Bright as a Feather

Entries tagged as ‘orphans’

If you only had 40 years…

May 19, 2009 · 2 Comments

What if, from the moment you were born, you were only expected to live for 40 years?

I would only have 16 years and 2 months left to live if that were true. My mom would have been gone for 11 years, and my grandparents would be long gone.

That is reality for the people in Swaziland, according to Unicef’s most recent report from 2007 of the state of the country. There is basically no middle generation. It is grandparents raising babies, and when the grandparents pass away it becomes babies raising babies. In 2007 there were 56,ooo children living as orphans because of AIDS. Fifty six thousand. And the estimate for people of all ages living with HIV in 2007 was 190,000. Those are some huge, sad numbers.

It’s overwhelming.

You’re only one person. What can ONE person do for 56,000 children, or for the 190,000 living with HIV? And what can only ONE person do, from across the entire world?

I don’t have every answer. I probably don’t have anything more than suggestions for you, actually. But I know what I am going to do about it.

This July I am spending 2 weeks, with a team of eleven other young adults, in Swaziland, loving on all the kids we can. And giving the Gogos (grandmothers, the ladies who are caring for the kids) a little break.

I feel absolutely blessed to be able to do this, and even more so to be contributing to the Legacy Book project.

Sinethemba. I have hope. The name of a sweet baby boy that our team leader met. His mother, Dudu, was dying of AIDS when Morgan met her, and last we heard she was not doing very well. The Legacy Book project was inspired by Morgan’s encounters and relationship with Dudu, a woman who was heartbroken to be leaving her son. The vision for this project is to give the children who will be losing their parents something to hold on to. Memories, photographs of the parents and children together(a rarity in poor rural areas), family history, advice for their futures, things their parents loved about them. Invaluable gifts to a child whose memories will fade, whose heart will long to remember what his mom’s hugs felt like, what her dad’s voice sounded like, the songs their family has sung for years.

If we can help preserve those things, if we can help the parents leave behind a legacy for generations to come to enjoy, then we have done our part. A small part in showing those children that they are valuable, loved, worthy, and not overlooked; that their parents loved them, that their lives can be healthier and longer, that they too can make a difference in someone’s life. That they are special enough for a group of 12 twentysomething year-olds from California to fly across the world to hang out with them, play soccer, teach them anything we can, write down their stories, capture the special way their mothers smile when they look at their child, and freeze a moment in time where parent and child were enjoying the moments they had.

My focus is to be the photographer who captures these moments, to record a part of the life each family is living, and to give the children these photos to keep forever, even past the time when the picture of their mother’s face is still clear in their minds. I’m honored to be a part of this. I’m preparing to cry, a lot, but I’m honored to be able to use my gift to bless others.

Because one person can make a difference.

{If you would like to be a part of this project by helping me meet my fundraising needs, please follow the instructions in the box up on the sidebar titled “Swazi- July 09″. (My  goal is $1,000.00 by June 1st, and a total of $3,00.00 by the end of June, and we leave mid July) Thank you in advance for any donations made! Things like this are not possible without many people coming together and doing what they can to make it work. And if you would like to keep this trip in your prayers, that is also a fantastic contribution, thank you.}

Categories: Swaziland 2009
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The Ivey’s are changing the world…and my heart

July 1, 2008 · 4 Comments

The world of blogging is amazing to me. People you’ve never met can really change your perspective, and your life.

Over the past few months I’ve been following the lives of a family I’ve never met. They share their stories, struggles and most importantly, their journey through trying to adopt 2 beautiful children from Haiti. And right now Aaron and Jamie could really really use your prayers! I beg you to join me, and many others who are lifting them up in prayer and pleading for God to move mountains that could possibly prevent them from being united with their precious children.

My heart has been opened and changed by their blogs, and specifically by their heart for adoption. It was a topic that I was always unsure of. And now, I don’t see how anyone can have a negative view of it. And it’s now something that I plan on doing when the time is right. Why WOULDN’T it be right to take in and love and give a home to a child who otherwise would be overlooked by the world.

I read a statistic that was something like, if 7(?)percent of Christians adopted a child there would be no orphans. I don’t remember where I read it, or what the exact number was, but it was a small number. And that blows my mind.

“Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and fautless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world.” James 1:27 NIV

I think it’s interesting that in the same breath, that passage mentions taking care of the orphans and widows, AND not letting yourself be polluted by the world. How do those go together? Because it seems that a main excuse people use (and I’m not saying that EVERYONE HAS TO adopt, just looking deeper into why we should) for not feeling called to adopt is to say that it is too hard, too scary. The world has corrupted so many things. And because the world feeds us lies about adoption leading to broken families who can’t get along and adopted children who hate their adopted parents…we have come to FEAR adoption in some ways. What if it messes up your comfortable life? What if it changes the way you and your family live. But who would try and decieve us to believe that “what God accepts as pure and faultless” is in fact impossible? I can only think of one Sneaky Little Bastard… the same one who would love for use to believe that many things are impossible, he would love for us to forget that through Christ who strengthens me, all things are possible. All things. Possible. God moves mountains. Don’t let yourself be polluted by the world.

If God sees something as pure and faultless, and if it models His love for us, why would we expect it to fail? Is it challenging and heartbreaking at times, I’m sure it is. But does that stop God from adopting us as His own and taking us in without question to love us for eternity? Nope. So why should it stop us?

Let’s join in prayer and beg for God to move what seems like us to mountains, but to Him are just little pebbles. And stop by Aaron’s blog and/or Jamie’s blog to read it for yourself, to see their hearts, and to encourage them. They’re trying to change the world through loving children as God loves. They’ve changed my life, and through that, will end up changing atleast one other child’s life in the future. And THAT, that is pure and faultless.

Let’s be The Church right now. Pray. It works wonders.

Categories: Faith · Making a difference
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