Latest prayer letters and news

Some prayer letters and news recently received into the SAMS office:

News from Gwen and Mags in Paraguay

Dear Friends,

 

Life in Paraguay is never dull or predictable! We are now into the third week of our winter holidays. It was supposed to be a two week break and we’re still not sure whether or not it will be lengthened yet again! First of all the holidays were brought forward by a week a few weeks before they were due to start and now we don’t know when classes will resume! It’s all due to Swine flu and trying to cut down on the illness. There have been quite a number of cases here and some deaths. It’s also the middle of winter and it has been very cold and wet which doesn’t help. There have also been an unusually large number of ordinary flu cases too.

          

June and July have been extremely wet months when usually very little rain falls. This was an answer to prayer, especially in the Chaco where drought was taking hold. The city was also lacking water but we have now been well blessed by some very heavy rain. I think we can safely say that the drought is over! Our new roof didn’t stand the test of some of the heavy storms and rain poured in at one point. The men had to go back on the roof to fix it all. That wasn’t as easy as it sounds as they had to wait for the tiles to dry before walking on them and we had rain for days on end!!

          

The rain also brought many more serious problems. In the Chacarita a house slipped as the ground moved with so much rain. As the house fell the gas bottle set light to the house and the family were burned and hurt. They had a daughter and two grandsons in the annexe school. The girl in 5th grade had a fractured skull  but made a good recovery and the boys had burns. The family were all in hospital but had no home to go to anyway. The pupils and parents here in the college responded extremely well and we held Bring and Buy sales etc raising quite a good sum of money to help the family. The annexe pupils did the same. Some parents donated building materials to help build a house for them and the man’s workmates are helping to build it. Victor, the head of the annexe school, insisted it should be built elsewhere and so take them out of the Chacarita and the precarious conditions there.

          

School was going along well with all its usual challenges! We’d managed to pack quite a lot of activity ( and work) into the months building up to the break. The trip to the Chaco for the oldest pupils was cancelled in March due to the drought . In June , after the rain , it looked like they would be able to go and they all set off ready one day only to find that rain had fallen heavily in the Chaco and access to the area where they were hoping to dig a water tank  would be almost impossible. So, it was cancelled again. The plan was then to go after the winter break but the extra holiday has put all the plans out and it won’t be possible now until September. The year 11’s did get their trip to Concepcion where they painted a poor school and dug latrines in a poor area. Mags also had a week’s trip to a sports camp in Brazil with a group of pupils.

          

In the last few months we have celebrated lots of events. The main ones being Mother’s day and Father’s day. The primary did two separate shows for their parents. The little ones did a big show for  mums and dads together. We also made the usual gifts from the children for parents. Gwen ended up sewing 60 cushions and covers for the children to paint! The annexe school also celebrated in the same way. With the holidays being brought forward the shows came at the same time as reports and so it was a mad rush to finish the term and get everything done but we made it!

 

The children are not back yet but the staff are all in. On Monday we all came in to prepare work for the pupils to collect and do at home. They came for that yesterday. Today we had a doctor( a parent) come to talk to all the staff. He talked about Swine Flu and what we need to do in school to prevent it spreading. The parents are watching closely to check we are doing all we can!!

          

We are now planning how to celebrate Friendship day ( July 30th) when we usually make presents for the annexe school and visit them. We are all ready in pre school to make our presents but I think the visit will be out for the time being. Soon after that we celebrate Children’s day so we have lots of things to get ready for.

          

Last Saturday we waved off the Butler Family after 15 yrs in Paraguay. The children were all pupils here and the two oldest found it hard to leave their classmates who were all at the airport to see them off. Patrick and Rosie had a done a great work with our older pupils in running the Youth encounter meetings  and Patrick had also taken assemblies each month. They had made quite an impact on our youth and we will miss them. It’s been great to see some of our ex pupils getting involved in the Anglican church as a result of the Butler’s ministry. Not only will they be missed by the youth but we’ll also miss them in the English speaking church which Patrick had led for the past two years. Last weekend we also said Goodbye to our latest volunteer, Andy Poole who’d been helping us for the past 6 months.

