By Carolyn Fitzkee
A highlight from a recent mission trip to Haiti and the Dominican
Republic was a time of prayer on the border between the two countries.
Two groups of volunteers traveled to the DR in December and January to
help build a church in La Descubierta, with funding from Global Mission
and Service, Brethren World Mission, and both volunteer groups. Located
near the border with Haiti, La Descubierta is a community primarily of
Haitian immigrants.
Coordinated by Earl Ziegler, a group of 12 volunteers from the
Lititz, Lampeter, Curryville, and Conewago congregations in Pennsylvania
completed latrines and a concrete roof during the week of Dec. 7-14,
2013. The second group of 18 from the Chiques congregation in Manheim,
Pa., and seven from Rockford (Ill.) Community Church of the Brethren led
by Carolyn Fitzkee and Jeff Boshart, traveled from Jan. 4-11 and helped
complete the concrete floor, paint the interior walls and ceiling, and
begin work on a cistern.
Both groups also spent time with the children of the community. The
first provided crayons and coloring books based on Psalm 23. The second
group, in partnership with Dominican pastors Anastacia Bueno (San Luis)
and Cristina Lamu Bueno (Sabana Torsa), provided an abbreviated
three-day Vacation Bible School. The pastors coordinated the songs and
spiritual content, while the US group led games and crafts. The first
day 50 children attended under the pavilion next to the church. The
second day at the local school 300 children attended. On the final day
60 children--including some not affiliated with the congregation--came
to the church for activities and worship that featured a Spanish
language puppet show on the Parable of the Lost Sheep.
Gran Bwa medical clinic
The group from the Chiques Church and Rockford Community also helped
provide a one-day medical clinic for 339 patients at the largest Church
of the Brethren congregation in Haiti on Jan. 9.
The Gran Bwa congregation is in a remote mountainous area of Haiti
near the border with the DR. A winding and rocky path provides the only
access. The group rode on the back of Daihatsu pick-up truck up a very
rocky, steep road for two-and-one-half hours, and then hiked for another
hour-and-three-quarters to get to the church. A group coming from the
Haiti side spent nearly a day getting to Gran Bwa.
Part of the Haiti Medical Project, the clinic was coordinated by Jean
Altenor of the National Committee of the Haitian Church of the
Brethren, pastor Duverlus Altenor, and Ilexene and Michaela Alphonse.
The US group provided a doctor, Paul Brubaker of Chiques, and four
nurses/ The Dominican church provided an optometrist, pastor Onelys
Rivas of Betel Church. The Haiti Medical Project provided two Haitian
doctors and a nurse, plus translators and supplies.
Altenor said it was hard to put into words how much it meant for this
community to be ministered to in this way, knowing the sacrifice of
those who volunteered. He said the church was “hungry” for this clinic,
which was very evident from the turnout.
For those from the United States, being able to serve alongside and
minister to brothers and sisters in Christ was truly a mountaintop
experience.
A prayer for peace
The prayer was for peace between the two countries, Haiti and the DR,
which have historically been at odds. A recent court ruling threatens
to strip Dominicans of Haitian descent of their citizenship. It was also
a prayer for Christians to model Christ’s love for all people, no
matter their differences.
The moment of prayer on the border grew out of the experiences of the
Chiques and Rockford volunteers growing closer with members of Iglesia
de los Hermanos in the Dominican Republic as they worked together on a
church construction project and an abbreviated Vacation Bible School for
the children of a Haitian immigrant community in the DR.
They grew even closer when 38 were physically squeezed together in
the back of a pick-up truck with a 12-foot bed for a long, bumpy ride up
the side of a mountain, and then continued on foot on winding rocky and
sometimes muddy paths to reach Gran Bwa, the largest Church of the
Brethren in Haiti to provide a one-day medical clinic for 339 people.
As the group worshiped together throughout the week, singing and
praying in English, Spanish, and Kreyol, God had been teaching us that
we were “one body” (1 Corinthians 12:12). As we prepared to cross back
into the Dominican Republic at the end of a long day, it felt right to
kneel together in prayer at the border of the two countries to pray for
peace and unity.
-- Carolyn Fitzkee recently was appointed an officer of Brethren World Mission, where she serves as financial secretary.
Source: 2/1/2014 Newsline
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