Thursday, January 14, 2010

Miracles!!!

Our friends are safe!!! All of them, including the 28 children at our orphanage!!!

Our sister-mission team from New Jersey was expecting to have to wait a full week for a flight out of Haiti. But all 15 of them managed to board an Icelandic flight that had arrived in Haiti yesterday with relief supplies. They have now been taken to the Bahamas. They will fly home to JFK in New York to their families tonight!

From what we've been told, it sounds like the whole team was at the orphanage with Pastor Ronald, his whole family, Raguel, Phinton, and all the kids when the earthquake occurred. They could not have been in a better place… and all together! They all got out of the building and into the field.

The orphanage building itself remains completely intact and unharmed, including (I believe) the clean water well and generator. The security walls around the orphanage land, however, have tumbled. Its like God put his hands right on top of the orphanage and protected it while everything around it was demolished. Because of the size of this new orphanage, we anticipate there will be many newly-orphaned children joining our family. For now, the military is thinking about using our acres of land as a “drop point” for military supplies and a headquarters for medical relief efforts.

The head of our ministry received a phone call from Pastor Ronald about 30 minutes ago. She said he was loud and clear. He was calling from over the mountain in the Dominican Republic where he was trying to find food and gas to take back home. His own home is fairly destroyed… some walls are completely gone so they can’t sleep there. Everyone is staying at the orphanage.

This is amazing… many parts of the church have “fallen apart”, as Pastor Ronald put it. The whole front of it is gone, his office collapsed, and many walls are destroyed. He said that on Tuesdays from 6:00am until 6:00pm during December and January, there are weekly revival services that usually crowd the church for the majority of the day. Unexplainably, no one was in the church when the quake hit. Pastor Ronald said, “God just kept them out. There is no other way to explain it.”

In general, food and water are scarce, but the church has a good clean well. Most people are sleeping outside for fear of another quake. If aid doesn't arrive soon, people may get desperate and do things they wouldn't ordinarily do. Looting in many areas has already taken place. In some areas, dead bodies are being picked up by trucks and dumped in remote places.

I'm sure the latrine at the remains of the church and school are being used beyond their capacity. That's when disease can begin to take over. Although we have a medical clinic right on the school property behind the church, the supplies are limited.

Financial contributions will be critical. Maybe we'll send a team from Denver after things have settled a bit.

I’m so happy I can’t even speak right now. Thank you for your prayers. God listened.

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Some Good News!!!

My drive home from work last night was a tough one. After a full 24 hours of no communication, my heart was beginning to feel stings of possible loss. I got it all off my chest as I talked to my best friend on the phone during the 45-minute commute. By the time I got to Marley's school, I needed to compose myself so that I could go inside to get her. When Marley and I got back out to the car, I had a text letting me know that Pastor Ronald was okay! It is amazing how much of a rainbow that little text message was, in the midst of my disheartened slump.

Late last night, I received an email from the head of our mission organization, Dayspring Ministries. She let us know that the Trinity team from New Jersey (who was in Haiti when the earthquake hit) were able to borrow a satelite phone from a CNN reporter. They called home and had a very quick 45-second conversation with a family member in the States. They were able to provide enough information to let us know that they were all safe. Dayspring is making arrangements with a dear friend in the Japenese military who is flying to Haiti delivering supplies next week. The hope is that they will be able to get a flight out, and back to the States, with him. Until then, they are camped out with 2,000 other people in the Port Au Prince airport.

The team was at My Father's House orphanage when the earthquake hit. While they did not have time to specify whether or not the new orphanage structure is still standing, they did say all 28 children are safe!!! Oh my gosh, what a huge blessing and relief. I am certain that as long as the structure remains in tact, Pastor Ronald will want to accept new orphans as soon as possible - making financial contributions to Dayspring Ministries Relief Fund all that more crucial!


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We are still waiting to hear word on our good friends Raguel and Phinton. I am hoping they were with the New Jersey team at the orphanage, but I don't think that was confirmed. Please continue to keep them in your prayers. Since they both speak English as well as Creole, I keep telling myself they are probably in the heart of Port Au Prince translating and trying to help with the relief efforts in every way possible. Until I hear otherwise, I will hold on to that.

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Thank you for all your contributions, prayers, and words of encouragement!

Psalm 46
God is our refuge and strength,
an ever-present help in trouble.
Therefore we will not fear, though the earth give way
and the mountains fall into the heart of the sea,
though its waters roar and foam
and the mountains quake with their surging.
The LORD ALMIGHTY is with us
the God of Jacob is our fortress.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Mind-Boggling

I don't understand. I know God's plans are huge and way too big for me to wrap my mind around. But it is hard for me to know why such terrible things happen to good people. I want, so badly, to hear from our friends in Bon Repos and Port Au Prince. I hate not knowing. The pictures and news coverage is breaking my heart. I just saw a photo of a crying man carrying his dead baby girl in his arms. Her face looked so much like Marley's does when she's sleeping. I'm looking out my window at the sun going down over the beautiful Rocky Mountains right now. All I can think of is how dramatically different the landscape looks to the people in Haiti right now. In a weird way, I find comfort in the fact that its dark there now... at least it is harder to see the destruction.

Earthquake Update

One of our sister-mission teams, based out of New Jersey, is currently in Haiti. We have been worried about them and unable to get in touch. But we just found out they are at the airport and are safe - but they weren't able to pass along any information about Pastor Ronald, Raguel, the kids, or anyone else specifically.

When we were in Haiti, we met some people at a really great Dutch-run Orphanage. It is close to the school and church where we worked. Their school and church buildings (which were amazing… much like any decent buildings here in the US) are destroyed and residential buildings are badly damaged. They are staying outside. No one there had died.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Catastrophic Earthquake in Haiti - 1/12/2010

By now most of you have probably heard about the devastating earthquake in Haiti. Its epicenter was about 20 miles southwest of our friends at the Light & Peace Mission and Orphanage, in Bon Repos, where my husband and I returned from about 9 weeks ago. So far, we have been unable to make contact with anyone and are very anxiously awaiting some communication. Dayspring Ministries has established an emergency relief fund account in which the funds, once received, are deposited and immediately accessible and available to the family who lives there and heads up the mission and 28-child orphanage. Unfortunately, we are not set up to process credit cards, but if you are interested in contributing, here’s the address where checks (made out to Dayspring Ministries Relief Fund) can be sent…

Dayspring Ministries Relief Fund
Carol Hawthorne
200 Lamerson Road
Chester, NJ 07930


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I cannot imagine what the next few weeks and months will be like. I am afraid for everyone. Never in my life have I seen people stronger than Haitian people. But I am afraid for them. For us.
- Livesay Family Blog, from Port-au-Prince