Friday, May 10, 2013

On a day to day basis thoughts of her just bring me joy...

Below is Allison Ahern's sponsorship story of visiting her Godchild for the first time on Christmas day in 2011. 

Allison Ahern’s parents gave her a gift that truly keeps on giving: the funding to sponsor a child at one of NPH’s home. “On a day to day basis thoughts of her just bring me joy,” Allison says of her godchild, Martha. 

When Allison began to look into sponsorship, she knew that she wanted a girl from Honduras, as she felt she had the biggest connection to that home. Someone suggested that she choose a younger child so that she could watch the child grow up. She chose to sponsor Martha, now 8-years-old. Before coming into NPH’s care in 2011, Martha and her five siblings had been enduring extreme poverty. Now, Martha greatly benefits from the care she receives from NPH as well as the support, attention, and compassion that Allison provides as an adult figure. 

Allison says that the relationship has brought her a whole new level of awareness as to how children live in other parts of the world. Allison says that she is always excited for Martha’s next letter in the mail. Having a personal relationship with a child, she says, has given her a whole new motivation to fund-raise for NPH. 

Allison was able to deepen that personal relationship with a visit to Honduras last December on a trip held by Friends of the Orphans. Having Martha show her where she lives and goes to school has connected them on a whole new level. Through visiting Martha, Allison now knows more about the little things that are not always conveyed in letters; such as Martha’s love of marbles and M&M’s. 

Allison is committed to continuing her sponsorship and going back to visit Martha in Honduras. “I told her I would come back, so I have to go back!” she says. Allison looks forward to watching Martha grow at NPH Honduras. Allison hopes she will get to be there for the big moments in Martha’s life like her quinceañera when she turns 15. 

Overall, Allison says that sponsoring children through Friends of the Orphans is “the best money you’ll ever spend.” She says the homes’ ability to provide stability, opportunity, and education sets the children’s lives up for success which is “the best gift anyone can give a child.”



Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Nothing beats getting a chance to spend time with my Godson...

Below is a story written by Katie Burdette, sponsor from the SE region, who works with Charity Services Centers in Miami, Florida and recently visited the NPH home in the Dominican Republic!

I had the greatest pleasure to go to the Dominican Republic to visit one of the NPH homes that Friends of the Orphans supports. To get the chance to not only meet the children and staff at the home, but to also see the villages and surrounding areas that these kids are in showed the true impact of this program. 

From the first moment that I stepped off the plane and met our guide at the Airport, the Staff of NPH Dominican Republic treated me with the love and attention of a dear friend. As we left the city to go to the home, a couple of children approached the van asking for money and food, many younger than my 13 year old NPH Godchild. I could not help but imagine if Wilfrido had to do the same before NPH saved him. Although the Dominican Republic was beautiful, I could still see the struggle and poverty. Inside the home, however, the children were so happy as they ran around the courtyard free to play without worry. 

Nothing prepared me for how well NPH created their amazing setup; they had houses that looked just like homes one would find in Miami. They also had a complete medical building, school, working farm, pond full of fish, playground, and even a baseball field! Everything that NPH has done at the home has made a community that anyone would want to be a part of. The kids were vibrant and so welcoming. Everyone was excited to see us and was quick to ask us questions about where we come from and if we knew their godparents. I had a chance to spend some time with the younger children at the home, and as soon as I entered the house, they jumped up, hugged me, and grabbed me by the hand to take me outside to play! All of them loved to play catch and were quick to bring out books for us to read to them. 

As wonderful as it was to spend time with these adorable children, nothing beats getting a chance to spend time with my Godson. Hearing some of the songs he wrote was wonderful! He really has talent! We spoke about his dreams and how he wants to become an architect. He even pointed out structures and explained to me how they were built. He has grown so much since I first started to sponsor him. Knowing that this program is making his dreams come true gives me hope that one day he too can help more children and maybe even build another home for the program. Meeting Wilfrido and the rest of his siblings really was a trip of a lifetime! I will never forget those moments with the children: reading to them, having them teach me new words in Spanish, and sitting down to eat with them in their homes that they were so proud of. I truly feel blessed that Friends of the Orphans is making such an amazing impact in transforming these children’s lives and that I had the opportunity to not only help support these special children overseas, but that they also made it possible for me to see it!






