I looked and there before me was a great multitude that no one could
count, from every nation, tribe, people and language, standing before the throne
and in front of the Lamb.

Friday, December 24, 2010

Elise Speaks at Gardendale First Baptist

I'm a little slow getting this video up on the site, but this is Elise's talk at our church on November 17th. He did a great job relating their situation to us.




God used Elise's talks at Rotary and our church in a big way. The Gardendale and Trussville Rotary are partnering together to provide 75 more Hydraid water filters. These filters are point of use filters and will be distributed in houses throughout the community. Our church, Gardendale First Baptist, took a love offering and collected $12,000. This money was used to purchase an 11KW diesel Kubota generator that will power the water system mentioned in his talk as well as provide power to the church and school.

The school is still in need of people who will come along side them to support the teachers and provide food for the students at the school. If you are interested, check out the http://hereamihaiti.blogspot.com website. You can make a donation via Paypal or mail them a check if you would like.

We are also sending Elise, Junior, and Saintanier to a pastor's conference outside of Saint Marc. Tom Ascol and Tim Brister from Grace Baptist Church in Cape Coral Florida are leading a conference the week of January 3rd with over 35 pastors from Haiti. Pray that they will be able to focus on the gospel and it's implications in their lives and communities of faith.

I think that's all for now, but there are still several more projects in the works that we hope will further enable the Holy Bible Church and School to reach out to it's community with gospel of Jesus Christ who came to seek and to save that which is lost.


Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Cholera Deaths in Petite Riviere

by Kandy

I have just this afternoon found out that four adults at the Holy Bible Church (where we stayed and taught hygiene classes in Haiti), and three children at the school in Souvenance (where we built the new church/school) have died as a result of the cholera outbreak. This is heartbreaking to me, as I know that this outbreak has the potential to continue to get worse in the coming weeks. Please keep these communities in your prayers, especially the families of those who have passed away. Pastor Elise is here in town and will be speaking at my church this evening. I will have more details after talking with him tonight.

Thank you for your continued prayers.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Out of Darkness

By Kandy Sanders

I have been unable to finish my account of our trip to Haiti, in part due to the busyness of home schooling, soccer games, dance class and all the other activities that seem to fill my days, but primarily because of my sheer inability to get something down on paper that conveys my experiences in a manner which makes sense. I have decided that there will be no more waiting and I will just write down what comes out and hope that you can understand in some small way the impact that this trip had on my life. Rather than writing a separate post about each day like I planned (which might take the better part of a year), I will do my best to summarize our entire week in this one post. We’ll see how it goes :)


On Monday morning the men left very early to begin work on the church in Souvenance. Souvenance is a village a few miles from where we were staying, and most of the people there practice voodoo regularly. It is a desolate place and I cannot even begin to describe the area except to say that it is extremely dark spiritually. About six years ago, the Holy Bible Church planted a church there, and the building they used was made of sticks and scrap pieces of tin. It was very small and definitely not sturdy enough to withstand tropical storm force winds. Not only were they holding church services in this “building”, about fifty children were going to school there as well. The few believers in the area have been faithfully preaching and living the gospel, all while the voodoo witch doctor lives perhaps a hundred yards from the church building. This witch doctor even visited the job site a few times during the week, which was very interesting, but that is not my story to tell. Perhaps one of the guys can write it down so that you can see how God was at work in this seemingly godless place. So, it was at this building in Souvenance that the men spent a majority of the week.


One of the men that came with us is an expert at water filtration, and he and Sam spent most of their time working on a water filter for the village. This filter will provide 3000 gallons per day of clean water to the people of the village of Petite Rivierre and the children who attend the Holy Bible School. Most of these people have never in their lives had clean water, and suffer from constant sickness due to their continued drinking of water from the river and irrigation ditch. Yes, you read that right. They drink water from irrigation ditches and mud puddles. I saw this with my own eyes. They do not even boil the water since it is so difficult to obtain wood for their cooking fires and they do not want to waste the precious wood to boil water. Can we even imagine having to make the decision whether to cook our food or boil our water? If you add to this the fact that severe hunger is a constant reality to them, it becomes easier to see what decision we would make. Is it possible for us to fathom the fact that there are whole villages full of people all over the world who must make this decision every day? I walk into my kitchen and turn on the tap and there is wonderfully clear, life sustaining water, any time I want it. How would I feel if I had to give my children water that I knew was making them sick, shriveling their little bodies, bloating their bellies, and turning their hair that awful rusty orange color? My heart hurts and I feel physically ill at the thought of the reality that these people face daily. The water filtration system will potentially change the lives of everyone in the area. The plan is to set up a bottle filling station at the school where the villagers can bring their own bottles and pay a very small fee to fill them with clean water. We pray that this will be a way to not only dramatically improve the health of the community, but also jump start the local economy.


There were two other ladies from our church who worked with me for most of the week. We spent some of our time teaching bible stories and hygiene classes to the local children who ventured to the area. We taught them the difference between clean water and dirty water, how to keep their water buckets clean and how and when to wash their hands. We also used the Jesus Storybook Bible to tell them about Christ. We had brought some copies of the book translated into French, and we left some of them with the school teachers. Jeremy also purchased some Creole bibles, which we left with the pastor. One highlight of my time with the children was when they sang “Change La Vim” for us. Jeremy had recorded them singing it on his first trip to Petite Rivierre and I had listened to it again and again over the last few months, but now I was able to finally hear it in person. The children sang so beautifully about God’s love for them and how they desired for Him to change their lives, that my eyes were suddenly filled with tears. This seemed to be the way my emotions operated while in Haiti, with sudden dramatic bursts of uncontrollable weeping. If you do not know me, let me tell you that this is very uncharacteristic of me.
After our bible stories, songs, and hygiene training, the children would go into the school yard and play games. Sam was able to join them some of the time and he enjoyed it thoroughly. He had never been around children who played soccer on a rocky field while wearing no shoes, and was quite surprised at how athletically talented they were.


One interesting occurrence during the week was the slaughter and butcher of a goat, which I was able to witness- a first for me. The pastor’s wife then cooked it and served it to us for dinner. It was very tasty and I did not hear many complaints from the other team members. We also at some small, whole fried fish one night, which tasted very good. Beans and rice were incorporated into pretty much every meal, but we ate significantly more meat than is typical of the Haitian diet. I know the guys had lots of Spam and peanut butter at the job site, so I am sure they were happy to see some hot food in the evenings, even if it was a little different from what they are accustomed to eating at home.


The afternoons were spent doing health surveys in the village surrounding the school. This was the most eye opening part of the trip for me. I had known that we were going to see hungry, sick people. I had not known the extent of the poverty that I would witness. The people there have nothing. Many of them eat one meal per day or nothing at all. Those who are well-fed eat twice a day when they can find enough food. Most of the people have gardens, but they are small and provide primarily corn, beans and sorghum. They all drink dirty water. Most of them are sick quite often. Many looked as if their bones would break if they were hugged too tightly. All of the children showed signs of malnutrition. Not many of the villagers have jobs, as there are no jobs to have. Many spoke of losing loved ones in the devastating hurricane and subsequent flood that swept through the area a few years ago. I was completely unprepared for the magnitude of desperation and sadness that I would witness in Haiti.


On Tuesday, Jeremy and I took a very long, arduous trip to Thommonde, which is located in the central plateau of Haiti. Providentially, on the flight from Miami to Port-au-Prince, Jeremy had been sitting beside a man from the CDC who is doing work in Thommonde, and Jeremy was able to find out about a project that the CDC is involved with there. This man has been working in Haiti for ten years with people from many different agencies, and they are training local health workers to help the people in the area, as well as teaching them how to grow and process food. They have done some fantastic work so far and we wanted to see how they are doing it. The man from the CDC invited us to come and talk to the workers in Thommonde, and fortunately we were able to find time to go, despite the fact that we were several hours away from their headquarters. However, we were able to glean some great information from the staff there and we hope that some of the ideas can eventually be transferred to Petite Rivierre. A clinic building has been sitting right next to the Holy Bible School for ten years, but due to lack of money, construction was never completed. If some of the locals can be trained in basic healthcare, perhaps this clinic could be operational some day. If this occurs, many of the health issues in Petite Rivierre will be nearly nonexistent.


