Thanks for 2016
Who are Among the Least?
We are.
We are among the least because that's where God dwells. He speaks in the hovels of the poor (Psalms 12:5) and we hear Him say, "Serve. Be my hands and feet. Let your hearts beat with those who need to feel unconditional love."
You can join us by:
Mail your tax-deductable gitsto the address below or use the sidebar paypal button. Please make a note "for Kenya."
Among the Least
PO Box 3543
Pagosa Spings, CO 81147
USA
mark and ~lisa hauger
field directors for amongtheleast.org
Kisumu, Kenya
We are among the least because that's where God dwells. He speaks in the hovels of the poor (Psalms 12:5) and we hear Him say, "Serve. Be my hands and feet. Let your hearts beat with those who need to feel unconditional love."
- We exist to serve the least among us through biblical orphan care by embracing family preservation and adoption.
- We walk alongside those fathering the fatherless and share the widows’ burden by facilitating financial classes, skills training, “pay forward” micro loans, and service opportunities for widowed/single mamas in Kenya. We also offer adoption networking and fundraising options in USA.
- By treating others as Jesus image bearers, we teach the supremacy of Christ in all things. Our passion is to equip nationals to care for orphans and widows represented in their countries and help them prevent generational patterns of oppression by offering active hope.
You can join us by:
- Visiting our website at amongtheleast.org and liking us Facebook.
- Commenting with a word of encouragement or advice on the posts.
- Remembering with us those who are among the least by offering simple acts of kindness.
Mail your tax-deductable gitsto the address below or use the sidebar paypal button. Please make a note "for Kenya."
Among the Least
PO Box 3543
Pagosa Spings, CO 81147
USA
mark and ~lisa hauger
field directors for amongtheleast.org
Kisumu, Kenya
People Projects
In this overwhelmingly hard world with continual tragedies, it's human nature to resolve problems by bringing solutions. Crisis resolution becomes the focus. Money, time, resources and energy are spent planning big projects that look good on paper and sound better in academic discussions but never really solve anything. Injustice still runs rampant. Defending the cause of those living under oppression will never work as long as it is treated exclusively as a business void of relationship, especially relationship with our Creator.
From our time serving in Kenya, we found there is no "one size fits all" remedy for providing assistance to the disenfranchised. While working "among the least," we've seen people assume that thoughtful strategies would produce mass effectiveness, productivity and gratefulness among those who received services. This is not true. People living in poverty, just like everyone else, are pron to greed, bad choices, and haunting demons that cloud judgement. Both project facilitators and clients can corrupt good programs if hearts grow selfish and honest evaluations are ignored.
At Among the Least we value principles that honor dignity and integrity. We are a small organization but that's good because we know the people we work and tailor "projects" to truly help and not pass them by. We fill our tool belt of service with a variety of ideas from the development continuum. Our relational approach lets us experience each others' characters - strengths and weaknesses. Goals are reached by uniting with those who live "among the least" in purpose, prayer and practice.
Projects serve people, not the other way around.
From our time serving in Kenya, we found there is no "one size fits all" remedy for providing assistance to the disenfranchised. While working "among the least," we've seen people assume that thoughtful strategies would produce mass effectiveness, productivity and gratefulness among those who received services. This is not true. People living in poverty, just like everyone else, are pron to greed, bad choices, and haunting demons that cloud judgement. Both project facilitators and clients can corrupt good programs if hearts grow selfish and honest evaluations are ignored.
At Among the Least we value principles that honor dignity and integrity. We are a small organization but that's good because we know the people we work and tailor "projects" to truly help and not pass them by. We fill our tool belt of service with a variety of ideas from the development continuum. Our relational approach lets us experience each others' characters - strengths and weaknesses. Goals are reached by uniting with those who live "among the least" in purpose, prayer and practice.
Projects serve people, not the other way around.
Why care about "HOLY?"
We're in Kenya watching the Creator make common lives holy, To Him, everyone - no matter how lost, how damaged, how wounded - are unique, valued, worthy of unconditional love.
To Him all are holy.
Now let me ask you...
What do you treat as special?
Where do spend your money, your time, your resources, your energy, your life?
That's
your holy.
Now one more question...
Is it worth it?
Is what you value so much worth everything you give it?
Only you can honestly answer and when you do, know there is a difference you can make (that will stretch who you really thought you were) by treating those among the least as holy.
Holy. It's not just a "religious word" for stuffy people who judge, criticize, and make living miserable. It's a revolution of good. It's your Creator saying, "There's more... and it's beautifully hard and challenging and full of trusting faith, and meaningful forever."
Let your common become more - "intact, complete, made for higher purposes."
Become Holy.
Extra Thoughts
ONE IN MILLIONS
One in millions and I have three of them - children who have
been adopted.
They come home in many different ways – as infants, as older
kids, special needs, kinship, inter-country, domestic, or combination
of ways. There are millions of people affected by this journey called adoption,
and millions of families formed along the way, each with their own unique story
of how it all happens.
I’m one in millions.
I’m a mom and my kids don’t look like they belong with me. I
love them like birth, life and death gushed out of me the moment I held
them. It’s still gushing. I parent them
with thoughtfulness and frustration and mistakes and forgiveness and arguing
and cuddling and laughter and tears and therapy. We are a family that was built different, that
looks different. Celebrating differences has been our family mantra. For us "normal" is highly over-rated. Sadly, the world rarely
appreciates uncontrollable differences so we've lived through cruelty that cuts deep - unimaginable and not worth repeating.
