Sunday, January 27, 2013

Mama Carmen (Photo Essay)

I've been thinking a lot lately about Mama Carmen.

We met in 2006 in a HiperPaiz store in Guatemala City. Many years before, her son had gotten in trouble and disappeared, and she promised God that she would spend her life caring for unloved children if He would bring back her son. It is a long and amazing story, but the son was miraculously returned, and Mama Carmen began keeping her promise. When that son was dying a few years later, he made Mama Carmen promise that she would never stop caring for children. She has spent her life keeping her promise to God and to her dying son.

Mama Carmen was facing some big problems in 2006. One night, she argued with God, telling Him that this was His ministry, that she was only His instrument, and that she never knew there would be so many kids and so much need. She went to sleep and had a dream. She saw a face, understood the name "Joe," and understood that "help would come through this man." She saw me the next day in HiperPaiz, and recognized the face. She sent two girls over to ask me if my name was "Joe," and that was the start of a great friendship for which I am profoundly grateful.

There is a much longer version of the story, but that is enough for now. Mama Carmen has faced a lot of struggles lately, and she could use your prayers.

2006

Judith and Dorcas in HiperPaiz - The day I met Mama Carmen





























2007






2008
































2009







































2010
























2011


































2012
































Saturday, January 5, 2013

Sixteen Days in Guatemala

For a little more than two weeks, I have had the privilege of being in Guatemala, helping with a variety of projects sponsored by JBU initiatives and friends. This is a brief photo essay of two weeks in Guatemala.

Friday 12/21 - Food distribution at the Guatemala City garbage dump. JBU Guatemala mission team provided a special Christmas meal of tamales and ponche. 
Saturday 12/22 - Event for children of the "La Terminal" trash heap, sponsored by Gateway Seminar class.  Hundreds showed up for games, food, and Christmas gifts.
Saturday 12/22 - Gifts and Christmas gifts for OANSA children at the Guatemala City garbage dump, sponsored by JBU Guatemala mission team.
Saturday 12/22 - Delivering tamales and ponche on the streets at midnight with Mama Carmen.
Monday 12/24 - "Bathing and hygiene day" for street dwellers at the Guatemala City garbage dump.  Thanks, Kelly Hadley, for giving some great haircuts.
Monday 12/24 - Visits to homes in the settlements at the edge of the Guatemala City garbage dump...and prayer time with families.
Monday 12/24 - Worship with garbage dump street dwellers. Tamales and ponche sponsored by JBU Guatemala mission team.
Tuesday 12/25 - Hadley family visit to family of weavers in San Antonio Aguas Calientes.
Tuesday 12/25 - Hadley family visit to the Apen family in San Antonio Aguas Calientes.
Wednesday 12/26 - Meal with Mama Carmen and family, sponsored by JBU Guatemala mission team, with help from the Hadley family.
Thursday 12/27 - Burger King day with families from the "La Terminal" trash heap. Thanks to the Hadley family for providing lunch for the group!
Friday 12/28 - Visited home of "Mi Especial Tesoro," a ministry to young ladies in Chimaltenango who have come out of very difficult situations.  Thanks to the Hadley family for lunch!
Friday 12/28 - Visit to Chimaltenango garbage dump to assess needs and potential ministry opportunities.
Friday 12/28 - Food distribution at the Guatemala City garbage dump.

Wednesday and Thursday 1/2 and 1/3 - Two days in San Juan Cotzal with the JBU SIFE/Enactus "Guatemala Water Project."
Thursday 1/3 - Visit to Chajul to see progress on JBU's first Water Project in the Ixil Triangle.

Friday 1/4 - Enrolled all five children in the Apen family in school. Luky will graduate this year. The twins (José and Josefina) will start preschool.
Friday 1/4 - Visited family of weavers in San Antonio Aguas Calientes. Purchased Emily's fabric (see above) that will allow her to buy her school shoes and school supplies.

Spent quality time with Enrique and Cecy Quiñonez.


Friday, January 4, 2013

A Tale of Two Twins

It was six years ago.

We were in the village of San Antonio Aguas Calientes, just outside of Antigua, Guatemala. We had tried to start a stove project through a local group, but there was a lot of social pressure coming from friends, so a group from JBU SIFE went down to assess homes and decide who should have higher priority to get stoves.  We were almost done for the day, but there was one more name on the list. Gloria. She didn't live very close. In fact, we had to walk halfway up a mountain to meet her, and when we arrived, we met the most pregnant woman I have ever seen. We forgot about stoves completely. The whole group immediately came to the same thought...we need to get this woman to a doctor.