 

We managed to get a few days away last week when we took a short break in Brazil , in Curitiba … our favourite city! We had a lovely 3 days there looking round, walking lots and enjoying the shops!! We had lots of plans for this break but most of them needed sunny weather and so haven’t happened yet! We did manage to get in the garden for a few hours the other day with the new kitten leaping on us  whenever we tried to do anything. Misty is our newest member of the family. She’s a grey cat cross between a Persian and a street cat! She’s very sweet and very naughty! She has no fear and still pesters the other cats and even the dogs!

 

Thank you for all your prayers and support. They are very much appreciated by us both. We’ll send some photos separately.

 

God Bless, Love from Gwen and Mags

 

SAMS Prayer Line for the week commencing Tuesday 21 July

Following their wedding on Friday and several months in this country, new mission partners Andy & Rose Roberts fly back to Brazil tomorrow to resume their work at My Father’s (safe) House for vulnerable boys in Olinda.  Pray for their journey, the work they will be taking up and their new married life together.

 

On Friday Paul & Sarah Tester, together with SAMS volunteer Rachel Hovenden, are members of a group from the Diocese of Peru’s Youth Ministry taking part in a mission trip to the southern city of Juliaca in the Andes, in support of the new church plant there.  They will be leading a children’s holiday club, running youth activities and helping to evangelise the local area.  Please pray for the health and wellbeing of all involved (especially bearing in mind the spread of swine flu in Peru), for God to use those involved to share his gospel, and for many to respond and choose to follow Christ. 

SAMS will be represented at both New Wine events this year, starting on Saturday.  The one at Shepton Mallet lasts for two weeks, the Newark event for one week.  Pray for those staffing the displays, including Richard Crofts, Tim Greenhalgh, Bob & Elizabeth Lunt  and Brazilian volunteer Felipe Canuto.

 

Sons of mission partners are on the move this week: John Meldrum returns to Brazil today (his parents Ian & Siméa travel in a fortnight) and Tomás Leake, son of Andrew & María, arrives in the UK from Argentina on Saturday.  Tomás will fly on to Australia in early August for a gap (part)-year before university in Córdoba, Argentina.  Pray for these travellers and their families.

 

Finally, former SAMS missionary Peter Wood died last week.  Peter served in Viña del Mar, Chile, from 1963-1972; the funeral is on Friday in Norfolk, with Bishop Pat Harris giving the address.  Let’s give thanks for Peter’s life and ministry and pray for the family at this time.

Annaghmore Team Returns From Argentina

“The breeze of divine grace is blowing upon us all. But one needs to set the sail to feel the breeze of grace”.

The ‘Beyond the Norm’ programme aims to give participants the opportunity to encounter South America within a supportive environment. It creates new experiences, new opportunities and new challenges. It provides the setting in which volunteers experience mission and cultural diversity first hand. Within unfamiliar surroundings participants wrestle with numerous issues and gain a better understanding of their own cultural norms.

We are all prisoners, consciously or unconsciously, of our own culture. Travelling 6,000 miles to South America is never the most significant part of the journey. SAMS hopes and prays that every participant is challenged and from past experience we envisage that volunteer’s worldviews will be impacted. Our worldviews are shaped by numerous influences. These include a combination of factors such as the culture of which we are a part, our education, parenting, family, life experiences, and friendships. On arriving in South America a person’s ways of deciding, thinking and communicating will differ from that of the local people. Having limited knowledge of the language and being in a country for a short period of time doesn’t stop a person experiencing ‘a clash of worlds,’ when patterns of behaviour, social structures and cultural expressions differ. The fusion of experiences creates a unique opportunity to see and hear things differently as the baggage of western consumerism is lifted for a short period of time.  

Before the Annaghmore team travelled to South America I was quietly confident as I knew the skill base was extremely high. I wasn’t disappointed as the 12 lads definitely produced the goods on the two building sites and their work rate was exceptional. But projects are much more than laying blocks and sometimes on teams people can miss out on the relational side. Thankfully the Annaghmore team embraced the relational side of the project just as much as they grasped the practical side. It was an encouragement and privilege to share with them as they interacted with the local people. They worked in challenging situations, ate there fair share of dry bread, stood under numerous showers that didn’t work, kipped in some suspect beds, and never once did they complain.

