Monday, September 12, 2011

August Team Visit

We just returned from our trip to Jubilee and visit the school! We were so, so happy to see all the progress that had been made at the school including the addition of 6 new classrooms and 2 (wait for it, wait for it) flushing toilets!! At year one of the school there wasn’t even water!

We were able to match our talented team member’s skill sets to needs at the school, making for a productive week! Lesson plans were created, ideas were shared, classrooms were swept, and lots of hugs were dispensed.

7 wonderful teachers, 2 interns, and interpreters began the school year last week welcoming 100 students and two, all-day first grade classes.  We can’t wait to see how the year unfolds!

Here are a few pictures from our August team….

Lets see...thats 13 team members and backpacks, 600 + lbs of books, and two vehicles...we can squeeezzee!

Sorting Abeka lesson plans in the PreK classroom
Getting ready for P.E.!
Feeding Program ....and a little peaking during the prayer : )

Made new friends with plenty of games that don't require team members to speak Creole

Feeding Program

Translating French
Laura Lynn meeting with mothers of incoming students
Little feet lining up in height order for lunch
Painting a new classroom
Sorting medical supplies for the on-site clinic


Learning to use new P.E. equipment


Ready...set....go!






Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Meet a Student...Frandi Dumel









FRANDI DUMEL   AGE 8

Lives with mom and papa.  Has 3 brothers and 1 sister.  Has no bed.  Sleeps on the ground with his brothers.  He likes to play ball and run.  He likes to learn new things like English.  He likes to eat at school when there is no food at home.

            February 2009, having recently retired, I went with a mission group from First Baptist Church, Brunswick to see something I could not read about in books.

I wanted to see poverty as God sees it.  My assignment was photographer.  I took a photo juxtapositioning the majestic mountains of Haiti with the desperate poverty in the foreground.  Not until I got home did I see the naked child sitting within arm’s reach.  Absorbed in the overall picture, the small detail, God’s heart, sat in front of me naked.   My heart was convicted.  How was I different from the rest of the world if all I did was unknowingly take his picture?  I certainly was not seeing Haiti as God sees it!

            The naked boy became my poster child.  I was compelled to go back to Jubilee Blanc, find the boy and make it right.  Time after time I returned and never found him.  I dubbed him the lost boy representing, in my mind, all those overlooked who deserve to be found.  In retrospect…. on all those trips, I didn’t come prepared with clothing for when I did find him.  I was not a prepared sanctuary.  My heart was convicted.

            Trip #8… there he was!  Still naked!  I think he likes being naked.  It was August 2010 and I was there to start school.  I took that young, naked man by the hand and enrolled him whether he liked it or not!  Wow.  8 trips and 1.5 years.  I still had no clothing for him.

            Trip #9…. His name is Frandi.  I took his picture and interviewed him for sponsorship.   His clothing was, ironically, a torn VBS shirt from summers ago.

            Saturday night, Pastor Emory asked me where I’d like the group to go to church Sunday morning.  I love the native ceremonies. This trip we had learned to play with the community.  Thought process:  we’re doing school, we’re building relationships, and we’re spending leisure time together= we should worship with the people of Jubilee Blanc.  It was a first visit to this particular church by our group.

            The church was perfect.  Dirt floors, homemade decorations, a couple of benches, people singing songs.  Usually we recognize the songs and can sing along in English.  There, probably among 15 people present, sat Frandi!  The enemy took hold and I wondered if this child was really the lost boy or if I just wanted it to be him.  At that very moment, he crossed his legs just like in the picture.  He also had a bald spot on his head like the boy in the picture.  And I wondered…. what were the chances that a lost naked boy from Haiti and a old white woman from GA would cross paths in a remote church with 15 people and a visiting group that just happened to attend that service.  I motioned to him and he came over and rested his head on my side.

            We also pulled all those outside the building in and the pastor told the people to never worry about having the appropriate clothing to wear to church.    How appropriate…. because I still didn’t have any clothing to give Frandi.  All the opportunities – seriously, what was I thinking?  The little lean-to building was rocking with worship.

            All I had was a bandana.  Bandanas are used in Haiti to protect your head, used to give dignity to cancer patients, used by cowboys to protect their faces, used to wipe tears and sweat.  All I had to give the little naked lost boy was a symbol of protection.  The conviction…. if we really want to be a sanctuary, in every level, we need to take being prepared seriously!

            One last thing, on my first trip I was asked to prepare a devotion.  I kept getting that old song from, like the 70s, in my head.  So, I did a devotion on being a sanctuary.  I didn’t know then that it is a song Emory and Mary often sing.  God is good.

