Wednesday, 23 February 2011

Christmas 2010 - News Items:

The BIG meal feeds many kids around the world:
Children in Uganda line up to get their BIG meal at Christmas time.   
Mission International partner pastor Emmanuel Winyi from Bweyogerere 
shared the meals out with other villages around the country.

Kids in Haiti receive their BIG meal on Christmas day 2010.   


Children in Narok, Kenya also enjoyed a wonderful day, over 220 children 
enjoyed a beautiful meal, Local American missionaries made 1000 cookies
to add to the festivities, for which everyone was very grateful. To see more 
visit the Big Meal pages.  Kenya partners PFJIM held BIG meals in 4 different venues.


The FILA team in Ghana carry Christmas food parcels to the rural villages around Zuarungu
where Hungry children are fed and told the Christmas story.  There was much rejoicing in the
villages as they appreciated the love of strangers who would send them food at Christmas.   To
see more on this story visit the Fila Blog.


The Hope Centre in Burundi celebrates Christmas with a BIG meal, in all 87 kids were fed
those who live in the Hope Centre and some of the local kids from the community too.
To see more on this story visit the Hope Centre website.


Photos from Pakistan show children eating their Christmas BIG meal.   Pakistan has, and continues to have a huge struggle to feed its population after the recent devastating floods which affected large parts of the nation.


Here kids in Visakhapatnam in India receive their BIG meal.

More photos of other BIG meal venues to follow.

Angus College Nursery raises funds for the BIG meal 2010
Mission International would like to wish all of our friends and supporters a wonderful Christmas 2010 and a happy and prosperous New Year 2011

click on image to enlarge




Friday, 14 January 2011

More news items:

The BIG Meal 2010





Scottish Government Cuts will affect Scottish Charities!

According to news just coming out via the 'Third Sector' magazine, Scottish charities will lose funding amounting to around £8.5 million around 24 per cent, after the Scottish Governments most recent budget.   Charities like Mission International will still however make sure that the donations made to our projects are valued at 100%.   Mission International currently does not levy any administration costs to our donations making sure that 100% of what come in from our donors goes to our projects.

Kabanda's Dad receives a wheelchair:
During October of 2010 a team from Dundee in Scotland visited Uganda, they carried with them a wheelchair which had been donated locally and this was passed on to Kabanda's dad who had been seriously hurt in a road accident.   This gift is currently his only way of getting around in hospital since the uninjured leg is a lame leg meaning that he is now unable to support his weight on either leg.
Due to the serious nature of the injuries he has sustained to his leg it has been necessary to undergo several operations which in Uganda cost a lot of money.   The cost of staying in hospital too is expensive (no NHS providing food or bandages or anything else for that matter).   Unable to go to work he does not bring in any income and relies of donations from friends and family to survive.   If you are able to contribute to this then it would be very much appreciated.   Kabanda's dad is a Moslem, however he has been really touched by the support he has already received via Mission international donors.   We pray that he will not only fully recover but also come to know the one who loves him more than any other, our Lord Jesus Christ.   Please continue to pray for him and for the whole family that they respond to the Good News!










Pastor Tom Opiyo visits Tanzania:
The director of People for Jesus International Ministries has recently visited the Mang'ati people near Morogoro in Tanzania.   To see more on this story click here.









New water project in Ghana:



News has just arrived of the water project, funded by Mission International, in Ghana.   To see more click here. and scroll down to find the Ghana section.







National Director of YFC Burundi 'Freddy Tuyizere'




Nyembuye Clinic Water Supply - support site now available!
Now that the Burundi team have returned they have set to work to try to raise funds for the Nyembuye clinic water supply.   The clinic is situated in Nyembuye, a remote village in the province of Matana near to Rutana town.   The site found here is designed to receive support for individual metres of pipe to bring the water from the hillside spring to the clinic's water storage tank.   Please have a look and get involved with this very worthwhile project if you can.

The picture shows the Nyembuye Clinic




Click on image to enlarge




Uganda team a triumph!