Lately, I’ve been reading lots of stuff on social media
concerning the process and journey of adoption. Some articles sound critical of adoption
choices, some compare processes and outcomes. I don’t see how these articles
are fruitful. They do nothing to help families formed through adoption. These single-sided opinions about adoption
reinforce doubts, fears and regret that some families might already be
experiencing.
As one of the millions I want to say a few things…
1. We constantly need education, support, resources and
places to get help when things feel like they are spiraling down an abyss, and
they can because adoption starts from loss. Some of the best places I’ve found
to receive encouragement are: rageagainsttheminivan blog adoption posts, Paula
Freeman’s blog, Empowered to Connect, Christian Alliance for Orphans and the listening
ears of those caring souls who know and love our family without judgments.
2. We need to comfort
and encourage families whose adoption journeys have been difficult at best or
even disrupted. We need to hear their stories without comparing them to another
or advising them beyond our boundaries of friendship and knowledge.
3. We need to
separate the orphan crisis from those who choose to adopt.
Not all the millions of families and children touched by
adoption need to be banner bearers for the cause of rescuing orphans. Some do choose to advocate in a variety of
ways and that’s great – for them. No adoptive family should be forced to do
either. Guilt is not a healthy motivator.
There are good adoption practices and bad ones. Both can be
intertwined because adoption is a process facilitated by flawed people whose
own ideas and agendas can blur motivation.
All agencies claim they are doing what is in the “best interest of the
child.” Each child’s birth situation brings a host of reasons why certain
choices are made concerning placement.
Some social workers’ bias – be good or bad - can influence outcomes.
Perspective families’ expectations and preparedness can do the same. Even under the “best” conditions, adoption
journeys are not guaranteed to turn out well, but then neither are biological relations.
Adoption is very much like real life – raw, distinctive,
beautiful, ugly, hard, joyful, sad, rewarding, devastating, surprising and so
much more… It’s a way to create family
in this messy world and try to give children what they need in spite of what
they lost.
It’s not easy.
We, MY FAMILY, are called to adoption.
We’re starting on the whole crazy journey again. Will it turn out right? I don’t know. What’s “right” anyway besides
giving a child the love they can receive and helping them be safe - however
that looks. We are just one in millions.
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
CHASING SUNSETS
I love sunsets.
I chase them.
In the early evening, on days with extra time, I periodically peek at the sky, predict cloud movement and determine if we should hop in the car to find the pending sunset that will loom large and lovely over Lake Victoria. The sky can display stunning colors washed across the horizon, leaving lingering beauty beyond my words.
Within these quiet moments I rest my mind, my body, but my spirit soars to places only angels see. Photos are obviously not the same as the experience, but the glow reminds me that at the end of each day, God speaks.
Taking time to cease from our efforts and observe quiet beauty becomes necessary when needs bombard us daily - needs to parent, and clean, and cook and serve, and hear information, and serve, and lead, facilitate, coach, mentor, encourage... Sometimes these overloaded schedules forces us take too much on our weak and weary shoulders. We make the mistake of thinking outcomes depend solely on us when it does not. It completely rests on the Creator who designs the clouds to move in such a way they disperse glorious light from a glowing orb. I am reminded He moves us and the work of effective missions belongs to Him.
Why Give?
Giving means to freely transfer, to cause, allow and supply with.
When you give to Among the Least, Kenya things happen.
Your donation:
- Freely transfers what God provides to help victimized mothers get healing & hope.
- Causes meaningful change to happen in the lives of those living in poverty.
- Allows us to be on the ground facilitating biblical training.
- Supplies Among the Least with resources and funding for income-generating projects.
Many widowed women in Kenya are treated as outcasts. They suffer from discrimination, systematic seizure of property, evictions from family homes, sexual abuses and forced re-marriage. Some must leave their children at orphanages because they can not afford to care for them. Our service to these women brings biblical teaching and skills training. We help them learn:
- That God loves them and their children.
- To earn a fair wage.
- Participate in church.
- Contribute to the needy in their communities.
Tax-deductible financial gifts can be sent to the address below with a note stating, "for Kenya" or see the donate button on the blog sidebar.
Among the Least
PO Box 3543
Pagosa Springs, CO 81147
Emmanuel, God with Us. Where?
Relentlessly dismal news hangs over us like thick grey skies,
predicting gloomy days ahead. From bomb ravaging Aleppo, to friends’ struggle
with cancer, tragic fires, plane crashes, terror and corruption, one might wonder
about the Christmas greeting:
Emmanuel - God with us.
God with us?
The question pleads, “Really?
Where?”
I’ve been tempted to ask this since returning from Kenya.
Our first Christmas home in 5 years but hard realities of living in a
developing nation return to haunt me… broken children crawling, limping, hoping
for a smile. HIV positive mamas, orphaned babies, millions of abandoned,
neglected, forgotten... God with us?
I cry at the loss while colorful lights
twinkle.
Where is He? The Savior heralded by an angel to lowly shepherds so long
ago:
“Don’t
be afraid! I bring good news of great joy to all people.”
“God is with you.” The voice resonates in my heart.
I’m reminded of a recent prayer time when an acquaintance
assured me with confidence, “God wants
you to know He is with you.” Or the stranger at the mall on Black Friday
who took a risk by walking over to me, placing her hand on my shoulder and
confessing, albeit uncomfortably, “I’m
supposed to tell you God is near. He’s with you.”