- Doreen Sigman





Update:  Frandi is now in school.  His teachers have taught him to speak English!  Among other things, he can now say, “I talk too much!”  He also wears a uniform, usually.  Love.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

In the Great Tumbler of Life, Rock On!

There is a tumbler in Gonaives.  Adam and Kathy need to comment with details of its construction and purpose. Mostly children of the 60s know about these things.  You put rocks in.  They collide with each other for days.  A finished product emerges polished and fit for a jewel.

I'm thinking we're much like the tumbler.  Whoever puts us in the tumbler chooses us.  We go in with rough edges and dirty faces.  We collide with each other, water washes over us, and we come out better fit for a King.

The tumbler encourages me.  Keep that generator pumping!  Rock on!  Selah.

Monday, July 11, 2011

Summer Update: Looking Ahead to Year 3

Jubilee School was established October 2009 to equip the children of Jubilee Blanc to dream dreams and have the skills needed to make them come true.
As we look to school bells ringing for year 3, it’s a good time to reflect on what we have come to believe about education in Jubilee.  What is going on there?
Foremost, we desire to expose the children to a Christian education aimed to save their souls through a personal relationship with Jesus Christ. 
Jeremiah 29:11 says, “For I know the plans I have for you”, declare the LORD, “plans to prosper you and not harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.”  Jubilee School strives to bring the children those things which cannot be taken from them:  knowledge to empower them with problem solving skills and life options.    All we do is as if unto the Lord in a spirit of excellence.
Currently, Laura Lynn, Watson, Julie, Tia and April have answered the call on their hearts to lead 100 children and support staff.  Beginning this year with K3, teachers will follow practices backed by research to present Language Arts (English, French, and Creole), Math, Bible, Art, Music and PE.   Several new classrooms are ready.  This year we will have our first two all day classes.  Three persons will share at-home responsibilities this year:  Doreen, Tammy, and Sarah.  We have also added a facebook connection (Jubilee School), a blog (jubileeschool-selah.blogspot.com), brochures and a display board to our tool box.  A sponsorship program for our students is being offered by a non-profit organization, Jubilee Kids.
Jubilee School is sustained by the talents and contributions of volunteers.  All materials within the project are carried by visiting missionary groups from the US in suitcases.  This is a massive undertaking evolving into a wonderful community effort.  Watch facebook for connections across the US:  PA, GA, NE, FL, MO, NJ, ME, VA…
You have blessed the school with two new Xerox machines, blocks for the building, and $6,500 worth of curriculum.  Many have prepared VBS opportunities and tutoring.  Last March, the first team of Teacher Trainers worked with 24 Haitian prospective teachers.  Children have conducted read-a-thons, sent books from their book fairs, sold bricks, and gathered supplies.  High school students have collected money, teacher groups have sent money, school paper was specially printed, ladies have sewn pillowcase dresses, and churches have collected backpacks…. Our hope is that the long-awaited container will soon cross the ocean carrying new desks and chairs!  How beyond any of us is all of this?
The beauty is like a disco ball reflecting each of us as we add our own special light.  Each is essential.  In that it is true that we each bring a piece of ourselves to contribute,  each of our little 12 year investments will a be so much more than a sum total limited by our own skills or preferences.  They will be that and more.  Solid educational practices enriched by all of you along the way.
Here we are, Lord.  Let’s do it again!

Friday, May 27, 2011

Copper Beech

This week I spoke with Lisa Michael who has graciously spearheaded efforts at Copper Beech Elementary School to support the Jubilee School. While this post may seem most relevant to fundraising efforts, I think it also has a heart.
Following the earthquake, Jennifer from the For This One organization met and presented to the Copper Beech PTA. As a result of that presentation, the school was able to "adopt" the Jubilee School. The fruits of this informal partnership  have been countless supplies and funding for our school. The heartening component is that we believe this partnership to be a two way street. While we are blessed beyond measure to have their support, we hope that the children at Copper Beech are in turn learning some invaluable lessons about education, volunteerism, and love through their continued efforts.
Doesn't it amaze you how a few people can set something so big into motion? How one parent or one teacher could introduce a lesson at school and from that seed help a child or community in ways we may never understand or see. Wow, just wow!


Copper Beech's latest fundraiser....the "buy a brick" program. Donated paper bricks are helping our new school walls grow in Jubilee!

Monday, May 23, 2011

Donations are on the move!

As Doreen says....if you have traveled to Haiti, then you know what a 50 lb suitcase feels like. We are blessed to have wonderful donors who provide us with supplies and equipment to take to the school each and every trip we take. However, a suitcase carrying books and crayons can reach 50 lbs pretty quick!
We have so many fabulous books and heavy equipment that we sadly have to sort and keep in our storage room to wait for the next go round. Enter a giant container.....