Wednesday, May 1, 2013

May is Godparent's Month!

Dear Friends

You can’t possibly put your arms around every child at our Nuestros Pequeños Hermanos (NPH, Spanish for “Our Little Brothers and Sisters”) homes across Latin America and the Caribbean. Not all 3,300 of them. 


But I think you can envision wrapping your arms around five pequeños I know… 


Eduardo and Martin are teenagers at our home in Cuernavaca, Mexico, who came to us when each of their parents could no longer care for them. Both boys are looking forward to brighter futures with the help of NPH, and one of Eduardo’s passions is to go to the New York School of Fashion Design. 


Ana lives in Guatemala in the babies’ house with her little brothers and sister. At 12, she’s a bit old for the babies’ house, but the siblings are so happy to live together. Chamba, a young boy at our El Salvador home who came to us from a government institution, has grown into a thoughtful and responsible young man with dreams of becoming a doctor. 


Lastly, Karina is a 5-year-old girl at NPH Honduras. She fell asleep in my lap the day I met her. I bet you can’t even look at her beautiful, sweet photo without immediately knowing why I felt drawn to her joyous presence … and why I wanted to keep that light in her eyes by helping to give her a more solid and promising future. 


You see, I not only know these children in my role as CEO of Friends of the Orphans, but because I sponsor all of them. That makes me their padrino – their Godparent – someone they can rely on. 


May is Godparent’s Month at Friends of the Orphans. All month long we’re celebrating the Godparents who make room in their hearts to brighten the futures of our pequeños. We are also thanking generous donors like you and inviting them to help us reach our goal to connect 100 new sponsors with boys and girls who come to us every day. 


Your generosity has been a true blessing for these children, and for as little as $30 a month (about a dollar a day), you can bring new hope and emotional support to a special boy or girl. As an added bonus, if you sign up in May, you will be entered to win a trip to an NPH home! 


There has never been a better time to get involved. After facing a major funding shortfall at the end of 2012 due to the worldwide financial crisis, we’ve been blessed with a challenge grant. 


The Flatley Foundation of Braintree, Massachusetts, has made a multi-million dollar grant that will allow NPH to end cuts to vocational and educational programs, and bring staffing levels and living standards back up. The Foundation set the challenge hoping people like you will rise to the occasion and give more than ever before to help meet the needs of our children. 

To meet the challenge, we must raise an additional $1 million a year for the next five years. Your sponsorship or donation will qualify and help us take advantage of this incredible opportunity.

Dollar for dollar, your sponsorship or gift will be matched to DOUBLE your contribution! It’s an incredible opportunity. And you can help NPH take full advantage of it. 

You can be part of the rebuilding story, helping a child receive the necessities of life – clothes, nutrition, medical care, and an education – not to mention a whole lot of love. 


And you can’t underestimate how important that love is. I’ve watched our pequeños proudly sort through collections of cards and messages they’ve carefully saved from their Godparents over the years. You should see their faces light up when a new letter comes in the mail, or how they pour themselves into writing responses and drawing pictures to send back. The children tell me they love their Godparents and pray for them. They are so grateful for the steady presence in their lives. 


I have never had children of my own, but now I have five. And every time I go to a home, I meet another child who invites me to change my life by changing theirs, and I know I will sponsor even more. Won’t you join me and make a real difference in a child’s life with your sponsorship gift starting at $30 a month? 


I hope you will, because there is a child waiting to give you a gift … the gift of being a positive force in his or her life. And there’s no greater gift than that. Thank you from the bottom of my heart for your thoughtful consideration. 


Sincerely, 

Frank Donaghue 
Chief Executive Officer 
Friends of the Orphans 

*Children’s names have been changed to protect their privacy.



Wednesday, April 24, 2013

We are already planning our return...

Below is a blog post written by Chris Ambroso, a staff member from Near North Montessori School in Chicago, that recently visited the NPH home in Honduras with some of our Midwest Friends staff! 

