Posted by: ajourneytogodsheart | 07/19/2010

Betel Children’s Home

And so the conclusion of a busy week has ended with another week starting to take shape already. Yesterday we went to Lar Betel children’s home to drop off some American visitors who had come to help at Cristo Vivo. Since we are no longer working with Cristo Vivo, we needed to find an alternative plan, and we have known about Betel for awhile now, we just have never been out there.

When I say “out there” I mean Out There. Its about 2 hours from Brasilia, 1:30 on the highway, then about another 20-30 minutes down a dirt track. We just kept riding up this windy, bumpy dirt track, really not even a road, just a glorified driveway, until we got to the children’s home.

We were really impressed with the home. The houses are clean and the rooms are organized. The kids were not fighting, they were playing soccer or hanging around chatting. Most of the kids are over age 12, as the young ones, up to age 2 or 3, get adopted really quickly.

The home has been around for about 30 years. They take in street kids, abused kids, sexually abused kids, and neglected kids. Alot of the kids who come from the streets are now second or third generation street kids/homeless. Those kids have no self-worth when they come to the home. While there, they have a sort of inner healing sessions available, the kids go to school right there on the property, and some of them are taught a trade.

Betel currently takes care of about 140 kids, though it varies alot, as children’s homes here vary based on kids coming and going. There are kids there from all over Brazil. This was apparent in the way the kids looked, some with more indigenous features, some more black, looking like they were from Bahia, Minas, the south.

The home has its own bakery where a few kids learn how to make the bread, then there is fresh bread for everyone daily.

The home has a really good organizational structure, and it is well-known. It has an office in Brasilia to take care of donations and paperwork things.

About 26 people work there, and all the workers live there with their families. They only receive a minimum wage, so the workers are dedicated to the kids.

We were all really impressed with Betel and the way it is run. Very impressed.

Posted by: ajourneytogodsheart | 07/06/2010

Another Children’s Home

Today I visited another children’s home in the Brasilia/DF region of Brazil. It was really well-run, lots of staff, the kids’ rooms were clean, the clothes were hanging nicely on the lines to dry, the kids weren’t fighting, and we saw them coming back from school in the home’s van, in their crisp uniforms.

But the kids were missing something. They didn’t smile much, they looked sad, a few of them seemed like they were isolating themselves by eating alone in the kitchen. Kids, who usually will come running up to visitors, barely looked at us, and just made comments when our “tour guide” got some facts wrong about them- “She has 4 brothers here with her” the guide said. The girl replied “No, I have 3 brothers, its 4 all together with me”.

And so our visit went well, but we couldn’t help but notice that the kids were missing something that, despite the poor conditions that the other children’s home we had been working with had, the kids were always happy because they knew Jesus. The kids at this new children’s home don’t have Jesus. Its a spiritist children’s home. We could probably equate it to being a new-age pagan children’s home, as we don’t really have “spiritists” in the US, just for cultural reference.

The children’s home is connected to a large daycare center. The daycare center has about 210 kids from babies up to age 7, who come from the surrounding community everyday. The daycare was even more beautiful than the children’s home! The children’s home was nice, clean, well-looked after, and brightly painted, but the daycare center, WOW, it was the nicest daycare center I have seen outside of the US!! And their outdoor play area was nicer than the playground at the public school I used to teach at in the US!

The kids were down for their naps, each on a little mat, sleeping. The rooms looked brand-new, the outside walls were painted with colorful graffiti displaying a child’s fantasy playland. The playground was beautiful, nice wooden structure, with a little clubhouse and a miniature fake asphalt road, complete with a dotted yellow middle line for the kids when they play on bikes.

Was it discouraging at all to see all this at a spiritist place? Knowing that the kids there don’t know Jesus? No, it was actually inspiring.

We, as Christians, need to have the best developed structures to take in children and care for them, to educate them, and tell them about Jesus. This spiritist place had such good structure, it was inspiring, because seeing it, I know it can be done. That we, Christians, can make equally as nice a children’s home and daycare center to tell kids about Jesus.

