U.S. Envoy’s Outreach to Sudan Is Criticized as Naive – WashingtonPost.com

Posted by christine, September 30, 2009
U.S. envoy to Sudan J. Scott Gration meets with Darfurian rebels, who told him that the Sudanese government was backing one rebel group to defeat another. (Photos By Miguel Ju?rez For The Washington Post)

U.S. envoy to Sudan J. Scott Gration meets with Darfurian rebels, who told him that the Sudanese government was backing one rebel group to defeat another. (Photos By Miguel Ju?rez For The Washington Post)

By Stephanie McCrummen
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, September 29, 2009

EL FASHER, Sudan — The volatility of this East African nation — from the Darfur conflict to the threat of renewed civil war in the south — is becoming a test of how President Obama will reconcile a policy of engagement with earlier statements blasting a government he said had “offended the standards of our common humanity.”

Top administration officials are scheduled to meet Tuesday to discuss a major review of the United States’ Sudan policy. But even as that document is being finalized, U.S. diplomacy has remained mostly in the hands of Obama’s special envoy to Sudan, retired Air Force Maj. Gen. J. Scott Gration, who is pushing toward normalized relations with the only country in the world led by a president indicted on war-crimes charges…continue reading…

Elizabeth and Baby Abel

Posted by christine, September 29, 2009

Here is a story from Kimberly Smith, President of Make Way Partners, one of our partnering organizations on the ground in Sudan…WARNING: some graphic content.

Milton [my husband] and I live on a hill alongside a river. In the winter months, when the trees are bare, you can see both east and west for miles up and down the river while sitting on our back porch. When summer greens close in on us, we hike down the hill to water’s edge, taking in the water and her host of life.

Moving water is a mysterious thing. When perched on the rim of the water at sunrise, one moment I may be in quiet wonder of an otter peeking out at me through the elephant Eears lining the shore. Then, in the next moment, I’m breathlessly trying to pull my 175-pound Great Dane (Elijah) out of the water because his brother (Elisha) has knocked him in, and neither of them can swim.

I think this mysterious nature of water must be partly why, in the Bible, Jesus used words such as those found in John 7:37-39 to express His promise to us. “…Jesus stood up and cried out, ‘If anyone thirst, let him come to me and drink. Whoever believes in me’, as the scripture has said, ‘out of his heart will flow rivers of living water.’”

Life is precarious on the water, one minute peacefully reverent, and in the blink of an eye, you’re drowning. Our God is wild, untamable and often comes rushing at us.

I once felt God rushing at me just this way as I sat in the middle of a group of Darfur women. Heat and the smell of death roasted together singeing my lungs.

The desperate women of Darfur crowded in around me. Nearly all their black arms clung to brown babies. Elizabeth, a girl of no more than 15 or 16 told me about the last time her village was attacked. She wondered aloud if she had become pregnant from the first man who raped her or did God not give her Abel (the half-Arab baby in her arms) until the fifth man. Or perhaps the gift of life did not find its way in Elizabeth until the last man pushed her close to death before rolling off of her.

That’s how she put it, “This baby. A gift. Abel, my life.”

Abel

baby Abel

It has always been clear to me that life begins the moment a child is conceived, and I firmly believe life has divine recognition marking his place in eternity. Still, I admit that even my mind reeled as I took in the scene:

A young black African girl holds a half-Arab baby who was conceived because of a violent attack upon the girl. His mother birthed him in drought and starvation in a homeless desert. Yet, Abel is called the gift of life by his mother while he hovers near death from some unknown parasite, disease or malnutrition.

God rushed at me in the odor, the girl’s desperate pleas for me to help Abel, the heat and the crowd pushing in around me. I knew each one of the women and babies had parallel stories. Where is God in the stench?

Authors like Phillip Yancy (Where is God When it Hurts), Ken Gire (Intimate Moments with the Savior), Elisabeth Eliot (The Liberty of Obedience) and C.S. Lewis’ words about “pain being God’s megaphone” all failed to help me understand what to do with someone else’s pain. They had schooled me well on dealing with my own pain, but I was not the one hurting.

I could get out of Darfur at any time I pleased. Elizabeth would watch her baby die a slow and painful death in this desert, and then she would soon follow him. Feeling guilty wouldn’t help. Feeling sad wouldn’t help. I confessed that I doubted prayer would save either Abel or his mother.

When I tried to pull my Great Dane, Elijah, out of the river, he was pinned between the pier and a boat. As I heaved on his collar to save him, the waves kept rocking the boat against him threatening to crush him. He panicked and flailed against me. Not knowing how to save his brother, Elisha reared up like an elk, crash landing into my back – biting and pulling at me in an effort to help pull his brother from the rough water. I nearly joined Elijah in the water, between the boat and the pier.

Finally, Elijah’s collar slipped over his head and I lost him in twenty feet of water. If he had been at the end of the pier, in the open water, I would have dove in after him. I could not get to him in this cramped space; I had to let him go.

