Friday, May 30, 2008

Our Cook


Our cook is doing a fantastic job making sure all our students are fed well. She is keeping the kitchen clean, doing the weekly/bi weekly market shop, and is preparing a wide range of meals for the children. For most this is the best they have ever been fed! The wonderful part is that she lives just next door and comes early in the morning to cook their breakfast and then again in the afternoon for their dinner. She is the mother of 5 girls and knows how to run a household well. Her husband is also very involved with BPDN - this is also a gift as he is the leader of the village!

If you would like to sponsor our cook -
please email Connect at connect3e@hotmail.com
We need three people to cover her wage of $105 each month.

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Great News

I (Ruth) have just returned this evening from the weekend down at Baan Puk Dek Nakrean. Jordan and I took the train to Hua Hin and from there hired a motorbike and rode the hour and a bit trip up the mountain. I prayed hard as we went through the stretch of road where the wild elephants cross regularly! Out at Baan Puk Dek Nakrean things are progressing really well. Samson, with the support of Ponpun and Namchai (leaders from the local church), have done got (and continue to work at getting) routine in place. The last couple of weeks have been spent getting 25 students and 4 University students off to their respective schools. Alongside this, Samson, Namchai and Ponpun (also students and volunteers) have have continued to work on the grounds and buildings.

This week ... the builders will return to complete the kitchen/multipurpose area! We will also be able to start shortly on Samson's room, along with completing paving around the grounds. Thank you so much for your generous hearts and for your continued support - both of which make this work here possible. There is so much to do here so please continue to remember Baan Puk Dek Nakrean. When we can, we would like to purchase a tank to collect rain water and save on having to purchase drinking water each day. We would like to begin building a couple of rooms for volunteers also. We will be patient...but continue to dream...at the same time!

Another great step this week was asking a Karen lady (who lives next door to the school) to come on staff as a cook. Samson, obviously, has alot on his plate and so this lady will take some of the burden of caring for 25 students from him. We have the funds to pay the first couple of months for this lady and from there we are hoping to have three people sponsor this lady (she has a name and I knew it this morning - but now I have forgotten~) - if you are interested please let me know via email. We have also taken 2 extra students from the village whose parents are both alcoholics. These little boys are now eating three meals a day, sleeping in a bed at night (rather than somewhere in the village - on a slab of cement) going to school and being taught how to care for their new clothes. Oh...it is so so exciting to see this....and it is happening because of your partnership.

We are also starting a general sponsorship for Baan Puk Dek Nakrean at $20 each month. If you are interested in this (it will help cover extra expenses such as medical costs, books, clothes, electricity and so on)let me know. We still need some sponsors for students (as our 4 university students all needed 2 sponsors each to cover fees) Again, if you are interested in sponsorship, email me. We still have many opportunities available!

David and Lexi Edwards (volunteers from Australia) leave this week after a full three months of service. We are so thankful for their hard work and loving hearts. The students have enjoyed working alongside them, learning English from them and will be richer for having both Lexi and David in their lives.

Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. You are indeed impacting lives here in Thailand. Let's stay the course together.

Monday, May 5, 2008

Urgent


When we leveled the land to begin building we came across a patch of dirt that was spongy...it was very unusual. The children could literally bounce on the ground as if standing on a water bed. The reason was the amount of water (and sewage from the village) running underneath that spot. While this was interesting when we were clearing the land... we had other words for it when it came time to dig the holes for the building. Having only dug a half meter deep we began to encounter the water. The holes had to be dug deeper but the more we dug the more the water came.

Similarly, as we have begun work here at the border of Thailand and Burma we have encountered an ongoing, seemingly never ending, more than we can handle, overwhelming number of needs. And they just keep coming.

