Use your influence to help us rescue orphaned children

Today, Asia's Hope has a waiting list of dozens of orphaned children we've identified as needing loving homes. Unfortunately, our resources are extremely limited. We desperately need to build our organization's capacity to run itself efficiently at a large enough scale to accept more kids who need our help.

We have lots of projects listed at here that need immediate funding

I understand, however, that it's often hard to ask people for money. It's pretty easy, however, to invite people to sponsor a child, and that's what I'd like to ask you to help with today.

Asia's Hope has recently created a new level of supplemental sponsorships. These sponsorships are $35 a month, and are designed to help underwrite a multitude of needs at Asia's Hope. Sponsors will receive a picture and a bio of a child at one of our orphan homes, and will receive periodic updates about that child and their home.

Sponsors sign up online, and are billed automatically each month on their credit or debit card. It's very, very easy.

If you would like to help us build our capacity to rescue more orphaned children, you can contact me at john@asiashope.org and I will send you 10, 20 or 30 sheets with pictures of available children that you can use to recruit sponsors at work, at church or around the neighborhood. Or, you can simply direct your friends and family to our sponsorship page.

 

 

On behalf of the kids, thank you!

John McCollumComment
T-minus ten days

It's hard to believe, but I'll be heading back to Cambodia and Thailand in less than ten days. And while I'm more than a little stressed by all of the things I need to do to get ready, I'm thrilled to be on my way to see all of the staff and kids.

I have some exciting activities planned for the kids, including trips to the beach and to see Angkor Wat, Cambodia's national architectural treasure. I'm looking forward to seeing first-hand some of the new microenterprise initiatives in action, especially the silversmithing projects in Battambang and Wiang Pa Pow.

I'll be blogging here on a regular basis, so keep an eye open for new posts.

I'm so thankful for all of you, and for everything you do to keep this movement going.

John McCollumComment
From Jen Lewis, trip participant

This is the kind of letter I love to get:

I have recently returned from a 17 day trip to visit Asia's Hope orphan homes in Prek Eng, Battambang, and Chiang Mai. I am a member of the Western Resrve Grace Church Team that went to dedicate the Haven of Hope (BB5). I cannot tell you what this trip meant to me. God called me to go, and I went. The trip greatly exceeded my original expectations!

To go half way around the world to give love to children, but be given that love in return at least 10-fold was just amazing! Those kids touched our hearts ina way I cannot even begin to explain. We made some heart connections that will last a life time! The day we left Battambang, the kids from Haven of Hope came to see us off at the Hotel Khemera. We spent about an hour with them in the hotel lobby. The first half hour was full of singing and hand holding and hugs and kisses.

Then the tears began! We were told that Cambodian children doen't cry...wrong! that departure from each other ripped all of our hearts apart. I spend a good portion of my day wondering what they are doing, which uniform they are wearing, are they thinking about us, etc. I have their pictures all over my desk. I'm sure my co-workers think I'm a tad bit nuts! I am beginning to save money for next year's trip! God Bless Asia's Hope! Our kids now have hope! -- Jen Lewis

John McCollumComment
New kids on the block

Every day I receive dozens of emails: documents, agreements, attachments, applications... some make me smile, some make me grimace, some make me scowl. But the ones that really get me excited are the bios of new kids we've brought into our orphan homes.

I won't give you all the details, but I'd like to share some excerpts from the bios of a few of our new kids at the "Grace Place" orphan home in Battambang, Cambodia:

One child:

Parents Background: Her father was a soldier and he had died after one year he divorced his wife. Her mother head had a serious wound on it and she became acute illness for a year and then she died in 2005.

Brothers and Sisters: 1 Brother and 2 sisters

Life before living in the AH orphanage: She and her brother lived with poor grandparents and they have no job to do. Her grandmother has diabetes and also high blood pressure. She must take the medicine everyday. Srey Nith was responsible to do the housework like cooking, carrying water, and other things.

Reason for moving to the AH orphanage: Because of her grandparents did not have ability to feed and to give her the good future and they observed that she loves to study so after they are informed about Asia’s Hope they have decided to send her to “Grace Place” of Asia’s Hope Orphan Home in Battambang.


Another child:

Parents Background: Her father was the drunkard and ferocity to the children and to his wife almost everyday. Because of this situation, her mother was serious sick and she coughed with blood and she also has a womb disease and then she died in 2005. Her father now became feebleminded and the lunatic, sometimes he did not know what he is doing, and did not care of his children.

Brothers and Sisters: 1Brother and 1sister

Life before living in the AH orphanage: She lived with her father the feebleminded. She and her younger brother lacked of daily food. Some days her brother and she got fed by their neighbors who showed pity on them and sometimes they got some money from working for their neighbors to buy food to eat like carrying water or house cleansing or working.