On Thursday some of us went into Gonaives, the closest city to Petite Rivierre, to buy supplies, order textbooks for the school (provided by donations from you guys!), and take the Judy dolls to an orphanage. The first orphanage we tried would not even let us in, but we kept looking. After asking around, we finally found one that would let us come in and distribute the dolls. The orphanage housed twenty-nine children, and they seemed well cared for. The boys and girls had separate rooms with rows of bunk beds and lots of space. All of the children were wearing clothes and there were only a few signs of nutritional deficiencies. We were able to tell them about the dolls and explain to them why we were there. They were, of course, very happy to see us since we came bearing gifts. What child doesn’t love to receive a gift? The children were sweet and beautiful, and loved to pose for pictures. After leaving the orphanage, we went back to Souvenance to get the construction crew and were surprised to find that they were only ten minutes from completing the roof. I was able to watch the final few minutes of construction, then found myself teary eyed again as Richard climbed the ladder and hung a wooden cross on the front of the building. After lots of pictures, we gathered everyone together inside the building for a dedication service. One of the highlights of the service was Brother Mark preaching while using the bible on Jeremy’s iPhone, a sight I am sure will never be seen again. After speeches and prayers from some of the men involved in the construction and church planting, we all sang “Amazing Grace”, a song that people in many cultures seem to know. I have been a part of many worship services with people in other cultures, but hearing those precious believers sing in Creole while we sang in English made me want to shout with joy. In my experience, I can think of nothing closer to the scene in Revelation where John recounts his vision of seeing people from every tribe and tongue praising God around the throne.


After leaving the new church building, most of the crew headed back to where we were staying, in order to get cleaned up and ready for dinner. A few of us, however, walked the half mile down the road to the voodoo temple. When I said earlier that voodoo is practiced regularly by most of the people in Souvenance, I was not exaggerating. Souvenance is home to one of the largest voodoo temples in the country and is considered the center of voodoo activity in the northwestern portion of Haiti. Many voodoo rituals and healing ceremonies take place in the area where we were working, and one of our interpreters showed me the signs of a voodoo house. There were several of those houses, recognizable by the strange items in the yards or charms hanging from trees. Around one tree was tied an infant sized casket which was painted red. I could write pages about how the people of Haiti are in bondage to voodoo and how they are so desperately looking for help that they call out to evil spirits daily. However, I will leave you to research that on your own if you wish. Just know that voodoo is dark and evil, and according to our interpreters, 90% of Haitians practice it in some form. We arrived at the front gate of the voodoo compound, were given permission to enter as sightseers, and began to look around. We could see many people sitting around, eating rice and talking with one another. They looked no different than the other Haitians we had seen. I think I was expecting to be able to discern the voodoo people from everyone else, but soon realized I was wrong. We saw many small huts which housed some of the people in the voodoo community, children running around playing, and several large, strangely shaped trees. One of these trees was in the middle of a large pit in the ground that is used for bathing during rituals. The voodoo worshipers believe the strange trees are magic. At night (according to voodoo beliefs), some of the people are able to go inside the trees, converse with the spirits, and be healed from all their ailments. Other trees are used for curses. The people believe that by wrapping an individual’s clothing around the tree, wrongdoing can be avenged. We began to talk to some of the children, found out if they could read, and gave them some Christian literature if they could. Since there were a couple dozen adults gathered together in the center of the compound, we headed that direction in order to strike up some conversations. We were able to talk to a few of them one on one before Jeremy asked if he could share a message with the whole group. They seemed eager to listen, and more people began to appear. Jeremy began to preach the sermon that Paul preached at the temple of the unknown god in Athens, slightly adjusted to fit the voodoo context. The people were excited about the message and seemed to agree with everything he said. I was more than slightly confused, as I had expected to be kicked out of the place as soon as he mentioned the bible. When Jeremy told them that they must throw down their voodoo charms and worship only the true God, pandemonium broke out. There suddenly seemed to be dozens of people there who weren’t there only moments before. They became extremely angry, and one of the men (who we later found out was a witch doctor) came up to Jeremy and began to argue and quote bible verses at him. I was even more confused at this point, wondering why he knew anything about the bible, but learned later that it was a ploy to confuse everyone so that they would not listen to the message. The amazing part was that he seemed to know more scripture than many Christians. This was the first time I had come face to face with what I recognized to be syncretism. As I looked around, I realized that many of the people were wearing shirts or necklaces with saints on them. They knew the bible, and agreed with everything Jeremy said. They talked about the miracles of Jesus, and told stories of Moses. They honestly believe that they are worshipping God, yet their voodoo practices contradict the idea of one Sovereign God. I have never felt more spiritually discerning than I suddenly did at that moment. I am not the type of person to talk much about spirits of good and evil, and I am not charismatic, but at the time I could almost see the forces of good and evil at work. It was an extremely strange experience for me, one which I have never had before. To be honest, if it happens again, I hope to be much better prepared than I was. All I could do was stand there, pray silently, and watch my husband attempt to share the gospel with these people. Another man began to talk to Jeremy and said that if we would give them food they would accept our God. Jeremy explained to them that we could not bribe them to believe in God. Besides, we had no food to give them. After a few more minutes of conversation and people yelling things in our direction, we decided it was time to go. We left the voodoo compound, but we pray that a gospel seed was planted in someone’s heart.


On Friday morning we were able to meet with the teachers of the Holy Bible School and have a hygiene and sanitation class with them. They learned many things, asked many questions, and were very receptive to what we taught them. We are praying that they will understand the importance of the information and teach it to their students. We left plenty of sanitation literature with them, in their native language, so they can study and learn even more.

After we finished that class, we all loaded up onto the bus and went to an orphanage, this one just a few miles up the road from the school. What I saw there was, at the very least, heart wrenching. We walked down a dirt path to a crooked gate made of sticks and tin, and as we walked through the gates, the children quickly gathered together and began to sing to us. It was so sweet to hear them sing, “We are glad to see you, glad to see you, glad, glad, we are glad to see you!” They sang it first in English, then French, then Creole. After the song, Jeremy told them why we were there and we began to hand out the dolls. I handed out a few, and then began to walk around and look at the orphanage conditions. The things I saw made me feel like crying and running and screaming all at once. The children were malnourished. Many had no clothes. Some were obviously sick. They all smiled at us, however. I felt silly handing dolls to starving children. To my right was a small mud hut that the orphanage worker said was where the children slept. I ducked through the small door and almost instantly had to turn my back to the children and face the wall, because my body was suddenly being racked with sobs. I had no control over it. These precious babies and children were sleeping on top of one another on a dirt floor in a tiny mud hut with nothing under them to cushion their emaciated bodies and nothing over them to keep away the disease carrying mosquitoes. When I could finally control myself, I turned around and began to try to talk to the children. None of them could speak English and I had no interpreter with me, so I had to resort to smiling and hugging them. It seems funny to me now that I was frustrated by that, as if somehow loving on them was inferior to talking. I spent a lot of time in that room and could not seem to bring myself to leave. I snapped a few pictures, but could not muster the strength to take more. When I finally walked out of the dark little hut and into the midday sunshine, my team was gone. I looked around and finally realized they were all on the bus, which was up the road waiting for me. As I trudged up the dirt path to the rocky dirt road, I almost felt numb from the experience. I was leaving those children to starve and die from some preventable disease. How do you process that? I still haven’t figured it out, but I nearly had a shouting fit when I learned last week that the members of the Holy Bible Church had taken some of their small water filters to the orphanage and are going to try to get them some food.

We drove back to Port-au-Prince that afternoon and flew home the next day. While I have had a difficult time processing some of the things I saw in Haiti, I know that God is sovereign and His plan is being worked out, even when I do not understand it. While it breaks my heart when I think about those sweet babies with no food to eat, I see that God is now mobilizing some of my brothers and sisters at the Holy Bible Church to help as much as they can, and He will be glorified. While I have no comprehension of what compels Haitians to practice voodoo, I see the small church in Souvenance faithfully plowing the fields with the gospel every day, and I know that God will be glorified. When I see natural disaster after natural disaster shake the small country of Haiti and do not understand why, I know that God will be glorified.


Please pray for the country of Haiti. Pray that those in bondage to voodoo will be set free because “if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed.” (John 8:36) Pray that those who go to bed with hungry bellies tonight will look to the Word to be filled. Pray that those with no bed in which to sleep will look to God for their comfort, even amidst their suffering.


I hope that from this post you are able to get a small glimpse of our trip to Haiti in September. I could fill pages and pages with the stories we brought back with us. If you ever have an opportunity to go on a trip like this, I pray that you will seriously consider going and experiencing God’s work in a different culture than your own. It can be life changing.