The first time we met Gloria - January 2007

As we chatted with Gloria, she told us that she was going to have her baby at home with a midwife, as is the custom of indigenous women of Guatemala. She told us much more about her situation...a story too long and complicated to share here. As we listened, we became more convinced that we needed to get her to a doctor. We offered, and she agreed. An ultrasound indicated that she was having twins and that they were positions incorrectly. Without a Cesarean section, she and the babies would not survive. But the doctor said she needed two more weeks, and we were leaving the next day. We made the best arrangements for her that we could...for the doctor, hospital, transport, and everything else. We returned to the States the next day knowing that God would work a miracle of logistics or that all three would die on the mountain. JBU students went to work and raised the money to cover the costs. God worked the miracle of logistics, and in February of 2007, we welcomed José and Josefina into the world.

José and Josefina - March 2007

It is amazing how God works. There was so much dysfunction in this family, but it was a beautiful family. Luky was a 13-year-old girl who finished 6th grade but could not afford to go any farther, even though she wanted to very badly. Luky is Gloria's daughter but had a different father. Then there was Cecy and Arturo. They and the twins were all children of Carlos, Gloria's husband. It was a very poor family with many problems. We believed that God had put these twins in our path, so we always stopped by to see them, but we never realized how we would learn to know the family and get involved with them and develop a friendship that would impact me in ways I never expected.

The family - December 2007 

We started talking to Luky. She was kind of standoffish and bitter, but she began to open up about how she would love to continue school. So we helped her. This year, Lord willing, she will graduate from high school and have a full 12 years of education. Then we started Cecy in preschool...and then Arturito. They have had their struggles, but Cecy will move on to 3rd grade this year, and Arturito will enjoy a second year of 1st grade. 

Today, I had the privilege of enrolling José and Josefina into preschool.  They will turn 6 years old in February. The time has flown! It seems like only yesterday that this bunch of gringos was glaring at this very pregnant woman in the doorway of her house, wondering if something had gone badly wrong. Now, all five children are going to be in school, and the oldest is going to finish her degree as a bilingual secretary.

José and Josefine - January 2013

For the past six years, we have gone through the tedious process of enrolling, getting school supplies, and buying school clothes. That may not sound like much, but in rural areas of Guatemala, it is not easy. Luky has become a beautiful young lady who looks you in the eye and smiles and jokes a lot. God has taken a lot of bitterness out of her heart. She has the potential to do many thing. The "system" in Guatemala is kind of stacked against her (she is a poor girl from an indigenous community), but God has already overcome so many things in her life. I am excited to see what comes next.

Luky - January 2013

God is good. I have learned this week that "faith is action." When we saw that pregnant lady standing in the door, we had to act. As we grew to know this family, we had to act. Gloria and Carlos have acted in faith to support their children's education, something they really don't understand because they never had that opportunity. Faith is action, and action leads to beautiful things. Faithful action helps us see God's plan unfold, even though we can't see it ahead of time.

Gloria, José, Josefina, Arturito, and Cecy - January 2013

Keep this family in your prayers. It is very hard to break out of they system they live in, but God has already worked miracles here. I don't think He's finished yet.

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Children of the Chimaltenango Garbage Dump

I have been sharing pictures and stories of the people of the Guatemala City garbage dump. Life at the dump is a struggle for survival. Even though the Municipality has restricted children from entering and working in the dump, enforcement is difficult because there are so many ways to get into the dump. Also, the people who work in the dump literally drag the dump into their homes. The distinction between garbage dump and living space is hard to see at times, and once trash is outside of the official boundaries of the dump, there is nothing to restrict children from being part of the industry of sorting and selling to recyclers.

This past week, I had the opportunity to visit the garbage dump outside of Chimaltenango, Guatemala. It is a smaller dump and a smaller community of people, but what was immediately apparent to me was the number of children working there. No attempt has been made to restrict child labor in this place.

Praise the Lord for people like Cesar and Carol Lopez.  Cesar and Carol operate a home for young ladies who have come out of situations of abuse in the Chimaltenango area. It is called Mi Especial Tesoro (or My Special Treasure). They believe that the best therapy for oneself is to reach out to others and help them in their time of need. So every Saturday morning, Cesar and Carol load up some of the older girls and go to the garbage dump to provide reading and writing classes for the children who live and work in this dreadful place. My respects to you, Cesar and Carol!

