Prayer Request for Beryl Baker

This is a prayer request for nurse Beryl Baker who works in the Chaco and has been rather unwell for the last week or so with a very high fever and bad headache and yesterday was diagnosed with pneumonia. We saw her nearly two weeks ago in the Chaco and she wasn’t well then. Beryl is now in the Baptist hospital in Asuncion. I visited her at lunchtime today. Beryl’s temperature had dropped down to 36 which is good. She is looking very weak and seemed quite sleepy although she told me that she has been sleeping very badly the last week or so due to a very bad headache. She’s of course worrying about all her patients, but I told her that just now she’s going to have to trust that the Lord is looking after them.
 
Dr Wesley who has been Beryl’s doctor for many years is a bit concerned that the pneumonia that she seems to have is atypical (unusual – different I think that means) and wants to check that this isn’t a reoccurrence of TB that Beryl had many years ago. She also has fluid at the bottom of her lungs. Fortunately she isn’t coughing too badly. Beryl was very appreciative of the visit and I prayed for her.
 
I mentioned to Beryl that I had pneumonia & pleurisy about 20 years ago and ended up having 6 weeks off work, so perhaps Beryl should consider that she is unlikely to be up and about rushing around next week! Obviously we all hope that she is able to relax, rest and get better and I guess that the hospital is a good place to be at the moment. How good it is to know that our Lord Jesus is watching over Beryl and is her Healer.

Love, Sally.

Beryl Baker in Paraguay

Beryl’s latest letter tells of her neighbours in Asunción taking pot shots at her cats with a shotgun (punishable by a jail sentence), and spreading broken glass bottles on her boundary wall. Temperatures vary in the Chaco from 34° one week to the mid-twenties the following week. Local resident Miguel was working for an unqualified electrician, fell 5 m. from a concrete post, which then fell on him and killed him.

 

The Ministry of Health needs to sort out the ambulance service, as well as training specialised paramedics. The Mennonite ambulances can provide this service, but most of the other transport is transport only. As usual, rain is desperately needed. All the Indian communities and a good many of the ranches and other places are out of water, so the emergency services are already taking in tankers to fill up all storage cisterns. At the house and at the clinic Beryl has sufficient, but levels for the animals are low, with very little for the horses and cattle to eat. The alligators are on the move, looking for water and food.

 

No doubt Rhett would have allowed all the ranch workers to stop work and watch the Paraguayan football matches (perhaps others) and we thank him for being a most generous employer. The workers even have their own health service, provided by Beryl. In return Rhett requires “No alcohol on the ranch and no firearms”. Some of the workers cannot manage without their tipple and so return home for the weekend.

 

The Chaco covers about 60% of Paraguay and as one travels north, its nature changes. Leaving Asunción on the Trans-Chaco Highway, the Lower Chaco begins almost immediately. Here it is beautifully green at present, but about one third of the way to Bolivia the Middle Chaco takes over. This is just around the right turning to Brazil, at Pozo Colorado. Here there is less foliage and the landscape becomes one of scrub and indeterminate bushes. About 85 km. beyond Pozo Colorado one finds Beryl’s house and clinic. It’s still not halfway to Bolivia, and it will be another 200km. or so before the High Chaco makes its mark. This isn’t mountainous “high”, for until then the land rises at 1cm. per kilometer. In the High Chaco one can use the term “desolate”. We are reminded of the fine balance upon which life, especially human life, exists. Here one finds warnings such as one would find in Death Valley- walk for 20 minutes from your car without a head-covering, and your life will be in great peril. Take rations for several days, plenty of water, your mobile phone (you might just get a signal) and motor spares, as well as extra fuel.

 

Matters at the clinic have changed little, except that the Health Promoters in the communities are taking responsibility for the more routine work. This leaves Beryl more time to do specialised things and the laboratory work. Other tasks include cervical smears and other screening for cancer. Where necessary, Beryl will help patients to get to Asunción – e.g. for biopsies. “My health needs get sorted out in Asunción at the Baptist Hospital” was the nonchalant reply she gave to my optimistic question about who looked after Beryl. She does admit to deteriorating hearing on the right side, together with a noise like a car air-conditioner.

 

Beryl regularly sends names of individuals for prayer, but one name stands out, as it is someone whose future fortunes could be bound up with Beryl’s. Jeremiah has been working at the ranch for more than two years and is about 19 years old. By the age of 10 he had lost both his parents, one through a road traffic accident and one through renal failure. He has been of great use to Beryl, not only taking responsibility for the physically demanding work, but also being an animal sitter for her.