These reminders shake my core. I recognize the mistake of
missing this truth. Instead of welcoming God in the midst of misery and
believing He restores all in His time, I expected God to follow my plan to
right the wrongs. I forgot; there is an enemy named evil. Sadly, God get blamed
for all its ugly turmoil. God also becomes guilty of mankind’s depravities –
choices to inflict wickedness that spreads like a pandemic. The consequences ruin
even innocence. Maybe God hates evil because its wounds infect us - His beloved.
Our Creator’s great love keeps us
from being utterly consumed. He came as a babe who grew to a man. He felt tired, hungry and thirsty. He wept,
groaned and experienced agony. His pure
devotion, uncontaminated by evil, sacrificed to win our freedom from depravity. He willingly took the reproach forced on Him
to remain with us forever.
God
came to live with us.
He’s
still here.
God wants to reach the desperate in Syria, He longs to
rescue the lost from dirty streets, hold the overlooked, and find the broken
hidden in far-away hovels. He desires to feed the hungry, to satisfy thirsty
souls, to comfort those who suffer and soothe their aches with healing balms.
How does God do that when the earth itself moans from the
weight of inhumanity?
God lives in the hearts of those who ask Him. And from those
hearts, He touches others with mercy. His truth-bonded grace carries redemption
far beyond the temporal. I see it when
volunteers work with refugees and when our church shares food boxes with needy
families. I read about it in a woman’s post thanking the community for their
care during her grief and in beautiful letters from missionaries serving in
desolate places. I receive it when helpful hands surround me, reminding me…
God
is with you.
As you scan the horrible headlines or live in unnamed sorrow,
please know Hope shines even when foggy confusion hovers. Believe the words of
the angels spoken long ago –
“Don’t be afraid… there is good news
that brings great joy…
Emmanuel, God with us.”
Why The Silence?
Why the
silence?
For the
last 5 years I’ve written thoughts and experiences about our family, ministry
and life in Kenya. I posted over 700 updates for those who supported our
journey. It became therapeutic and a lovely way to record memories. For the
last two months, I did not write. I avoided my blog and social media. It took me a while to respond to emails. I
didn’t know what to say.
We’ve been stateside for 8 months. We have a
few more to go. When we left Kenya for a
much-needed furlough, weariness followed me.
While home in Colorado, it shimmed up as my partner. Confusion joined in. Then Frustration appeared forming
an overwhelming trio. For the last 8 weeks, every time I tried to write, these
three actively get in the way. On the
laptop, Word’s “new blank document” screen became my nemesis. I joined a great
writing group to spark motivation but became disappointed by my lagging
participation. I simply didn’t know how to communicate without feeling tired.
So. Very. Tired.
With that
said, I apologize to those who support us for not keeping you updated. Please know how sorry I feel, how lost I felt,
and how I’m processing long term life in Kenya - the fight for Henry, the
threats of security, the management of effective cross-cultural ministry - all
while being a wife, a mom, a friend with profoundly limited strength in a
extremely foreign setting. Many of these
things are still the reality we navigate from more familiar surroundings. I’m not feeling bad for my self. I certainly
detest pity parties. I am recognizing I’ve been emotionally injured and the
ever-healing wound sometimes seeps, especially when ignored.
As God
nurture’s His “unforced rhythms of grace” within my heart, I’ve found my voice
again but it may sound a bit different. Probably less-filtered. I’m searching
for my humor though... Might wanna end me a joke to flesh it out...
Thanks for
understanding.
~lisa
Prayer desires:
- Obviously, for me ~lisa.
- The kids continued healthy transitions to life in USA.
- Henry’s medical needs to be addressed effectively - a consensus on the best course of action. Also, that immigration issues solve without uncomplicated delay.
- Mark’s bio-sand water filter training.
- The ministry in Kisumu – may fruit remain and multiply.
Praise explosions:
- Henry is doing so well acclimating to school (even though he did pull the fire alarm yesterday).
- His Special Needs Resource Team is AWESOME! (Which includes my super sis!)
- Taleah doesn’t experience anxiety attacks anymore. She really enjoys school, friends and singing in the traveling choir. She plans to attend One Thing at IHOP.
- Tavin’s maintaining his job, car and gym membership. He’s also songwriting, studying for the ACT and is a huge help around the house.
- The Resource Center’s amazing ministry to moms and children in Kisumu.
Ears That Don't Hear
A warm July sun
streams through Juniper branches, and we sit in their shade eating ice cream
sandwiches. Henry’s eyes close as the summer breeze tickles his ebony cheeks. I
smile while warblers happily chirp, and I ask Henry if he likes the birds’
songs. He keeps his eyes closed, licking the frozen treat. I wait and repeat
the question. Then I remember. He doesn’t hear me. He can’t hear the birds. He
won’t respond unless he opens his eyes, looks at me and reads my lips; even
then, natures’ high-toned melodies are lost to him.
A few days earlier,
the diagnosis of Henry’s profound hearing loss carried waves of shock and
sadness. We thought he couldn’t comprehend certain sounds but long awaited
tests results revealed a severely profound impairment. Henry has lived for 7
years without understanding functional language. He has ears that can't hear.
As I watched Henry
that late July afternoon, I realized how many time my ears have failed to hear.
