Tuesday, April 15, 2014

ALSO Alabama 2014 - Final Post



Just a few final words to sum up the rest of our trip.  We spent the final morning all working on the 3rd house on Roslyn Crescent.  It was a sight to behold.  All 28 students and 10 chaperones swarmed the house and began siding the exterior from every direction trying to cover every square inch before it was time to go.  We made impressive progress and managed to almost complete the job in 3 1/2 hours!  Only a portion of one of the front wall remained. 


One of the three houses our group worked on in the same area.

Students worked from every side of the house.  Some measured(sometimes twice), some cut (sometimes more than twice!), some used the power nailer, while others caulked and painted the siding.

Carefully measuring using the imperial system of feet and inches.

Katie and her dad work on a section of the house.


The nailer works better if you squeeze yours eyes shut at the same time!


Wayne and his crew kicked up a lot of dust!



Measuring and cutting siding.


Preparing the roof for drywall.

We tore ourselves away from the house at noon to return to Camp Christian to quickly shower and clean the camp in preparation for our long trip home.  It was an awesome week.  We had so many fantastic experiences and interactions with others and within our group as well.  On our trip we presented Goodwill Missionary Baptist Church, Camp Christian, and Habitat for Humanity with a portion of the funds raised in our 'Have a Heart' fundraiser.  We benefit so much from all three of these groups that it was very fulfilling to be able to give back to them as well.  

As you may have heard we had some mechanical troubles with the bus on the way home and got delayed in small town Iowa for several hours. The people there were patient with our group and were very accommodating.  Our bus driver managed to locate the part we needed only 25 miles away!  After we got on the way again we decided to drive through a second night to arrive home safely and just slightly ahead of schedule.

A special thank you to all that made the trip not only possible but such a great learning experience for our students.  These people are too numerous to begin to name!  Thank you for following our blog and keeping us in your thoughts and prayers as we travelled, learned and served.


ALSO Alabama 2014

Friday, April 11, 2014

High River MDS - Work Day #4



Well, it's hard to believe that this morning we began our final day with High River MDS.  This has been a fantastic experience, and one that is hard to describe.  Today began like the previous four, with a 6:30 AM alarm, devotions at 7:00 AM with breakfast to follow and off to work by 8:00 AM.  We all worked hard, and enjoyed continuing to use our new-found skills like mudding, taping, and hanging drywall.  Our necks are sore from looking up and our eyes are tired from getting full of dust! 

In the end we felt fulfilled from the work, and from working with such good friends and crew leaders.  We finished the night with a sharing time with the whole MDS crew, which was very touching and meaningful.  There are so many stories to tell about the people and the events in High River and we will share more when we get home.  Tomorrow we will head for home even though it feels that we just arrived!  Thanks for your thoughts and prayers. 


                                                             
                                                                     The Crew!


ALSO Saskatoon Mid Week - Roll up the sleeves and get to work!


This week, the students who stayed back in Saskatoon were out doing some work in the city. Some worked at community schools, while others worked at Habitat for Humanity, both on houses and at the Re-Store Habitat, which is a store open to the public which offers affordable building supplies, appliances, as well as furnishings. They learned quite a bit about Habitat's mission, and how it works, and the students who went to schools learned a lot about how those work, and how even children go through challenges everyday.

(more below)
Toby, Isaac, and Caitlin were at W.P. Bate Community School this week - one of 4 schools assigned to RJC students.

Toby working one-on-one with a student.

Alexa, Maddi, Renee, and Roch (not pictured) were at Caroline Robbin School. They are all wearing pink on Anti-Bullying Day.

Danielle up close with a student at St. John School.

Isaac outside the Family Room at W.P. Bate.

Dusty, Kyle, Gabby, and Abby at the Habitat for Humanity work site. The Habitat group worked at 3 different sites this week!

Rachel and Leah working at the Habitat site.

At Vincent Massey Community School, the students can be involved in a strings program with the cooperation of "Sistema Saskatoon."

Hope and Brittany at the craft table at Vincent Massey. They made hats everyday for the Pre-K kids.

Lyndsey, Danielle, Cody were at St. John School.

Thank you Ed Brockman, principal at St John School for making your school available to RJC kids. Ed is a former teacher at RJC. Can you find the family resemblance with one of the RJC kids?
Today we are at Camp Kinasao to reflect on the week's events, and share many of our experiences that we had throughout the week. Some people talked of how Habitat works for the betterment of people who are less fortunate, and how the Re-Store helps raise money for the building of those houses. '

The students that worked at schools throughout the week also talked of their week, including stories from and about the students, that were both uplifting, positive, and a little bit heartbreaking. Children and staff welcomed the students wholeheartedly, and students in particular were very sad that they had to go.

All in all, it was a short, three-day experience, but we learned valuable life lessons and had amazing experiences along the way. Even though the week was a bit short, and we wish it were longer, the grade 11's and 10's are looking forward to ALSO next year!
- Cody, Roch, & Leah

Thursday, April 10, 2014

High River Work Day #3

Today is the third day working with the MDS organization in High River. The students woke up at 6:30 and some later than that!  Joe led everyone in a devotion; Simon and Analicia closed the devotion praying in Spanish.  The students were blessed to have a hot breakfast everyday before heading to work at 8. 