The children’s home had about 50 kids, and 12 of them were special needs kids. One had a wheelchair. Another didn’t talk, another looked like he might have CP from the way he walked. Another, possibly autistic. First off, the christian children’s home we had been working with did not take special needs kids. They didn’t have any infrastructure for it. The children’s homes I have seen which take in special needs kids have been in Mexico and Ecuador. The home in Ecuador was really well-structured, but the special needs kids were not adequately cared for. At the spiritist children’s home, the special needs kids go to regular or special school, go to the doctor, and get special exercises to help them out. The other children’s homes I have seen with special needs kids, the kids were just left sitting in wheelchairs all day long because the caregivers weren’t therapists.

What a wonderful thing it would be to have a PT and OT living inside a children’s home for special needs kids! That is one of my dreams… Now I have another one, I have a model that says “a children’s home with a nice structure and organization can be done”. Learning from the spiritist home, I can say, let’s make a better children’s home than any other religion out there, and lets make it Jesus-centered, and fill it with kids with special needs and abused kids, and with Jesus’ Joy!

Posted by: ajourneytogodsheart | 07/03/2010

The Most Valuable thing to Bring on a Short Term Missions Trip

The most valuable thing you can bring with you on a short term mission trip is an open mind. Come without expectations. If you have any expectations, let them go. If you expected to be busy all the time, let it go. If you expected you would have certain foods, let it go. Open up your mind to the new and unknown. Open up your mind to be able to see that cultural differences aren’t wrong. Their way of doing things may be different that ours, but it is not wrong, just different. Open up your mind to what God wants you to learn. Even if you are miserable, even if you get sick and can’t even get out of bed, God still has brought you for a reason and wants to teach you many things. Before doing anything else, right now, take a few moments to think of expectations you may have had, and release them to God, let them go. Ask Him to open up your mind to learn and to be open to receive and be teachable.

The second most valuable thing you can bring is a willing heart. We are not called to go on missions trips to stay in 5-star hotels. We are not called to go on missions trips to refuse to clear the table, wash the dishes, clean the bathroom, pick up trash. We must be open and willing to go lower still in the upside down kingdom of God. If we normally don’t pick up trash around our yard or in our street, and at a place we visit, we are told they need us to pick up trash, we don’t complain about it or make a scene. We do it, and do it willingly. When there is a chore around the places we visit that we see really needs to be done, we do it. Or we ask someone if we can do it, and ask someone how a local would do the chore. There are very different ways to clean in different parts of the world. We step in and fill in the gaps, we go lower and lower until we feel we can go no lower, and still, we might be called to sit in a garbage dump with people dying of communicable disease, we go there and go lower still.

The third most important thing to remember on a short-term mission trip is that you are only there for a short amount of time. Whether it is a week, two weeks, a month, or even six months, after your set time there, you will go home, and those you have worked with and ministered to, will remain where you met them, where you saw them. You cannot change everything on a short-term trip. You cannot take people out of the poverty situations they are in, in most cases. That is the job of the local church and long-term missionaries. Many places people visit on short-term trips, such as daycares, children’s homes, hospitals, and neighborhoods, have regular ministries that work with the people there on a regular basis. These ministries welcome extra short-term help for a bit of respite, but the people at the places you will visit are not without other help after you leave, unless, for example, you go in with a team to break ground in a previously unreached village. But, even then, a pastor will be sent back there to work with the people since the short-term work had broken ground for a pastor to go in.

Along the same lines, know, you cannot change culture in two weeks. We can act within the bounds of the culture of the kingdom of God, we can show the people that there is another way, but there are things that we cannot change. One example is, in many parts of the world, dogs are treated horribly, they are kicked and chased away, and even killed, for no reason. We cannot change what other people do, how they treat the dogs, but we can show them what is the proper was to treat a dog, and to not kick the dogs or throw rocks at them. We can kindly tell someone we see kicking a dog, to be more gentle, but we cannot make them listen or make them change.

The fifth most important thing to remember is that, no matter how you feel, you are still a foreigner. Foreigners attract attention. They do at first, they do when they speak the language, they do even after years of living in a place. You can minimize how foreign you look by copying the dress of the people around you. But there are things that will make you look foreign no matter what- your hairstyle, your skin color, the color of your eyes, the way you walk. It is amazing to realize that people in different parts of the world actually walk different, the way they move their hips and thighs to walk, is different.