I’ve compromised that ability through selfishness - especially to maintain my “oh
so important agenda.” In retrospect, my rejection
to listen with understanding ears became the main nemesis in many blotched
situations:
- “Authoritarian ears” neglected children’s explanations that I assumed were excuses.
- “Western ears” misinterpreted cultural innuendos on the foreign mission field leaving Kenyans confused by my actions.
- “Rebellious ears” willingly ignored my Creator - the very One who formed them to hear!
…Yet, every time I
ask the Lord to change my selfishness to sensitivity, His kindness causes my ears to hear resonances of tenderness,
confidence, acceptance and hope. Things that sound like God.
How do I end this
post that prods me to sincerely hear as I parent a child who currently can’t? Remember…
Remember we are
gifted with this amazing sense to...
- Respond without preconceived judgment.
- Build communicating bridges over haunting misconceptions.
- Enjoy His Still Small Voice that urges us to listen carefully.
“Anyone
with ears to hear should listen and understand!” Matthew 11:15
Praises and prayers…
We received an
extension for Henry’s non-immigrant visa for 6 months. Please pray as we actively pursue medical assistance for the cochlear
implant surgery.
Tavin is working a
full time job and saving money to start school next year. Please pray for him to know and understand the Lord’s revealing plan.
Please keep the ministry in Kenya in
your prayers. The Resource Center continues to thrive and the biosand water
filter project keeps producing. God’s word is taught and those who have ears are hearing the good
news! Your continued
support helps keep these programs growing.
David and team continue water filter project. |
Bible trivia challenge! |
Watching Nick Vijicic video - Life Without Limbs |
Pastor Mary teaching a Bible foundation class |
Asante sana for your prayers, support and encouragement.
hugs from the haugers O00Oo
"We Don't Know...Yet."
If I had a nickel for every time I said that phrase over these last 4 months, our support would be covered for months! As missionaries on furlough, most conversations start like this…
“Your back!”
“Yep.”
“For how long?”
“We don’t know… yet.”
“When are you going back to
Kenya?”
“We don’t know… yet.”
“What will Tavin and Taleah
do when you leave?”
“We don’t know… yet.”
“Are you going to rent your
place again?
“We don’t know…yet.”
I could go on, but you get
the idea. For this lengthy yet over due
post, I try to explain our redundant, ambivalent answer given to many reasonable questions, and hopefully
pray for us. I wanted to refrain from writing till we had some concrete news to share
but details are far from settled… Sooo:
We are currently on furlough
with a USA immigration (USCIS) visa for Henry that expires September 27th.
Henry is 100% adopted - our child, our son; but since we adopted as residents
of Kenya, USCIS requires us to have legal and physical custody of Henry for 2
years while living outside the USA after
the adoption finalized (November 2014). We’ve been in USA since March 28th
and this time does not count towards the 2-year requirement rule. (Note: this would not be a current problem if we were not detained by Kenya's adoption moratorium that went into effect in the middle of our process.) Sooo, (it gets more complicated):
In May, Henry's hearing was
informally checked by BOCS. He failed those tests, which led to more formal
testing in June. In July, Henry was
diagnosed with bilateral nerosensorial profound hearing loss. In other words,
he can’t hear information. (Think if you only heard loud garbled
announcements made at airports… Yeah. That’s Henry’s world of sound. Fyi
though - doctors/audiologists are AMAZED at his coping strategies Click link for how Henry hears you.) Henry is
now a candidate for cochlear implant surgery that involves mega money, tedious
therapies and time-time-time.
Our dilemmas
that require the repetitive “We don’t know…yet” are:
1.
Do we do
the surgery and when? Henry will loose whatever natural hearing he has if we
elect to go this direction. We need a long stretch of time in USA for it to
benefit Henry.
2.
How do
we finance this? Henry is not a citizen yet so insurance for him in USA is
E.X.P.E.N.S.I.V.E. He does not qualify for government medical programs because
he is not a citizen. Every grant program we seen so far has citizen
requirements.
3.
How do
we start this process that needs consistent attention if Henry is not allowed
to stay in USA or get citizenship?
Things
we’ve done to discover solutions to the “We don’t know…yet” are:
1.
Prayer –
prayed and praying!
2.
Researching
speech development for children with hearing loss and how to introduce hearing
to a child who has never genuinely heard the variety of sounds that form
communication.
3.
Filed
our $350 visa extension for Henry with the USCIS.
4.
Contacted
our US Rep. Scott Tipton asking him to contact USCIS on our behalf and request
Henry’s citizenship. This will help free us to make decisions that are in our
family’s best interest and continue working as missionaries without travel
restrictions.
What’s
happening now?
1.
Henry
got hearing aids this week. The
aids will only enhance the sound he can already hear. They are the first step
to introduce hearing changes to Henry. He is also attending a summer school
session to help with socialization.
2.
We wait,
patiently, persistently, proactively for God, knowing He works all things well.
3.
The
ministry in Kenya continues – We interact with the management team regularly. Resource
Center files are completed via our internet correspondence. The mamas keep meeting regularly for bible
study and a new tailoring class starts soon.
Saying, “We don’t know… yet” to
Henry’s situation and our pending mission strategies (implementing orphan caregiver
programs and taking DIGGS Resource Center model to African leadership
conferences) is difficult, except for the word - yet. That word carries hope because we know Jesus - the One who knows all. He directs the universe and has the hairs on
our heads numbered. Nothing escapes His attention. His love for us is
unlimited. We remain confident in Him - faithful God.