Near North Montessori School has formed a special friendship with Nuestros Pequeños Hermanos Honduras. In March, for the second year in a row, NNMS students, parents and staff traveled down to NPH Honduras to spend a week volunteering, working and visiting with the pequeños. 

The group consisted of 16 junior high students, 9 parents and 3 staff members. Each participant in the group was a sponsor, making the visit very special for the group and the pequeños. We spent our time visiting with our godchildren, working on the farm, cutting vegetables in the kitchen, making tortillas, sanding down tables and helping in the Montessori school there. The two Spanish teachers from NNMS arranged with the English teacher at NPH to mix their students together so they could each practice their second language. One parent spent a part of each afternoon doing yoga and breathing exercises with her godchild and his housemates in Casa Emmanuel, the home for special needs boys. They loved the exercises and sense of community. 

The trip was inspirational and amazing, and we are already planning our return in 2014!







Friday, April 12, 2013

Two Families Unite!

The Mages family of Minnesota and the N.P.H. family of the Dominican Republic unite!  

My name is Suzanne Mages and I am a relatively new volunteer at the Friends of the Orphans office in St. Paul, MN. I originally got involved with Friends of the Orphans after visiting the Nuestros Pequeños Hermanos site in the Dominican Republic in July 2012, where my older sister, Kristen, has been volunteering for over a year now. This past January, I was fortunate enough to make a second visit to N.P.H, but this time, my whole family went down as well as two of friends! 

Being that Michelle, my younger sister, Becca, my best friend, and I were on break from college for the entire month of January, we ventured down a week before my parents, giving us a full two weeks in the Dominican Republic. In that first week of the trip, we spent the majority of our days at N.P.H., developing friendships with kids of all ages. 


Becca and me with some of the girls! 

In the mornings, we would see the kids off to school. At noon, we would walk with them back to their houses and join them for lunch. When the school day was over, we would spend a few hours in the park, listening to music, playing on the playground, or helping with chores. On Wednesday evening, we, along with the entire N.P.H. community, attended church. It was during these times that the kids and volunteers, without realizing it, reminded me what it looked like to selflessly love and serve others. For example, in their few hours of free time after school and before dinner, I could look around the park and see the older boys teaching the younger ones how to play baseball. If a little kid started crying, it wouldn’t take long before he/she was scooped up and comforted by a volunteer or older kid. No child ever seemed to be left out. Everyone was always welcome, even an outsider like me! 

Before we knew it, the week had passed and it was time to pick up my parents and Kristen’s high school friend, Abby, from the Santo Domingo airport. We spent the first couple days after their arrival at a nearby resort, giving Kristen a chance to relax after the busyness of the holiday season. We then headed back to N.P.H., where our family of 7 (at this point we considered Becca and Abby a part of the family, with my dad calling them his “second daughters”) was warmly welcomed by the N.P.H family of over 200, uniting our two families together as one. 

Our ever-expanding family! 

The day of our return to N.P.H. happened to be the tenth anniversary of the founding of the Dominican Republic site, so we had the opportunity to be a part of the celebration. The day began with Mass, and lunch in the park followed. In the afternoon, we watched a program that some of the older kids put on for all of the visitors that came to partake in the festivities. The dancing and loud music made it such a fun atmosphere to be a part of! 

It was so fun to watch some of our new friends perform in the program- they did a great job! 

Amidst the blaring music, little Saul managed to fall asleep in Kristen’s arms! 

In the final days of our trip, my family was entirely immersed in the N.P.H. family that the kids, employees, and volunteers so welcomingly made us feel a part of. We played bingo with some of the older girls, spent more time in the park, visited the baby house, played basketball, walked to the nearby batey for soda with the girls in Kristen’s house, watched the older boys play baseball… the list goes on and on. We were even able to eat lunch with the kids in their houses, thanks to the hospitality of the tías (caregivers). 


 Michelle and Dad having a grand ol’ time with some of the younger boys! 

