A Family Affair

Posted by marisa, June 29, 2009

DSCN0230When Tammy heard about mocha club, she quickly started a team for her family, giving up $7 a month. She sent invitation emails to everyone she could think of, sharing her story of answering the call to give to our Orphan Care projects, despite hard financial times for their family. (Read updates on those projects here!)

But it didn’t stop there. Tammy wanted to do more.
She bought “I need Africa more than Africa needs me” tshirts for her entire family to wear to church. She talked with her pastor and shared her vision of getting the whole church involved, and organized a donation to her project from the church. She’s also getting the Life Group she and her husband attend excited about running a campaign.

And, she got her kids involved. Ten-year-old Delaney decided to give her money to help the orphans, and created a drawing with the phrase “We are all the same”. We were able to take the drawing over with our Mocha Club Cape Town trip (it is pictured above with some orphans in Khayelitcha, South Africa!) Fourteen-year-old Presley spreads the message of Mocha Club to her classmates and draws posters, getting her friends excited about helping!

How can you get your family involved?
You decide. You make the difference.

GUEST BLOG: “Learn To Earn” by Ernie Halter

Posted by christine,

Ernie Halter at Learn To Earn

Editor’s Note: Ernie Halter is one of our MC Artist Sponsors who traveled to Cape Town, South Africa in May/June 2009 to visit several Mocha Club projects, including the Job Creation center, Learn To Earn. Here are some of Ernie’s thoughts on the experience..

As a Mocha Club Artist Sponsor, I take a little time to talk about Mocha Club and the Job Creation project in Africa nightly at my performances on tour. Recently I finally got to visit the Learn to Earn (LtE) center in Khayelitsha, South Africa near Cape Town, and I can honestly say I’m more passionate now about the project than ever.

Learn to Earn is actively addressing widespread unemployment in the area with programs that teach South Africans useful skills such as sewing, ceramics, woodworking, auto mechaniErnie Halter at Learn To Earnc training, word processing, and graphic design. LtE then places students in jobs or helps them open their own businesses. The program has an 80% success rate for job placement, and those who do not immediately find employment are hired at the LtE center until they do. The center is extremely busy and full of life. We saw busy classrooms hard at work, prideful people given an opportunity to provide for their families and better themselves under less than ideal circumstances.
Having been there and witnessed this firsthand now, I can see that Learn to Earn isn’t so much about charity. It’s a partnership, creating with its students and its community the most empowering gift you can give…

Hope.

Big Cups for Big Change

Posted by marisa, June 28, 2009

k2654Emily’s youth group was hosting a DiscipleNow weekend at her church, and wanted to involve a missions emphasis for the event. She ran a Make Change campaign as the special offering all weekend, using oversized “coffee cups” made from flower planters to collect the money. She showed Mocha Club videos to promote the idea, and bought Mocha Club “I need Africa more than Africa needs me” tshirts to give away.

Emily picked our Sudan Regrowth project area, with an emphasis towards the New Life Orphanage in Nyamlel, Sudan.

The weekend raised almost $700 for the orphanage!!
After the event, when asked how she felt the campaign went, Emily said “It made the church realize the need in Africa, and I was so encouraged by the response from our church!”

Teresa Nyibol’s story

Posted by christine, June 26, 2009

Here’s a story from Make Way Partners, our partners on the ground in Sudan. Mocha Club helped build the girls’ orphanage in Nyamel, Sudan in 2007, and the boys’ orphanage was just completed! We are so thankful that children like Teresa can now live in love and safety!

Teresa Nyibol

Late one evening just before sunset, I sat in Sudan’s oppressive heat watching the fireball in the sky sink beneath the horizon with great anticipation for the immediate temperature drop this would bring.

In Sudan, everything seems to stop at this time each day. The harsh sand no longer stings your face as even the wind seems to wait in reverence for God’s great exhibition of sunset.

Just as the last breath of day was being drawn, hysterical screams pierced the rest. My head jerked around to see a young girl from our school running into the compound. James and I met her at the same time. It was Teresa Nyibol; she was about 10 years old. I wrapped my arms around Teresa Nyibol trying to calm her – and cover her at the same time for she was naked.

James went to collect a blanket to cover Teresa Nyibol. Her body was shaking, she was crying and trying to speak at the same time. Although her English was fairly fluent, her native tongue Dinka was what pushed forth her story.

Teresa Nyibol is one of the 400 orphans in our New Life school in Sudan. At this point, we did not have dormitories completed yet for the children to sleep in, so most of them sleep in the bush alone and unprotected. Some of the children, however, had been taken into community homes with the promise of having a roof over their heads at night.

The problem is that because even the community people are so poor, not just the orphans, everyone is desperate. So, most of our orphans who lived in a community home were made responsible for finding food for the family and forced into domestic or sexual slavery. The woman that Teresa Nyibol lived with was desperate. Her husband had been killed in the last attack upon her village; she had five children of her own. Teresa Nyibol became a commodity to this woman.

She was going to sell Teresa Nyibol to the slave traders from the North. She explained to Teresa Nyibol that at least Teresa Nyibol would have a roof over her head and would get good food everyday. Nyibol didn’t care; she refused to go. The woman had much riding on this transaction. Nyibol was only 10 and a virgin; she would bring enough money for the woman’s children to eat for many months to come.

The woman became violent; she ripped Teresa Nyibol’s clothes from her back and burned them. She thought that if Teresa Nyibol was naked she would be too afraid to leave the tukel until the morning when the sale would be completed.

Teresa Nyibol knew her one hope was help from Pastor James at New Life Ministry. Naked, she ran to our compound. Of course, we took Teresa Nyibol in.

After a year and a half of consistent care and protection, Teresa Nyibol has not only begun to reveal much healing but a true leader has burst forth. Teresa Nyibol, now about 12 years old, leads daily liturgical dance on the compound. A choir of young girls and boys meets her each day after school where Teresa Nyibol leads in creating beautiful dances that honor God and tell, through dance, His unrelenting love for mankind.

Teresa Nyibol says that when she grows up, she wants to be the Director of New Life where she can lead others to protect the innocent and raise up the next generation of peacemakers in Sudan.

Orphans helped by famine relief in Kenya

Posted by christine,

We updated you recently on a famine relief distribution that Mocha Club helped with in Kitui, Kenya, thanks to you. Here are some photos from our National Director in Kenya, Benson Mutisya, on the 3rd distribution which happened recently. Benson is pictured below in the straw hat. Here’s his report…

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“Over 1,000 families turned up in the distribution centers. We originally planned to serve 1,000 families whom we had short listed, but many more got wind of it, so they also came. We had to buy extra food locally even though expensive, so as to serve at least 300 more. Those who came were ministered to with both the spiritual food as well as with physical one. We thank God for the many services we held with those who attended.”

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The Kitui orphans got their share too, as you can see from the first photo below. They got a double portion of food, plus new school uniforms!

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