Those who wait on the Lord
are not put to shame. Psalm 25:3.
We are abundantly grateful
for your continued support at this time. Please be free to connect with us
through phone calls, emails and comments. We love hearing from you.
Praises:
Mark and Lisa have a full
schedule of speaking for August.
Tavin has a full time job and
his own vehicle.
Taleah does part-time work
and dance.
Henry continues to thrive and
adapt well.
The ministry in Kenya keeps
functioning without crisis.
Prayer:
Favor with USCIS.
Some health issues for Lisa.
Henry’s continued
development.
God’s wisdom for pending
decisions.
One of the mama’s we worked
with, Rose Brenda, was in a serious motorbike accident. She is pregnant
medically unstable.
Big brother drives! |
Ants in Kenya are a big problem but Taleah likes these ones. |
Henry gets new "ears!" and our amazing audiologist. |
Asante sana for your prayers, support and encouragement
hugs from the haugers
Ooo0o
A Few Observations from This Side…
A Few
Observations from This Side…
1. Cats and
dogs are so much fatter here.
2. I can
leave a plate of food unattended without swarms of ants devouring it.
3. Security
checkpoints are only at airports.
4. Road traffic makes sense.
5. Small
children do not roam the streets unsupervised.
6. No one
begs for anything.
After
transitioning between hotels and homes, we finally settled in one place for the
next few months. We are experiencing things that go along with re-entry like unpredictable fatigue, confusion from the copious amount of choices
and strange cravings for chili mango and ginger soda at 2:00 am.
Our
schedule changes daily as we learn about Henry’s developmental assessments. He
underwent a bunch of labs to make sure he’s parasite-free and has no
underlying condition that is causing some periodic vomiting. Extensive audio
screening revealed Henry requires hearing aids and cochlear implant surgery.
His lagging speech development is our biggest concern, but overall he’s
adjusting well to his temporary home in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado. Our
trip to Texas in June has been postponed until we get our Henry boy the care he
needs.
Tavin
graduated from Pagosa Springs High School on June 4th. We look back
at this last year in awe at how God provided a free, uncomplicated answer for
Tavin to complete his senior year. Thanks to some GREAT people in the education
arena in Pagosa, we watched to watch our “first-born” walk across the stage and
receive his diploma. His future holds a variety of options that we are helping
him investigate.
Since
Taleah finished 9th grade through Calvary Online, she’s busy
catching up with friends, enjoying dance class and appreciating her “favorite place in the whole world.”
We
certainly miss our dear Kenyan friends but are happy to hear the mamas continue
to meet for Bible study and accountability. The Resource Center hosted youth/children
activities for vulnerable kids from the surrounding slum while mamas’
participate in catering class and sewing training.
We still
need our faithful donors to help during this six-month furlough. With
Henry’s medical assessments and immigration issues, we are looking to God’s
provision to carry us. We feel grateful as we seek the Lord and His next phase of serving victimized mamas
and at risk children in Kisumu.
Please be
free to contact us to know more about life Among the Least in Kenya.
Asante sana for your prayers, support and encouragement.
hugs from the haugers Ooo0o
So Many Miles
So many miles…
1,989 + 6,238 + 382 + 487 + 1,587
…
A family of 5 traveling
approximately 11,000 miles to various destinations and living out of suitcases
for 31 days should make us expert packers, right? After the first week our best laid
packing plans unrolled into possession chaos:
“Where’s my toothbrush?”
“Those are my socks!” “
“I know I packed that shirt…who
took it?”
Plus, our generous family and
friends added warm clothes to bless our un-acclimated bodies to the
chilly temperatures…
Hats.
Scarves.
Gloves.
Sweaters.
Jackets.
Boots.
Yep, time to get a trailer
(or some warmer weather)!
After sorting through our
compound in Kenya and transitioning ministry to the Resource Center at the
local church, we began our long adventure over the ocean and across the USA to
see family, visit friends and share stories of God’s amazing grace to those
living among the least in Kisumu. We’ve received many warm and big-hearted
welcomes. THANK YOU for loving us so
well!
We are happy to report the
Kisumu Resource Center continues to prosper. A church in Ohio recently provided
funds to build one porcelain toilet system for the elderly/physically
challenged and two flushing squat potties. The Kenyan advisory board and
management team provides unified leadership for ministry programs so those living in poverty
have opportunity to belong, to contribute and to serve – just like the Bible
teaches.
Kisumu Resource Center Family Day
As we settle into our Pagosa
home for the next 5 months, our personal goals include:
1. Preparing Tavin to graduate
from high school and investigate his next step.
2. Helping Taleah reintegrate into
a community she left over 5 years ago.
3. Navigating immigration rules
and Henry’s path for healthy development.
4. Participating in some family
debriefing sessions.
Our speaking schedule takes
us to Texas in June so please connect if you would like to know more about how
we “equip developing-nation churches to biblically minister to people living in
poverty, specifically widows and orphans” Does your organization or church
support missions that need sustainability tools? We can assist. Working
together creates caring churches.
"Hey, has anyone seen my
mittens? I’m freezing!"
Asante sana for your prayers, support and encouragement.
hugs from the haugers Ooo0o
Just Check'in In...