The days at N.P.H. allowed my dad to spend some quality time with our family’s sponsored child, Wilson (age 16), which I think meant a lot to the both of them. My dad is the lucky father of three girls and because of this, I think he considers Wilson the son he never had. And much to my mother’s surprise, this trip included a complementary manicure. Twelve-year old Anita pulled out her cherished Christmas presents, a nail file and nail polish, one afternoon and set to work on my mom’s fingernails. I think my mom was more than pleased with Anita’s skill and color choice of alternating lime green and pink. 


Dad and Wilson! 

Mom getting her nails done by Anita. 

Although we dreaded its arrival, eventually the time came to say goodbye and return to Minnesota, an especially difficult task for Michelle, Becca, and I, who had been there the longest. To leave a place where love and happiness was so abundant was almost impossible. It was incredible to be so accepted by a community that knew we would only be with them for a matter of days. The kids were inspiring in that despite the countless tragedies of loss and abandonment that so many had experienced in their pasts, their ability and willingness to love was fearless. 

Little did I know before leaving that this trip to the Dominican Republic would have such a great impact on me. Spending time at N.P.H. has not only brought about many new friendships and cherished memories, but it has provided me with inspiration to love more fully and be of greater service to those around me. And for that, I am forever grateful!  

 Family photo :)

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

It could not happen if it were not for you.

A message of good news from Frank Donaghue, Chief Executive Officer:

Just recently we celebrated the feast of Easter, and like most feasts we celebrate in the Church, or even holidays we celebrate within the secular community, they are very planned and structured with every detailed prepared. In the church, the music is practiced, the special flowers arranged, the ritual unique, and so too is the way we celebrate Christmas, Mother's Day or Father's Day with our families. We have special traditions and customs that make up these annual planned events.

However, the real events of Easter and Christmas and Pentecost were not like our current celebrations; they were unexpected, kind of scary, almost rough, and yet they are the very events through which God made himself known to us. 

For our kids their stories are also often rough, scary, and unexpected, but once at NPH something happens; their lives are changed, and for most of our children they experience family for the first time. This is the good news of Nuestros Pequeños Hermanos.

James Joyce, the Irish writer, describes “Epiphany” as a quick sudden discovery of "whatness", and that is what happens at NPH. And it could not happen if it were not for you. 

It happens through your generosity of resources and even your love by becoming part of our children’s lives. Every time I visit a home I seem to connect with a child and decide to sponsor a new child: one who never knew his parents; one the son of parents who left him at NPH because they had HIV, were alcoholics, and the mother a prostitute and knew that they could never take care of him; a little girl and her 5 brothers and sisters whose mother died; a boy who started his life in a trash dumpster. Each story more tragic, scary, unexpected, and rough than the previous. In a short time, I have had an epiphany, perhaps they have had one too. My small gift is little compared to the gift they have given me. 

It costs about $5,000 a year to give a child that life, that hope, that opportunity. It is their food, their medical care, their education. 

NPH is their home, their family, you have a chance to bring provide that for them, and they have the ability to give you a gift beyond measure…take it from one who had an epiphany. 

This is an invitation to truly change the life of a child and transform your life at the same time; now that is good news.

Click here to learn more here.

Monday, March 18, 2013

Midwest Young Professionals Board!

This past February, the Midwest Region launched its Young Professionals Board at Piece, a Chicago pizzeria and brewery! There was a great turnout – people in attendance ranged from past international volunteers, sponsors, event and office volunteers, and friends of friends. Old friends reconnected, new acquaintances were made and everyone enjoyed sharing Friends and NPH stories while devouring Piece’s delicious pizza and beer!

The mission of the new Midwest Young Professionals Board is to engage young people in the mission of Friends of the Orphans and Nuestros Pequeños Hermanos, with the goal to increase our visibility among this audience, engage former and future international volunteers, and raise additional funds for Friends of the Orphans. The Young Professionals Board also connects young people who care about combating global poverty and helping children in need together in a fun and vibrant community of peers.

With a goal of $20,000 for 2013, the Midwest Young Professionals Board hopes to throw several fundraisers and networking opportunities throughout the year – bar events, 5K runs, social gatherings, supporting the International Volunteer program, etc. In a city as ambitious, vibrant and young as Chicago, the Board is bound to be both fun and successful!