"I am sending you to them to open their eyes and turn them from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan to God, so that they may receive forgiveness of sins and a place among those who are sanctified by faith in me." Acts 26:17-18

Thursday, October 14, 2010

The Journey North

by Kandy Sanders

The journey across Haiti to the small town of Petite Riviere was long and filled with sights which were new to me. When driving through the country side of Alabama it is very common to see pastures full of cows, horses or goats. Occasionally a hen house can be seen in rural areas of the state, or perhaps a few chickens pecking around in someone’s yard. I had never been in a place where cows, horses, goats, donkeys, chickens and pigs roam completely free right in the middle of a city. There was an almost disturbing clash of cultures which could be seen in every direction. People were riding donkeys loaded down with goods, children carefully balanced buckets of water on their heads, while trucks and motorcycles seemed intent on running everyone else off the road. On one street corner an elderly woman was selling freshly made fried plantains and pork on a stick, while on the next a man was trying to sell old stereo parts and computer equipment. One of the strangest sights was of a lady walking down the road with a large basket of laundry on her head while talking on a cell phone. Occasionally a UN truck filled with soldiers carrying large weapons would come into view and I was unsure at the time if I should feel protected or frightened. While the bus weaved its way among the streets littered with debris and people, the cacophony of sounds was unlike anything I had previously heard. The constant noise of large trucks rumbling slowly through the city, the buzz of motorcycles darting in and out of alley ways, and people hawking their goods on the streets verged on auditory overload. The air was filled with dust and a horrid smell which could have been one of any number of things, but the near nausea that it induced prevented me from attempting to identify its origin. The constant jostle caused by the conditions of what the Haitians called “roads” was more than slightly annoying and I almost felt as if I was in Jeremy’s old Tacoma mud riding through Mt. Olive again. The only difference was that this ride was incredibly long and punctuated by nearly constant horn blasts from our bus and every other vehicle around us.

The larger cities through which we traveled resembled Port-au-Prince in that they looked like garbage dumps with people and animals wandering around in them. While in Port-au-Prince I had been astounded by the amount of earthquake damage still visible but as we made our way north, I eventually began to see evidence of hurricane damage. Haiti has been ravaged by many hurricanes, tropical storms and floods over the past few years, but I had assumed that the country had largely recovered from these earlier assaults. Surely the earthquake was the only natural disaster still causing problems, I thought. Unfortunately, as I soon learned, the country is in such mayhem that the people just cannot seem to get out from under the devastation of so many catastrophic events. For too many reasons to explain here, damaged buildings sit untouched, lingering rubble is piled high in the streets, people remain hungry, and children are still sold as slaves.

The bus stopped in St. Marc, which is the main port of Haiti, so that we could eat a late lunch and load up on groceries before getting out into the countryside where supplies would be fewer and harder to find. For me, it was an exercise in faith just to walk across the street since vehicles had no regard for the safety of pedestrians and they almost seemed to veer toward those on foot in most instances, so I was sure I was stepping off the curb and into certain death. Let me say here that I have spent time in many large U.S. cities, including New York, San Francisco and others, as well as the cities of Lima and Iquitos in Peru. I also experienced what I thought were crazy cab rides while on my honeymoon in St. Thomas, and on a trip to Hawaii, but I had never seen anything like this. There seemed to be no traffic laws whatsoever, most of the roads would not even be considered roads in America, and our driver had nerves of steel. That is not an exaggeration. At one point during the week I remarked that driving must be considered an extreme sport in Haiti and I know that you could ask any member of our team and they would concur. Once safely inside the store, we grabbed a bite to eat, purchased groceries and journeyed back to the bus. Despite exhaustion caused by being on buses and planes for many, many hours, I found that sleep was elusive. I reasoned with myself that sleep would come once we were settled somewhere for the night and I certainly did not want to miss the sights, so I stayed awake through the long ride.

The countryside of Haiti was absolutely gorgeous and I was pleased that I had stayed awake to enjoy it. The green hills, which rolled right up into the not too distant mountains reminded me of the breathtaking scenery in Hawaii. Palm trees could be seen swaying against the backdrop of a Caribbean sunset, the ocean became visible for a short while, and I began to feel peaceful for the first time in several hours. For a little while I almost forgot that I was in the most impoverished nation in the western hemisphere. Occasionally we would go through a town and see pigs rooting around in piles of trash, or women making charcoal by the side of the road, but after a few hours I began to feel as if I was becoming desensitized to these sights. When we finally arrived in Petite Riviere, I was relieved to be finished with the day’s travel, but more than slightly intimidated by what was to come. For some reason, I felt for a moment that whatever happened over the next few days couldn’t be as difficult as the previous twenty-four hours. However, I remembered having this same thought upon arriving in Iquitos, Peru last July after more than a day of travel, and I was overwhelmingly wrong in both cases. The days to come would prove to be filled with exhaustion of both the physical and emotional kind.

The LORD is my shepherd, I shall not be in want. He makes me lie down in green pastures, he leads me beside quiet waters, he restores my soul.He guides me in paths of righteousness for his name's sake. Psalm 23:1-3

Monday, October 11, 2010

Overwhelmed

By Kandy Sanders

Some of what I've written here is straight from my journal because I want you to get a sense of the raw, unedited emotion I felt at the time. You may be surprised at some of it, but I'm striving here for honesty and not the toned down happy mission trip story that so many of us have told or heard at one time or another.

Walking out of the airport into the overcast day brought unusual sights, smells and sounds which overwhelmed my senses and brought to mind the vague feeling of a being on a movie set. Scanning my surroundings, I quickly became aware that I was certainly not in Alabama anymore. After fighting my way through a sea of people, being herded through the fiasco known as baggage claim, then being attacked by pseudo airport employees, somehow I had expected relief upon exiting the building. What I saw made me wish I had stayed inside. Children dressed in not much more than rags held their little hands through the holes in the chain link fence, hoping to be given something, anything to feed their hungry bellies. The cinder block wall across the street was a canvas for all manner of graffiti, and men leaned heavily on it as if one, the men or the wall, would be unable to stand otherwise. The porters who fancied themselves airport employees were arguing with one another over my bags in a language I did not understand, and I began to feel absolutely helpless and out of control. Once again expecting respite from what seemed like a strange dream, I boarded the bus which would take us to Petite Riviere, our final destination. I was wrong again. The drive through Port-au-Prince was surreal at best, a nightmare at worst. There were people everywhere in the streets, an occasional naked child running this way and that, buildings in shambles, trash piled high on what may have been sidewalks, goats and chickens roaming free, and vehicles everywhere competing for space on the road. When the bus finally reached the outskirts of the city and I thought that surely the worst was behind us, the tent cities came into view. Some were seemingly built on heaps of trash, some on hillsides, others in ditches alongside the road. They stretched as far as I could see and suddenly I was devastated. The emotion of the day began to have its way with me and I was ashamed of the name of that emotion. It was disgust. Absolute, total, outright disgust. I could not fathom why someone would want to come to this God-forsaken place to do anything. How was I going to spend an entire week here?


I did spend a week there and lived to tell about it. There is more to come. God is good!


"Many are the plans in a man's heart, but it is the LORD's purpose that prevails."
Proverbs 19:21

Friday, October 8, 2010

Our Trip to Haiti

By Sam Miller, age 13


We got to Haiti Saturday evening and the airport was crazy everyone trying to “help”. The ride over to Gonaives was extremely bumpy but I actually got some sleep. When we finally got to the house we went to bed. Sunday we went to church. I thought the church service was neat; I had never been in a church service that there was a translator. The church was definitely different than the churches here. It was a building with no windows and one room inside. After church I helped Raymond sort out pieces for the water filter. Monday we started sanding the pieces to the water filter and putting them together without gluing them. Tuesday we started to glue the pipes and pieces together. We started to put the system up on the wall, after that I went outside and played soccer with the kids. They were so much better than me that they were just going around me with the ball. Afterward I went out and helped do surveys around the school. The houses looked like mud huts but the people looked happy.
Wednesday we finished putting the trusses on the church in Souvenance. I was glad I got to help out as much as I could, carrying and lifting. Thursday we started and finished putting tin on the roof of the church, and put a small wooden cross on the church. We sang “Amazing Grace” with all the people who were there. On Friday we went to an orphanage that had 95 kids and gave out dolls to all of them. They had one meal a day sometimes none at all. They lived in dirt floor huts and they all looked happy. Afterward we went to Port au Prince and stayed in a house that was really nice especially for Haiti. On Saturday we went to the airport and flew to Miami and we ate the best food I had tasted all week, Chile’s. When we finally got to Atlanta we started driving home. When we got home I went to bed and slept like a rock.
I think Haiti is a terrible place with so much poverty and death. I would also like to go back because I enjoyed helping the people there. That was what I did in Haiti and what I thought.

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Report from PAP Airport from Jeremy - Saturday, Oct 2

Wow, crazy week.

