of desperation.

Liu, China: Restaurant worker:

“My name is Liu. I was born in the People’s Republic of China in 1976 on my parents’ small farm in Fujian Province. I did not want to be a farmer but I had not studied hard at school and had few skills. It seemed to me that a future in Fujian Province was bad and I was thinking about going to some big city to work.  One friend went to Shanghai but he returned to our village after only a few months. Many young people had gone there from many parts of China, but for someone not well educated it was impossible to find good work. 

Someone in my village told me he knew a man who could arrange good work in America or Canada.  This was of great interest to me and I spoke with this man to arrange everything to find good work in a Western country. A few weeks later, a man called Wang Yi Xiong came to the village. Wang was a “snakehead.” He said it was very possible, but it was complicated to organize documents and travel and a job. Getting to the west would cost 33l,200 Yuan which is almost $40,000 American dollars. My dream was to go to America and work, but now it seemed impossible because it cost so much money.  Wang said perhaps if my parents could pay part then I could pay the rest when I arrive in the Western country like America or Canada and had a job making a lot of money. I also could pay the money back to my parents and more so that they would have a good life when they were old. For Chinese people, respect for parents is very great, and I decided this seemed like a good idea. Wang said if my parents would agree, I would just need to pay one-third of the price before leave China and the rest little by little when I arrive in the West until the last of the price was paid. My parents thought it was good for my future and for them too. They said all the money they had saved over the years could be used, because I would find good work and repay them. I was very happy and give to the “snakehead” photos for the passport that he said was necessary.



Some weeks later, I went to Shanghai with the money and met again with Wang and the man who claimed he was the “snakehead’s” representative, a man called Su Baoshan. I also met five more people who were also going to West. The representative had our documents and new clothes because we must travel like tourists and our clothes looked too poor. At the airport we were all very excited because no one had traveled on an airplane before now, and we finally were going to the West. We flew to Bangkok where representatives gave us Korean passports, and then we flew next to Nairobi in Africa as tourists.  Su travelled with us and controlled everything. We were not to talk to anyone except certain officials that he knew. When we did not need the passports, he kept them. While we waited in Nairobi before the next airplane took off for Amsterdam, he explained that when we arrived in Amsterdam, we had to say we were political refugees and wanted asylum. He gave us lessons on we must say. I asked why officials would believe these stories, but he laughed and said it was the law. But we were confused because we not want to go to Amsterdam but to America. Su said it would be only for a short time. We would continue to America or Canada later. On the airplane he took our Korean passports and said another representative of “snakehead” would meet us in Amsterdam. Then he tested us on what we were to say to the officials. When we arrived in Amsterdam, we were questioned very closely by the officials who had a Chinese person as an interpreter and then were released and an agent for the Chinese businessmen took us to Brussels. I and two others arrived at an apartment where other Chinese people were living in a very poor part of city. It was very dirty, and we had to sleep on the floor with no heat. There was not even hot water to wash, and the man who was already living in the place said they were often ill because of the cold and little food they received. 

Some days later, a man named Guan took me to a Chinese restaurant to work. I started very early in the morning helping to cook and prepare food and then washing dishes and cleaning until late at night after the restaurant closed. The boss was very harsh and all my pay went to the man from the “snakehead” to pay the last of the price for coming to Europe. There was very little left for me to send home even though I was working 16-18 hours every day. After a few months, I was very sick with a skin condition and a cough but still, I had to work and there was no doctor to help. Guan said there was still a lot of money left on my debt for the trip and finding the job in a restaurant, so I had to work every day. If I did not work, I could never complete the trip to America and also my parents in Fujian Province would remain poor until they died. The discipline was very hard as well. One person who came with me from China, was beaten for not working hard enough. After the second time he was beaten, he tried to escape to find work with other Chinese people in Brussels, but was caught by a man from “snakehead.”  He was beaten in front of us and locked in a box to show how serious this was. I was very frightened and said I wanted to return to Fujian Province. They said I also would be beaten and locked in a box until I agreed to work. I worked more than three years to pay “snakehead” but it was never enough money to pay everything. If they did not beat me, they threatened to throw me out and fire me and then I would have no money and no hope for completing my travels. In the meantime, my father died and I tried to send as much money as possible to my mother because she had no savings as everything was given to “snakehead” so I could come to the West. I did not know how I would help my mother and continue my travel if the Belgium officials sent me back to China. What or who would be waiting for me in America?  Probably more work underground. I felt very tired from living.”

