Showing posts with label ministry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ministry. Show all posts

Monday, January 3, 2011

Birmingham-based ministry known for work in Sudan expands to Congo, Peru

Published: Sunday, January 02, 2011, 2:15 PM

Make Way Partners, the Birmingham-based Christian mission organization that runs orphanages in Sudan and a home for women and children in Romania, has expanded its work to Congo and Peru.

Kimberly Smith, founder and president of Make Way Partners, has helped establish an orphanage in Congo working with Sister Alvera, a Catholic nun who left her monastery to take in orphans.

Sister Alvera grew up in the convent after she was dropped off there by her parents at age 3. After becoming a nun, she wanted to go out and help people.

"She was seeing the soldiers take local children as sex slaves," Smith said. "She wanted her convent to do something about it. She wanted to go live out on the street with the children and see what she could do. She started trying to help the children. She had a gathering of 20 orphans."

Make Way Partners helped Sister Alvera find a house. "Now she has 40 children and they are all living in a little house," Smith said. "We are looking for land to build her an orphanage."

Smith has identified a Christian leader in Peru, Jack Vasquez, a certified public accountant, who will be leading rescue work for Make Way Partners in Peru. Peru has a large drug-trafficking problem and insufficient law enforcement, she said. "Any time you have drug trafficking, you have terrible human trafficking," she said.

People suffer severe poverty and girls are sold into prostitution as part of a sex industry that includes brothels serving tourist traffic near the famed Incan ruins of Macchu Picchu, she said.

Smith also has just become a first-time author with a book called "Passport Through Darkness: A True Story of Danger and Second Chances," about the ministry in Sudan. The book has been available for order online and was slated to appear in bookstores starting Saturday.

"We've already sold several thousand copies online," Smith said. It has helped raise awareness of the work in Sudan, she said.

'Healing process'

Christian Retailing Magazine named the book its top pick for December. "We're just excited and humbled," Smith said.

"I tell a lot about human trafficking stories I witnessed," Smith said. "God revealed himself to me in a healing process through those hard times."

For more information on the book, see the website, www.kimberlylsmith.com. "I hope it helps give people the courage to risk finding out what God wants to do in their lives," Smith said.

The book includes an endorsement from former President Jimmy Carter, who invited Smith to speak to his Bible study class at Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains, Ga., in 2007.

"He and Rosalynn sat down and prayed with me afterwards and he said, 'If there's anything I can do for you, let me know,'" Smith said.

Smith, a former missionary to Portugal who helped break up a sex-trafficking ring there, had been looking for ways to fight sex trafficking and slavery when she founded Make Way Partners in 2002 with her husband, the Rev. Milton Smith. She made her first trip to Sudan in 2004 and, with support from Christians in Alabama and across the South, established the first orphanage in 2005.

Make Way Partners runs an orphanage in Darfur that has 525 children living in three dormitories on 100 acres that includes a school, a church and a medical clinic. James Lual Atak, a former "lost boy" who gathered up most of the orphans, runs the campus.

Smith also started an orphanage in southern Sudan, near the border of Uganda, that has 50 children. That's run by civil engineer Kevin Massie and his wife, Shalene, who live in a tent with their 1-year-old daughter, Abigail, while they oversee the construction of dormitories that will eventually house 125 children. Massie graduated from Virginia Tech University and contacted Make Way Partners after researching the humanitarian crisis in Darfur.

Make Way Partners also supports a home for exploited women and their children in Romania. The shelter, called House of Treasure, houses up to 20 girls who were rescued from forced prostitution, Smith said. Some Romanian girls as young as 14 years old were rescued from brothels in Spain, Greece and Germany. The House of Treasure was founded by Iana Matei, a psychologist who has received international acclaim for her rescue work while enduring threats from organized crime rings that run prostitution networks exploiting girls as young as 10 to 12. "She's doing a remarkable job," Smith said of Matei.

Make Way Partners had a $4 million budget this year, most of it going to fund the work in Africa. "We bring accountability so that American donors know that their money is being used wisely," Smiths said. "The only thing that keeps us from being able to save more lives is that we're staying within the budget we have. For an organization that just started seven years ago, we feel fortunate. God's blessed us tremendously."

Join the conversation by clicking to comment or e-mail Garrison at ggarrison@bhamnews.com.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read our FAQ page at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php
Five Filters featured site: So, Why is Wikileaks a Good Thing Again?.


View the original article here

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Druid Hills residents oppose ex-offender ministry program at Carraway

Published: Monday, November 22, 2010, 11:26 PM ??? Updated: Monday, November 22, 2010, 11:29 PM

Druid Hills residents on Monday voted against a proposal by an ex-offender ministry program to place a "ministry mall," including residential programs for former prisoners and recovering drug addicts, at the former Carraway Medical Center campus.

"I think they were overwhelmed by the scope of the project," said Charlie L. Williams Jr., president of the Druid Hills Neighborhood Association, which voted 19-0 against the project.

The Rev. Andrew Jenkins, executive director of the ministry, called The Village, said his group wants to revitalize the property by locating a variety of social services under one roof. There also would be long-term housing that would include, in the first year, as many as 40 non-violent former prisoners, 25 recovering drug addicts and others such as college interns working with the program and missionaries in between assignments.

The plan also calls for building single-family houses on out parcels and attracting new business, such as a grocery store to the northern end of the 30-acre Carraway campus.

About 50 people attended the meeting in the sanctuary at St. John Baptist Church, where Jenkins outlined the proposal. Residents seemed to be most concerned about the prisoner re-entry program, saying it would be detrimental to the community.

"We always want to help people fallen on bad times, said Martha Bozeman, a resident of nearby Central City who grew up in Druid Hills, and whose father still lives there. "But we're worried about the safety of our children and our property values."

Jenkins said residents are non-violent offenders trying to get their lives back in order. He said they would be closely supervised and would be required to hold a job. If a job was not available, then that resident would be required to do 40 hours of community service work in the area.

He noted that in the last three years, The Village has worked with about 300 former prisoners in other locations, and only three have gone back to jail.

Birmingham City Councilman Johnathan Austin, who represents the area, said the idea is worthy, but he will oppose The Village moving to Carraway.

"It's not going to happen as long as I am here and I will do all I can" to prevent it moving to Carraway, Austin said.

Residents noted that the Salvation Army has also proposed moving some of its operations, including a homeless shelter, from downtown to Norwood, a neighborhood adjacent to Druid Hills.

L&B Realty Advisors, a Dallas-based company that owns the Carraway campus, has not been able to attract another buyer in the health care industry, said the company's Jon Foulger. Efforts to interest other potential buyers, such as senior citizen housing, have failed.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read our FAQ page at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php
Five Filters featured article: Beyond Hiroshima - The Non-Reporting of Falluja's Cancer Catastrophe.


View the original article here