We're sitting in the PAP airport and I finally have a few minutes to collect my thoughts. Here's a quick update on our various projects for the week:

• church - the roof is finished thanks to a lot of help from the community. The dedication service was great. Mark preached a quick sermon(he had to use the bible on my iPhone, ha!) and then we prayed for the church leadership. As we prayed for them I was overwhelmed by the dedication to the gospel displayed by these men. For the last 6 years they have faithfully been plowing this land planting the seeds of the gospel in the hearts of the people of this community. I am not worthy to tie their shoes. Hopefully God will allow these men to continue to spread the gospel for many years to come.

• water system - we were not able to get the system fully operational due to some electrical problems with the generator. Elise is going to get a breaker box put in and then a local plumber is going to help him test it for leaks once it is pressurized. Elise said he would call me when it is working.

• hygiene/sanitation training - the ladies were able to share with the children Monday and Tuesday. They read the Jesus bible storybook and taught some personal hygiene lessons to them. In the afternoons they visited houses and were able to collect information for our health surveys. We still have to compile all of the information but the results confirm a lot of what we expected to find. Most people eat 1 time a day if they have food. Everyone has stomach problems and headaches which are common symptoms of water born diseases. Friday we had a class with all of the teachers at the school. It was very interactive and full of questions. After the class they were real careful about their drinks. It really made them confront things that the sort of knew but didn't apply them to real life. Some of them drink from the river. Some of them don't have latrines. These are things that are within their power to change. They think that they don't have the resources to do this themselves and is the attitude we are trying to change. We told them to start where they are, use what they have, and do what they can. Hopefully they will become passionate enough about their community's health to do something about it.

Voodoo temple - the main voodoo temple in Haiti is less than 1 mile from the church we were working on. As we passed by it each day I couldn't help but think about the people in bondage to this dark religion. I also thought about Paul when he went to the temple to the unknown god in Athens and presented the gospel to them. Thursday morning I paraphrased Paul's message so that I would be ready if we could get into the compound. After the dedication service we got Michelle(our truck driver) to drop us off at the temple. Kandy, Mallory, Jenny, Odny, and myself went up to the gate and the lady told us we could walk around and take pictures if we wanted to. There were children playing and 20 or so adults scattered around the compound. We walked around passing out copies of Finding Your Joy in Creole. Everyone wanted a copy and several people immediately started reading it. One teenage guy spoke English and asked me what religion we were apart of. Instead of answering I asked him what religion he was. He said he was Christian so I asked him why he was hanging out in front of a Voodoo temple. His replied that he was there because his mother was there. I asked him if he also worshiped Voodoo spirits. He said that he did. Then I asked him how he could be Christian and Voodoo at the same time. He had a puzzled look on his face and said, "I don't know". Before I could respond he said, "You mean you have to choose?" This was not something he had ever considered before today. I told him that yes he had to choose. He could not serve God and Voodoo at the same time. Then I told him that I had a message for them if they wanted to hear it. Everyone gathered up and Odny translated for me. What I said is below:

Men of Souvenance, I see that you are very religious. I see this great temple that you have built to honor all of the many spirits of Voodoo. Therefore you worship many spirits that you do not know. I am here to tell you of the God who made the world and everything in it. He is the Lord of heaven and earth. He does not live in a temple made by man. He is not served by human hands, as though he needed anything, since he himself gives life and breath and everything to all mankind. From one man He made all the peoples of the earth, and He determines the years of their lives and where they will live that all men should seek after God in the hope that they might blindly find Him. Yet He is actually not far from each one of us, for "In Him we live and move and have our being." The times of ignorance God overlooked, but now He commands all people everywhere to repent because He has planned a day on which He will judge the world in righteousness by a man whom He has appointed and of this He has given assurance to all by raising Him from the dead. This man is Jesus Christ, the one and only son of God. He lived a perfect life and died to pay the sin debt for every man who believes in Him. Therefore you must repent and believe in Jesus Christ. Throw down your Voodoo charms and call upon the name of the one true God. Cry out to God and leave this way of life behind.

They were fine with everything I said until the part about throwing down their voodoo charms came out. They erupted with anger screaming, "we will never do that!" A witch doctor argued with me for a few minutes and knew a lot of scripture, but never did have a point. We eventually made our way back out to the road and walked towards Elise's church. I don't know if there will be any fruit from that experience, but hopefully some of the people will reconsider their syncretism and turn to Christ.

I also want to write something about the orphanage, but that will have to come later. See you guys tomorrow.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Friday, Oct 1 - Final day of ministry in Haiti

From Jeremy and Kandy's FB postings from yesterday and today:


Yesterday: Jeremy - Just preached paul's sermon from the temple in Athens at the voodoo temple in souvenance.


Yesterday: Kandy - Today's excitement: a visit at an orphanage and a debate in a voodoo temple.


Today: Kandy - Just visited another orphanage. Atrocious conditions, much worse than the other orphanage. Very emotional.


Today: Jeremy - Orphanage had 95 kids, mud huts, one meal per day. Kids slept in dirt or on a foam mat


Today: Jeremy - Sanitation class this morning, dist Judy dolls at orphanage. Headed back to PAP now.


I believe the team is now headed back to Port-Au-Prince to prepare for their departure early tomorrow am.

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Thursday, Sept. 30 am

Posted by Kandy on her FB page less than an hour ago:

In Gonaives, searching for an orphanage that will let us in. No luck so far...


Let's be in prayer that the team will be able to get into an orphanage to deliver the dolls and Bible story books.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Updates from Jeremy - Wednesday, Sept 29

Just in case you do not monitor Facebook, here are some recent updates that Jeremy has posted to his FB page:

Based on the surveys the women have done: 90% unemployment, 1-2 meals a day when they can find food, lots of kids live away(restaveks).
Also, a lot suffer from stomach problems, headaches, all symptoms of bad water and malnutrition.
Today we are distributing finding joy booklets in creole and playing the proclaimers for the onlookers and helpers at the job site.
A lot of the people helping build the church are not Christians and some are Voodoo worshipers. Pray for them as we proclaim Christ.
Also, be sure to read Kim's update from Josh from last night. Here is the link to her blog:

http://moodygirls3.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Update from Josh - Monday, Sept 27

Kim received a brief phone call and then an email from her husband, Josh, last night:

http://moodygirls3.blogspot.com

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Update from Haiti - Sunday, Sept 26

Jeremy called for a brief update this afternoon. He said things were going great. They arrived at the school between 7:00 - 8:00 last night and everyone got a good night's sleep. They attended church this morning and Mark Harrison preached. They were planning out the rest of the week this afternoon, gathering up supplies, etc. He said the translators were working out really good so far.

Keep praying for God's favor upon the team and the community they are there to serve. May God receive glory through every aspect of this trip.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

September 2010

Hi everyone, this is Kandy. I haven't been on here in a while, but I just wanted to let you all know how to obtain information about the trip if you wish. Internet access will be spotty at best, so I will keep a journal and update my personal blog when we get back to the states. Here is the link: www.sanderspartyoffive.blogspot.com

Also, Josh Moody's wife may be able to update their blog while he's in Haiti. This is the link to that one: www.moodygirls3.blogspot.com

I know that Jeremy will update this blog when he can with the logistical aspect of everything, since that's what he's so skilled at doing.

Please keep us in your prayers as we go and minister to a hurting nation.

Blessings!

Kandy

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Back to Haiti

Wow, it's been a while since I've updated this site. A lot of people have been asking about it though, so I'll see what I can do to bring everyone up to date.

Most of you know I went back to Haiti in June with Richard Bradley and Hal Heiss to evaluate some future projects at the Holy Bible School in Petite Rivierre des Bayonnaise, Haiti (outside of Gonaives).

Here is the view from Google Maps:


View Larger Map

We got to know Elise Cadet and the other men and women who run the mission. They are part of a small network of four churches, two of which are church plants from this original church. One of their church plants is just a few miles from the main mission in a town called Souvenance. Souvenance is home to a large Voodoo temple and the locals referred to it as the center of voodoo in Haiti.

Here is a link to an article about a Voodoo ceremony in Souvenance. Voodoo has a real hold on people in Haiti. We joke about Voodoo here, but this is a real and very dark religion.

Here is the Voodoo temple on Google Maps:


View Larger Map

Here is a picture of the gate outside the Voodoo temple:

From haiti2



The church was planted six years ago and currently has about 60 active members and 50 children going to school there. One of the members we met was a Voodoo witch doctor's wife. She was converted about 18 months ago and has been active in the church since then. Her husband is still in bondage to Voodoo.