As I write this message I am sitting in the h

ome of Jez & Helen Fage and their three kids.   This family are mission

aries from a church in Swansea in Wales and
 

 have been serving with ARMs for a couple of years.   Last night Jez t

ook me to the airport from my 10 o'clock flight with KLM bound for Amsterdam, after Helen had prepared a wonderful meal before we set off.   The flight was full and took off on time, however as the nose of the plane lifted an extremely loud rumbling crunching and groaning with a serious vibration began and continued as the plane climbed slowly over the lake.   Passengers all grabbed the seat in front of them as it was abundantly clear that there was something seriously wrong with the plane.   The crew, who did a wonderful job throughout, let us know there was a problem but they did not know what it was.  Some news came through that we had 
 
a hit a very large bird (the size of a cow if the noise was anything to go by) and we had lost one engine as a result and so we would need to return to Entebbe,   A lot of prayers were prayed during the few nervous moments as the flight was brought safely back to earth.   Jez returned to the airport to get me and took me back to his home where I slept the night and from where I write this message not knowing when I will get home.
Mean time the team are in Rakai, they have spent a wonderful 2 weeks in Gabba, Bethany Village and visiting projects such a Mighty Meals in Bweyogerere.   In the next few days they will visit the Murchison Falls game park and Dwelling Places in Kampala.   All in all it seems like it will be a really eventful trip with all sorts of stories to tell on our return to Scotland.




Sponsor kids in Kenya:
A new child sponsorship project as been added to Mission International's Global Sponsor child sponsorship programme.   After the return of our mission team during the summer of 2010 we have been given the names of children requiring sponsors in Narok, Kenya.   If you would like to sponsor a child in Kenya or elsewhere with Global Sponsor, please follow this link.

Burundi team returns:

Tuesday, 16 November 2010

More news stories

School starts again in Bolgatanga, Ghana:
Many children in Africa do not attend school, not because they dont want to but because they cant afford to attend. Below is a picture of just a few of the many who turned up at the FILA school who cannot afford to go to school.   Mission International is now sponsoring children in Ghana (and other countries) to go to school.   If you would like to sponsor a child please visit the child sponsorship pages of our Global Sponsor site.



Construction well under way in Olooltoto:
By the end of the Kenya team's time in Narok this summer (July 2010) some of the work started had not been completed due to lack of time and late delivery of materials, however we now have some photos of work continuing and approaching completion.

Pastor Tom Opiyo proudly stands by the sign to the new church building in Olooltoto/Oloontoto (pronounced differently by various groups).  It is hoped that this building will double as a nursery/school as well.   For those concerned by the use of tall fences and barbed wire, this is a village deep in to the Maasai Mara in which wild animals like elephant, zebra and lion roam.  As the team were constructing the nearby water tanks a herd of 60 zebra passed looking for safe pasture. 

Construction well under way in Olooltoto:


Interesting website:
You may be interested in this site which has recently come on line.  

Kabanda's father in road accident:
The father of Nelson Kabanda whose early life story is recoded in a book by Mary Weeks-Millard called Kabanda's story has been involved in a road accident.   He was travelling to work in Mukono town from his village on his motor bike when he was struck from behind by a truck which pushed him in to a stationary taxi in front of him on the road.   Kabanda's dad has received surgery to a badly broken leg and is also being treated for severe blood loss as well as other cuts and bruises.   We pray for the family at this time that God will be close to them in their time of need.

Thursday, 14 October 2010

Lots of news items:





Uganda team set to go!
A team of girls and staff from Menzieshill High School in Dundee will be travelling to Gabba in Uganda on 28th September for three weeks.   There the team will serve in local schools, support orphan children and get involved in project work in support of ARM (Africa Renewal Ministries)    For most this will be their first time in Africa and so the excitement is rising.   They have raised a considerable amount of money for their trip including over £700 at a recent quiz night attended by friends, parents and family members as well as staff and pupils from the school.

Newsletters link:
 Mission International sends out regular email updates and newsletters some of which you will find here, however if 



you
 would like to be added to our regular mailing list then please email us on mail@mission-international.org and we will make sure you are kept up to date as things happen.   A Ghana 2010 newsletter has also been added recently to those stored on this site.





Recruiting for 2011 Mission teams NOW!
If you would like to serve God in the developing world and see new people and culture as you share God's Word and your skills then please consider becoming part of a Mission International team.   We are now recruiting for summer 2011 so please visit our www.Mission-Teams.org pages where you will find more information and be able to download an application form.

News from Burundi team 2010:
We have been here a week and our heads are spinning with a range of reactions and emotions from what we have seen, heard and smelt!  All of the group of nine are well.  It is very hot and dusty.  Forget about air-conditioning.  There are cuts in electricity and water evey day; that is part of life here.  This is the first time many of us have slept under mosquito nets.  Charles and Val Carr (who supervised building of Hope Centre orphanage in 2008-2009) are very good team leaders and we get along very well as a team with great fellowship and prayer times.

The children at Hope Centre are very glad to see us.  Most are outgoing and playful (the younger chldren).  Pastor Leonard is very happy to see the enjoyment the children get from holding our hands and playing games with us.  The older children are keen to discuss with us in our limited French or their limited English.  Not got to grips with Kirundi, the local language yet!  We have done some maintenance tasks and painting in the nearly completed house 4 with the older children helping and doing tasks themselves after we show them how to.  It is evident in the culture and education system here that doing basic maintenance and improving things above basic subsistence does not come naturally.  Some of us visited a secondary school near Hope Centre where it was thought we could help by doing painting.  But the state of the buildings, desks and blackboards was so poor that painting is irrelevant.  Where to start?