Just
check'in to share a quick update –
After
living in the chaos of separating, packing and moving and packing some more, we
are on our way to USA – with Henry. It feels surreal to write these words;
after 2 years of “unknown” for this little orphaned boy (who’s grown tall) and
consistent ministry with those living in extreme poverty, we are more than
ready for furlough. We will miss our good friends in Kenya but we are EXCITED
to see family and friends back home.
Serving in
Kenya for 5 years reaped beautiful fruit of transformation. Culturally relevant
discipleship programs built healthy relationships. Those living in poverty now
serve in their communities. Victimized widowed mamas feel empowered to raise
their children. Clean water is shared with the gospel message in villages and
the slums. A functioning Resource Center equips the local church to biblically minister
to those in need. Only God can take a seed of a vision and cause it to mature
into meaningful reality.
If you’d
like us to share some of our experiences of seeing God moving while living
among the least, please be free to contact us and we can set aside some time to
visit. We can also
present at churches, small groups and organizations. Below is our itinerary:
- March 28th - 31, Washington DC.
- April 1 -7 Buffalo, NY
- April 8 – 17 Columbus, Ohio
- April 17 -21 Driving to Colorado
- April 22 Staying in Pagosa Springs (but can still travel to share)
Our time
frame for returning to Kenya In not scheduled yet, but it will probably be in
late December.
Please pray for us:
- International travel with Henry - a first for this boy!
- Continued health and provision. (Taleah's still dealing with a painful tooth ache.)
- Continued unity and effectiveness for the ministry in Kisumu.
The Resource Center Advisory Board, Management Team and some of the mamas. |
We certainly appreciate all the prayers, support and encouragement.
As we say
here in Swahili, “Asante sana. Nema shakuru. Mungu akubariki sana.”
“Thanks you
so much. We are grateful. God bless you so much.”
hugs from the haugers Ooo0o
Oops! In all the excitement we forgot...
Oops! In all
the excitement, we forgot our last post for “Week of Water.” What excitement?
We have Henry’s non-immigrant visa to visit the USA! Yea Jesus! Thanks for all
your prayers.
Below is
the missing water post and prayer requests.
Meet David
Otieno. He’s our
“water guy” - the person in charge of constructing, delivering, and informing
his community about bio-sand water filters. His own story helps share the
importance of providing opportunity to access potable water...
“She’s sick
again” David hung his head when we asked about his little girl. Three-year-old
Mary was fighting diarrhea and fever for months. Consistent medical expenses to
treat her were draining the family’s small income.
David and
Nancy both grew up as orphans, raised by guardians. Neither knew the close care
and comfort of a mom and dad. Mary’s chronic sicknesses made them feel
helpless, instigating a root of rejection and threatening loss.
“Let’s
pray.” We joined with David requesting God to intervene and show us the cause
of Mary’s weakening condition.
In the
following weeks David and Mark worked on bio-sand water filters, transporting
them to widowed mama recipients. As we discussed the benefits of the filtered
water, David had a thought… “Mary’s continual illness could be related to
contaminated water.” David lives in a flood plane of Lake Victoria and many
children suffer because their small bodies cannot effectively fight water-borne
illnesses.
On a warm
Sunday afternoon we delivered a bio-sand water filter to David’s humble home;
since then, Mary’s health has dramatically improved.
Clean water
ministered to this family - bringing health, income and assurance that their
Heavenly Father knows how to care for them.
This
“sustainable story” was seed funded by your generous donations.
Please join
us in praying for…
- Our travel plans. We should be departing Kenya at the end of March for a stateside furlough. While there, we hope to visit with as many people as we can to share the vision of biblical ministry to those living in poverty.
- Ministry in the Resource Center to function with unity and integrity found in God’s amazing grace. We’re excited about the advisory and management teams!
- The widowed mamas who still need school fees to send their very bright older children to school. The mama’s are not just given funds. They contribute volunteer services to show appreciation for the help they receive.
- Continued heath, provision and protection.
Asante sana for your prayers, support and encouragement.
hugs from the haugers Ooo0o
Week of Water 3: Do you know the Living Water?
Our third post in Week of Water shares the tract we
use to explain the gospel message with those who
are gathered to watch the process of setting up a
bio-sand filter in a community.
Do you know the Living Water?
use to explain the gospel message with those who
are gathered to watch the process of setting up a
bio-sand filter in a community.
Do you know the Living Water?
LIVING WATER
Both natural and spiritual life requires water… God created
human beings to enter into the world in birth through water. We need clean water to sustain our lives -
water free from parasites, harmful bacteria, and toxins. Drinking water that is not clean makes you
and your children sick with runny tummy that brings death. Also, not drinking
enough water will make you feel weak and confused. If you miss water for many
days, you will die.
Our physical need for water reflects our need for spiritual
water. The Bible says we all thirst for
Living Water. John 4:7-13 says a
Samaritan woman was at a well, drawing her daily water. She was embarrassed by her life because she
had lived with many men. Jesus walks to
the well, asks the woman to give him a drink. She was surprised that Jesus, a
Jew, would even speak to her because Jews and Samaritans disliked each
other. Jesus explained that if she knew
who He was, she would ask him for Living Water. Jesus said, “Whoever drinks this water will be thirsty again. Whoever drinks the water that I
will give him will never be thirsty. The water that I will give him will become
in him a well of life that lasts forever.”
