We returned this past week from our weeklong camp in the
village of Kalinenska...a remote part of the Kherson region. This was our 4th
summer heading back to work with these kids.
Leaving for another camp tomorrow...this time for 2 weeks. Please keep our team in your prayers.
The hardest part about going back every year is seeing that
they are still there. I look at my pictures from the previous
years and I see how the kids are growing and changing... and yet there they
remain, isolated in a tiny village, waiting for the next group of guests to
arrive...hoping for a change from the normal.
What amazes me each year about these kids is their memory. These are kids who struggle in school
and have a hard time putting letters together and remembering one English word
I teach them, and yet they remember specific details of previous years together as if
the events happened only yesterday.
They will recite which games we played in 2009, they recite song lyrics
from two years ago, they will go into detail about films we showed them and
they can even remember which day of the week we showed up last year!
Honestly it was
mind blowing to hear the kind of details they remembered. After doing dozens of these camps I
have a hard time separating them in my mind, and truthfully they all start to
blur together. I have to look at the pictures to remind myself who was who and
what we did. Not for these kids.
They remember the specifics. The
moments are engrained in their minds.... because for them these moments are
significant. The monotonous
routine is broken and they are given a break. The scenery stays the same perhaps, but the people who fill
it are now different.
I started thinking more about this because I realized that
to us the camp might just seem like a lot of work at times-- Details to
coordinate, games to organize, lessons to create. And then we wonder whether it makes a difference, if there
is any lasting impact?? Well this
year as I was hearing child after child rattle off details about previous camps
I felt as if God was whispering to my heart....Yes, Karen, it does matter.
Don't let yourself think otherwise.
So this year as we played silly games, taught the lessons,
sang the songs and pointed them to the truth of Jesus I found comfort in
knowing that even though they don't always seem to pay attention...something
here is sticking...something is getting through. When we leave
and they go back to their normal, they will draw upon these precious memories
and they will find comfort.
Maybe it will start as just a simple memory about one of the games, but prayerfully they will draw up words of scripture, words of hope and truth that have the power to change them forever.
"As the rain and the snow
come down from heaven,
and do not return to it
without watering the earth
and making it bud and flourish,
so that it yields seed for the sower and bread for the eater,
11
so is my word that goes out from my mouth:
It will not return to me empty,
but will accomplish what I desire
and achieve the purpose for which I sent it."
Isaiah 55:10-11
Leaving for another camp tomorrow...this time for 2 weeks. Please keep our team in your prayers.
Beautiful, encouraging post about the impact we ARE having with Ukraine's kids! I pinned {to Pinterest} your two games in light of our VBSs and camps coming up, so you may be getting visitors to your blog. :-)
ReplyDeleteOh, Karen - what a beautiful post! Makes me want to cry and rejoyce, all at the same time - cry because the kids are still there...rejoyce because what you do for these kids is amazing. I know your presence there makes a long lasting impact on these kids - I witnessed it first hand last summer, and it's beautiful.
ReplyDeleteLove you, friend.
Oh, Karen - what a beautiful post! Makes me want to cry and rejoyce, all at the same time - cry because the kids are still there...rejoyce because what you do for these kids is amazing. I know your presence there makes a long lasting impact on these kids - I witnessed it first hand last summer, and it's beautiful.
ReplyDeleteLove you, friend.
Greetings to this awesome Ministry among the Orphanage Children iam so much impress because even i was Orphan boy but God has raised me up as a Youth pastor to the very huge Congratulations and i would like to visit your mission and share the love of God and share few gifts that our Church believers would like to give to your Mission for the glory of the Lord and would you invite us for one week to serve the Lord among the Children and give some gifts and share the joy of the Lord with children through your Ministry in Ukraine. kindly invite us so that we would come and visit you and share love of God and have a blessed fellowship for one another in Christ.
ReplyDelete