For several moments, I heard monstrous thrashing about as Elijah flailed under the pier. He could not swim. There was no hope. Elisha and I both paced trying to guess what to do.

Suddenly, at the back of the pier, Elijah erupted through the water lilies. Bobbing up and down as he would hit bottom and push his way to the surface, swim a stroke or two before sinking again, he made his way to the shore. I had done everything reasonable and in my might to save him. I had failed. I lost him. In my hands, Elijah was dead.

Jumping on the pier, Elijah greeted me with a dog shower as he joyfully shook himself out. He was happy to be alive. Something bigger than me was at work in this dog.

Darfur is exactly like life at the water’s edge. I am not in control of things in Darfur. I cannot fix all the problems of Elizabeth, Abel or others. But, I can be a witness of Something Bigger at work. I can tell their stories to all who will listen so that you and others can be a part of that Something Bigger.

Like me, you may not be able to save them all, but coming to terms with our limits and allowing God to do what He will through all that He has given us, we can save many.

Grace Orphans On Their Playground, and Overview of 2009 So Far

Posted by christine,
grace orphans-playground

Grace orphans on their playground

Testimonials from Grace Orphans…

Here are some updates from the Grace Orphans in Sunyani, Ghana, supported by Mocha Club.  Their lives are being helped, thanks to you…

“I have received new school uniforms, a pair of sandals and learning materials. These things have helped me to continue my education. We now have sports equipment in our school. I am grateful to your ministry.” - Yaw Amankona, JHS, Odumasi – Sunyani.

“It is very helpful because when my mother doesn’t give me money I know that when I come to school I will get food to eat and I am happy to learn always. I thank you and I appreciate all that you have done for me. God bless you.” - Frederick Asamoah, 12 years, Class 6, Odumasi.

“I am not hungry any more. I am always happy to come to school. Please I want to ask you that always remember me and give me food and clothing. Thank you.” - Amos Arthur, KG 2 Odumasi – Sunyani.

Nicks Pics of Sunyani and SMI 536

kids at Grace Orphanage

Background Info…
from Sam Oppong, African Leadership National Director in Ghana

Grace Orphanage aims at helping children orphaned because of accident, HIV/AIDS and natural deaths. Most of these children hail from villages and urban centers and due to poverty are unable to be clothed and find access to health and education facilities.  Even though some of the children are living with extended family members, they still have to endure physical, sexual or emotional abuse and end up on the streets due to poor parenting and lack of resources. The orphanage has adopted 180 of these children by providing them with educational materials (books, pencils and pens) clothing and money to purchase food.

These orphans and needy children are allowed to live with their relatives but receive the necessary assistance from Grace Orphanage. These orphans live in Sunyani and its suburbs, (Odumase, Kotokrom and Abesim). All these towns and villages are located in the Brong Ahafo Region of Ghana.

Staff of the Grace Orphanage, with funds from African Leadership and Mocha Club, provides these orphans with books, cloths, school uniforms, footwear, money to buy food and to pay the premium for the National Health Insurance (NHIS) for some of the orphans. Sports equipment and other needs are also provided for these children.

These enable these children to attend school regularly.

Had it not been because of the financial assistance given to these children, most of them, if not all, would have gone to school barefoot, in tattered uniforms and even without food.

Grace Orphanage has been able to assist because of funds from African Leadership.  The teachers, community leaders and relatives of these orphans do appreciate the assistance, and have been cooperating with our staff.  However, we are unable to help all the orphans in the selected communities because funds are limited and the number of orphans keeps on rising because of HIV/AIDS, economic and other social reasons.

This orphanage project has given hope to so many orphans and needy children in the community, many of whom are still in school because of the project. Furthermore, these orphans are able to access health services because African Leadership has paid their NHIS premium. The objective of the orphanage is therefore being realized.

Grace Foundation’s overall goal is to help provide formal and vocational training to equip the people with the necessary skills needed to reintegrate them into society.

The hope is to take care of 200 children in 2009 and then increase the number to 300 in 2010.  With your help, we can!

Oxfam launches East Africa appeal – BBC Africa

Posted by christine,

Oxfam has launched an emergency appeal for £9.5m ($15m) to reach millions of people threatened by hunger in Ethiopia and other East African countries.

The UK-based agency says thousands of animals have already died because of a drought which is the worst in 10 years.

Warning signs indicate that the lives and livelihoods of 23 million people are threatened – twice as many as the last serious crisis in 2006…continue reading…

Sudan faces ‘historic crossroads’ – BBC Africa

Posted by christine, September 28, 2009
Salva Kiir said Sudan must be ready for either unity or separation

Salva Kiir said Sudan must be ready for either unity or separation

The leader of southern Sudan says the country is at a “historic crossroads”, as it gears up for a national vote and a secession referendum for the south.

Salva Kiir also raised the prospect of conflict between north and south resuming despite a 2005 peace deal.

“We don’t want to go back to war but people have to be alerted [sic] always,” he told a conference of opponents of President Omar al-Bashir.

Meanwhile, the president has ended years of censorship on newspapers…continue reading…

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