We are pleased as punch to announce that we were given access to space on a container bound for Haiti! The container, which will travel by sea to its final destination, contains valuable supplies and new kindergarten desks and chairs.

Below are some pictures of us packing and readying boxes for their long journey. Look how many! So exciting!

Doreen showing off her packing tape skills


Labeling our boxes to be inspection by customs with love (please be ok with our paper cutter!)


Joyce and Melissa packing reading books





Our prayer request is that the container arrives in good condition and has no problems passing through customs and into the hands of those waiting in Haiti. Fingers crossed that the container beats our August trip so we can use the supplies and furniture to ready the school for the 2011-2012 school year!

- sfc

Thursday, May 5, 2011

In light of last week's storms throughout the Southeast, we would like to extend a special thank you to the Rise School  in Tuscaloosa, Alabama for their support of the Jubilee School. The Rise School offers early childhood education for young children with physical and developmental disabilities and their typically developing peers.
In 2010, Rise School social worker Lauren Humber organized a school wide drive that would benefit the school and the community of Gonavies. The school generously raised nearly 100 lbs of baby supplies, children's shoes and underwear, and new and gently used children's clothing.
We were so blessed by the outpouring of support that the school offered those in need and we can only hope that the same love and support is offered to them as they face the challenges that lie ahead.
- Sarah Frances

Friday, April 15, 2011

Honk if You Love Jesus!

Next time you see geese heading south for the winter, flying along in a "V" formation, you might be interested in knowing what science has discovered about why they fly that way.  It has been learned that as each bird flaps its wings, it creates an uplift for the bird immediately following.  By flying in a "V" formation, the whole flock adds at least 71% greater flying range than if each bird flew on its own.

Whenever a goose falls out of fromation, it suddenly feels the drag and resistance of trying to go it alone, and quickly gets back into formation to take advantage of the lifting power of the bird immediately in front.  When the lead goose gets tired, he rotates back in the wing and another goose flies point.  The geese honk from behind to encourage those up front to keep up their speed.

And finally, when a goose gets sick, two geese fall out of formation and follow it down to help and protect it.  Selah.

People who share a common direction and sense of community can get where they are going quicker and easier, because they are traveling on the thrust of one another.  This principal, Masterfully designed into nature, is like our work in Jubilee.  We are most effective in spreading the message of hope and love when we work together.  Keep up the good work, geese!  Honk, honk! 

Monday, April 4, 2011

Update from our March trip to Jubilee!


This trip, the team facilitated an “Introduction to Teaching” strand in the newly developed Trade School in Jubilee. Doreen and Tyler McIiwraith taught the week long course to 24 students interested in becoming teachers. These students will now begin practicum experiences in the school until the end of the year, hopefully becoming part of next year’s faculty. It is our attempt to Grow Our Own Teachers in Jubilee Blanc- an effort in empowering the Haitians living nearby.

Decisions were also made to begin a summer school this year and to add a 3 year old PreK class. Next year we look forward to pinpointing a Creole curriculum to implement.

Below is an update regarding the Trade School from one of its co-founders, Kathy Brooks.

                                                                                       
March 31, 2011              

“This new plan I am making with my people isn’t going to be written on paper, isn’t going to be chiseled in stone. This time I’m writing out the plan in them, carving it on the lining of their hearts.”  Hebrews  8