The last thing to remember is that smiles and prayer are two universal languages. Oftentimes, prayers don’t need to be directly translated. You can pray for someone in whatever language you like. Unless specifically asked by someone to translate a prayer, it is usually unnecessary. What people should be able to tell from prayers, above anything else, is your love for them. Smiles, as well, are also universal, except in Russia. Smiling at a child living in a slum, smiling at a woman who has been abused, smiling at an old man suffering from back pain, will brighten their day. It shows you like them, shows you care about them. Before anyone will accept Jesus, they must first accept his representative on earth, and that is us that they must accept. We win their acceptance by eating with them, eating the same way as them, eating the same food as them. We gain their acceptance by learning how to do the common chores they do, by singing the same songs as them, by finding out about their culture and customs. Before we can win the privilege of winning them to Jesus, we must win them to ourselves, to show love without using words, to show love in every way imaginable. Our love should be the most visible thing in our lives.

Posted by: ajourneytogodsheart | 06/23/2010

Disenchantment

It had taken me years to get back into a holy-spirit filled church movement after alot of stuff happened in high school. And I was back into it from 2008, up until now. And I am getting back out.

I am so disenchanted with it. Not with Holy Spirit, no, I still love Holy Spirit. But I am disenchanted with the way things tend to work in the more “out-there” Holy Spirit ministries. I am not including Iris in this at all. Iris has issues, yes, but thats more because Mozambican culture has issues, and Mozambicans make up the majority of Iris. I love Iris.

That said, the other big organizations are so concerned about numbers, that they take shortcuts legally, they run over “little” people who arent working for them. They threaten others to shut up so their own numbers can grow.

They count how many headaches were healed, and forget to hug the person who wasn’t healed, rolling themselves out of the meeting in their wheelchair. I am not saying that a headache healed is nothing, but the numbers don’t tell the whole story.

I am done with it. No more. I should’ve learned my lesson back in high school. I should’ve stayed out of it. But, no, I decided to go back in. And I’m out again.

Maybe it was my knowledge that Holy Spirit is real, and can heal, and is a great partner in God’s work that made me go back in. I loved going to The Call, and Iris, and YPI. But then finding out the backstory to these places, makes me want out, and out now.

But I still am not giving up on Iris. I know Mama Aida. I know her missionaries. They are real, humble ppl. Not concerned about numbers. They just love ppl. Simple. Thats all I want. And Holy Spirit. I don’t want big-ness or fame or all the pride that goes with that. I want Africa.

Posted by: ajourneytogodsheart | 06/18/2010

I am witness to a Lie

I am witness to a lie.

The lie that claims their photos as my own. The lie that profits from my loss. The lie that refuses to acknowledge the artist. The lie that is puffed up by pride.

I am saddened to see the cd that has my stolen photos on it was released without any further resolution. The prideful producer refused to acknowledge me, refused to talk to me.

The pride that puffs up is the pride that will destroy. Pride comes before a fall.

All I wanted was some resolution. For the Pride to say “Ok, I was wrong, they are YOUR photos, and I didnt take them myself”.

I am further and further disappointed and disenchanted with the Large. The Large is powerful and its power fuels the lies. Power intimidates and threatens the small to shut up.

I cannot lose any more than I have already lost. I cannot be at peace with the release of the cd without even giving me any acknowledgment or thanks for the beautiful photos. I say beautiful, not because I think my photos are the best, but because, if they were used, then someone who used them must have thought they were worth taking and using. Someone must have thought they were worth stealing.

Those who own nothing of value never get things stolen. Those who posses expensive gadgets can have their possessions stolen. Those who are creative can have their very heart stolen.

I am seeking to take back what is mine. I am guarding my heart, my artwork, I am trying to let things go, to let things be.

But I cannot see how Pride can say they are so holy. I cannot see how Pride can still make things work.

