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news and announcements

We plan, God laughs.

2/26/2020

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Obedience leads to an extraordinary blessing for a missioner as she returns to Sierra Leone.
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by Tina DeBoeser, Director of Missions & Outreach, Ebenezer United Methodist Church

​I had no plans to go to Africa in 2019.  I will say that again - I had no plans to go to Africa in 2019. My year was simply too busy. A year of too much going and too much going on. Although I had been part of a team in 2018 and fell in love with the mission and people, I was not going back in 2019. 

That was final.  

Ever heard of the old Yiddish proverb, “We plan, God laughs”?  I should have known my head’s very reasonable reasons for staying were no match for the Holy Spirit whispering ‘go’!   

So I went back to Bo to embrace the people, beauty, dignity, promise, and the mission. 

I am no stranger to international missions; I am in fact the Director of Missions & Outreach at a large suburban church. As such, one of my key roles is to recruit, prepare, and send teams around the globe to work with partner organizations like Helping Children Worldwide. I recognize and appreciate what a privileged position I hold, one where I have the freedom to choose to experience these opportunities. 

I am also no stranger to the criticisms of short-term mission trips. Many of the concerns raised are valid. When done poorly, a short-term mission trip can actually cause harm and prevent healthy development. 

But when we start a trip well prepared, with a humble heart, and the expectation of developing a mutual relationship, it can be a thing of beauty. This has been my experience with HCW. 

Returning to Bo in 2019 was especially exciting for me. Part of the trip was devoted to visiting and developing an agreement between HCW, my church and two (of an eventual five) villages. This new formal relationship is the brainchild of HCW and we are thrilled to be the beta test! 

Visiting Samie and Fengehun villages was a surreal experience. We were greeted by the senior residents and chiefs, welcomed with song and given the VIP tour of community resources and liabilities. 

Once we sat down to hammer out an agreement, it was fascinating to hear the villagers’ hopes for their community’s future. I was so encouraged to hear strong women speak about their aspirations for themselves and their children.  

One thing I have learned from short-term missions is the truth about mothers. All mamas, regardless of where on the globe they happen to stand, want the same thing.  They want the opportunity to raise their children in a safe environment, free of fear and disease. They want their children to have the opportunity to learn, pursue their purpose, to know that they are valued and loved, and to fall asleep with full bellies.  

I believe that much division and fear in the world could be solved with proximity. Taking the time to be in authentic give-and-take relationships with others who do not look, act, buy, speak, think, vote, love, or live like us is the only way to remove the fallacy of ‘otherness’.  Sometimes it takes going to the other side of the world to open your eyes and heart to those on this side of the street.  

Africa imprints on your soul, just as surely as the beautiful, deep, organic smell clings to your clothes and suitcase long after you have returned home. 

Although I have no plans to return in 2020, I believe I can hear God laughing right now.  

Learn more about joining a mission team to Sierra Leone: www.helpingchildrenworldwide.org/mission-trips
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The road to reintegration: leading orphanages from institutional to family care

2/26/2020

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​Based on the CRC’s success reintegrating children out of residential care to live with their forever families, the CRC is launching a Reintegration Department to help other orphanages learn how to make the same transition. The CRC is the first residential program in Sierra Leone to transition to a family-based model of care for vulnerable children. In 2000, the CRC began rescuing street children in the waning days of the civil war. During that desperate time, there was no way to trace families, and the parents of abandoned children were presumed dead. Out of necessity, the children were placed in residential care for their safety. 

In 2003, the CRC began extending assistance to children in extremely poor families through the auspices of the Child Support and Family Care Programs, providing different levels of support depending on the needs of the child and their family. In 2010, the Sierra Leonean government passed a mandate that youth in residential care must be reunified to live in community, with a parent if they could be found, or with other relatives. The CRC’s residential program began scaling down, finally reuniting the remaining children with families in 2018. 

With the residential program closed, the CRC’s entire focus shifted to empowering vulnerable families to stay together, and to reintegrating children separated from parental care back into safe and loving families. Through the CRC’s Family Strengthening Program, parents learn about healthy parent-child attachment and coping strategies. Few of the parents of children enrolled in the CRC are literate, and they may have been subjected to trauma or abandonment themselves, so these are new and important concepts for them. Parents have the opportunity to enroll in microfinance classes to learn small business skills (most parents survive through petty trading or sustenance farming), and upon graduation, receive a small loan to start or improve a business. The elements of the Family Strengthening Program work together to help families move away from the desperate measures imposed by extreme poverty towards longer term solutions and stability.  

The CRC’s new Reintegration Department will help other organizations in West Africa learn how to strengthen families and provide them with the tools they need to stay together, instead of being torn apart by poverty.  Led by long time CRC team member David Musa, the Reintegration Department will assess an organization’s readiness for transition, teach the organization’s leaders how to develop a transition plan, and coach their staff through the process. As one of the key implementers of the CRC’s reintegration process, David is uniquely equipped to lead other orphanages to a family-centric model.  The CRC and HCW are collaborating with 1MILLIONHOME (www.1millionhome.com) to hold a multi-national workshop for orphanages in West Africa who are interested in learning how to transition from institutional to family care. The workshop, with the whole-hearted support of Sierra Leone Minister of Gender and Children’s Affairs Mabinty Tarawallie, will be held in Freetown in October 2020.
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Reintegration Manager David Musa visits the home of John, who was recently reintegrated with his family after being separated by the Ebola crisis.
If we can encourage other organizations to reunite their kids with families, it will be an excellent marker for the CRC. And it will be
good for Sierra Leone.