A wise person once asked  the question, “What is beautiful to you?” The answer to that will tells us alot about the plans God  has written on our hearts.
Things Beautiful to me that bring tears of joy to my eyes and whirls of excitement in my belly:
  •            Handing the women in our class raw materials…..sea glass, beads and old buttons, aluminum pendants (made right in Jubilee) and 20 minutes later they begin calling my name to look at the lovely pieces of jewelry they have crafted.   Seeing their faces when they KNOW they have made something remarkable.  They  themselves…..yo memn.  That is beautiful to me!
  •      Watching a small plot of land in this place called Jubilee, a dry and dusty plain, morph into to a place where  well water spills over and creates an irrigated, community garden.  It has been an arduous process, and it is not quite lush yet… but it is the community garden and it is planted with banana trees, papayas…militon. It springs up HOPE  …it is beautiful to me!
  •       The Gazebo. It is the center piece in this community….an open air structure, newly reconstructed with sturdy   4 x 4's and grass mats for the roof.  It is beautiful and it serves as some sweet shade with benches built all around.  Trees and flowers are planted….Pray that they take root and live!  It is a place for serious  conversations, a place to sit and day dream, a place to play games with kids and laugh with the old people.  It serves as on office and place to nap in the heat of the day…it is beautiful to me!
  •       Local nurses and mid-wives that have been serving in Jubilee receive knowledge and affirmation and stethoscopes, thermometers and blood pressure cuffs…this is beautiful to me!
  •       Benson, is a young man, who has been faithful with what he has, using his talents to do book binding for teachers, fellow students and bibles for churches….he has been sharing his knowledge with others.  We have had 4 weeks of journal making classes. And because of the character and intelligence of this young man, eight people in Jubilee  have jobs making journals!  This is beautiful to me!
  •       A mom with three kids moving from a dilapidated grass, mud house into a newly community constructed sturdy block home..painted bright and clean. This is beautiful to me!
  •       Fishermen hauling in their nets and they are full. ..
  •       Local farmers coming together to petition for a well for their land. The money is being raised by a good friend and soon these farmers will have water for the dry season to sustain their crops!
  •       Children learning to form letters, to form words. So that one day the whole world can know what great thoughts they have!  Holy young women who daily give their lives so this can be so.  They are beautiful to me!
The initial run of the Trade School is coming to a close this week.  It has been six weeks of finding our way…sitting in the dirt, standing in the sun, hauling boxes on our heads at times and being uncertain of the next right step.  But it has been six weeks of growing friendships, putting names to the faces and the faces of their children,  discovering who can write and who helps those who can’t, watching beauty and dignity and hope and freedom grow.
It is a tentative thing,  Hope. Like the plants we’ve planted around the gazebo.
There is an innate code that tells them  to stretch out those roots, take hold of the nutrients and moisture outside of their small well known space… and grow.
 But it takes Hope to make that effort.
The same for us humans.  
We are hosting our second Art Festival this afternoon.  There will be jewelry and wind chimes, journals and benches displayed.  All things created and crafted right here in Jubilee….even the Fresco Cart is scheduled to come! ( I will no doubt be his best customer!)  A wonderful team of visitors is awaiting the opportunity to buy gifts to take home…even a few UN officers are promising to come buy things for their wives and children!  
A small thing,  but a seed of hope. Beautiful to me. 

For more information regarding the trade school, please visit http://tradeschoolhaiti.org/

Selah!

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

A note from former teacher Jubilee Teacher, Rachel Greene

The following is a story that was written by former Jubilee School teacher and one of our favorite Jubilee School fans, Rachel Greene. The note is so special and really needs no introduction....



November 11, 2010:
Someone lied to me. I was told that mission work was beautiful, that I would receive a blessing from it which I could not describe. I could not describe this, but not because of the beauty. Where is the beauty in holding a dead child in your arms? 

~*~

Cholera is an acute intestinal infection caused by ingestion of food or water contaminated with the bacterium Vibrio cholerae. It has a short incubation period, from less than one day to five days, and produces an enterotoxin that causes a copious, painless, watery diarrhea that can quickly lead to severe dehydration and death if treatment is not promptly given. Vomiting also occurs in most patients
        -       World Health Organization
~*~

The week of cholera began on the first Sunday of November. Hurricane Tomas had dashed his way through our lives a mere 48-hours before, so Lala and I were still sopping up water and sleeping off the fatigue from our excitement. We didn’t know until that next Monday morning that cholera had begun for us.  School began normal enough, though Tomas had kept most of our children home. Then one of our preschooler’s mamas came in. Her son – Santos Jerome – had taken ill Sunday night. But by the time we found out it was already too late. Twelve short hours and we lost him; a precious boy whose face I cannot remember.

Three of our Kindergarten students came down with cholera that Monday, but only one seemed weak enough for an I.V. We did not know much about cholera then; we didn’t recognize the taunt, hollow look about the face; we didn’t understand the sudden weakness; we barely grasped how swiftly it could take you. We were a uncertain of how best to help when our neighbors started coming; like the slow drift of the avalanche, so minute in its advance that the imminent rush almost takes one unaware.

 There were several times the first day that Lala called me out from my classroom to have a second opinion in whether a patient was sick enough to merit an I.V. We stood over them and questioned just what a deepened eye socket looked like. The lack of confidence is almost comic now, knowing that only days later so seasoned we would become that with a onceover scan treatment would be prescribed without bothering a second glance.