We had a good time with Rema Ministries people talking about options for improving the future prospects for Hope Centre in conjunction with Mission International.  Rema support Pastor Leonard with advice and financial management in his task of operating the orphanage.  They work with different churches to promote reconciliation, evengelism and building capacity for Burundians to improve their lot.  We have learned a lot about the culture here, the legacy of the genocides in the 1970s and 1990s, the poor education system and the endemic corruption that shape what and how progress can be made.  Tomorrow we head upcountry with Rema people for two days to see a couple of projects they run.  On Sunday we will attend the church that Pastor Leonard is pastor of that is two hours' drive away from the orphanage.  He has asked us to share with singing and testimonies.  We guess it will be a three hours service, very usual here.

Burundi is a beautiful country and the people are beautiful.  Many NGOs are working here.  Progress is painfully slow.  But life is much better for the 41 orphans from 4 to 25 years of age at Hope Centre though we ask what does their future hold.  How do they need to be equipped to lead responsible and productive lives?

Thanks for your prayers for Ita and myself and the rest of the team of nine - Ian and Anne Forsyth, Charles and Val Carr, David Wells, and Philip and Norma Carr.  We are due back in Scotland on 1st September.

God bless,

Mervyn Currie

Burundi team 2010 sets out from Aberdeen airport:
The picture above shows the team as they set out with their enormous consignment of luggage on the way to the Hope centre in Burundi.  We wish them a successful and enjoyable trip.

Olooltoto gets water:
This years team to Kenya has recently returned to the UK, however during their time in Kenya they were able to complete a water project in the village of Olooltoto in Kenya's Maasai Mara.   Previously villagers had to carry water long distances from polluted water sources used by cattle and wild animals too.   The villagers were extremely happy and expressed their thanks by singing and dancing for the team.   More photos and details will be available on out Mission Teams pages.

Keep a look out for posts giving details of teams for 2011




Kenya Team 2010 video:



Fund-raiser raises £1000




Click on image to enlarge.

Rheagan's birthday bash, which doubled as a fund-raiser for the Kenya team to Narok this summer, raised £1000 for the water project to be installed in a Maasai village in Kenya's Maasai Mara.   The talent displayed on the night, which ranged from musical and singing pieces to a Burundian drummer, was brilliant and very enjoyable for the gathered crowd.

Musical fund-raiser for Kenya team 2010:
 Rheagan Donaldson will be having a birthday bash in the form of a music fundraiser for the Kenya Team 2010.   Rheagan, a Kenya Team 2010 member, is aranging the event to raise funds for her time on the team as well as celebrate her birthday.  The music event will take place in the Port Seton Community Centre and starts at 6:30 (doors open at 6:15pm) on 25th of June 2010.  Burundi drums, Bagpipes, bands, dancing, singing, violin duets, African style music, Scottish pop and rock music, food and drinks, stall, and an hour long sponsored drum solo at the end.

The picture shows Rheagan preparing some of the props for the event.






Edinburgh Marathon raises funds for the Hope Centre, Burundi:
Peter Crawley from Westhill in Aberdeenshire heard that friends of his were planning to be part of a Mission International team which would visit the Hope Centre in Burundi during August 2010.   Peter decided to raise funds for the Hope Centre by running the Edinburgh Marathon.   Peter used Just Giving as the focal point of his fundraising efforts.   You can see Peter's Just Giving pages here.   Thanks Peter for your efforts, we really appreciate what you have achieved, as do the large family of children in the Hope Centre.
Three Peaks event a great success!
Four colleagues from Law at Work in Edinburgh agreed to climb Britian's three highest peaks, Snowdon, Scafell Pike and Ben Nevis to raise funds for Mission International's Kenya Team 2010 project.   The project plans to provide water for a remote Maasai community near Narok in Kenya's Maasai Mara and has an estimated cost of around £5000.   Richard Woods, one of the climbers and a Kenya Team 2010 member too used the Just Giving site to help people donate to the event easily and has provided a few more photos there as well as writing a blog on his experiences too.   What an amazing effort guys, I was with you every step of the way (in my dreams zzzzzz)!
Haircutting Hilarity:  
Jack Spillsbury, a member of the Kenya Team 2010 has raised funds for the project by getting his hair cut off.   Jack had very long hair before the big day but decided it all had to go in support of the team's fundraising efforts.