Reflection: People in slavery are very often drained of hope, self-worth and a sense of belonging.  Jesus faced many people in his world who were enslaved by cultural taboos, demonic oppression, etc.  He always responded with grace. Radical grace!  He responded by restoring hope, self-worth and a sense of community. As we hear the cry of those in our world who are oppressed and broken may we also hear our God calling us to action.  It’s not so important how BIG the action is as it is how faithful the response.  Am I taking the steps of faithfulness that God is showing me? I will not wait for everyone else to get on board before I decide that I can do something. I will seek out those who God is raising up to address issues of Justice ( Gods process of bringing his rightness to the world) and Shalom (Gods fullness, healing, completion in the world) I will open mys.elf to the possibility that God may wish to utilize me in a way that bring Justice and Shalom

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Hear the Cry: Slavery footprint

This week you are invited to see how the products we purchase may be connected to human slavery. Also read this story of human trafficking.... 

Ricardo, USA: Agricultural worker
For Ricardo, it all started about four years ago, when he was offered the chance for well-paid work in the United States. An agent offered to organize his travel and employment and took a payment to cover costs. He escorted Ricardo and a group of others to the Sonoran Desert, and then deserted them, leaving them with nothing except food and water supplies for three days. The group spent eight days lost in the desert. When another agent appeared, they had no choice but to accept his offer of help, but they would have to pay. They made it out of the desert alive, but this was not the end of their ordeal. When the agent discovered they didn’t have the money to pay him, he handed them over to a man who was taking workers to Florida. The journey took over a week, with 16 of them packed n the back of a van. They had nothing to eat, and had to urinate into a bottle.  Once in Florida, they were sold to a labor contractor for $1,100. The contractor explained that they would have to work to pay back the money they now owed him.



Every day he took them to work on tomato farms. The work was back-breaking, a normal day lasted from 5:00am until 7:00pm. “I was practically dying,” says Ricardo, “we didn't eat very well, the water was polluted that we were drinking.” On pay day, Ricardo was given a check for $80, but immediately the contractor charged him $40 towards his debt, $30 for rent, electricity, water and food, and he was left with only $10.This system of payment continued, with the workers' debts increasing, it seemed the contractor would never let them leave.

One of his co-workers tried to escape, but was caught. The contractor beat him and threatened to kill him if he attempted another escape. “This is when I realized that it was really slavery,” Ricardo remembers. “The next day I was sick from … bad food and I was weak and I couldn't work. But that wasn't enough. They made me work, I had no choice. I went because I was afraid.”




Ricardo and five of his co-workers managed to escape during a supervised trip to buy food. They made their way to a town, where they met a Mexican woman who offered to help them. Her father arranged for them to work on an orange farm, and for the first time since arriving in the US, they received wages.  But after two weeks, the contractor learned of their whereabouts, and visited them, claiming each of them owed him $5,000. Ricardo called the police, but they did nothing and the man walked free. It was only with the support of a local organization, the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, that they were able to stop the contractor enslaving other workers. The organization contacted immigration agents, who set up an undercover operation. This confirmed that workers were being enslaved on tomato farms. But once the workers were set free, most of them were not recognized as victims of trafficking, but instead treated as illegal migrants and forced to leave the country immediately.

It was through the support of the Coalition that Ricardo managed to stay, but even today he lives in fear of reprisals from the traffickers he exposed. Ricardo still receives anonymous threats by phone, and on one occasion, was threatened by a man with a gun. But the police are doing nothing to protect him, despite his willingness to help them in their investigations. They have not even taken the most basic precaution of providing Ricardo with a mobile phone or panic alarm.

Thought for reflection: Let the awareness of this story begin to seep into your consciousness. It’s happening in the world that you and I inhabit. It’s happening in the Good world that God has made. It’s happening in almost every country. It’s happening here in our own city of Houston, Texas. Tikkun olam ( תיקון עולם‎) is a Hebrew phrase that means "repairing the world" (or "healing and restoring the world") which suggests humanity's shared responsibility (with the Creator) "to heal, repair and transform the world." Maybe the old adage is true… “we are the ones we have been waiting for”. Gods calls us….