~*~

Yolanda’s sister came for help Monday night. She told us that the eight year old had started having diarrhea the day before. Lala decided to visit personally and told me to ‘boot up’; the sodden memories of Tomas had yet to begin their slow seep into the ground causing the usual dust to form thick stratums of muck and mire. When we reached the family’s clay packed shanty ten minutes later, it looked like Yolanda had been sick for months. The skin stood taught over her cheekbones, and her lips were cracked and split like shaggy pine bark. But it was her eyes which were the most gruesome feature. Sucked down deep in the sockets, they gaped mercilessly, the skin of her lids so stretched so tight it was a wonder she could blink. The dehydration is what kills you when it comes to cholera. The bad water you ingest jettisons all that you have stored up inside. It can take you in just a few hours.

Yolanda appeared to be on the brink, but that first night Lala managed to slip an IV into her failing blood vessels and pump her full of liquid life. Having carried her home we had nestled her in our scant supply of blankets on the one mattressesed bed in the clinic. Uncertain if a single I.V. would be enough we hauled a second bed into the clinic and covered the metal framing with cardboard to cushion what would become our uneasy vigil. I remember watching her tiny chest rise and fall under her mosquito netting from my own prone position on that opposing bed. She was already malnourished and undersized from birth. Eight years old, but with the look of someone half her age. We all dozed off around midnight, and when we awoke at 5:30 we found that she made it through that first night. After flooding her system with the salty zest of the saline once more, Lala sent her home with instructions to keep her drinking steadily every few minutes.

We were almost overwhelmed by the crowds that Tuesday. Our school kids were so few in number that Lala combined the classes between Julie and Mr. Watson and so I could keep working with her at the clinic.

How long have you been sick? Do you have diarrhea? Can you explain it to me? What color is it? Do you have clean water at home? Here, drink this. Do you have a bucket at home you can bring for water? Wash your hands after you touch anything. Drink this every five minutes. Is there anyone in your family who can help you? You have to make her drink it or she will die.

I had followed Lala around Monday afternoon, watching her talk to our neighbors, seeing people gather as she spread this message of salvation. Previously I had been shy about speaking in Creole to anyone besides my kids, afraid that my meager attempts would sound ridiculous.  But without realizing I picked up the language of cholera and its prevention and started spreading my own good word when I made my rounds visiting our sick students. It’s amazing what putting someone’s life on the line will do to your confidence.


That night after spending forty-five unsuccessful minutes trying to I.V. an 18 day old baby, Lala once again told me it was time to ‘boot up’. Sweaty and exhausted we mucked our way through 10 and 11 inches of standing water back to Yolanda’s home.  Because of the impoverishment our neighbors survive in, we knew that most everyone in the house would be asleep – burning much light was too expensive for typical circumstances. But Lala was sure that out of the 13 other family members living with her, at least one would be up with Yolanda.

All was still when we approached the patched wooden door. Lala had to bang for a solid minute before anyone roused to open a way for us. Yet in that one roomed house, there had to have been at least four with their heads less than a foot away from the door. Not a single one even tried to pretend that they weren’t rubbing the sleep from their eyes as we stepped into the room, but the sound of Yolanda’s abrupt heaving centered all of our attention on the small figure quivering precariously on her knees. Lala knelt before Yolanda, her swollen face spotlighted by my hand torch. Her face was still puffy from the excessive I.V. hookups Lala had put her through the day before, but only just.

 “Yolanda, have you been drinking?” If she hadn’t of had the puny look to her eyes, the question might have made me laugh. “Yes” was what she could manage, and that in a spineless whisper. Her makeshift toilet was almost full and Lala sternly sent a brother out to empty it into the dark. The situation was heartbreakingly obvious; the eight year old had been awake by herself, left alone to vomit savagely throughout the night.

“There are 14 people in this house, even if you were to sit for thirty minutes each you all could still get a full night’s sleep! This is your sister; do not leave her up on her own! You decide if she lives or dies!”

Lala’s face was dark with vigor as she chastised the girl’s family. Yet despite the force I knew it wasn’t anger, which she proved to me moments after the door was closed. “Do you think that was too mean? I didn’t want to be ugly, but I just don’t think they understand how serious this is!” I remember trying to formulate the sentence that conveyed everything I was thinking They are leaving her alone to die because they do not understand that this could be her last moments while you have literally been saving lives for the past two days nonstop and here we are making house calls. How do you find the words to tell a friend that they are your Hero?

Lala decided that we would make a second visit that same night, to see if anyone had taken her seriously. I couldn’t wait any longer when my wristwatch chimed in at 11pm, so we trudged back through the muck and standing water leading to her house, sending a silent prayer with each liquidly gulp at our boots that we would find at least one person awake with her.