I can only pray that the antithesis of Pride, Love Himself, would come and break Pride down so that the Lie will not pervade my life anymore. So that the Lie cannot live anymore.

That Love Himself would make Himself known. All credit goes to Love Himself. The keeper of my heart. The keeper of my artwork.

Posted by: ajourneytogodsheart | 06/15/2010

The Journey Project- June 2010

The Journey Project- June 2010

Happy Endings
Upon my arrival back at Orfanato Cristo Vivo in May, after having been back in the states for a month, I was a little disappointed to hear that some of my favorite kids had left. Sometimes, when kids leave the children’s home, they go back with parents who still neglect them, and the kids are unhappy. Or they go to another institution that is not necessarily Christian. Or they go with a family member who can’t provide for them. I was concerned for their well-being.

Surprisingly, little Raquel and her 4 brothers, all went back with their parents! Their mother came back to their father, and they are living with both parents again. The older kids are still at the same school and see the kids from Cristo Vivo there everyday. The kids are really happy to be back with their parents. The kids are doing really well, and we are so happy their story had a happy ending for this chapter!

Water Filter
We have purchased and installed a water filter in the cafeteria at Cristo Vivo! The filter is directly hooked up to the pipes, so there is no re-filling of containers to do. The old re-fillable water filters were broken and moldy. We decided that clean water for the kids was worth investing in, and a local church in Brasilia gave us money to buy the filter. Now the kids can drink clean water and not have to worry about getting sick from their water!

Summer Outreach Team
We have 3 Americans from Connecticut joining The Journey Project in Brasilia during the month of July! We are excited for the ways that they are going to be able to help, as well as for the things that God is going to teach us. We will be helping at Cristo Vivo, visiting another children’s home, helping at a daycare for children from a poor community, and doing some other creative outreaches around Brasilia.

Ways you can help!
Even if you can’t come to Brazil this summer, you can still help us make the summer successful!

Please, pray for us! Pray that all of the details get worked out and pray for safety for everyone as they are traveling to Brazil. Pray that all flight connections get made on time! Pray that the kids are receptive to us coming and that their lives will be changed.

Consider supporting us financially! While the volunteers who are coming are paying their own way, we do need some additional funding to help us get to Cristo Vivo and the other outreach locations, as well as covering some living expenses. If you are able to financially support us this summer, please make checks payable to “Harvest Christian Center” and write “Brazil” on the memo line. Send tax-deductible checks to: 302 Soundview Ave, Shelton, CT, 06484. Or visit our website at http://thejourneyproject.org/1/donate.html to donate online. Any amount is greatly appreciated.

Tell your friends! Join our group on facebook, follow our blogs, pass along our newsletters, and spread the word! We are starting a Love Revolution with the forgotten and rejected in Brazil and we want the world to come along on our Journey!

Thank you for your continued support! God bless you all and have a wonderful summer!

-Emily Bair
contact@thejourneyproject.org

Posted by: ajourneytogodsheart | 05/21/2010

Greening the earth

I have had a few thoughts this week:
1) I am thinking of starting a new blog. Not missions-focused, but just focused on maybe like arts and crafts, or being greener or something along those lines.
2) I’m really going to be cutting back on ministry after July. Paulo and I are taking the first year of marriage “off”. Well, not entirely, but he won’t be traveling with the band and we’re not expanding the Journey Project. I’m still going to be going to see the kids at the children’s home and all, but not expanding, and we’re going to kinda turn that over to some friends who are already very involved.
3) I really really need a job. Like as soon as I move to Brazil. Unfortunately, I am not sure if it will be possible because of my visa.
4) I really really need some creative, artsy, intellectual friends in Brazil and here in CT. I miss my college friends. Alot.
5) I finished Brian MacLaren’s book “Everything Must Change” and while I didn’t agree with everything he said, I agree with his main point- Everything Must Change! Our narrow worldview, our view as God of a God of war- meaning we should be people of war, our view that we want immediate gratification without any consequences, our view on what happiness is, and our views on how to eradicate poverty and bring justice. Don’t believe the critics all the time. Read the criticized books yourself before you judge.
6) People keep asking about the trip to Brazil in July. I just got my ticket for my MAY trip last week. I have not thought much about the July trip. Lets do one thing at a time.