Here is a picture of the witch doctor's wife and Elise:

From haiti2


The Souvenance Church is here just a mile down the road:


View Larger Map

This is a picture of the front of the church:

From haiti2


From the Google Maps image you can see the beginnings of a block wall around the existing tin and wood structure. We are helping with the resources to finish this building. Last week we sent the money down for Elise to buy the brick and concrete to finish the walls and pour a floor. Here are some pictures of their work so far this week:

From haiti3


From haiti3


When we get there next week one of our projects is going to be to help those guys put a roof on the building. Hopefully by the end of the week we'll be able to have church with them in the new building. One of the things I really like about this particular project is that it's not our project. As you can see, these guys are taking the lead and doing the work. We're helping out, but this is their deal. There is also an active healthy body of believers that have been meeting here for six years. We are not helping with a building hoping a church will materialize. The church is already there. We're just helping with a better facility.

Water filters

On the trip in June we were able to take some water filters from Hydraid to the school. They were already in a warehouse in Port au Prince so we picked them up on the way, all 3500 pounds of sand and gravel and filter cones.

Here's a picture of some of the filters put together:

From haiti2


Each filter can produce 75 gallons of clean water per day. You take the top off and pour 5 gallons of water into the top. It filters through the sand and gravel then up through a chlorine filter. After the chlorine chamber it goes into a plastic container that has a charcoal filter attached to the exit valve. The charcoal filter removes heavy metals and the chlorine from the water. After a few weeks of operation, a film forms over the sand that they call the "slime layer". This layer of bacteria removes up to 99% of harmful bacteria from the water greatly reducing the constant diarrhea that often plagues people without access to clean water. Once the slime layer is in place, the chlorine tablet is not necessary and does not have to be replaced.

After we left in June, we were able to get Santanna, the principal at the school, and his assistant Junior to a training class offered in Haiti by Hydraid. They are now fully trained on how to operate and maintain the filters. Elise said that the clean water is the biggest thing to ever happen to their community.

While we were there we (meaning Richard, the real engineer) examined a filtering system that they purchased, but it has never been installed. It is a system from Living Waters for the World(LWW) that can produce up to 3000 gallons of clean water a day. This time we are taking a man named Raymond Shackleford that has been trained by LWW to install this system. The school has a water line off of a mountain spring that is piped down the road and is used to fill their cistern. This system will be used to filter that water and store in a tank for use. We will probably have to pull the existing tank off of the roof and clean it out with bleach or buy a new tank while we are down there. This filter does require electricity but they do have a generator that they run when needed. There is lot of promise in using this system because it will produce enough clean water for the entire community and could even generate some income for the school. Currently the only source of bottled clean water is in Gonaives 8 miles away.


Sanitation and Hygiene Training

Since the community now has access to some clean water and may have access to a lot of clean water if we get the second system up and running, we wanted to focus on sanitation and hygiene on this trip as well. Our female members, Kandy (my wife), Jenny, a former Peace Corp volunteer who spent two years in Africa, and Mallory, a patient care tech are going to be teaching sanitation and hygiene to women and children in the community. One of our goals is to transform the community by teaching them the importance of digging and using latrines. Hopefully this will occur through the material we are using from http://www.communityledtotalsanitation.org/. We'll see how that works out. We are also going to teach personal hygiene and hopefully setup some hand washing stations around the school and church. The device we are going to try to build is a tippy tap. It's basically a suspended bottle which is tipped over to dispense some water. Hopefully this simple device will allow the children to wash their hands after using the latrine and before eating. We also have some signs to put up around the school teaching basic hygiene points in Haitian Creole.

As we talk to the community about sanitation and hygiene we also want to gather information about their health. What are their most common medical problems? How many births and deaths have each family had in the past 10 years? What were the causes of the deaths(if known)? This data will be invaluable in helping them shape a health care plan for their community. We have three ladies from the community who have volunteered for medical internships. Hopefully we will be able to help place them in internships at other clinics in Haiti so that they can return to help run a clinic in Petite Rivierre.

Judy4Haiti

I responded to a Twitter request to help get some Judy4Haiti dolls to Haiti. Their goal is to give these dolls to Haitian orphans who don't have anything else in the world. Our goal is to get some of the women of the church in Petite Rivierre to go with some of our group to one of the orphanages in Gonaive to get them involved in reaching out to the orphans in their communities. The orphanages are not very nice places and are sometimes hard to deal with because of corruption and harsh conditions. Even so, we hope to get the local church engaged with the at least one of the orphanages in Gonaive while we are there.

Discipleship

Today I received 300 copies of Desiring God's Finding Joy booklet in Haitian Creole. This booklet is 47 pages and details answer to such questions as:

  • Why did Jesus have to die?

  • How can God Love Me?

  • What if I don’t love God?

  • How can I love a God who allows so much evil?

  • Why is it all about God?

  • What does all this mean for me?

  • What should I do?


  • We hope to host some classes in the evenings for whoever will come and discuss each of these questions. We also hope to hike up to a village in the mountains (6 hours one way!) and pass the booklets out there as well to those who can read. For those who cannot read, we were able to take some Proclaimers in Haitian Creole last time. This time we are taking 5 Proclaimers in French per Elise's request. These devices have the entire New Testament audio on them. They can be charged with a wall outlet, hand crank, or attached solar panel and are loud enough to be heard by a large crowd.

    For the kids, Kandy found the Jesus Storybook Bible by Sally Loyd-Jones in French. We ordered five of them from France last week and they arrived yesterday! This storybook Bible frames each of the stories in redemptive history. The theology taught through this book is even good for adults who may not have connected the Bible into one story of redemption.

    I also got a copy of Desiring God by John Piper in French for Elise. This book and John Piper have influenced my personal theology a lot and I hope Elise will enjoy it as well.

    Details

    We'll be leaving Gardendale about 1AM on Saturday morning headed for the Atlanta airport. We fly from there to Miami and on into Port au Prince. We will arrive in PAP about 11AM local time and meet Elise there with a bus. From there we will drive to Petion-Ville and get a rental truck. From there we'll head north toward St Marc. In St Marc we'll probably stop for groceries and some late lunch. The next leg takes us to Gonaive. Gonaive is on the coast and only 8 miles from the school. The last 8 miles takes about 45 minutes though. Hopefully the road won't be too muddy in the fully loaded down bus.

    Pray for the people that we are going to serve. Pray that we will show them the love of Christ in word and deed next week. Pray that they will be encouraged to know that we are one body of Christ and that there are other Christians that care about them. Pray that God will help us to convey our material whether it is hygiene training, discipleship, or just talking about our families back home. Pray for our four interpreters that they will be able to fluently translate our words to those who need to hear them. Pray for our interpreters that we may be able to influence them with the Gospel since we will be spending an entire week with them. Pray for our safety and that our team would function smoothly.

    That's all I can think of for now.

    Monday, August 16, 2010

    Pics of Text Books at Elise's School

    I uploaded some pictures to the Here Am I Haiti website if you want to take a look at the books that they have to use now. We've raised about $1,100 of the $21,087.62 needed for the books.

    http://hereamihaiti.blogspot.com/

    Sunday, July 25, 2010

    New website for the school

    One of the projects we are trying to help the school at Holy Bible Church with are text books. I setup a website for the supporting organization, Here Am I. Click on over to the site and help us buy new text books for the school.

    Wednesday, June 30, 2010

    Quick Update

    I'll put together a much more detailed post about the trip later this week, but I just wanted to post this before I go to work:

    Here is a video of the children’s choir practicing… If you want to see something from the trip I think this sums it up. The chorus to the song they are singing is “Change My Life” or “Change la vie”. Our goal is to be the hands and feet of Christ to them to enable them to reach their community and beyond for Christ. They have actually planted two churches from scratch in these incredibly harsh conditions. We just want to come along side them and take part in the great work they are already doing.

    One of the most moving moments for me was watching Junior, the assistant principal, get water out of the Hydraid filter that Richard installed for them. For the first time EVER, he is able to provide clean water for his two children and the 600 children that attend his school. That has to be empowering on so many levels. They knew that their water wasn’t clean, but they didn’t have any other choice. They had to drink the dirty water even though they knew it was bad for them. Now he can give his children water that won’t make them sick. If that isn’t a picture of Matthew 25, I don’t know what is…

    Here’s the children’s choir video.

    Holy Bible Church - Children's Choir from Jeremy Sanders on Vimeo.

    Monday, June 28, 2010

    Planning for the Future

    On Thursday morning Jeremy Sanders, Richard Bradley, and Hal Heis flew out of Birmingham on their way to Gonaives, Haiti. The plane stopped once in Miami, then arrived in Port-au-Prince on Thursday afternoon. From what I have heard from Jeremy the flights were uneventful. Water filters were picked up from a warehouse in the city, then a four hour bus ride took the team and supplies to Gonaives. At one point the bus was on its side and stuck in the mud, but the experienced driver was able to get it out and continue the journey without further problems.