I could see the faint glow of a kerosene lantern shining through the cracks of the door, but it still took a while to get someone to open it up to us. The brother looked a little groggy, but at least cognitive when he finally answered Lala’s “honor” with the usual “respect”. The tradition seemed a little out of place in the context of checking to see whether a family had left one of their youngest to fight through the night on her own, but I suppose one could understand why that would be the least of my judgment calls.

Yolanda was still struggling between consciousness and exhaustion, but she had managed to find a comfortable way to recline. I had to fight the urge to beg Lala to let us take her again. We had discussed our plan of action on the way over and decided that leaving her with her family was necessary. It wasn’t the thought of teaching in the school and working in the clinic the next day that made the decision. It was the unwelcome certainty that it would ultimately have to be her family taking responsibility for her that made the difference. But it was the realization that they might not choose it that turned my stomach as we silently trudged home in the dark.

The clinic was packed from dawn until dusk that Wednesday. I kept trying to catch a minute’s break to check on her that morning, but when we had twelve on I.V.’s by noon, I gave up and just prayed that one of her family members would bring her if she got worse. It was Wednesday, November 10th, and the next day was Lala’s birthday. Mary Wilson pulled me aside and told me of a surprise birthday dinner she wanted to have for Lala that evening. I wasn’t certain how I was going to fill my part and convince Lala to drive into town after she had spent the day single-handedly playing a hospital’s entire staff, but I promised to do my best. We had pizza and cake that night, and the money I gave the teenagers produced some pretty fantastic gifts straight from their beautiful hearts. We laughed and joked and played with pellet guns – for a moment it was as if cholera did not exist.

~*~


 I should have known better that next day – Lala’s birthday – when I went to check on Yolanda and found out that they had moved her sleeping mat away from the others and parceled her off under the dismissing sheets draped over the side of her mother’s bed.
I knelt on the packed earth floor and had to use my flashlight to see her, even though the glare of the morning sun was hovering just over my shoulder. She was naked, covered with a scrap of clothe which would not have covered the torso of a normal sized eight year old. Yolanda had the cloth tucked in on both sides. Her older brother told me that they were giving her the serum water regularly, but I wasn’t convinced by the bowl of vomit that lay half full at the head of her mat. I asked her if she had to go to the bathroom and she was just strong enough to clutch my wrists as I held her over the bowl. It sounded like the letting go of her bladder, but it wasn’t urine. Cholera liquefies your feces and it comes out clearish, the look and consistency of rice water. It’s fatal only when the rate of expulsion out wins that of the consumption. I restocked her small bottle with a serum of the rehydration salts and Sweety, the sweet flavoring that was my attempt to lessen the bitter salt taste that I was forcing our patients to drink as their bodies rejected their only chances at life.


The rest of the morning hours are a blur. It was just after one when sister Gerlande came to the school.
“Yolanda is sick.” The bottom dropped out of my stomach. I headed to the house at a slight run; each boot print in the mud bringing me closer to what I was certain would not be pleasant.

Stepping through the gaping entrance into the stick-fence surrounding the house, two of the brothers run up to me and drug us through the mucky yard and into the doorway. Three more of her family members sit huddled to the side of the room, staring at the sheet hanging down from the bed as if it contained a living thing. My stomach lurched as I realized that they still had stowed her away under there, out of sight, out of mind perhaps.
Pulling back the sheet was worse than I had braced myself for. Little more than a skeleton looked back at me. Her eyes fluttered to blink as my light hit them, but the skin was so tight that they barely made it half closed. They must have been preparing to bring to me before the sight of her worried them too much for even that.

~*~


She is dressed in a blue frilly dress, a macabre allusion to all that is wrong with the world- a dying child made up in a party dress. I scoop her up in my arms, her bones so light that I think of the hollow ones found in birds. She doesn’t even try to help; she just lolls back as I take her through the front door and into the yard. She struggles to look at me and I connect brown eyes greyed over in worry with brown eyes glazed over in the state of delusion.
“Come on baby girl, I’ve got you now. I’ve got you. Please, just please.”
Her lips quiver as her spine wretches quietly. And then suddenly, as if it were the most natural happenstance she collapses in my arms. Her head arches back in an unbelievable angle and I stumble to a halt. The child lies dead in my arms and I don’t know where to take her.

~*~

It may have been a minute; it may have been an hour. I watched the mountains in the distance. The mud oozed under my boot as the water slushed its way down the shallow drainage ditch. The frills on the blue dress scratched at my arm as the breeze gently pulled at them. I began to walk, towards school, towards home.
And then, she coughed. Again her body went rigid in my arms, but this time it was life surging through her limbs, jolting her back into the cradle of my arms. We made it back to the school, together. I.V.’s and a trip to the hospital continued the struggle to add strength to her bones. She is back in school now, or was when I left Haiti seven weeks ago. I’m no doctor, perhaps she only passed out that incredible November afternoon, but this is my truth of the story of the week that Yolanda had cholera.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Meet a Student....Manickson Estime



Our 2nd student in the Meet a Student series is Manickson. He loves to play with little cars and legos and his favorite thing to do at school is write. Manickson's father helps support the family by planting rice. His family includes his mom, dad, and 3 sisters. 