Have you felt the Jesus won’t speak to you because of who
you are? Have you felt a desire for
Living Water to satisfy your thirst for truth? Jesus can cleanse you from fear,
shame and evil . Ezekiel 36:25 I will sprinkle clean water on you, and you shall be
clean from all your uncleannesses, and from all your idols I will cleanse you. John 7:37 If any man thirst, let him come
unto (Jesus), and drink. He that believeth on (Jesus), as the scripture
says, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water. This promise is made to you and your
children as it says in Is. 44:3 “I will pour
water on the thirsty land, and streams on the dry ground; I will pour my Spirit
upon your offspring, and my blessing
on your descendants.”
Who
do you say that Jesus is?
John 3 says there was a
man of the Pharisees named Nicodemus. He
came to Jesus and asked, “Teacher, did you come from God; for no one can do
these signs that You do unless God is with him.” Jesus answered, “ I say to you, unless one is
born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.”
Nicodemus said, “How can a man be born when he is old? Can he enter a
second time into his mother’s womb and be born?” Jesus answered, “ Unless one is born of water
and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God. That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is
born of the Spirit is spirit. Do
not marvel that I said, ‘You must be born again.’ The wind blows where it wishes, and you hear the sound of
it, but cannot tell where it comes from and where it goes. So is everyone who
is born of the Spirit.” Nicodemus
answered, “How can these things be?” Jesus answered, “For God so loved the
world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should
not perish but have everlasting life. For
God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the
world through Him might be saved.”
Isaiah 12:2-3 says
we should draw water with joy from the wells of salvation.
Do you want Jesus to cleanses you from every act
of wickedness? Do you want to be saved from the grip of evil? Do you want to
know how to draw living water from the wells of
salvation? Do you want the life God
intended for you?
1. Accept that you need spiritual cleansing and acknowledge
Jesus alone can bring you new life.
2. Believe that Jesus, perfect in goodness, died on the cross, He suffered a horrible death - a penalty that should have been ours for the evil choices we make. Jesus willingly suffered that penalty Himself so He can cleanse us with His precious blood. By Jesus Christ sacrifice you are washed clean from sin and free to have relationship with God Almighty.
3. Confess aloud for God to forgive you, to wash away your old life and birth you into a new life in Christ. Thank Him for rescuing you with His amazing love.
2. Believe that Jesus, perfect in goodness, died on the cross, He suffered a horrible death - a penalty that should have been ours for the evil choices we make. Jesus willingly suffered that penalty Himself so He can cleanse us with His precious blood. By Jesus Christ sacrifice you are washed clean from sin and free to have relationship with God Almighty.
3. Confess aloud for God to forgive you, to wash away your old life and birth you into a new life in Christ. Thank Him for rescuing you with His amazing love.
YOU ARE BORN AGAIN! Live your new life
by reading the Bible, praying and attending a healthy Bible - believing church. May you drink deep from God’s endless Water
of Life and grow into everything He created you to be.
Aunt Rose giving water cleaned by her biosand filter to children in the village.
There are four filter in this community and one more to be placed later this month.
That's five areas the gospel of Living Water is being proclaimed and disease-free water
is available.
is available.
But now, because of your help, the number is decreasing
and people hear the truth about Jesus.
Asante sana for your prayers, support and encouragement.
hugs from the haugers Ooo0o
Week of Water 2
Since we are posting for this week about water in Kenya, let
us explain what a bio-sand filter is, how it works and benefits to the
communities where they are placed.
First, what is a
bio-sand water filter?
It is a water
treatment system using a slow sand filtration process. Bio-sand filters remove
pathogens and particles from water using biological and physical processes that
take place in a sand column covered with a biofilm (a layer of germ eating
bacteria). It is a
concrete container a bit larger than a office water cooler that is constructed
by Kenyans (with Mark n our kids) using locally sourced materials.
Next, how does it
work?
After the concrete case cures with an inset plastic pipe, it
is filled with layers of washed sand and gravel. Dirty water is poured into the
top of the bio- sand filter, where a diffuser plate (made by our Kenyan friend,
Steve) evenly distributes the water over the sand bed layer. The water travels
down through the sand bed, passes through multiple layers of gravel, and
collects in the plastic pipe at the bottom of the filter. The clean water then
exits through the plastic piping for a family to collect in clean containers.
The removal of contaminants
and disease causing agents is possible due to a mixture of biological deprivation
and natural filtration. The organic material in the dirty water is trapped at
the surface of the sand bed, forming the layer of germ eating bacteria, which
actively removes pathogens and contaminants. The water produced with
the bio-sand process is tasteless, clear color, odorless and safe for
drinking.Studies have shown the bio-sand filter can remove more than 90% of bacteria and 100% of parasites, dramatically reducing the occurrences of water-borne diseases. Because of the filters’ effectiveness at increasing the safety of water, the ease of use/maintenance and lack of reoccurring cost, it is considered a suitable water treatment for developing countries.
Globally, hundreds of millions of
people are trapped in a poverty cycle of chronic disease because they lack
access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation. The statistics are unsettling:
over 1.8 billion people are drink contaminated water, while 2.4 billion people
lack access to basic sanitation. We are helping Kenyan use bio-sand water
filters, coupled with the gospel message of hope in Jesus - the Living Water - to
bring affordable, sustainable potable water solutions with a focus on salvation
through Christ.
Any questions?
There's a quiz next week. ; )
Interested in more info?