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Hear the Cry: Human Trafficking

“I swore never to be silent whenever and wherever human beings endure suffering and humiliation. We must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.”

Elie Wiesel

For the next 6 weeks or so Chapelwood will as a congregation will attempt to "hear the cry"of the needy.  As the psalmist says “You, Lord, hear the desire of the afflicted you encourage them, and you listen to their cry defending the fatherless and the oppressed”. We will hear the cry of the hurting and the imprisioned. The cry of those without hope. We may hear our own inner cry of desperation.  We will hear the cry of our God who calls us to awareness, prayer and action. It begins with awarness though....




Human Trafficking is a complicated industry.  Most victims’ stories are tales of poverty, need, want or dissatisfaction with the way life is – and a desire to discover what might be.  Both economic and spiritual poverty drive people into situations of vulnerability.  When a person is in survival mode, he or she is not concerned with moral or social status.  Driven by the need to survive, the poor are the perfect prey for traffickers promising good jobs in nearby cities.

Those of us who want to help must be aware.  Human trafficking has become a multi-billion dollar industry largely because the average person has ignored it.  The public isn’t aware of the extent of human trafficking and therefore does little to stop it.  By bringing stories of human trafficking to light, however, more and more citizens are playing an active part in the eradication of this modern-day slavery.

We must also address the root causes of trafficking: economic inequality, inadequate health care, economic and social hardships imposed by governments, political unrest, improper food distribution, unemployment, the absence of citizenship or travel documents, and a host of other factors – not to mention people’s seemingly insatiable demand for illicit sex.  Where there is demand, you are sure to find supply.

Human trafficking is a tangled mess, to be sure, and the size of the problem can make us feel helpless.  Yet people caught in the sticky, malicious web of human trafficking are being freed, one by one, through hard work and fervent prayer.

To see one (of many) organizations working globally around the human trafficking issue check out this group




For an organization here in Houston engaging effectively around the human trafficking issue check out Houston Rescue and Restore for additional events and opportunities go to www.chapelwood.org keyword human trafficking.

There is more that we must hear and understand about this complex issue. More awarness. Many more stories to be heard. Its an overwhelming issue. But I believe Gods word to us is HOPE. We will live into this hope.

Stay tuned for more blog posts in the near future.

Friday, July 27, 2012

The mission in video!

A special thanks to missionary Carleton Cole for the production of this video summary of Chapelwood's mission to Mizak, Haiti.

Chapelwood Haiti Pilgrimage 2012 from Carleton Cole on Vimeo.

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Our mission together--Haiti 2012

The Chapelwood Haiti mission team returned late Saturday, July 14th after eight powerful days in partnership with HAPI (Haitian Artisans for Peace International). The primary focus of the mission was joining with HAPI's clinic to host a dental clinic and working with the women artisans to sharpen their skills in sewing and encourage the connection between art and spirituality.
Team arriving in Port Au Prince


Dental clinic:
In 4 days, we saw 132 patients and extracted 329 teeth. Our average patient was 34 years old and wanted 2 teeth extracted. The three dentists were supported by eight members of the team each day--as dental assistants, in-take volunteers and sterilization specialists :)


Dr Ron Rhea and his wife Kay assisting.


Dr Sarah Hummel, Nelio (local health care worker)
and Patty Cordrey with one of the patients



























Dental tools ready to go!
Over night the construction site for the new Merlet Center was transformed into a dental clinic. Only God could have imagined the transformation that took place!



Merlet Center under construction.

Dr Michael Maher, Diane Gonzales, Carleen Woods
and Emily Carter get the clinic set up.


The back drops created by Chapelwood's VBS children and utilized during the HAPI children's program on Saturday became the colorful (stress-reducing) back drops at the dental clinic!


Artisans:
Monday members of the team led a discussion about art and spirituality. The women's co-op opened up about their connection to God as they embroider, sew and paint. The discussion focused on God's words to us and our words to God. As a result of the discussion, the women had a chance to create art not to be sold in the co-op but as an outlet of their God-given creativity. It was  beautiful week together with our team and the women.



Vicki Roussel working with one of the artisans on the 100 yr old treadle machine.















More stories to follow but here are some snap-shots of the week in mission with God.


The team standing on the land for the new high school!





Sarah's guitar was a HUGE hit!
Carleen Woods and Nina Hanks help load Noah's ark
during the Peace Pals children's program.
Play time!!