Yesterday we came back thrilled but emotionally exhausted from another weekend down at Baan Puk Dek Nakrean. So much is happening, the dorms are nearly complete – they are very rough – but they will keep the students dry. The students have chosen their new rooms (4 to a room at this stage) and express enormous gratitude for what they consider is a privileged position to be in. We have three girls starting government university and another young man (all of whom are potential leaders for the Karen people) starting University in Bangkok. We could already fill the places for next year’s possible intake of students. Baan Puk Dek Nakrean is getting known very quickly and so we are hearing of further needs. We can’t respond to them all just yet, we know that. But the needs are there, we hear about them and we are constantly confronted with the injustice in our world. This weekend Samson was asked if Baan Puk Dek Nakrean could take a 2 week old baby. The mother is desperate to give the baby away so she can work and earn her $3 or $4 a day and live. Samson had to say no to the baby. We hear of people hungry all the time, but can't respond as currently we don’t even have the funds to get the BPDN built. However, when one of our laborers (whose wife has died) got sick and his family (4 children) therefore did not eat rice (their staple diet) for a couple of days we felt compelled to respond and so we bought rice for them to eat so their systems did not shut down and they continued to live. The needs keep coming and coming and coming. In an honest moment of expressing emotion and with tears, I said to Colin ‘I nearly wish I didn’t know.’ ‘It is too hard to know.’ ‘It would be easier to live without knowing.’ ‘There is truth in the statement ‘ignorance is bliss’. But we do know. And knowing means we can do nothing but respond. This is the heart of the Christian faith… Micah 6:8 says ‘What does the Lord require of you? To seek justice and love mercy and walk humbly with your God. So I write this blog with somewhat of a pleading heart that you too would know and would respond. Here is the current situation.

Since our last blog it has become apparent that we have to stop building. We have the finances to finish the dorms and to feed the children (that will always be covered via your sponsorship), but we cannot proceed any further with the kitchen/dining/classroom multi purpose area until more funds come in. We didn’t know that the 4 university students all needed their years fees paid up front and so paying this has sapped the remainder of funds.

I rang Samson yesterday and explained that we have nearly come to the end of funds and that we need to stop building for the time being. Samson (again affirming our confidence in him as a leader) said ‘No problem teacher! We can go slowly slowly’. While we appreciate Samson’s acceptance of the situation, Connect longs to finish this first stage of building for him, the students and the wider village ( village children and parents can come for English lessons and dinner once a week). The upright poles are in place for the multipurpose area but we need another $3000 to finish this building. Until then they will (remembering also that the rainy season has begun) cook, eat and learn under a tarpaulin. We need about $1000 to build a room for Samson (he will live in a tent till that building is complete) and another $1000 to build paths around the home to cope with the rainy season. Currently there is slipping and sliding on alot of mud. $6000 was given to purchase a vehicle for Baan Puk Dek Nakrean – but because this was not an immediate need we used the funds to build but will also need to recover these funds asap.

So can I humbly ask you to help? Every dollar (even $20) will help Connect cover these immediate costs and serve these people. Can I also remind you that every dollar you give goes straight into cement, blocks, rice, wood, nails, gravel, vegetables (although we have begun to grow our own vegetables to cut down costs in the future), petrol to run Samson’s motorbike, clean water and so on. None of our volunteers take anything and Colin and I use our salaries from our jobs to fund us being here.

So many of you have given so generously to Connect and you continue to give via your sponsorship commitment. Thank you. However we need funds over and above the sponsorship money and if you can help with this we would be grateful. If you can pray, we would be grateful. If you can speak to your friends about the needs here, we would be grateful. If you can come and learn, love and teach the students, we would be grateful.

This, by far, is the most daunting project Colin and I have ever pioneered. I am confident that I could say the same for our director, Ken Bunney. When Ken came over to Thailand last week we spent the evenings chatting, under the tarpaulin. The three of us spoke of feeling that we finally understand a little of what it is to follow Jesus obediently. Today, as I recalled our chats with Ken on the land, I remembered a feeling I had as a little girl. I remember having good news and telling my mum that I wanted to get a loudspeaker and shout out my good news to the world (apparently confident that the world would want to know). That feeling, however, has never left me. At times (even as an adult) when I learnt something or experienced something new – I wanted to get that loud speaker and go to a mountain top and shout it out to the world - so people could experience the joy with me. Never has this feeling been as intense as it is now though. More than ever I want to shout out what I know. So here goes for those that want to hear. I know there are people that are hungry here at the border of Thailand and Burma. I know that these 24 students have a future to dream about because they were chosen to live at Baan Puk Dek Nakrean. I know that there are many more students hoping to come next year. I know it takes money to respond to the needs. I know that the parents and grandparents have hopes for their children. I know that we have only scratched the surface here. I know that we have students who need to see a dentist. I know that we need volunteers to come. I know that the Karen make great leaders for their own people and that they simply need us to partner with them. I know that God made the Karen and has a plan and hope for their futures just as He has for mine and yours. I know that I must keep learning and ‘knowing’, that I cannot shut off to any of this. But more intensely, even though I am immature in my faith, I know and have a new found, deep joy that comes with responding to injustice, to loving mercy and walking humbly with my God. I am aware of the numerous needs around our world. If you are responding elsewhere, well done. If not and you are able to make some room in your budget - I thank you for responding alongside of us.