    The conditions for the team are much better this time around, and they are even sleeping in beds instead of on a concrete floor! The bucket bath is still the method for bathing, but it could definitely be worse. Just ask any of the February team members!

    The place where they are working is called the Holy Bible Church and School, and it is outside the city of Gonaives. Jeremy said that it is an absolutely beautiful area. There are about six hundred children who attend school there, some of them walking eight miles one way to get there. Besides being a place of learning, the school also feeds the children one meal a day. For some of the children, this is the only food they will eat all day. Approximately two hundred of these children are earthquake refugees from Port-au-Prince, so the school has had many more mouths to feed than normal since January.

    Friday was the last day of school, so the guys were able to see a small ceremony in which the children's names were called one by one and each received a report card. One important aspect of the day was that Jeremy was able to speak with the teachers and find out what is needed and how we can best help. He also spoke with them about basic hygiene, and they plan to set up a handwashing station outside the school.

    He was also able to speak with some prospective medical trainees who will soon be graduating from the Holy Bible School. He gave them some advice about the process of continuing their education, such as writing a two page paper about themselves, outlining who they are and why they should be considered for medical training.

    On Friday and Saturday Richard worked on getting the water filters functional. There is not really a source for clean water at the school, so these filters will help immensely. I believe he said there are fifteen in all, but only two of them will be set up for now since school is out for the summer. There is a summer day camp that goes on at the school, but there are not nearly as many students as during the school year.

    On Saturday, they went into a village in which voodoo is the predominant religion. A few years ago a church was started there and now sixty believers attend the church. One church member is married to a practicing voodoo witch doctor. I do not know her name, but I can imagine that she and her husband need lots of prayer. Also, the community is still steeped in voodoo, despite the presence of a thriving Christian church. It is a very dark place. They desperately need the gospel. Please join me in praying for the believers there to have the strength to love their neighbors, for the desire to share and show the gospel, and that the hearts of the unbelievers would be softened.

    The team also heard about a village on the mountain adjacent to the school in which there are no Christians. Voodoo is the only religion in this particular area. I am unsure if they visited that village, but I will have details from Jeremy soon. Even though Haiti is considered to have been "evangelized", there is absolutely no Christian witness in some areas.

    Hal preached at the Holy Bible Church on Sunday morning and the guys chipped in to buy the church members (about two hundred, I think) dinner, which consisted of two goats. I am sure there was other food, but all that stuck in my head was the part about the goats. Jeremy said it was all very good. Due to rain and extremely muddy conditions, there was no church on Sunday night.

    On Monday morning, they rode in the back of a truck, then on a motorcycle, into the main city of Gonaives. They had planned to speak with the director of the micro finance company, but he is out of the country for two weeks. However, they were able to exchange some information and hopefully something will come of it when the director gets back to Gonaives.

    On Tuesday morning, they will begin the journey back into Port-au-Prince by bus, where they will catch a 12:30 flight for Miami. They should be back in Birmingham by 8:30PM.

    While it is very difficult to communicate with Jeremy right now, he did relay to me that he has fallen in love with the people of Gonaives, and with the beauty of the area. He is excited about the return trip, which is scheduled for some time in September.

    The one person I have not mentioned yet is Elise. He is the pastor of the Holy Bible Church, he runs the school, and he planted the small church in the voodoo community. I was priveleged to have him in my house when he came to the US for a visit in April. He seems to be a wonderful man of God and I can not wait to hear his entire story one day. Jeremy has spoken with Elise extensively during this trip and from the way it sounds, has grown to appreciate and respect him. He is a Haitian who was led to Christ by Icy Mae Frederick, a missionary from GFBC, several years ago.

    There are plenty of gaps in this account of the trip, but Jeremy will be able to fill them all in when he gets back.


    "If you pour yourself out for the hungry and satisfy the desire of the afflicted, then shall your light rise in the darkness and your gloom be as the noonday." Isaiah 58:10

    Gonaives, Haiti

    It seems we have a team in Haiti once again. This team is much smaller than the previous one, but this time they are mostly interested in gathering information and getting to know the people of Gonaives.

    After some research, I discovered that Gonaives lies in the western part of Haiti and due to the geography of the area, is very prone to severe flooding. The city is surrounded by mountains and hills on three sides, with the Caribbean Sea on the fourth. Floods resulting from two deadly tropical storms within the past six years killed more than 3,000 people in Gonaives. Many people fled the city, primarily to Port-au-Prince, after the catastrophic floods. When the earthquake hit Port-au-Prince in January, many of them returned to Gonaives with only the clothes on their back. Gonaives is now home to 40,000 earthquake refugees.

    I found the story of a family from Gonaives who lost a daughter in the floods during Tropical Storm Jeanne in 2004. Devastated, they packed up and headed to a place with better schools and "better fortune". They had been living in Port-au-Prince for only a few years when the earthquake hit and their son was crushed in their rented house in the downtown area. Now they have gone back to Gonaives. The mother said, "Living in Port-au-Prince is a problem. Going to Gonaives is another problem. Everywhere you go is a problem. If I could, I would have left this country and been somewhere else by now. But I have no way to do that".

    We all know that Haiti is an extremely impoverished country. These devastating natural disasters have wreaked havoc on the already desperate situation in which these people live and despite many of them giving their best effort, there seems to be no way out.

    One of the goals that our team in Haiti is trying to accomplish is to get some of the locals set up with microloans. I do not know all the details, but Jeremy has been in contact with an organization in Haiti called Fonkoze, which deals with these loans.

    Another goal is to get some medical training for some of the locals, perhaps students from the school where they are working this week. If there are people in the community who can take care of medical issues when they arise, as well as handle some preventative care, they will not have to rely on outside doctors and nurses to come in and do it for them.

    Self-sufficiency is the ultimate goal and we would like to come alongside them and help where we can. We are learning as we go and want to help the situation rather than make it worse. This does not appear to be an easy task, but with God's guidance we believe we can make the right decisions. And if we make the wrong ones we will learn from our mistakes and try something different.

    Jeremy has put together an extensive document about the purpose of these Haiti missions and I think he plans to put it on the blog. It explains all of this in much more detail, but I hope this gives you a preview of what is going on.

    Later tonight I plan to post an update about their experiences in Gonaives over the past few days.

    Wednesday, June 23, 2010

    Haiti Bound

    I'm heading for Haiti in the morning with Richard Bradley and Hal Heiss. Hal actually runs the stateside fundraising for the school that Elise runs in Haiti outside of Gonaives. We are going to be meeting Elise tomorrow and picking up a pallet of water filters to take to the school. The purpose of this trip is to meet several people at the Ministry of Health, Fonkoze(a micro-finance institution), and look at the church roof and determine how we can get clean water to the school reliably. We'll be back Tuesday and hopefully I'll have more info then. Kandy will provide any updated information if I can call her. We would greatly appreciate your thoughts and prayers while we are there.

    Friday, April 9, 2010

    Nicaragua 2010

    I know this blog is supposed to be about the work in Haiti, but there have been a few people who wanted me to post updates about the Nicaragua trip.

    Jeremy is currently with a team from our church (Gardendale First Baptist), as well as a few people from other churches, in Puerto Cabezas, Nicaragua. They flew out of Atlanta early this morning and, after a layover in Miami, arrived in Puerto Cabezas late this afternoon. I don't know all the details of this trip and I don't even have all the team members' names, so I apologize for that. Although I will probably contintue to refer to them as "Jeremy and the team", I'm pretty sure that Richard Bradley is the leader of this trip. He has been to Nicaragua many times over the last several years and knows the local missionaries well. He's done a lot of construction in the area, but again, I don't have many details.

    The people group they will be working with are the Miskito Indians, who speak Miskito and for the most part don't speak or understand Spanish. So the team will be breaking up into several groups which will include two Americans, an English to Spanish interpreter, and a Spanish to Miskito interpreter. Each team will go to a village tomorrow morning and stay there for the remainder of the week. They will be teaching, preaching, and discipling local believers. On Friday, they will be reunited with the rest of the group from the U.S. and begin the journey back home.

    I spoke with Jeremy a little while ago and he said that, having been up for two days now, they are all exhausted. They attended a church service at the mission compound tonight and one local man became a believer! To God be the glory! I'm sure the exhaustion they feel doesn't compare to the joy of seeing a person come to faith in Christ.

    I will have communication with Jeremy in the morning, but that will probably be the last time until Friday. The team will be in a very remote area without much communication. In case of emergency there is a sat. phone but no cell coverage. We were told to abide by the policy "no news is good news", so I probably won't have much to report after tomorrow. Thank you all for praying for the team as they attempt to live out the gospel for the sake of glorifying God among the nations.