SAVE THE DATE: The next Midwest Young Professionals Board gathering and meeting will take place on Thursday, April 25th. Location and time, TBD.

The Midwest Young Professionals Board is currently open to anyone between the ages of 21 and 35 who is interested in raising awareness and funds for Friends and NPH. Annual dues and registration forms are due by Friday, March 1st for 2013 membership. If you are interested in joining or would like more information, please contact Melissa Hoyt at mhoyt@friendsus.org or Gaby Driessen at gdriessen@friendsus.org.

Erika Klotz (former International Volunteer), Jasmine Montiel (MW Office Admin/Volunteer Coordinator), and new friends enjoy Piece’s delicious brews and pizza.

Our lovely Faces of Hope and Gala volunteers enjoyed learning about other ways to support Friends of the Orphans!

Jeremy Edwards shares his Friends and NPH expertise with new friends.

Jasmine Montiel (MW Office Admin/Volunteer Coordinator), Gaby Driessen (MW Child Sponsorship Manager), and Melissa Hoyt (MW Special Events Manager)

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

God loves you and there are people who don't even know you that want to help you achieve a better life...

Below is a testimonial from wonderful Friend and Godparent, Pat Henrickson. Enjoy!

Recently, my wife Maria and I got the opportunity to visit the NPH home in the Dominican Republic. Our extended family sponsors four children there and we were excited to get to meet them and see first hand the work being done. The trip was promoted through the Northwest office of Friends of the Orphans. It was expertly planned by Stacie Wallace and we were accompanied by our intrepid group leaders, Hailey Rademacher and Donna Egge. In all, eighteen of us attended from the Pacific Northwest. Anyone who wishes to take a similar trip can be confident that it will be safe and extremely well organized.

We arrived in the capitol city of Santo Domingo in the morning and were taken by bus one hour up the coast and then inland from the the City of San Pedro De Marcorís. I was surprised that the "home" is actually a sizeable community. Outside are tall walls that provide security for the children. Inside are dozens of acres with a school, a church, a clinic with a full-time volunteer nurse, a community kitchen, and a large garden. The children and staff were all very friendly and welcoming and our sponsored children were especially happy to meet us! More than two-hundred children reside here, living in small individual houses, arranged by age and gender. Up to twenty children live in each house. They are crowded, yet amazingly clean and neat. Each house has a live-in lady called a "tia", which is Spanish for aunt. The tias provide guidance and supervision.

On this trip we were volunteers as well as visitors. Keeping with the theme of the home, we were asked to help out, as is expected of the children. We painted buildings, worked in the community kitchen, helped in the school, and toiled in the garden. Of the work I did, I felt the most memorable was the day I helped build doors and shutters for a small house just outside the walls. Ten people lived there with no electricity or running water. Part of the NPH mission is to do outreach work in this nearby neighborhood. The poverty is unimaginable. Ultimately, though, it was a positive experience. It allowed me see the stark contrast between the neighborhoods that the NPH children come from and the life they have now.

Our most fun day was when we got to take our sponsored children to San Pedro for an ice cream outing. What American children take for granted was a momentous occasion for these kids. We also spent time during the evenings doing activities with the children and playing games. You quickly form a bond with them that makes it difficult to leave.

In the end, the thing that impressed me most about this home was the constant and consistent message being impressed on the children. It was handed down by the staff, by the tias, and by the priest. God loves you and there are people who don't even know you that want to help you achieve a better life. But with good fortune comes responsibility. You need to go to school. You need to do your chores and be respectful. You need to be a good citizen. Above all, when you have been given opportunity, you shouldn't take it for granted and you should give back. It was nice to be reminded of that message.


Monday, March 11, 2013

The Way of the Cross by Father Rick Frechette, NPFS Haiti

It was a long, hard way that she walked, the mother of Ronel.

And like the long, hard walk of Christ, it started with a very bad verdict.
“Crucify him.”

Ronel, at 8 years old, had cancer of his kidney.

Marise was tormented, and pondered in her heart what this might mean for her little son.

So began her way of the cross.

Weeping came easy now, for this strong and weathered woman.
Like dewfall on her cheeks, and river mist shrouding her eyes.
Marise would become known for this sorrowful look.