  Here is Christie looking really awesome while handling a nail gun.  And Jacob, a crew leader working on the framing.  They were framing a basement from morning till afternoon.


Kelsey looks like a professional electrician here screwing the outlet in place.  And the picture below Rianna is sort of holding on or leaning against a cardboard. Working with joy!  (Don't let this picture fool you, Rianna has been working really hard!  Ask her about the bucket.)








 After supper they met with other volunteers in the chapel. A homeowner, Kathleen, shared about her experience and how the flood in High River impacted her.  Her home basement was destroyed by the flood and she talked about how he received help from some volunteers working for MDS. One of her most precious and irreplaceable item found in the basement, a Norwegian hand made table cloth by her mom, was found under many layers of mud. She was very grateful and said all the volunteers who helped the victims of flood could not be thanked enough. It was a very touching story.


Peace Out! - Christie!

Pictures from Guatemala ALSO

We received some pictures from Guatemala, showing the students working, singing and playing. We are really looking forward to hearing their report when they return this weekend.

Working hard

Enjoying some well earned rest.

Singing for the children at Anadesa.

Well earned rewards

Working Hard

Singing for the Children's Program at ANADESA

A Study of Contrasts in Guatemala

Buenos Noches hombres y mujeres!

In this ever busy week and a half, every day is an adventure. On Monday we had an intense day of contrasts as we toured Guatemala City. We started off the day with breakfast at Semilla, and soon took off in our ever loyal Micro bus. We drove to the centre of the city and viewed a Catholic Church built by Spanish Conquistadors a few centuries back. It was a beautiful and awe-inspiring building that was reminiscent of those in Europe. We traversed over the centre plaza to check out a government building built by a self-centered dictator during the rise of fascism. It is used today for normal government business. We then hopped into the Micro (which we learned is affectionately nicknamed Mennonito, 'Little Mennonite') to visit a second smaller church where Father Gerardi was assassinated in the parking lot outside his church after the Guatemalan Civil War for his book that revealed secrets of his country. We went to a museum that told us of the history of this country, and the past of war and racism that Spanish colonizers and others bringing over African Slaves created. We learned a lot that we had never thought about in our safe North American way of thinking. We proceeded to eat a three-course lunch at a restaurant which cost less for 16 of us here than it would for all of us to eat at McDonalds at home. The financial contrasts here are crazy. After lunch we spent an hour in the main downtown market attempting to barter and use the few spanish numbers that we know. It is a hectic and confusing place. From life to death we went from the bustling metropolis centre to the Guatemalan Cemetery. We saw a gigantic Egyptian-style mausoleum for the powerful Castillo family right next to the slots in the wall for the 14 year renting spots for the poor who could afford it. This contrast greatly affected most of the group, for it was one of the most extreme contrasts that we've seen right next to each other. At the end of the cemetery was the city dump where we watched people crawling like ants to find riches in the garbage of the rest of the city. They struggled to live day to day searching through all of the trash. We directly drove to Cayala, which is like going from District 12 to the Capital. It is the place of the posh and the privileged. We saw stores full of brand-name things that could feed every person in the rest of the city for a week. We went back to Semilla with a new view on things, tired and conflicted with all of the drastic things that we had seen.

The next morning, we drove from Semilla to the Mayan ruins of Iximche (that's pronounced ee-SHEEM-chay). They were very impressive, and ancient, and made of stone, but that was the first time we didn't feel so much like tourists, due to the plethora of elderly folks armed with cameras and even less knowledge of Spanish than us. The people who inhabited the ruins back before they were ruins had a very advanced society, and managed to work the symbolism they attached to numbers into almost all aspects of their life. After the tour, and the half hour it took for everyone to use the bathroom, we drove to the market of Panajachel, where we enjoyed lunch in a small restaurant. Most of us ordered things like quesadillas or burritos, though Ryan had pizza, but the thing that was different about this restaurant was the glasses the drinks were served in. They were like wine glasses, except much bigger than a wine glass had any right to be. And they were full just about to the top. After our meal we strolled through the market down to the docks of the Lake Atitlan, where a boat and her captain were waiting to take us across the waters to Santiago Atitlan. The boat ride itself was a memorable experience, though in different ways for different people. For Daniel, it was one of thorough enjoyment, as was shown by how he put his arm in the water as the boat sped along. For others, it was telling Daniel to put his arm in the boat as water splashed off of it and onto the rest of the boat's occupants. The waters were a little bumpy, but we made it to the other side without incident, where we walked through the streets of Santiago Atitlan and beyond until we arrived at ANADESA and their work site, which at the time consisted of a medium-sized room which can function as a dining room or a classroom as the situation demands, a smaller room which is used as the office, store, and kitchen, and no other rooms but for a storage shed and a piece of land where we would be working the next day. We were introduced to the women who would be hosting us in their homes for the next couple of days, and were given a historical explanation of the Peace Park located next to ANADESA.