He is a proud owner of a small motorcycle, which he pays for (Beryl pays it, out of his wages) by installments. Thus he could be useful one day, as a driver, relieving Beryl to concentrate on her own issues en route. Furthermore, she can support him. He has two older brothers, one in an institution for treatment for inhaling harmful substances, and the other in prison. There are three other younger children. He went at first to one grandmother, a Christian who took him to church. All six were reunited when Jeremiah joined his other grandmother, living at the time in a typical shack in Ramoncito, in the Chaco.

 

One of the grandmother’s neighbours asked if Jeremiah would help out at his bosses’ ranch and that, says Beryl, is how he came to be in the Chaco and through  a lost lamb, came to Rhett’s ranch looking for it. At the time of Beryl’s last message (9th July) she was heading back to the ranch with all speed so that Jeremiah could go in the opposite direction, for a big youth outreach in Ramoncito, taking his brothers and sisters along. Jeremiah is a young man who faces great pressures. The “macho” image is very common.   Drink and “noxious substances” are readily available and very much a part of the limited social life of the young men of Paraguay.

 

He needs our prayers, as much as do the elderly and infirm of the Chaco. In the hands of countless Jeremiahs lies the future of a country which is Third World in a number of ways, where corruption and dishonesty are a way of life.

 

Paraguay

Pray for Ed and Marie Brice: “Just weeks before the main political parties chose their candidates for the Municipal elections and with many Indian communities being targeted for ‘special’ attention, we held our first Bible study week of the year in Río Verde.” Pray for the pastors they work with as they play an important role in keeping the peace, in advising the community leaders and in pressuring the politicians to keep their promises at times like these. Pray that the Lord will bring healing in some of the communities affected by division and renew Christian commitment.

Linn Tedman asks for prayer: “Please pray for the children and staff of St Andrew’s as we return to school. Pray for good health and for stamina to see us through a busy term. Also, please pray for Mauricio, Bieto, Diego and Rodrigo, recovering addicts. Pray that they will gain strength through the Lord and his Word to remain free of their habits. Pray for them to tangibly feel the Lord’s love. Gwen Carlisle and Mags Southern also ask for prayer for more staff for St Andrew’s school in Asuncion as they are currently short staffed.”

Please pray for Beryl Baker as we have heard that she may have Dengue Fever. Pray for resources for Beryl as she works in her Health Clinic in the rural Chaco. Pray for Jeremiah who helps Beryl with odd jobs and with her animals. Pray for the Mission Paraguay teams as they spend time in Paraguay. Pray for Babs Owen as she co-ordinates the running of the English church services on top of her already heavy workload in the school. Pray for her to have stamina and wisdom. Pray that the Holy Spirit will guide her well. Pray for good support from those around her.

Uruguay

Latin Partner Gonzalo Soria writes from Fray Bentos, Uruguay: “We have just held a gathering of all the parishes in the interior of the country. We enjoyed times of sharing and fellowship together with time spent in reflecting on the word of God and how the Lord is working in our different communities. During these winter months, and thanks to the help received from two companies in the area and the Fray Bentos municipality, we have been able to start a cafeteria, where we give all the children in the area a glass of warm milk with bread/pastries on days when the school canteens are closed.” Pray that their wish to establish a place to not only give out food but to enable people to share their faith and provide workshops and family activities will come to fruition.

Another activity we are very pleased about and which is also a great challenge, has just started in July. Every Wednesday we are working with a group of young people who have committed offences and instead of prison have been put into a programme of work in the community. With this project we are able to offer workshops for these youngsters, which we pray could help to change the direction of their lives as they discover another way to live.” Pray for the young people and those working with them.

Brazil

Please continue to pray for the Rev Miguel Uchoa (Holy Spirit Church, Recife) suffering from multiple myeloma and for the rest of the pastoral team, including Latin Partner Josias de Souza, in his absence.

Greetings to all the SAMS Ireland family from Paraguay.

Everyone arrived safely accompanied by all their luggage, almost two weeks ago now although rather tired after a 16 hour wait at Sao Paulo airport.  We have had a very full programme with redecoration of part of the Diocesan Offices in Asuncion and some very successful sewing workshops. Despite 2 days of constant rain and cold weather immediately after arrival which necessitated some quick changes to the planned schedule we have visited a number of communities in the Asuncion area where the Church is working to assist with the mobile toy library operated by FEISA the Anglican teacher training College, to distribute spectacles many of which were donated from Northern Ireland (there are more to come in August with Susan McCaul for distribution in the Chaco) and to undertake a range of work with children. Last Sunday we worshipped at Roque Alonso in the church where groups from the UK and Ireland have been based on three previous occasions.