Jeremy is very far from Port au Prince, by water or by land
(travel by air is not a choice for poor people).

Mother and Son travelled the long road, with other poor women who also hoped that Port au Prince might bring some kind of relief from their woes. 

It was a rough trip for Ronel, like being on a very bad road when your whole body aches with the flu. Christ was buffeted and stricken. Ronel was not without his literal hard knocks.  Hundreds of eyes gawked at his gaunt and pale smile . 

The journey ended, thank God, by an encounter with our team of good Samaritans at St Damien Hospital.

Help took a rough form. As Christ on the Cross was offered a sponge soaked in gall to quench his thirst, before long the bitter gall of chemotherapy became a staple for Ronel.

As Christ’s side was pierced by the sword, Ronel’s side was lanced by the surgeons spear, for the removal of the tumor.

As Christ anguished for many hours in the heat of the day, Ronel was blasted with the wild energy of radiation to burn the cancer away. 

“Thank you for helping my son,” said the bewildered Marise.

God be praised, Ronel seemed better.
And so, back to Jeremy went the world’s newest Lazarus.

Resurrection!

Long, lazy days in the family “lakou” at Jeremy. 
New memories  of sunny days and balmy breezes, of grandma working hard in the fields, looking often to see if her precious young treasure was alright, as he lounged on a hammock, held up by two coconut trees, which shaded him and gave him drink.

Paradise regained!

As Marise started to recuperate her widows mite, to renew herself with the energy of her friends, both lost during her difficult months away from the marketplace in the face of tragic illness.

The sun rose and the sun set in Jeremy
For many months.

Ronel studied and worked,
Ronel laughed and played.
Ronel began to grow tired,
Ronel started to become pale.

Marise could not NOT notice,
Try as she might.

Back to Port au Prince, guided by hope. 
Battered again in crammed busses, walking through the hospital gates to the same good Samaritans,

But this time their jaws dropped and their hearts tightened.
It was too late. Very sadly, Ronel was beyond help and was going to die.

This is when I met Ronel. He was in agony.  His eyes were like deep lakes, trying to drink in understanding. His body was skeletal, his belly bloated. Marise held him in her arms, and the weight of his body on hers, and the weight of his illness on her heart were very obvious. She was the sorrowful mother. “Blessed is the womb that bore you and the breasts that nourished you!” 

Heaven and earth were locked in an embrace, under the names of love and sorrow, under the names of Marise and Ronel. This was holy ground. Fools need not tread here.

The wish was to return to Jeremy. Marise was telling Ronel they would go back to the sunshine, to the cool breezes, to grandma and the shade of her trees. She pulled me aside to say that grandma’s hammock was the best place for Ronel to die, though she appreciated what we had done. She sobbed as she explained that if she went to Jeremy now she could start to save for a new shirt for Ronel’s burial, for a coffin to be made, for a grave to be dug.

I packed them some pain medicine. I packed some food and drink, I gave money for the tickets and to help later with the funeral. And they left after  we had a simple prayer together.

Marise had the idea, I discovered later, to be at Portail Leogane late at night, and be first in line for the morning bus. She would sleep in line, on the ground, holding her place, holding Ronel, so as to be sure of a seat on the first bus.

And so she did. She sat on the ground, against a tire, cradled her son, and fell asleep.
Marise slept lightly, but deep enough to dream. She dreamt she was flying a kite, in the calm blue sky with light winds. Birds were singing, children were laughing, an old, wizened women looking on smiled her approval and enjoyment of the scene.

The kite soared, and out-powered the string.
The string broke, and the kite was lifted by the spirit-wind higher and higher,
And became lost to her eyes in the strength of the brilliant light of the sun.

Marise woke up. Two hours to go until dawn.
Ronel was dead in her arms.

Pieta.
Stabat mater dolorosa, juxta crucem lacrimosa, dum pendabat filium.

Two hours to wait. Two hours to grieve, to ponder, to pray.
To grieve on public display in the streets.

Public transport would start up before sunrise, but would not accept a corpse.
Even if you paid two seats.