    There are still things in the works as far as Haiti is concerned, so I don't want anyone to think that we have forgotten about it. Jeremy and many others have been hard at work, researching and planning future Haiti trips, and more details about that will come later. We are praying that God will raise up locals to assist and eventually take over this work, which is the only feasible way to improve the long term situation in this poverty stricken country. We know that it will more than likely take quite a while for that to happen, but we are certainly not abandoning the Haitian people in their darkest hour. God will be glorified through this. We are praying for discernment as to the best course of action. Please pray with us and consider joining the effort in some way as you feel led.

    Saturday, March 27, 2010

    Slideshows

    Check out these two slideshows:

    Elise Cadet was one of the pastors that we worked with in Haiti. He is in the US this week and came by my house this evening to plan our next trip to Haiti to work with his church and school. Here is a slideshow that they put together:

    Elise Cadet's Slideshow from Jeremy Sanders on Vimeo.



    This second slideshow is one Josh made of our pictures that we used during our presentation at GFBC:

    GFBC Haiti 2010 Slideshow from Jeremy Sanders on Vimeo.

    Wednesday, March 10, 2010

    Update from Petion-Ville

    I got a call from Josue’ this morning about 6:45. He had just gotten off the phone with Dickens. Dickens told him that since we left 43 people have become followers of Christ and joined the local church there. I thought that was pretty awesome.

    Have a great day!

    Sunday, March 7, 2010

    Tuesday - Day 3 - Journal

    After waking up about six I took a shower and felt much better. I didn't have any clean clothes, but it didn't matter I was refreshed. Outside, the YWAM compound looks back across a range of foothills that were being lit up by the sun as it crested over the mountains on the other side. There were chickens roaming the yard and breakfast was waiting. I drank some instant Starbucks coffee that they had and ate a type of roll or biscuit that must be Haitian. We were waiting for Elise to get in so we could meet him at the port. I touched base with him at 7AM and he was just leaving his house in Port au Prince.

    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics



    About 9AM Elise called and said he was almost to the port, so we loaded up and headed that way. The road in front of the port was busy with activity this time of day, but we managed to find a spot to park. Elise wasn't there yet so we had to wait another 15 minutes. Once he got there he ran into Alex first and we made our introductions. He called Wally and he met us at the entrance to the port and got us through security. Wally is a big guy every bit as big as Willy Wyatt my neighbor who was a pro nose guard in the NFL. He also had a badge on a chain around his neck and everyone was calling him hefe or chief. I thought, wow, this guy is really going to be able to get our stuff out of here. We had to leave them our passports and headed out to the dock. The boat our food was on was the only one at the port. It was just sitting their idle with the loading door open, but no activity going on. I pulled out my camera and snapped a picture of the ship, but one of the guards saw me and shouted something in Creole or French. Elise said, “no pictures!” Wally showed us the manifest of the ship with our names by the seven pallets. He said that he had permission to unload all of the containers from the ship. The problem was that the food was designated for us and not for a local mission. While we were standing out there Wally was talking on his cell phone trying to figure out what we could do. In the meantime, our buddy Roy, was walking across the dock. We waved at him and he walked over. We introduced him to Wally. Wally doesn't speak English, so Elise had to translate for him. Roy started to launch into one of his tirades on injustice in the world, more specifically Haiti, and how the people in front of him were part of the problem. I elbowed him and whispered to him, “Wally has the paperwork to get your stuff off the ship, don't ruin it.” Then Alex told Elise, “I don't know this guy, so whatever he says, doesn't apply to us!” Luckily Roy got the hint and quit before he got himself in a hole with someone who could help. After Roy walked off, Wally said that the agency was coming to talk to us. We weren't real sure who this was, but we said OK. A few minutes later he arrived, his name was Sonny. Sonny told us we had to go to an office down the road and pay for the bill of lading and get them to file paper work with another government office to release our food from customs. Alex and I both could tell this guy was just after money and we got rid of him. Elise and one of his friends walked Alex, Dickens, and I over to the office for the bill of lading. The lady there found the bill of lading, but wanted to charge us around $170 US to get it. They also needed a copy of my license. Alex asked to see the bill of lading, she showed us a copy but wouldn't hand us the original. Alex then asked her who her boss was, she said it was Sonny. So Sonny had sent us to his office to pay money for a document that came over with our stuff on the ship that we had already paid the shipping on. We weren't asking them to file any paperwork for us or do anything really. We just wanted the piece of paper that was ours to start with. Alex demanded the paper and Sonny said he would cut the taxes in half and give it to us for $100 US. Alex said, “I'm not paying you anything, I just want my paper.” Then Sonny asked to speak with the lady. His call dropped the first time, but then we got him back on the phone and he told her to give it to us. Then we headed over to see the customs principal in St Marc. With Elise and his friend we walked straight up to his office and explained our situation. He said that we would have to take our bill of lading to Port au Prince and talk to Jean Baptiste to try to get our food released. We called Jean Baptiste and were told that we would in fact have to come up there in person to the finance ministry. So we headed that way, bill of lading in hand.

    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics





    Before we left we got the rest of the crew headed back to Petion-Ville and Michel took them to a warehouse where they could buy rice and beans to start cooking at the church. The guys told us later, that this warehouse was stacked to the ceiling with donated US rice. It was guarded by some pretty rough looking characters with big guns. They bought 5 big bags of rice and 2 big bags of beans. Elise was going to go get the stove he was buying with the $900 that Dennis Gamble sent him and needed another $400 US or so because the guy had gone up on the price. I told Elise to get with us the next morning and one of us would help him go get it.

    Alex, Dickens, and I finally found the correct finance building. We initially were downtown by the palace, but had to go back up the hill of the city a bit to find the finance building. These people there said that we had to go to the IGF (Inspector General of Finance) which was a different building. We finally found it, and had to park across the street, then climb through a gate that had concrete pylons from the office beside it which had collapsed lying across it as well as power lines that were hanging within reach. We followed Dickens through the hole in the gate and found ourselves in a parking lot with a big sign on a small building that said “IGF”. We went inside and were immediately taken to a mid-level manager named Ronald December. He talked to us, and made a few phone calls. His secretary told us we had to consign the food over to the Protection Civil(another name for the Ministry of Interior) in order to get it passed through customs. She gave us an example written in French which Dickens wrote on the bill of lading and then Alex and I both signed it. Ronald said that there was a lady at the ministry of interior that was waiting on us to get there and we should go talk to her. Then she would meet us at his office the next morning at 9AM to get the paperwork to release the food finalized. We couldn't come back today because it was already 3PM and they closed at 3PM. So we headed out for the address of the Ministry of the Interior. Their office must have fallen because they have taken over a house to use as their office. They have several computers out front in the driveway running under a tarp, and desks and computers crammed in various rooms. We had to circle the block a few times and by the time we got there she was already gone. We talked to one of her associates and he said we would just have to come back in the morning. She wasn't answering her cell phone, so we resigned ourselves to try again the next day.

    We headed back up to Petion-Ville and the church. They were cooking beans and rice in the church’s kitchen and were finishing up the medical clinic. We hung around and ate some dinner and talked to the other guys about what had been going on. The clinic was very successful and everyone was in pretty good spirits. We did find out from the guys that the rice that they bought was donated US rice. No one was especially thrilled about that, but we didn’t figure there was much that we could do about it at the time. After everyone ate dinner, we headed down the road to where a gathering of Christian's were about to have a service. Scott had been asked to preach. The worship was amazing. Completely a cappella they praised God for a solid hour. Raymond translated for us, and they wanted us to sit in chairs at the front. Scott brought the word in a powerful way. He told the story of creation and how Adam and Eve tried to cover their sin with their own devices, but God had to provide a sacrifice to cover their sin. It was a very clear Gospel presentation.

    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    After he finished, we slipped off and headed back to the church. I slipped out to the street and called Kandy. After talking to her about the day, Mark was just sitting on the road a few feet over from me. While we were talking a couple of local guys walked up and talked to us. One of them was Michee who lives in the neighborhood. After talking to them and sharing the Gospel with them, both professed to believe that Jesus was the only way to heaven and to be followers of Christ. These guys were so humble and friendly. It's very hard to get an accurate read on their intentions though. Sometimes, I just think they want to practice their English on you. Michee is 35, single, no children. He doesn't have a job and just hangs out every day. I understand that it is very hard to get a job, but these guys don't even try. There are people who work around the city. There are taxi drivers, street sellers, laborers of various types, government jobs, and shipping jobs. They just don't even see the possibility to get a job so they don't try. Neither one of them stayed around for too long. Alex and Brett eventually walked out and joined the conversation as well. While we were hanging out in the street talking in the middle of the biggest natural disaster in our hemisphere with dozens of people either sleeping or just hanging out around us in the street we tried to come up with something else we'd rather be doing. There wasn't anything else. This was it. To be doing something for God's kingdom that had eternal ramifications. Both in our lives and the lives of the people we were ministering too.