Sunday, February 27, 2011

Meet a Student....Dieulande Chery





This is the first of many blog posts in our "meet a student" series. If you are one of our wonderful donors who help to sponsor student tuition, we hope this gives you a  better glimpse into these sweet children.

Our first student is Dieulande Chery. Dieulande is 6 years old and her favorite thing to do at school is write in her notebook. She likes to play with her doll when she is at home with her Mom, Dad, 3 brothers, and 2 sisters.
P.S. Sorry... the students were super serious about getting their pictures taken!




Thursday, February 24, 2011

Meet Our Teachers!

We are so blessed to have a wonderful group of teachers for our 2010-2011 school year that we wanted to introduce them! : )

Julie Arthur (Hometown: Huddleston, VA): Julie is a teacher and missionary who is teaching the children language arts.
Joseph Huberman (Haiti): Joseph is currently teaching Bible, Art, and Music.
Laura Lynn Nichols (Hometown: Waycross, GA): Laura Lynn is the school's on-site administrator and also blesses the school with her nursing skills!
Daniel Pierre (Haiti): Daniel is currently teaching Pre-K.
Doreen Sigman (Brunswick, GA): Doreen is our state-side administrator and coordinator of the teacher education program.
Terrianne Stokes (Hometown: Destin, FL): Terrianne is currently teaching Pre-K.
Watson Noel (Haiti): Watson has been with the Jubilee School since its inception. He is currently teaching Math.


Teachers Julie, Terrianne, Laura Lynn, and 2010 teacher Rachel enjoying a day off!
 


In the classroom

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Jubilee Organic Cakes (applause, applause)

We get SO much help and support from the most amazing people that Doreen suggested to start blogging about "can you believe it?" donations!
Our first WOW donation(s) is from our friend, Sandra Shelnutt. She is a fabulous organic baker who donates all her proceeds (after ingredients are purchased) to the children of Jubilee. More amazing than her baking skills is the fact that she is so unbelievably generous to donate her time and effort for cakes she could have easily profited from herself. We are so blessed to have her as a supporter.
We would also like to give a big thanks to Tammy Ross who has donated generously of her time to get the school up and running and also linked us with Sandra.
To find out more information regarding the cakes, please click Sandra's website below:

http://www.jubileeorganiccakes.com/

Doreen and I marveled at how she has said "all talents are useful" ... this donation goes to show just that. Who would have believed a baker would be supporting education and food for children in Haiti!

Selah.

-Sarah Frances

Thursday, February 10, 2011

The Lost Boy

The post below was written by the Jubilee School stateside administrator, Doreen Sigman. To me this post epitomizes what the effort to create and sustain the school is all about.
I hope you enjoy the school's blog as it was created as a forum to share experiences, find out about upcoming opportunities to serve the school and donate, inspire, and see a little glimpse into the blessing of these students and their lives.
- Sarah Frances Boshers

Why I Was there....Why WAS I There????

This story begins with a photo taken of a village street. Well, I took the picture because I was the designated photographer for a mission team associated with the First Baptist Church, Brunswick, GA.

2/09: I set out to see what I couldn't read about in a book, to better understand a grander picture, to gain perspective and got my money's worth! We traveled in the back of a pick-up truck five hours from PAP (Port Au Prince Airport) to Gonaives conducting medical and dental clinics along the way. Those five hours compounded backward in sanitation, treatment of children, technology, theology.....in ways best left for others to examine by their own standard. The destination, the poorest of the poor in the poorest country of the Western Hemisphere, Jubilee Blanc, left the team virtually unable to speak of our experience when we got home. It was there that I took the picture of the village street as it starkly contrasted with the beautiful mountains behind it....but, what I saw when I got home and looked at the picture, was the boy - naked and, essentially, all I had done was come to take his picture. Introspection time.


Meanwhile, Kathy Brooks (co-director of Much Ministries) was headed to Gonavies to stay with Mari and Emory (permanent missionaries to Jubilee Blanc). As Kathy and I share a love of artsy things, I asked her to bring some supplies to Woobens. Woobens is a 24-year old young man who perseveres! The kind of young man who hangs in a tree he gets stuck in for days while trying to go for help during a flood. The kind of young man who learns English, computer skills, and is approaching the 1% mark of Haiti's young people who graduate high school. He is a gifted artist. I wanted to help him help himself. Instead, he sent me back a picture he could have sold  back to me, essentially giving me all he had...talent, wealth, himself. Introspection time.