On Tuesday after we got our tour of the ANADESA facility and the peace park we got split into families for our home-stays. Some of our group is in Chukmuk a village/town 15 minutes away from ANADESA and the others are staying only a minute walk away from ANADESA. We are spending Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at these homes. We have had so much fun playing with the kids, making s'mores, eating tortillas and talking with our hosts. They are so hospitable, kind and humble, they also never stop smiling! The kids are adorable and its going to be so hard to say goodbye because even as we write this out they are sitting on our laps. The food these women prepare is amazing and really you can't go wrong with a side of tortillas.

On Wednesday we spent our first length of time doing service work. With the money that RJC raised ANADESA was able to purchase the next phase of their building. We got to start the construction of this new addition, a classroom. The first step in the construction was digging trenches/holes for the foundation. These trenches had to be one meter deep and about half a meter wide. Within the first hour and a half the holes were good as dug and it was down to the fine leveling to make them exactly the dimensions needed. Even the people at ANADESA were surprised with how much we got done. So after that we had to move rocks from a pile near by to the construction area. After all that it was finally lunch time where we got to enjoy Coca-Cola chicken. After lunch it was time for the fun to begin. The children's group was meeting and we got the joy to sing for them and then have them sing for us. After this song fest we got to make a paper chain with the kids and share in snack time. Once the kids left we got to go on a walk around town and spend time in the market. To finish off the day we went back to our home stay houses and spent time with our host families.

Mackenzie, Daniel, Kenna, Matt and the rest of the Guatemala gang!

Sent from my iPad

ALSO Alabama - Work week draws quickly to an end!

Today is the third day of volunteer work, and were still going strong. We split into two groups, 5 stayed at Camp Christian to do some maintenance at the camp, while the rest of the crew returned to Habitat for Humanity. At the camp Debbie got us to clean the front porch and prepared us for painting. We painted the ceiling and the two walls. 

At Habitat we finished siding the second house, and the first coat of paint as well! Wahoo! Tomorrow we are starting the third house! 




Then we packed up our stuff and headed to the beach! "Lets go to the beach, beach lets get away" It was very windy, but warm! The waves were beautiful and body surfing was a go! The water was freezing, but it was a experience of a life time for some people! There were people playing Frisbee, football, and walking along the beach looking for shells. All in all the beach was a success, and we were happy with the weather! We had a hard time leaving the white, silky (squeaky) sand. After what seemed like a long drive we came home to some devotions, and a warm fire where we roasted wieners on coat hangers, and even some yummy smores! It was a great day, and we are more than ready for tomorrow! 




Picture perfect until an unexpected wave came along1

Catching some rays!

Go long!

Tandy jukes and jives to a first down.

One of the few positive plays from Morgan's team!

ALSO ALABAMA

Back after a hard days work and fun at the ocean.


** Sorry for the double post today.  We are usually one day behind always when we are blogging due to the lack of internet at Camp Christian.  However after today's work we will be cleaning up and packing as tomorrow is our last day in Mobile. The students will work a half day on Friday then we will board the bus for the trip home.  I may not be able to access any internet tomorrow (sorry Heather!)  I will try to post on Saturday when we should be in a hotel for the night.   Wow the week has just flown by and none of us can believe that we are just about done.  The kids are tired as the mornings are early and the work day is long but everyone is doing well and having a blast!  Thanks for keeping up with us via this blog!  See you soon!

ALSO Alabama - Day 1 Habitat for Humanity





Howdy ya'll! We woke up earlier than what was prefered, but we survived. We were all super pumped to get to work, but when we got there it was colder than we expected. Nobody had time to miss home because it felt like Canada! They had a lot of work prepared for us, but as usual we got it all done! Way to go team….again. There was a lot of painting, and siding done. A lot of us were excited to work with power tools, *cough* Dayna. We could not wait to get to eat our lunch but when our break was over we went right back to working like champs. We had to cut our day a little short because of the rain (of course) but despite the cold weather it was sunny enough for some of us to get burnt! (Mieke) #gingerprobs. Some of the boys even picked up a southern accent and it seemed to last for only a few hours….(Josh, Shane, Derek, Jake, Morgan) After a long day of work we came back to the camp for some devotions and quiet journaling time, and of course supper. Again #shoutout #bevandralph After supper some of us went to play in the rain with a tire amongst other things. It was very slippery right Hayley? While others stayed nice and warm in the dorm area, or played card games. All in all it was a great bonding experience for the team and we are more than ready for what tomorrow brings. Goodnight ya'll, Mieke & Katie



The 'Muscle'

Hey Benjamin . . . want to be in the picture?

See mom . . . he's doing just fine!

What happens when it doesn't quite fit?  You rub it across the cement until you sand off just the right amount.

How many RJC kids does it take to paint an eave?

These two didn't know who Charlie's Angels were!!!



Measuring twice.

Mom and daughter working side by side in Mobile.


One of the three houses RJC is working on during our stay in Alabama

Back at Camp Christian we had devotion lead by Emma and Ashley.  We were a pretty tired crew by the end of the day.  So the evening ended with board games and visiting.



Emma and Ashley

What is more Mennonite than Dutch Blitz?