Tuesday, March 22, 2011

A Snapshot of MEX


This is a picture of Parque Hidalgo - found in the center part of Mexico City! Yesterday, 3/21 was a holiday, so there were LOTS of people and lots of venders!
Beautiful purple trees! Notice also the taxi's! We have plenty of them!
Hmmmm... I wish I paid attention to my friend, I think this monument up front is of Hidalgo, where you can actually use the elevator to climb up.

A Friend in Need of a Friend

I feel the need to write and to share what has been going on lately. Mexico City continues to break me and challenges me to step forward to help the many needs around and among this craziness of uncertainty, God blesses me of time with Him to rest, pray and wait in faith.

Living situation: I will be moving the end of this month. Living among my team outside the city, has kept me from ministry and deep partnership in the city. Early on, God has blessed me with an opening to rent a room with my new adopted Mexican mom this next month. Pray that this transition moves smoothly and that I will still be strongly connected with my team.

Ministry: I am still trying to find my place in ministry. I feel the desire to come alongside Camino a Casa as my main organization, but what about the desire to work with kids? World Vision has not answered my calls... However, God has blessed me with women (about 7) who desire not only friendship, but someone who can help guide them closer to the heart of God in His Word. Your prayers for these women have been abundant! I don’t know how God will use them, but oh how I am encouraged to see great transformation in their lives! I can share with you in detail about each one, but for now, let me share with you a young woman who I JUST met yesterday I will call her Gloria (because you can see the beautiful glory of God in her face)!

Gloria since birth lived in a broken home. Her abusive alcoholic father had left the family and her mother sought for another man to fill the emptiness in her life. She was just 18 years old when she had Gloria and very much immature in the ways of life. She drank, smoked and had relationships with several men who only encouraged this addiction. Many of these guys abused poor Gloria and her older sister by touching them in inappropriate places. Home was very hard full of violence, alcohol, sexual abuse, and a mother who simply denied/ignored the pain that was going on among her very own children.

At the age of 16, Gloria’s life turned from bad to worse. She desired to go to school, to study, this was her first year of high school, but simply couldn’t pay for this. At this time she fell in ‘love’ with a 38 year old man who said and did everything she thought she needed. He presented a job that would pay a little less than $600 a month in Monterrey, Mexico. She was desperate to leave her home situation. He said he loved her and would visit her. This looked like a hopeful future, but it was only a trap for more abuse. She was one of the many that are currently caught into human trafficking. For work, she was obligated to give her body. The extent is horrible. A young girl, 16 years old – trapped! No place to go. Depression sat in. Self-hate increased. It was a pitiful state. This lasted for 5 years!!

As she sat besides me, I couldn’t help but tear up! This beautiful young woman has been mistreated & terribly abused in many horrible ways. And in strength and beauty, she testifies today, that if it weren’t for God working in her life today, she would be in a worse depressed state as she had been. It is only God that has been giving her the ability to continue on and a dream to help heal and rescue the young women around her who has also been trapped in the same scheme. She is currently writing a book of her experience. Her identity is protected for it still goes on, and the network is very strong and well organized! She wants to fight again injustice and perhaps study law! She wants to make a difference!

Simply from hearing her story: My can't help but to think, How can I be part of this? What can I do to love Gloria? In tears she shares that she has been praying for friends who won’t judge her for what has happened, who won’t criticize her or degrade her. She needs friends and I am willing to be that friend for her. Pray for Gloria. It hurts to write the book and yet she knows it must be done. Pray for her family. They still don’t understand why she was gone for so many years and it hurts to be the 'scapegoat' for the pain that goes on in home. Pray for this HUGE ministry that God has placed before her to do, that God will continue to strengthen her work. She has confessed, “I’m weak, it is God that has strengthened me to move forward.”

"You evildoers frustrate the plans of the poor, but the LORD is their refuge. Oh, that salvation for Israel would come out of Zion! When the LORD restores the fortunes of his people, let Jacob rejoice and Israel be glad" (Ps. 14:6-7).

Friday, March 11, 2011

Visiting the Street Kids

Yesterday, our team went to Barranca de Muerto to visit the street kids that Craig visits weekly. It is such a poor poor sight a condition you wouldn’t want any child to be in. Located right outside the metro stop is a dirt patch; this is their home. You can identify where they stay by the blankets that lay there, loaded with filth is their beds. Their main companions are dogs. Here live young boys and even a young teenage girl ranging from the ages of 16-19 inhaling drugs every couple minutes. They have wadded up a tissue dipped in some sort of paint thinner and placed it in their fist. You will see during every conversation, every couple minutes, their fist coming towards their mouth and nose – at times placing the tissue between their lips. Because of such addiction they have slower response system, they have killed many brain cells that it is noted how their cognitive understanding is to a basic level. They are skinny and you can see too clearly their bone structure of their faces. They are covered in dirt, thick patches on their fingers, hands and body. They wear oversized torn clothes – the ones that are donated to them. Their shoes are also torn. They are happy to see the familiar faces and repeat the word, ‘sandwich,’ wondering if we would feed them a decent meal (it is the plan). Because there are new visitors they take the time to ask us our names and to the special ladies, ask if they have a boyfriend. They are happy to see us and it shows. About 9 are there, one is laying down, either sleeping or simply unable to face the afternoon. Yesterday was a special event, not only it is our plan to enjoy their company through talk, and play and to feed them a nourishing meal; this time we also will provide an auditory recording of the Bible in Spanish provided by the organization Faith Comes by Hearing.

After a couple minutes through curiosity, Craig shows one boy the small listening device called the Mini Proclaimer and the Bible story begins in John 1. Almost instantaneously, there are four huddled in a circle to hear this story. They are hungry for the Word of God. In no time, there are more than half the young teenagers listening to the audio as it plays the story of Jesus using drama and background effects. It fascinates them as they intently listens. We are stunned! The Bible truly is powerful! Though they continue inhaling, they listen, and respond by the shaking of their heads or brief comments of a character. They story goes on until chapter 11, simply because we have food for them to eat and be nourished with. Again, we are blown away how the Word of God is so powerful in the midst of these young kids! A smile forms in our face because we know that the core nourishment they need is the Word of God, is the Truth.

It is unfortunate that because of such dependence on their addictions and filth, life will end in a matter of years. Because they are so addicted, there are no homes willing to house them for protection or transformation and because the majority of these street kids are above the age of 18, they do not fit under the care of the government. Who will care for them? Unfortunately, many of those who act like they care, are those who misuse and abuse them.

Did you know that Mexico City has 1,900,000 underprivileged and street children. 240,000 of these are abandoned children. Homelessness is found everywhere and it is an ugly sight to see, but are we going look at them in pity with compassion but walk by hoping for them to get a better life or are we going to do something about it? What can we do for them?