Ruth.

Thursday, May 1, 2008

27 days without a shower!

We have just come back from having lived (camped) and worked at Baan Puk Dek Nakrean (Home for Students). I came and went (organizing volunteers) from the land, but Colin (who upon arriving home stated he hadn't enjoyed a shower for 27 days), David and Lexi have all spent the good part of the last month working, playing, learning, teaching and laughing with the students and builders. So far, your financial gifts have enabled us to purchase land, build 6 rooms (each with room for 4 students) and build a kitchen/classroom/dining multipurpose area. We now need to concentrate on getting 24 students and 5 (off campus) university students into their prospective schooling. This means buying uniforms and shoes, paying school fees and buying books and pencils. Your sponsorship will help cover this. We are still unsure as to who the last 14 students will be and consequently we have not been able to send photos and details as yet. Samson is having to work out who he can say 'yes' to for this first intake of students. We have many people asking if their child/ren can come. One man who is building at BPDN (we are paying him above award wage at $4 a day) if one or two of his children could come to the school. His wife has died and their family are strugling to get the money to even eat rice each day. Pray that Samson will have wisdom on who to accept. We will know by the 14th of this month and we will then get the sponsorship details sorted. Samson continues to shine as a leader, he is extremely relational and so the building side of things is exhausting him some, but he continues to show wisdom, maturity and joy.

Currently we use Samson's motorbike for everything - and once the dorms and kitchen are finished we will purchase (as the funds come in) a car for Baan Puk Dek Nakrean. Following that we need to put some walls on the kitchen area. We need to build a room for Samson (he will live in a tent for the time being - making room for the 24 students). We need to build beds for the students (until then they will sleep on the cement) and we need to build a room for our volunteers that are beginning to come on a regular basis.

David and Lexi have and continue to be a great asset at Baan Puk Dek Nakrean. They are the Jack and Jill of all trades. They teach English, sing songs, build tables (out of a variety of materials), shovel cement and the list goes on. Their greatest impact is their willingness to love, laugh and be silly in general with the students. The students are enjoying their friendship. The students at Baan Puk Dek Nakrean also thouroughly enjoyed Pee Pee (Grandma) Janet coming. Janet was out at the school for over a week. She embraced the students, taught them English, shoveled gravel with them (cement has been a common theme in the month!) and they embraced her back.

Following writing this blog, my task is to make a DVD to send to each of you. On the DVD you will see Janet, David and Lexi and Ken in action, along with the students, Samson and Ajarn Ponpun. Our director of Connect, Ken Bunney, has also visited this month. Ken was appreciated so much by Samson and Arjan Ponpun (our leaders of Baan Puk Dek Nakrean)along with the students. Samson took Ken out for a day on the motorbike to other villages to introduce him to the great number of needs the Karen people have. Ken has returned to Australia with a clearer understanding of Connect's role here in Thailand with the Karen people. Ken has been deeply moved by his time here and is motivated to grow the Connect network of supporters so we can continue to significantly impact the lives of the precious Karen people here.

Below are some photos of our month.....the building is further along now....but you will have to wait till the next blog. Just 6 months ago Colin and I asked Ken Bunney if he would be willing to be the Director of Connect. We thought that over the next couple of years we (and our group of friends and family) could perhaps help some Karen children/families through sponsorship for their schooling. Now, just 6 months later, you have enabled land to be purchased, dorms for 24 students to be built, a kitchen/classroom to be built, leadership development to begin taking place and 24 school students and 5 university students to be stepping into a whole different future than they thought. Thank you....Thank you....Thank you. Please continue to travel this journey with us......the need is so great here...it seems like the journey has only just began!