Thursday, July 28, 2011

Guat's up? Guatemala

3 And he said: “Truly I tell you, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.
Matthew 18:3

Upon Arriving at Casa Para Ninos I was met with a complex paradox. Stories of how many of the children ended up at Casa... babies in trashcans, kids who got sick and the family didn't want them, little girls raped, and so on. We were warned that many of the children might be tempted to steal stuff so keep an eye on everything. Typically you would expect delinquents at a place like Casa, but yet...I saw 400 children, one big family. All 400 worshiping Jesus and loving one another.

People so far have asked me "What was the best part?" and I can't really answer because everyday was the best, and no words can really describe what happened there.
The other question is "What did you do?" so now I will write down what I did in a complete schedule manner.
Sunday was our first Complete day there. On Sunday, work crews and the school kids are off, and we just got to love on the kids. I loved starting the week off with Church there at Casa. Mike "Papi" preached a great sermon and all the kids were jumping up and down and singing their little hearts out. (Sidenote: little is right, only a couple of the kids there were taller than me and I'm only 5'5") We spent the afternoon playing with kids and looking around Casa on our own. Another thing was that the group that I was apart of (Lubbock) stayed with a group of Mennonites from Pennsylvania and Maryland. They were great people and many of them were on their 3rd and 4th trip to Casa. Therefore, Sunday was spent meeting our bunkmates and some of the Casa girls that lived near our "Gringo Dorm"
Yes they called us Gringos, though this is more of a "foreigners" term than "White People" Funny, I barely heard my name at all the whole week, I was "gringa" to the kids, and "Texas" to the other team.

We started off the week a little slow because we were all waiting for tasks to do. However, Papi told us that whatever we can do to help is fine, but the most important thing is to love the kids. So love we did!

Monday we got the whole shebang tour of the place from a longterm Missionary named Adam. He was from Alabama, it was evident through his accent, his Alabama T-Shirt, and his "Jesus loves you, Roll Tide!" disposition.
He showed us where everything was and what projects they had going on, and what needed to be done. First thing was the showers at the Baby dorm were not working and needed repair. We had a bit too many people so I and a few others were keeping the little ones out of the way. With not much to do, after lunch it was play time with the younger children. (Children through Jr. high age went to school in the morning, and HighSchool went after lunch) We made little string bracelets.. and I learned that I'm really not that crafty of a person.

Tuesday started off a bit slow since we all did not have a job yet, but then the girls from the Mennonite group and I went to paint the pink walls that were over on the boy side. The afternoon was once again spent hanging with younger girls and my new friends from PA and MD. Then that evening we threw a Pizza party for the Vocational age boys. These boys are in highschool and preparing for college or vocations. Ric entertained them with some ridiculous "magic" tricks while Doug sang out some background music. (A much funnier scene than is described by words).

Wednesday, Ric Thomas and I started the day off learning Kachiquel, the local Mayan language, and it was the good morning, afternoon, evening, greetings. Then we went over to the transition house to hang a ceiling, in which I worked real hard at handing stuff up to the hard workers. Wednesday night, Doug Chapman (Missions pastor at FUMC LUBBOCK) filled in for Papi and Jacob (local kid)  translated the message.

Thursday continued the work on the Ceiling and artistic painting of the formerly pink wall. Some of the vocational boys dropped by and expressed approval at their new lightblue psalmy tree wall. I then learned that I have some serious ceiling hanging skills, and I was the master tile hanger person. And off course! We played with the kids more than we worked. That night we all went over to the boy side to hang out and I met my buddy Ivan there, and we hung out while dodging stray soccer balls that were flying from the game.

Friday was the last morning we were there, on Friday we said our goodbyes and nostalgically looked around and soaked up all we learned and gained from our time at Casa.

People ask me what was the best part... there's not a best part, there's just a best lesson... or 2.

First, is that all you need is Love. Mike had buried 3 children of his own and hadn't cried at any of the funerals. Yet... when he visited Guatemala and was walking the city in the wee hours of the morning, he stumbled upon piles of orphans cuddling for warmth, and he couldn't STOP crying. Upon his return home his wife Dottie asked him "How was it" and he started crying again. His wife knew him well and asked "When are we moving to Guatemala?" So they moved to Guatemala and Mike went to the Judge in charge of the children of Guatemala and asked for the children. The judge told him off, he didn't have property, food, clothing to provide, and he was a tourist. Mike knew she was right so he just started bawling. She told him to come back in a couple days after he had time to think about it. So 2 days later he went back and she had agreed to give him around 30 kids to take care of. Knowing her previous attitude towards him, he asked why, and she told him "When I saw you crying, I knew you would love them." God used the tears of a man who'd never cried to do his will.

Secondly, I learned that God does in fact provide. I learned this lesson from my own experience and Mike's testimony. When I saw the Guatemala trip in the church bulletin at FUMC Lubbock I knew I wanted to go, but I wasn't sure God wanted me to yet. So I signed up for the trip knowing that if it was God's will, it would happen. Sure enough, the information email was sent and I was excited to go, however, at the time my family didn't have the money and as a poor college kid who didn't make enough money to pay my own rent, I didn't have the money to go on my own. So I sent in the question "How much?" and the answer was 1200$ but each individual would be responsible for 600$. I found that to be manageable, but the kicker was "If you come up with 100$ by May you are going" I opened my desk drawer and pulled out a 100 dollar bill that was a gift from God himself. The story behind that was I reached into my back pocket one evening and I had a mystery 100$ Bill. Being a gift from God, I knew it shouldn't be spent needlessly. That was the sign that God wanted me on this trip.

Mike in his testimony reiterated the lesson. Ever since he came to Guatemala to do God's will, everything he needed, happened. The Guatemalan government does not fund Casa Para Ninos, but they endorse them. Every penny for Casa comes from God in some form or fashion. Apart from money, God blessed Casa with clean healthy water and enough resources to increase room for more kids.

Seeing this truly hit me that when God makes a promise he keeps it. He stays faithful and when you do his will he provides everything you need.

I highly recommend Casa Para Ninos for a life changing experience. :)

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