Posted by: ajourneytogodsheart | 05/17/2010

Wedding Things

So I have not been the most faithful blogger here recently. Actually, it isn’t because I am too busy, it is because rather than focusing on missions right now, I am focusing on my upcoming wedding! It is going to come really quickly- just over 3 months away right now. I have 2 upcoming trips to Brazil which cuts out about 6 weeks of planning/prepping that I have here in the states, but does allow me to see my fiance!!

As someone who is interested in being a good steward of the money God has given me, and the money God has given my parents, in this case, I am having a very frugal and DIY wedding. Our photographer is the most expensive thing- and we’re having a friend who is a pro come and do it for way less than even local photographers who are not nearly as good as our friend!!

I got my wedding dress for free. Yes, you read that right, freeeeeee!!!! It was a $1000 dress that was free at a dress shop that was getting rid of old stock. Thank goodness for my sister’s dance studio because she was getting costumes there, and got a bunch of wedding dresses for free as well!

My outfit otherwise is simple- i got a haircomb for 75cents and decorated it myself with faux pearls that we had lying around. The good thing about being crafty in general is that we had alot of stuff lying around and haven’t had to go out and buy things to enable us to make stuff.

I made my own paper for the favor tags, table number cards, and “escort” cards (we’re not having an escort, but the cards are not on the tables…). My handmade paper was made out of packing paper and newspaper. It came out really cool. We even had screens I could destroy cuz we got new windows last year and don’t need the pop-in screens anymore. My grandma gave me her old blender to wreck with the paper pulp.

I’m keeping track of how much I spend on wedding things, and so far, for all the decorations, favors, bridesmaid dresses, flower girl dress, hair thing for me, and all the stationary, it is just a bit over $200. I am determined to not spend more than $2500 on this wedding. I had a potential budget of $5000, but I don’t want me or my parents to go into debt for one day! So I cut it in half, and I think we will actually stick to it!

Posted by: ajourneytogodsheart | 05/03/2010

The Weight of it All

I have learned a powerful lesson that still is sticking with me a year and a half after leaving Africa. Africa does not leave you the same. I can go to and from Brazil without much deep effect on my conscience or on my heart. Maybe that is because Brazil already owns my heart, and Africa was unintentional.

I have found that many of my friends who I was in Africa with, to this day, keep posting things on their facebook pages about Africa and the need to return. We are waiting to return, waiting to live again, waiting to breathe in the African dirt again.

Not to say that no one continues on normally, I believe some people may have forgotten Mozambique more than others, but for many, it has left such an impact on their lives that it is impossible for us to function in normal western society. We are called, drawn, back to Africa, back to something greater than ourselves. We are in this holding pattern waiting for a chance to leap out and serve God in a greater capacity. We are waiting, and in the process, unhappy with jobs, school, life in general. Africa is not something you ever “get over”. It is hard to cope in normal life knowing that Africa exists and that you are not there.

Sometimes I wish I weren’t different. Sometimes I wish I was able to just have a normal job, like if I had stayed at the bank back in ’07 I would have a stable life. I would have my own car and apartment. But no. I left and nannied and got my life wrecked by these former orphan kids from Eastern Europe. And then I had to go to Africa. And after that, I got my life wrecked even more by these crazy autistic kids (God gave me His eyes) and then I went to Brazil and realized I need to be there. So then I left the autistic kids, and was in Brazil, and now I’m here, and I am back to how I was 3 years ago.

Well, there is one difference, I’m getting married soon, to someone who also has this inability to live in normal western culture. So we won’t. We’ll go back to Africa. Mozambique. Zimbabwe, the DR Congo. Morocco. Bangladesh. France. Anywhere but here.

Why does Africa mean you are no longer able to live some normal steady, stable western life? Is it possible to do that without having some sort of residual guilt about not being there? Without having some sort of longing to go back, to go back home?

Posted by: ajourneytogodsheart | 05/03/2010

Photo Contest

Life in the bush in Mozambique

http://travelmaharishi.com/?page_id=3

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