Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Something to Smile About


Photography has been a hobby of mine for as long as I can remember. I don’t think it’s an exaggeration to say that I’ve taken close to 100,000 photos. I know it’s not an exaggeration to say I’ve taken over ten thousand photos of children. Yet, there is one child that I just can’t get out of my mind.

It was a beautiful day in a small village near Mafeking. Children were laughing and playing all around us as we blew bubbles, tossed balls, braided hair or just shared hugs.

I didn’t notice at first. I was too busy trying not to miss a great photo opportunity. But by the third or fourth photo I realized that something about her was different. She never smiled. I don’t mean she wasn’t smiling at the moment. I mean she never smiled.

Up to this point, I remember being struck by just how joyful these children were in the midst what seemed like such difficult circumstances. Never before, and never since, have I experienced children more appreciative…of everything. And their smiles… their smiles could keep you warm inside for days. Yet here was this one little girl who just wouldn’t… or couldn’t smile.

Like many others in her village, she had already suffered the loss of parents, siblings and friends. Like so many others, she had gone without food, water, medical care for longer than you and I can easily imagine. Like so many others, she was suffering.

Michelle Tessendorf, later shared with me that quite a few children in these villages withdraw from the world around them in response to the tragedies they have faced in their young lives. Michelle went on to describe the programs that Helping Hands have in place to help these children to cope with their grief and to adjust to the terrible things that happen in their lives.

Like so many other things that Helping Hands does for the people in these villages… help is needed to sustain the effort. Prayers, contributions of time and talent, donations… all are needed to sustain the great work being done on behalf of these children.

Every child deserves to be fed. Every child deserves to be educated, cared for and loved. Every child should be able to smile. Every child in the villages supported by Helping Hands in Africa has a much greater opportunity for all of this than those who haven’t yet been reached.

For me, this little girl serves as a constant reminder of the importance and urgency of the work that Helping Hands is doing in the villages of South Africa. My hope and my prayer is that we will all do our part to give these children something to smile about.

~Ric Leutwyler

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Postcard from Africa


Imagine a world where water is a very scarce commodity. In order to wash yourself or to have water to drink you need to collect it miles from your home in a bucket. The full bucket of water is very heavy so you can't carry a large load yet the water you carry must be enough for your family to drink, cook and bathe. If you have no money to buy food, you may want to grow some vegetables in your small back yard but you cannot do this because there is no water. For thousands of people in Africa this is not something they have to imagine. It is a daily reality.

For a group of women in Molelwane village this is no longer the case. Thanks to the youth of La Casa de Cristo Lutheran Church in Arizona, the Helping Hands Community Centre in Molelwane now has a water-well that is fitted with a pump and a storage tank. This means that there is clean running water available every day. Some of the women from the village have taken advantage of this and have started a micro business - selling vegetables at the local markets. Helping Hands provided the fencing (to keep out the goats) and the soil is being prepared. Seeds will be planted in the next week and soon we will see a small, but thriving business in operation. All this because a group of teenagers that live thousands of miles from this village put in some time and hard work to raise the money for the well. What a wonderful outcome of a partnership between teenagers in the USA and rural women in a small forgotten village in South Africa!I would like to extend an invitation to all of you reading this Postcard who live in the United States ... come and visit us at Helping Hands next summer (2009). Why not approach your church or a group of your family and friends and come and see for yourself. Who knows what kind of partnership may develop out of your trip.

For more information click here.

With kind regards,

Michelle Tessendorf