Marise made her way to us, for a third time since she began her way of the cross in Jeremy, nearly two years before. She arrived on foot, carrying the lifeless Ronel in her arms.

I was preparing for the morning mass as she walked into the chapel, and in wailing and grief, gave me her precious son, for the mass of the Resurrection, and burial.

HIS WAY was to walk our way.
He was born in a manger, on a bale of hay,
Noticed only by those who loved him
And by those others whom the Holy Word describes  as wise,
Who understood the language of  a rogue star.

HIS WAY was to walk our way,
And brighten it by the heroic witness and sacrifice,
Of mothers and of strangers,
And to quicken the way with many small resurrections
HIS WAY was to surrender to the tragedy he could not control
to conquer it, and ransom its energy, transforming its terror into healing,

HIS WAY was to be buried in a borrowed grave,
and to rise again quietly and unannounced,
leaving only the sign of the folded shroud that had covered his face….

…and when needed, for people like Marise,
the sign of the soaring kite with the broken string.

RESURREXIT SICUT DIXIT, ALLELUIA!

He has risen as he promised. God be praised.

Happy Easter to you, with shared faith!

And may God bless and reward you,
for all the Ronels and Marises who come to our doorstep
who have bee helped by your generosity.

Fr Rick Frechette CP
March 10, 2013
Port au Prince, Haiti   

Monday, March 4, 2013

New Years at NPH Honduras

Below is a story submitted by wonderful Friend and Sponsor, Marcia Van Vreede.

What? Celebrate New Year’s Eve with over 400 children... Where? In Honduras - you’ve got to be kidding! Nope, that’s what we did, and it was fabulous! The evening began with a special dinner prepared by the high school, university, and year of service students. In fact, all of the work on the Ranch at this time of year is done by them. After dinner there was a chocolate bar (they all seem to love chocolate!), time for photos, a dance, a huge bonfire (our godson helped build it), the traditional burning of the old man (an effigy for the old year), fireworks, lots and lots of firecrackers, and sparklers. The festivities last until 3:00 am if you can make it that long! Of course, all of this was accompanied by many smiles, hugs and wishes for a “Feliz Ano Nuevo”.

My name is Marcia Van Vreede, and my husband, Dale, and I have been fortunate enough to have made several trips to NPH Honduras since September 2010. That is when we finally made the trip to meet our godson, Bryan. We had been exchanging letters with Bryan since the year 2000. Our trip was a life changing experience and we decided that building this relationship with Bryan and NPH was something we wanted to do. What a rewarding journey this has been.

In his letters, our godson had told us how Christmas and New Years were celebrated at the Ranch. Last year (2011), his letters became real. In Bryan’s words, "It was the best Christmas ever!" Sharing this experience with Bryan, our new goddaughter, Estefany (we added another godchild in June 2011), their siblings, their friends and all of the children at the Ranch was truly remarkable.

Since I was a young girl, my cousin and I wanted to help orphaned children. We believed that every child deserved to be loved. (We might have been influenced by Shirley Temple movies!) Anyway, what a privilege and honor it is to be a part of Friends of the Orphans and NPH. They have made my dream come true - providing shelter, clothing, food, education, faith formation, family, and love to orphaned and abandoned children. Whether your special place is in Honduras, Nicaragua, El Salvador or one of the other homes, it is the same in this way – the children are laughing, growing, learning and loving. God’s love is a powerful thing.

"To us, family means putting your arms around each other and being there" – Barbara Bush. While we are at the Ranch, we share in the simple things that bond all families together – watching soccer games, playing water balloon toss, watching movies, sharing meals, attending Mass together, playing cards or Farkle, letting your goddaughter style your hair, making and eating cookies and bars. All simple yet profound!

The homes and children still need our help and support. There have been some huge budget cuts in the past couple of years. We can attest to some of those cuts in Honduras. They are eating less meat and more rice and beans! More budget cuts are impending in 2013 and although eating less meat is a hardship, having to cut staff and educational programs is worse. Our support is needed more than ever. While many of you may not be able to share the same experiences that Dale and I have, please be assured that your participation in this worthwhile endeavor is appreciated and put to its best use. May God continue to bless all of you in your generosity and support.