​David Musa
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Three sisters find their forever home

2/26/2020

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The story of the three sisters is, sadly, a common one in Sierra Leone.  It is a story of loss and trauma from an early age, caused by extreme poverty.  With 60% of the population of Sierra Leone living below the international poverty line*, poverty is pervasive, along with its side effects of illiteracy, malnutrition and disease.  Children suffer the most.

Aminata, Memunatu and Hawa lost their father first, when he became ill in their village of Kpewema near Bo. He was transported to the government hospital where he died.  

Soon after, their mother went into labor with her fourth child, who was stillborn.  The labor was very difficult, and on the long transport to the hospital, she too died.  The inability to access health care when they needed it proved devastating to this family.  

The girls lost their parents in 2015, during the height of the Ebola outbreak. Although the parents did not die from Ebola, the family was nevertheless deeply affected by the crisis.  Hardly anyone in Sierra Leone escaped the Ebola epidemic unscathed.  An estimated 21% of health care workers died, severely curtailing the already over-burdened system.  The reduction in healthcare services caused setbacks in the treatment and control of other serious diseases, including HIV, tuberculosis, typhoid, and malaria.  

With country-wide travel restrictions and wide-spread quarantines in place, an already inadequate food supply was further threatened.  The World Bank estimates that two out of three households experienced increased food insecurity due to Ebola.  The ripple effect of the epidemic reached deep into the households of the poor and vulnerable. 

After the death of their parents, the three girls were left in the care of their late father’s sister, Nagissa.  A widow who struggled with poor health, Auntie Nagissa did her best to care for the sisters, but her meager income as a petty trader barely provided enough for herself and her daughter.  She worked long hours in the Bo market and the children were mostly left unsupervised. Constantly hungry, they could be seen begging and scrounging for food around the neighborhood. 

As Nagissa’s health declined, she needed to seek medical treatment that was only available in Freetown, and she couldn’t take the girls with her.  Desperate and unsure what to do, Nagissa appealed to the Child Reintegration Centre for help for her nieces.  When CRC Education Manager Mabel Mustapha saw the children’s condition, she knew they needed to intervene. The girls were not attending school and were obviously malnourished.  

“When I heard about the death of their parents, especially the mother, I could not hold back my tears,” Mabel said quietly.  Reintegration Manager David Musa concurred: ”I thought to myself that if the CRC does not come in to help, this whole family will be facing problems.”  

With no other obvious options, the CRC agreed to bring the girls into the residential program until Nagissa could stabilize her situation and provide an adequate home for her nieces.  Aminata, Memunatu, and little Hawa moved into the CRC residence in December of 2015, a few months after the Ebola crisis was declared over.  

After enduring so much trauma and loss, the CRC provided the sisters with a safe haven of predictability and normalcy, but the girls never stopped longing for their own family.  Hawa especially needed constant hugs and reassurance, the result of losing her parents at such a young age.  

​Aminata had been in first grade when their parents died, but her younger siblings had never gone to school.  The girls were excited to enroll in the nearby primary school, UMC Kulanda.

Eventually Aunt Nagissa’s health stabilized and she returned to Bo.  It had always been her heart’s goal to care for her late brother’s children, and with coaching and support from the CRC staff, she was able to prepare a home for the girls.  

Nagissa attended the CRC’s family strengthening program, and with the help of a small stipend, she secured a small compound in a safe neighborhood with room for an outdoor kitchen and space for the children to play.  Close-knit and welcoming, the neighborhood is close to the CRC and the girls are still attending UMC Kulanda Primary, which is just around the corner.  

“I am very happy to have them back,” Auntie Nagissa said happily. “Ever since they came back they have been helping me with domestic work at home. Aminata usually goes for the cooking items at the market where I am selling and brings them home to my eldest daughter. They both cook together,” 

“I always help in washing the dishes and sweeping the compound,” Memunatu said proudly.  Little Hawa helps her aunt care for the chickens. 

Recently, a documentary crew from Helping Children Worldwide’s partner organization 1MILLIONHOME visited Sierra Leone to interview and film families like Nagissa’s who have been reunited through the CRC reintegration program.   Reintegration Manager David Musa and case manager Assiatu Tarawally accompanied the film crew to Auntie Nagissa’s home to translate and check on the family.  

During the film crew’s visit, a neighbor was holding a graduation party for her daughter, and everyone got in on the action.  The three girls helped their neighbor prepare food for the party.  Aminata pounded hot peppers, Memunatu drew water from the well for cooking, and Hawa washed dishes.   

The whole compound was filled with the celebration of life, and the joy of family and community. “They were all involved in the cooking together with their auntie,” David observed. “You could feel the love when all of them are together.”  
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“They were all involved in the cooking together with their auntie.  You could feel the love when all of them are together.” 
​- David Musa
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