Send us an email at
mlthauger@hotmail.com.
Asante sana for your prayers, support and encouragement!
hugs from the haugers. Ooo0o
Week of Water 1
Over the
next 7 days we plan to post “A Week of Water” and tell stories about the
importance of water in a developing nation like Kenya. Hope you’ll engage with
us!
The African
sun scorches Kisumu this time of year, putting an abrupt end to the stormy El Nino
rains. Seems like overnight our compound has gone from lush foliage to baked
brown grass. Hot afternoon winds layer grimy filth across everything. When the
weather gets like this, water becomes like liquid treasure to many who amble
along the dusty parched roads. That’s
where our story starts…
Jackie and Dorine are widowed sisters. Together they raise children in a
place where opportunity is small and wages are smaller. When they realize a bio-sand
filter has been donated to their household situated along a busy access, the
idea of selling clean cold water to thirsty passersby initiates. However,
these Christian mamas know that water is not the real need, but offering
occasions to share Christ, the Living Water is their ultimate goal.
The plan: Fill
new plastic bags with pure water from the filter and place in them with ice in
a used cooler purchased from the market. Outside their gate, under the shade of a Jacaranda tree, chilled water will be sold for 10 bob a bag (10cents). They asked
us to help design a small Swahili tract that tells the gospel message, which
they will offer with the disease-free water.
The bio-sand
water filter donation provides potable water for the family, a small business
venture, and a platform for sharing the Hope that lives within them. Want to join these mamas for some real
thirst-quencher? Please pray for their meaningful success, for the tract to be culturally appropriate and touch the hearts of those who read it.
Bwana
Asafiwe! (Praise the Lord!)
We have a date for Henry’s non-immigrant visa appointment at the USA Embassy
in Nairobi – February 18th. Please pray with us for favor. Thanks for standing with us
through this amazingly long process. It’s beautiful to see the lengths
God goes to welcome a son into a family.
We have a date for Henry’s non-immigrant visa appointment at the USA Embassy
in Nairobi – February 18th. Please pray with us for favor. Thanks for standing with us
through this amazingly long process. It’s beautiful to see the lengths
God goes to welcome a son into a family.
Asante sana for your prayers, support and encouragement.
hugs from the haugers Ooo0o
Reminded to Remember
I’ve been
reading Hebrews and am stuck in chapter 11. I’m not stuck as confused, but
stuck like God is trying to imprint something in me…
When I
think of the things we’ve walked through over the last two years of
consecutively living in a developing nation, and than I compare it to the prodigious people
who experienced incredible challenges without loosing trust in God, I’m
obviously awed and humbled; but, it’s chapter 11 verse 40 that stirs my heart…
“All these people
earned a good reputation because of their faith, yet none of them received all
that God had promised. For God had something better in mind for
us, so that they would not reach perfection without us.”
Their faith is part of a
bigger story. It becomes intertwined in ours and together we become part of God’s
Great Story that culminates in Jesus. Their patient endurance, in the midst
unimaginable trials, is not for comparing
but for remembering. I am “reminded to remember” that God was with them. God gave them faith. God gave them
courage. God gave them strength to “overthrow kingdoms and make justice work,”
to even embrace a martyr’s death. A presumptuous outcome didn't justify their
faith. A submissive and focused perseverance in God’s providence made their
faith legendary.
So regardless
of what we encounter - be it a horrific crisis or daily frustrations - "let us run with
endurance the race God has set before us by keeping our eyes on Jesus, the
champion who initiates and perfects our faith.”
We remain
grateful for prayer partners and supporters like you who continually encourage our faith. This month found us delivering water filters and sharing the gospel,
facilitating bible studies, meeting about the Resource Center, praying,
preaching, parenting and navigating the final documents of Henry’s adoption. Below
are our current requests and some important information.
Please pray
for:
1.
Healing
for our local pastor’s wife, Mary who has been diagnosed with benign but
painful tumors in her abdomen.
2.
The
Lord’s provision since a few of our widowed mamas’ children need school fees.
3.
The
young adults of some of the mamas to stay strong in the Lord and resist the
pull toward evil gain and drugs.
4.
The
Resource Center to be managed with integrity and the team to make unified
decisions that benefit the community. It’s ready to open for ministry next
month after the inside is painted.
5.
Henry’s
documents to be completed without unnecessary complications.
We thank God we received his
adoption and birth certificates. The
Lord also removed an impossible
barrier when we tried to apply for Henry’s Kenyan passport. Yea Jesus!
6.
Our
family:
· Kids’ schooling to successfully
continue. They have all been very diligent.
· The packing process - we need wisdom
on what to store, transfer and gift to others.
· Cost effective and straightforward
travel plans.
· Restored health. We’ve experienced
various infections that tend to linger.
· Provision and Protection.
Working together, combining faith. |
Telling stories, sharing faith. |
Reaching out in faith for salvation. |
A bubuzela in worship? Expressing faith. |
Kenyan church. |
Our 18 year old getting ready for his next step in life. |
Our animal lover. |
Can I travel yet? |
We plan to
take a 10 month furlough for over due medical check ups and Henry’s assessments, to
investigate Tavin’s future school plans and raise awareness/funds for the
ministry. Please pray about continuing your support during this time and having
us share with your church, Bible group or organization. Feel free to contact us - mlthauger@gmail.com
Asante sana for your prayers, support and encouragement.
hugs from the haugers Ooo0o