Reason for moving to the AH orphanage: The neighbors and the village chief saw this situation and reported to the staff of A.R.M and then they reported to us about that. We went directly to this village and took her to live in Grace Place of Asia’s Hope.

 

And another:

Parents Background: His father was the drunkard and he is addictive to wine. This is always happened that made his father never cared on the need of family and children. Because of this his mother left home to earn money as a night club woman (prostitute), and then she has another boy friend. Soon not later they got divorced and abandoned their son since he was small. Kim Hab was living with his widow handicapped aunt since 2004.

Brothers and Sisters: 2 brothers

Life before living in the AH orphanage: He lived with his widow handicapped aunt who got small income from selling small things in the market. So his aunt faced to the difficulty of providing food for him and her own children. Kim Hab could not help any thing because he was small.

----

And the stories go on. Each one more heartbreaking than the one before. All of these kids have experienced more pain in their first few years than most of us will experience in our whole lives. Each of them lived without hope. Now, each of them has a chance for a bright future. 

I can't wait to see these kids in a couple of months, after their transformation has gotten underway, and their healing has begun. Pray for these kids. Pray for the hundreds of others who need our help. And pray for Asia's Hope.

 

 

Momentum

On Tuesday, my friend Andy Taylor and I drove to Pittsburgh so I could give an update to the youth at the 2009 Momentum conference. Last year, the students raised more than $90,000, enough to open and operate two orphan homes for an entire year.

It was an honor to thank the students on behalf of our staff and kids in Cambodia. I also got a chance to hang out briefly with Je'Rod Cherry, who raffled off one of his Super Bowl rings to help kids in need. Asia's Hope was a recipient of some of those funds, and we were able to purchase land and underwrite a large portion of the construction costs for our Doi Saket 3 and 4 orphan homes.

It's really amazing to see God's spirit move in the hearts of so many people across the nation, and i'ts especially encouraging to see God work so powerfully through the youth of the Grace Brethren fellowship. Very cool.

John McCollumComment
Can you help?

I've just returned from Cambodia and Thailand, and I'm amazed at how well all of our kids are doing.

I've watched God transform these kids from scared, vulnerable street kids to confident, strong brothers and sisters, sons and daughters.

Like all charitable organizations, Asia's Hope is feeling the pressure from the global economic downturn. As an organization with only one full-time staff in North America (and nearly 90 in Asia!) we have always pinched our pennies and stretched our dollars to the max.

Right now, however, we have a number of urgent, unexpected bills we're struggling to pay -- a well that's run dry, a sudden increase in rent at an orphan home, repairs to an air conditioning unit, repairs to a vehicle -- and a few others.

Would you take a moment and pray for Asia's Hope today?

Would you also consider clicking "Donate" to make a contribution via PayPal or credit card?

May God bless you as you stand in defense of orphans.

John McCollumComment
"Fellowship"

Boy, do I miss my family.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m having a great time here. And I’m certainly not hug-deprived – I can barely walk two steps inside the gates of one of our orphan homes, so eager are the kids to latch on to my legs, arms, back, neck and torso. But, you know. It’s not the same as being home with one’s own family. So, by the time I leave on the 25th, I’ll be more than ready to get back to the States.

My time here hasn’t been all hugs and dancing. I’ve spent most of my days in meetings with staff, directors and ministry partners. When I’m not in meetings, I’m usually working on things with exciting names like, “operational principles,” “philosophical foundations,” “best-practices implementation standards” and “statements of ecumenical consensus.”

A couple of days ago, however, I spent the entire afternoon lounging around on a bamboo cabana beside a lake with our directors and their wives. We ate snails sold to us by little old ladies in long, wooden boats. We sipped Coke and orange Fanta – a favorite here in Cambodia – and I think I may have even fallen asleep. “Fellowship,” we call it in Christianese. It was very nice.

Tonight, it’s another dance party. I’m buying some special food and drinks, and we’re going to try to replicate the revelry we enjoyed in Battambang.

Before then, however, I have a 3-hour meeting wherein I’ll bandy about terms like “organizational aspirations” and “Institutional financial vehicles.”

Later, I’ll look them up to see what I was talking about.

Alive and reasonably well

It's been a couple of days since my last post, but I have an excuse. Really. Our intern, Kaillee Dravenstott, has been sick, and I've been shuttling her back and forth to hospitals and clinics.

As of this morning, we don't think she has dengue (our first fears). It looks like it might just be one of the many weird viruses floating around Cambodia. Keep praying, though, and I'll keep you posted. Eventually.