    As the conversation went on, we heard a string of gun shots. At first we were a little concerned, but we decided that if the people around us weren't worried about it, it must not be too close. There were a few more shots and that was it, no big deal. The next day we found out the police were shooting at some looters at a grocery store...

    After that we went to bed. The church was slam full because all of us were in Petion-Ville tonight. Brett, Mark Turner, and Richard Bradley all slept in the cars. The rest of us were crammed in the church. Air mattresses were pretty much touching each other. There were several roosters in the neighborhood that would crow every once in a while, and a couple of dogs that like to wake up and fight for a bit each morning.

    Tuesday, February 23, 2010

    Monday - Day 2 - Journal

    We met downstairs at 4AM, arranged all of the luggage and supplies, some on roofs. Brett's Isuzu had a flat tire, so we changed that with the help of one of the valets at the hotel. Josh led devotion and we prayed before we left at 5AM. It was still dark as we made our way across the city, but uneventful. We had Motorola radios that made vehicle to vehicle communication possible. The trip across the DR took about 6 hours, and 3 flat tires. Luckily there are plenty of places to get a tire fixed around here. In one little town while waiting for a tire to get fixed we bought 7 ham, cheese, and slaw pannini's being cooked by a lady street vendor. It cost about $3.50 for all of them, and they were pretty good. The scenery in the DR is gorgeous. Rolling mountains are almost always visible. We bought gas in Jimani and headed for the border crossing.

    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    Before you watch these videos a few disclaimers. Go ahead and make fun of our unintentional fake Dominican and later Creole/French accents. They get better as the week goes on. Also, these videos were mostly shot from a moving SUV in crazy traffic so they aren't very steady and the conversation in the background reacts to the traffic. The videos are in 720p and streaming from Vimeo.com so you should be able to make them full screen and it be very crisp.

    Bani from Jeremy Sanders on Vimeo.



    Vincinte Noble from Jeremy Sanders on Vimeo.



    The crossing was packed with vehicles and people. There was a market right at the border and people were buying and selling food to take into Haiti. It took about 45 minutes to get across the border, but we weren't stopped or questioned at all. We didn't even get our passports stamped, they just waived us through. There was also a big UN troop carrier with a 50 cal mounted on the front that was a little intimidating, but all of the military we ran into just let us move forward without question. The road on the other side of the crossing was a very bumpy gravel road that was cut out of the side of the limestone cliffs by a river. Once free of traffic we stopped to wait for the other vehicles to catch up as it was impossible to stay together in that mass of people and trucks at the crossing.

    This one is a little long, but is all my footage of the border crossing into Haiti which was quite an experience.

    Border Crossing from Jeremy Sanders on Vimeo.



    One notable image was that of a single man in a canoe with outriggers loaded down with probably 10-15 50lb bags of rice paddling it down the river towards Haiti. He wasn't making much progress, but I guess he was determined. Maybe a sign of things yet to come…

    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    We thought that we were seeing poverty in the DR. Poverty in Haiti is so much worse that it is not even comparable. As soon as you reach the first town the smell of the third world greets you strongly. There are tent cities everywhere. I asked Dickens if those were earthquake refugees? He said that they lived like that before the earthquake. Another thing we noticed was that the gas we bought in Jamini must have been pretty low quality. All of the vehicles reported a loss of power and rattling valve trains. The trip from the border into Petion-Ville was about 3 hours which only covers 35 miles. The images of poverty and earthquake damage were striking as we rode into town. I think they speak for themselves.

    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    We made it to the church about 2:00 I think. The "street" that the church is located on is a very steep dirt, gravel, and sometimes concrete road. When we got out of the cars and looked around, I was amazed that this was what these people were living in. They were very happy to have us there. We quickly unloaded and assembled a team to go to St Marc to get the food. The medical team was going to sort the medical supplies and get ready to open the clinic the next day. I left Jeff in charge of the rest of the group to get our other supplies and gear situated and to start talking to the people of the neighborhood. We met Chasnel Raymond (referred to as Raymond), Josue's brother, as well. Dickens got a guy named Michel to drive our lead vehicle and the others followed. He is a professional driver and it was a fast ride into St Marc trying to keep up. Richard had his second flat tire on the way. I stayed back with him and we worked on getting it fixed. We had a jack, jack handle and four-way, but couldn't get the jack high enough to lift the tire. While he was under the truck, a water truck came by spraying the road and soaked him while he was laying in the dirt. After that we discovered from some local guys that there was a tire fixing stand about 100 yards down the road. It had just enough air in it to drive it that far and we were able to let them fix it.

    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    From Haiti - Jeremy's Pics


    Alex and crew proceeded to the port. When he got there about 5:15PM, the guards said it was closed, but took him to the ship. The guys on the ship took him to a room and said to wait there while they talked to the captain. The room they left him in was full of other guys from the ship. They asked him if he was new on the boat, and he said "pretty new!" One of the guys he met was Roy Dixon. He is from England and runs a non-profit getting aid into countries. He had an ambulance full of medical supplies that he was trying to get to a team of doctors, but couldn't get it through customs. They customs people told him he needed an NGO (non-government organization) to consign it over to in order to get them to release it. Through that search he met the guys at YWAM, Youth with a Mission. They have a large base in Saint Marc headed up by a guy named Terry Snow who has been in Haiti for 17 years. Tom was his contact there and after Alex told Roy what we were trying to do, Roy said he would try to get us connected with them as well to see if they could help us get the food off of the boat.



    Once Richard, Mark Turner, Josh, and I caught up with Alex at the port, Roy jumped in the SUV with Josh and me and we rode the few blocks to the YWAM compound. St Marc is like the Wild West. All of the roads are dirt, and there are motorcycles zipping by everywhere. The dust just hangs in the air. When we got to the YWAM compound, a guard opened the gate (more like metal blast doors) and let us through. We waited around for a while for Terry or Tom to become available. While we were waiting I called Elise to see what he thought we could do. He said that we could go see his cousin Wally at customs tomorrow and we could probably pay a little bit to get the food released. When I relayed this to Roy, he was pretty adamant that we not pay tariffs or bribes to get the food released. He said that once one organization does that it sets a precedent that harms all of the other Christian organizations trying to get aid into a country. Tom from YWAM was able to talk to us at 8PM. He went through the process of getting a shipping broker to handle the paperwork and file it with the government in Port au Prince to get your supplies released. We explained that we did not have time to deal with all of that, that we were only going to be there for a week and had to get the food so that we could distribute it. I talked to Elise and he said that we could go see his cousin Wally the next morning at the port and see what we could do. He was going to drive up and be there by 7AM. Then we went with some of the YWAM staff to a local restaurant to get some dinner. The place we went had hamburgers, pizza, and other various American foods, so I ordered a Royale Cheeseburger with Bacon. It has to be the nastiest hamburger I have ever put into my mouth. I only ate two bites of it and couldn't eat anymore. The patty was about one eighth of an inch thick and was burned to a crisp. The bacon even tasted bad. I think that this has to be the first burger in my life that I have ever not finished. I went ahead and ate the fries.

    After dinner we were going to drop Roy back off at the port since he was staying on the boat. He jumped out of the car and walked over to the guards to try to get in. Well, the guards evidently had decided to give him a hard time and wouldn't let him back through the gate. Roy is kind of a hot head so he just kept getting more and more wound up. He was going on and on about how the problem with Haiti was the government and how they hold up everyone trying to help their people. He then threatened to call Fox News, CNN, the BBC, and anyone else who was listening and tell them that they were responsible for suffering in Haiti. Of course the guards didn't understand a word of English and he might as well have been yelling at a brick wall. After a few minutes of this, one of the Haitian YWAM guys that was with us jumped out of the other vehicle and ran over there to see if he could help. Once he started translating what Roy was saying that just made the guards madder. Evidently the Haitian word for the f-bomb is the same as it is in English. Somehow through all of this Roy convinced the guards to let him back to the ship, and we headed back to YWAM. YWAM lined up some bunks for us to sleep on and had some towels and stuff for us to use in the morning. I talked to Alex for a few minutes and then headed up to bed with some Ibuprofen. My neck was pretty tight from all the car riding and stress of the day and I had a raging headache. As I laid on the bunk on a thin air mattress with a sheet over it, I prayed that God would release the food, but that I also would be content with His will if it did not get released. I prayed for the safety of our team and the success of our mission to show the love of Christ to those in desperate physical and spiritual need.