6/09:  Return to Haiti to find the lost boy from the photo of the village street and to paint with Woobens! I never did find the lost boy, but now know the children of Jubilee Blanc are all lost and all deserve to be found.
We did a Vacation Bible School in the blazing heat, fed the children, and began learning their names. Things change when we know each others' names. Woobens and I painted and Emory and Mari shared their vision of a school in Jubilee Blanc. Suddenly 31 years of teaching, 3 teaching degrees, experience supporting teachers, 10 years of foster parenting and 6 children of my own looked like a vast eternal plan. Ok, that's cool!

9/09 (my third trip in 6 months): I returned for 16 days with curriculum, teaching supplies, and student supplies in hand. Two teachers were hired, a classroom was built, and 30 little ones from Jubilee Blanc started kindergarten. Little blank slates without preconceptions, prior knowledge, crayons, or any idea about what their own faces look like. They made toys from things visitors discarded and are without any comparison for hungry. What a mighty God I serve who would turn hunger for what I could not learn in a book, to books which will deliver a people from hunger.
Jubilee Blanc is not the miserable, desperate place I first took a picture of. It's comfortable and happy - a place of destiny waiting to be fulfilled where everybody knows your name.

- Doreen Sigman



Thursday, February 3, 2011

Pre-school Supplies and our March trip to Haiti!

The Jubilee School's state-side administrator, Doreen Sigman, will leading a trip to Haiti from March 27th - April 1st. The school's curriculum and materials have to be carried in by groups from the United States due to the absence of reliable shipping to Haiti and a lack of local resources for appropriate supplies. The group traveling in March will be assisting the effort by bringing in much needed Pre-K supplies.

We are frequently asked about donations, below is a list of what we will need for the upcoming trip!
Items for PreK students: blocks, picture books, good wooden puzzles, money for ABeka PreK materials ( for more information about the Abeka curriculum, click here: http://www.abeka.com/Schools.aspx), bookbags, water bottles, plastic shelves, washable/durable items for playing house, PE equipment, art supplies... anything you'd see in a PreK classroom!

For more information regarding donation, please email the school at haitijubilee@gmail.com
For email about upcoming trips, curriculum, and teacher resources, please email Doreen at sigman1@comcast.net

Thank you for you support!

Friday, January 28, 2011

The Jubilee School - Our Story



The dream of a school in Jubilee Blanc, Haiti was realized in October of 2009. Pastor, Emory Wilson, had a burden for the 12,000 poorest of the poor people of Jubilee. The adults were without permanent homes, without jobs. The children starving. Schooling was not an option for most. Yet, somehow these are a happy people.
Pastor Emory built a one room corregated tin room to feed 250 children each day. It had a dirt floor, no water, no restrooms. We soon learned that's all you need to help a dream come true!
In July of 2009, we set out to begin a school! That entailed finding teachers, finding children, finding materials for each, devising a curriculum, and uniforms for all! All supplies needed to be carried in from the US. Yes, God can do all of this! With six weeks of preparation, we began school.
Deciding to begin with 5 year olds, we set out to identify the 50 we felt we could handle. The children, living nomadic lives and having come through flood experiences, did not have birth certificates. We looked for missing teeth! Parents came to meetings all dressed up. Fathers, brothers, and mothers turned out to sharpen pencils, sweep, and add another room. Water brigades of women helped at cement pouring time, young boys pushed large carts with dirt. Dads learned to build rafters. Inside, two Haitian teachers and 48 adorable
toothless children began a journey toward a graduating class of 2021.
Not only was this an opportunity to show God's love, teach God's love, and open doors to choices for a people, relationships were built. After pounding the last nail in the now 2 room tin school, dad's came in and peered over their children's shoulders, people peeked over and under the tin. We learned each other's names. The world tilts differently.
In 2010 we began the school year with two more classrooms. 105 children are learning math, reading and language arts, French, music, art, and Bible. The staff has expanded to a stateside administrator, an on-site administrator, 3 American teachers, and most importantly, 3 Haitian teachers, and a host of volunteers. Several short-term missionaries have blessed the school with their service.
All materials still need to be carried in from the US. Our walls are turning from tin to concrete block, a teacher education program will begin in March 2011, and children wanting to come
in still peek.
When God works like this....selah!
The needs are many and all talents are useful. Join us and see God in action!