The team worked within different building methods and even though they had more skill that many of the people they worked with from the host country, they never pointed the finger and told local people how to do things, they showed respect to the community and valued everyone who worked alongside them.

I probably don’t need to tell you that the lads didn’t let me down when it came to eating everything that was placed in front of them! I could say so much, but maybe the local pastor in the church summed up the imprint the team made as he shared with me that for generations the story of the Annaghmore team would be passed on as one of the best gifts that God had given them.

This team was worth its weight in gold and every team member was authentic in all they did, and excellent ambassadors for their local parish and community.

Geoff Hamilton
Team Leader

Claire’s News Summer 2009, from Paraguay

Dear Prayer Partner,

How are you? I hope you are well. Thank you for all your continued prayer and support. Alot has happened since my last letter. I should write more often! The first bit of news is that I have decided to leave Paraguay and return home at the end of the year. As a lot of you know, I have been thinking of this and praying about it for a long time but wasn’t sure. Thank you for your prayers concerning that. It took me a while to be sure but I believe now that it is the right decision and I have peace about it. I told the leaders first and yesterday Bishop Andres told the rest of the church so it is all official. There were lots of tears yesterday so that is the start of it. It won’t be easy leaving people after 9 years, but I am looking forward to coming home too – family, friends, oh and nice chocolate every day.

Click here to read Clare’s News Summer 2009 …

Paraguay Prayer Calendar July / August 2009

Dear friends,

Greetings from sunkissed, rain drenched and southern wind swept Asuncion! Thank you for your prayers, the prayer for rain certainly worked, there’s been plenty of rain, even a brief downpour this morning whilst we were in church! I’m sending this early as we are off to Buenos Aires tomorrow, Peter is speaking at a clergy retreat and I’ll be enjoying the company of Bishop Greg’s wife Sylvia.

Yours in Him, Sally and Peter

Click here to read the Paraguay Prayer Calendar July / August 2009

Annaghmore to Argentina

 

Departing 26th June – 10th July

 

Pray for us, the people we will serve, and for also for the people who will serve us.

 

The ‘Beyond the Norm’ programme aims to give participants the opportunity to encounter South America within a supportive environment. It creates new experiences, new opportunities and new challenges. It provides the setting in which volunteers experience mission and cultural diversity first-hand. This year Geoff Hamilton will lead a team of 13 skilled men from Annaghmore Parish in Armagh diocese. This is a developing story as Annaghmore has been a supporting church for many years, and the link has evolved and become more relational. Pamela Gomez from Salta in Argentina was placed within the parish as part of the SAMS fusion programme. Pamela was deeply enriched through her placement and she will be one of the people overseeing the team’s summer placement. The local rector Dorothy McVeigh will be part of the ‘Beyond the Norm’ team which will participate in various projects.

 

Only a life lived for others is a life worthwhile.

Prayer Line

First and third year students at FEISA teacher training college in Asunción, Paraguay, are sitting exams until 3 July, while the second years are out on teaching practice up to the same date.  Pray for God’s peace, strength and encouragement in this testing period.

 

Also in Asunción, teachers Elaine Black and Sue Nagaitis ask us to pray for an English-speaking Bible study which they’ve recently started on Thursday evenings.

 

Felipe & Sarah Yáñez and sons Samuel & Aaron are flying to the UK from Spain on Thursday to begin a two-month period of UK leave.  Pray for refreshment for them, good readjustment and for their church visits programme starting on 11 July.

 

Others are flying from Brazil: Siméa Meldrum and sons Hudson & John arrive next Tuesday (30) to join Ian who has been here for a month; and Josias Júnior is coming for a short visit.  Pray for them and for Josias’ wife Dani and baby son Daniel who remain in Recife.  Please also remember Ruth Hollingdale Vilella and her mother who is ill: Ruth is over from Recife caring for her, with husband Efraim joining her in mid-July.

 

Finally, please pray for Jocelyn Padbury, former SAMS missionary in Paraguay, who suffered a stroke last week; and also for SAMS GB chairman Patrick Coghlan who is ill.

Recent news letters and prayer letters

Some news letters and prayer letters received into the SAMS office:

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