Friday, July 29, 2011

Village Development

Imagine you are a 30 year old woman. Now imagine that you have 5 children from age 12 years old to 1. Your husband, and his income that you lived on, is suddenly gone due to his death. Your $60/ month in now down to almost nothing unless you can find some recyclables to sell. The unclean river water that is your primary water source is taking its toll on your family's health. School is not an option for your kids since you make almost no money and besides, they have to work to help make money. With your 3 oldest able to gather some bottles and cans to sell, you are all able to at least have 1 meal a day, maybe 2. Still not enough to have any of your kids go to school.  It breaks your heart to think that they are caught in the same cycle that you are in since they will not be able to receive an education. But still you are able to feed, clothe and house them, even though that means 1 meal a day and only one set of clothes.

One day you realize a growth on the neck of one of your children. After a couple of "expensive" visits to the state hospital, it is determined that the treatment needed will cost $200. That is an unfair choice to make...there is no way you could come up with that kind of money but there is no way that you can let your child go untreated. Then you remember some of your neighbors sending their daughters 15 km into Phnom Penh and returning a few days or a week later with a lot of money. All of a sudden that seems like a reasonable option.  But is it trading one child's life for another?

This is a fictional story compiled from different anecdotes of real families and real lives here in Cambodia. Many of these moms and kids are not sure exactly what awaits their child once they get where they are going. Often times it is prostitution or forced labor or factory work in poor conditions.

At Asian Hope we have a real heart for these families. That is why our family is so excited about the new VDP (Village Development Program) that AH is starting. We have isolated a community, Prek Pneu, where decisions like the one above are faced regularly. Our family visited a church up in that community and plan to spend one Sunday each month worshipping with and encouraging the believers there. Through the new VDP, Asian Hope will help bring clean drinking water, sanitary toilets and some minor health care to the 1000 families in the village. We will also start a "catch up" school which, in part, will help children successfully enter the state school in the grade that they should be in. Along with meeting these physical needs, we are already supporting an existing Christian home church in Prek Pneu and will use our partnership with them to bring the Gospel to this wonderful community. It is our desire to bring hope to the residents by meeting each of their needs; mental, physical, spiritual and emotional.

Please visit the link to view some pics of the sweet faces in Prek Pneu.

As a family, we are so humbled and excited to be a part of such an amazing ministry. We are also humbled and grateful for your partnership with us. Thanks for reading.  We will keep you updated.

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