A picture is worth a thousand words ... and sometimes a few tears. We are part of a world that lets children live, work, and die in trash. What can YOU do? I'll let some pictures do the talking.














I Had a "Blast" on New Year's Eve

Literally, we had a "blast" at the Quiñónez home last night.

Cecy ... believe it or not ... was in the kitchen. She had received a turkey as a gift, and she wanted to share it with family and friends. Cecy has a gas stove in her kitchen. It has electronic ignition, but it is not automatic. You have to turn the gas knob for the burner or oven, and hit the igniter button. 

Well, apparently Cecy thought she had lit the oven. She called me into the kitchen to see the turkey and a big rice casserole that she had just put in the oven, and then she noticed that the oven was not lit. There was some momentary confusion as she was trying to light the stove, allowing some gas to build up, although the oven door was open. When the gas ignited, I can only describe the sound as a shotgun blast right in front of us.

People ran from all corners of the house to see what had happened. A window was broken one room away from the concussion. A curtain was knocked out of a window two rooms away. Cecy and I were standing directly in front of the oven ... about a foot away ... and other than a little bit of ear ringing, we were fine. In fact, we both started laughing and couldn't stop. I don't know why.

If you are physicist and can explain this away ... please don't. I choose to believe it was a God moment. How can the concussion from the blast break windows and knock down curtains rooms away and do nothing to two people standing a foot away directly in the path of the blast? God is good. 

So this was the extent of my new year's eve blast. And in case you were wondering ... and perhaps most importantly ... the food was fine. In fact, it was delicious.

Happy new year! God bless you!

--Joe (in Guatemala)

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

A Senseless Loss

December 18, 2012

I met David when I was living in Guatemala in 2003. He was one of a group of boys who lived in a park called Plaza Berlin at the southern end of the Avenue of the Americas in Guatemala City. Watched over by another street dweller, David and his friends made their home under a sidewalk and had their daily strategies for survival. I knew David through the efforts of a ministry to street kids that worked hard to reach out to these boys. David never left the streets, and I have continued to bump into him over the years as he has moved around Guatemala City.


Most recently, David became part of a group called "Los Peregrinos"...a group of drug addict street dwellers who make their living scavenging at the Guatemala City garbage dump.  Every Monday evening, the members of Iglesia Bautista Cristo es el Camino have a meal and worship time for this group, trying to show a little bit of love to these men who long ago slipped through the last crack in their society and ended up at the dump. In the last couple of years, it was increasingly obvious that years of inhaling solvent were taking their toll. David grew weaker and thinner, constantly trembling due to the neurological damage from the drugs.


Yesterday, I got the news that David was dead. The story I heard was that he ate some food laced with poison. Was it murder, suicide, or an accident? I only know that it is tragic...and senseless.

I would like to say, "Please pray for David's family," but outside of a handful of street family and some caring people who have loved him over the years, he had nobody. From the world's perspective, David slipped from obscurity to oblivion. Most of the world won't care...or even notice that Guatemala has one less drug addict sleeping on the sidewalks outside of the garbage dump.

We have lost too many of our world's young people for senseless reasons. We are ALL precious in God's sight. I know that David had professed Christ as his savior, and even though he never escaped the material problems of his life, he did win the spiritual victory. In that final lonely moment, I know that David truly slipped from earthly obscurity to an eternal freedom in the presence of God. I rejoice in that, but I am once again convicted that those of us who are still on this side of eternity need to redouble our efforts to share the truth of the Gospel and to engage the spiritual and physical battle before us.

No matter how often we bathe or how well we dress, we are all God's street kids. We all hold onto things that are offensive in God's sight. Let's not fool ourselves. To see a young man like David is to look into a mirror. I am thankful that God didn't "step around me on the sidewalk." Instead, he saw me and reached down to help.

People ask, "Where is God in all of this?" I am convinced that God was with David every moment. The better question is this. Where are God's people?

Adios, David. I'll see you again.



January 6, 2013

POSTSCRIPT:  I printed copies of photos of David from the 10 years that I knew him, and I shared those with some of his friends in Guatemala while I was there over Christmas and the new year. They remember him...and mourn.  (Photo by Pastor Saul Pérez.)