Last night we arrived in Concepcion after a 6.5 hour bus ride. The road from Pozo Colarado to Concepcion has deteriorated considerably since last year with massive potholes but after years of waiting for permanent repairs they are now underway with the route diverted in a number of places which gave a rougher than normal ride. We arrived to a great welcome from Bishop Andres and Estella who were eager to know about the folk from St Canice´s and the other Irish churches, who had visited in recent years. Papa Noel (Noel Boyd from Donegal) received a special mention!

 

Please continue to pray for the group and for the work of the church in Concepcion. The 2nd  group are scheduled to arrive on 7th August for a three week visit which features a range of building work in the Chaco. We ask for your prayerful support as they make their final preparations and for their safe travel.This year we have once again been greatly blessed by the Lord and we thank Him and so many friends in SAMS Ireland and other supporters who have once again generously donated towards our work and given clothes, spectacles and sewing materials all of which will help the people of this needy country and promote the work and ministry of the Church here.

Blessings,

David

David Orritt (Coordinator Mission Paraguay)

 

PARAGUAY

Pray for Beryl Baker and her Chaco clinic. Beryl has worked tirelessly for four years without a break, and is reluctant to leave people with such overwhelming health needs. Pray for Jeremiah, who helps her with the more physically demanding jobs, that he would be able to resist illegal drugs used by many around him.

 

Chris and Alison Hawksbee ask prayer for good rains in the Chaco to fill the reservoirs, cisterns and to be able to plant subsistence crops. Chris gives thanks for the NGO, Global Chaco, providing projects sponsored by the International Development Bank. Two communities in the El Estribo settlement will benefit from these, with a filtration tank added to their water systems. Pray the communities will be diligent in the maintenance these filters require to be effective.

 

Give thanks for the work of Chris’s helper Esteban Galeano, teaching the making of adobe bricks. Pray for more people to be encouraged to make bricks and improve their houses. Chris hopes to help the pastors in La Patria build adobe houses for themselves this year.

 

Praise God for the encouraging visit of Bible Society consultants and their work with the Enxet translation team in Rio Verde. Pray for Tim Curtis and translators Juan, Martín and Asunción as they work on Psalms, I Kings and Esther, using the recently installed Paratext computer programme. Give thanks for the projector, which enables groups of Enxet readers to read Bible texts together in the translation office.

 

Thank God for Nelson Aguilera’s input into staff training and project work at St Andrew’s School. Pray for Head Gwen Carlisle and Deputy Mags Southern, for fruitful meetings with parents leading to good relationships and a clear understanding of expectations. Pray for a good break this summer after this long term.

 

BRAZIL

Pray for God’s blessing on Josias and Danielle de Souza and Daniel in youth ministry and preaching in Holy Spirit Church, Recife and beyond. Pray for deepening faith and commitment from the young people, and unity among Christians in the area.

 

Efraim and Ruth Vilella praise God for his leading and timing in finding a home, a church and starting work in Porto Alegre. With Sara, nurse and pastor’s wife, Ruth is starting an evangelistic ministry for pregnant women similar to that in Recife. This is being advertised through local health centres, and Ruth will be able to pass women on to other health professionals. Trained volunteers help with the Bible teaching and health talks. Pray for them with the challenge of setting up a sewing workshop as part of this ministry.

 

Ruth loves the weekly support she gives at a local children’s home, helping the hardworking staff and looking at areas to address with further training. Efraim leads worship at church, has started a music group with some of the youth, and is enjoying having a prayer group in his new office. Of the move to Porto Alegre Ruth writes: “We hope you can rejoice with us now …. Thank you for your continued prayers.”

 

David Weller, chaplain of Christ Church Rio de Janeiro, wrote of serious floods in April. The worst affected were the poor of the favellas and over 150 died. Pray for those who grieve and those whose homes were destroyed. Pray too for David and Sue and daughter Rachel, in their ministry of services, Bible studies, counselling and pastoral visiting for their English speaking congregation.

ECUADOR

Pray for Jill Ball in Santo Domingo, that she would know an intimate walk with God as well as having loyal friends. Pray for the Women’s Project, thanking God for Ernesto, a church member who has given his land specifically for this work. Thank God too for good initial meetings with Paz y Esperanza, who have developed work among abused women in Peru, and are now in Guayaquil, Ecuador. Jill is in the UK 30 June–31 Oct.

 

Pray for Wilmer, president of LIAT in Ecuador, thanking God for the skills he brings into the Charity. He is a committed member of the Baptist church, and an engineer. Uriel coordinates the Charity and leads the Northern Baptist church. Uphold him and Lina.

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