Tuesday, May 24, 2011

An Awakening

This is an incredible song! Chris Tomlin sings it like no other. It is one of my wife's favorite songs as well. I wanted to share it with you because it was played at the Hope International Dinner on Saturday evening and then again by the LWCC Worship Team Sunday morning.




This is exactly what our World needs: An awakening.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Guest Writer: Pastor Rob Tucker!!

The Beauty was in Their Faces
When I traveled to Ethiopia I had one prayer before I left. It was simply this: Lord, show me your beauty in this place. When our group arrived at the airport, we came face to face with some pretty ugly behavior. Men toting automatic weapons demanded that we allow them to search all of our belongings, including our medical supplies. They held us up for hours, and for no reasonable explanation they confiscated much of our needed supplies. They told us we could come back the next day, and if they felt like it, we could get them back.

Driving through the city of Addis Ababa was also glum. I was still praying to see the beauty of God in this place, but the city cried in desperation for help - run down buildings, burnt out cars, roads that needed repair. Anyplace that wasn’t a road seemed to be mud. Not a big fan. The hotel was nice, but it was a constant reminder to me that as Americans in this place, we were the “haves”. A glimpse out my window to the rear of the hotel reminded me that we were surrounded by the “have-nots.”

The next day, the medical clinic was swarming with people in dire need of help. All kinds of ailments and diseases were represented. Our doctors told us that many of the sicknesses could have been cured by a $10 visit to the pharmacist back home. But who had $10 here? Might as well have been $10,000. As a result small ailments become full blown health issues. Where was the beauty in this?

I prayed in earnest for God to show me his beauty. And he answered that prayer! As a part of our “village team,” we began to do daily work at the schools with the children, and we also paid visits to people with HIV and AIDs. The beauty was in their faces. And the beauty was overwhelming. What I had missed before I saw so clearly now. It was if Jesus himself was shining through every smile, every touch, every embrace.

My lesson was well learned. Stop looking for beauty in your surroundings. See it in the people who are all around you. You don’t have to go to a foreign land to see God’s beauty in their faces!

Pastor Rob Tucker is the Youth Pastor at Living Word Community Church in York, PA. He is one of the people who inspired me to take a mission's trip to Sendafa, Ethiopia. Please visit his blog by clicking here. Rob and his lovely wife Rob are in the process of adopting a child from Ethiopia. You can learn more about his story at his blog. This blog was posted here with his permission 

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Did God really create TOO MANY people and NOT ENOUGH resources?

This question was raised tonight at the dinner we attending, celebrating the one millionth micro-finance loan given this year through Hope International to people in poverty stricken countries.

Does the picture to the right make you feel uncomfortable? I hope so. Why are there so many people here in America and other wealthy nations that have so much, while there are people in some countries that have so very little? Did God really create too many people and not enough resources to take care of them?

You and I both know that is not the case. I see this as an opportunity for us to take care of God's people as we would take care of our own children. We can wipe extreme poverty from face of the earth once and for all if there were enough people committed to helping out their fellow man.


I want you to imagine for a minute that this little boy on the left was your child. Could you bear the thought of knowing that he may not live to see tomorrow because you simply do not have the means to put food on the table?

There are days in my house that we throw out more food that this child will probably eat in a week or two. We have been so incredibly blessed. Who are we to shrug our shoulders at this obvious need around the world?


There is hope! Hope International helps provide people in poverty-stricken countries with micro-economic loans with means to start a business to support their families and sometimes their communities. Rather than simply buy them food, Hope International uses the "teach a man to fish" mentality to help eradicate poverty one small loan at a time. They have thousands of success stories and I encourage you to read about them on their website by clicking here. Not only does Hope International provide loans for their physical needs, but they help with spiritual needs as well. Many people have come to the Saving Grace of Jesus Christ through the love extended by this program all around the world.

What are you going to do about poverty?

Friday, May 20, 2011

HOPE International Annual Spring Celebration Dinner

My wife and I are very excited and blessed to be attending this event tomorrow. We will be attending with eight other members of our January Ethiopia trip.

HOPE International (HOPE) is a Christian faith-based, 501(c)(3) non-profit organization focused on alleviating physical and spiritual poverty through microenterprise development. To read more about this incredible ministry, you can visit their website by clicking here.

This event will be attended by over 30 ministry partners from all over the world to celebrate the work that God is doing through HOPE International. They will also be presenting the Thurman Award to a client "who exemplifies HOPE’s values of perseverance, innovation, and service". We will also get the opportunity to hear from Dr. Scott Todd, a visionary leader in the fight to eradicate extreme poverty in this generation.
Please join us in prayer that God will work this special event and through this ministry to reach people with His Grace and Understanding throughout the world.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

I Want to Know Your God

As I write this, and am overflowing with excitement! This story is incredible! Let me slow down and tell you from the beginning...

My wife and I visited this woman when we were in Sendafa in January. She and her husband have HIV and are currently on anti-retro viral drugs that we are providing to almost 500 people in the village of Sendafa. Their two children also have HIV.

She is a stay at home Mother and her Husband has no full time job. He works wherever and whenever he can find odd jobs to do. He also rents some weaving equipment and makes beautiful cloth (she is holding some in the picture), but he cannot afford the supplies that he needs to make enough to sell in the market.

Shortly after we left, the PAAV (Project Adopt a Villeage) staff contacted the man and told him that we could help him with a small business loan in order for him to purchase the weaving equipment (rather than rent it) and get enough supplies to begin weaving full time.

He was elated and immediately began weaving full time. He and his wife now sell his fabric in the market and make enough money to support their children comfortably. He has even been able to open a small savings account in the village's new bank and is making payments on his loan already. When he talked to Dr. Frew he said that he was so proud and happy "because my children are no longer hungry". (Bianca and I wept when we heard this)

But wait! ...it get's better! When Pastor Steve Almquist was telling us this story this morning he also shared the best part: Two week ago, as Dr. Frew was leaving the clinic, this man was waiting for him outside the gate. He said that he did not have an appointment, but wished to speak to him. He then thanked Dr. Frew for all that we had done to help him, and told him "I want to know your God. I want to worship the God that you worship. Please tell me about him." As Doctor Frew told the man about our God, he accepted the Lord as his Savior on the spot! He then asked the Doctor to come talk to his brother about Jesus too. The brother has not yet accepted Christ, but with our prayers and your prayers, I have a feeling that he will soon.

This family attended Church last Sunday for the first time in their lives and they plan on attending regularly. God is so good!

It is so encouraging to hear how God is working in the hearts of these people in our village of Sendafa, even while we cannot be there. Please join us in prayer that may Ethipian's will come to experience the over-whelming grace and love of God and will invite Him into their hearts.

God bless you, and God bless Sendafa!

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

This previously unreleased footage was shot and edited by Clifton Kern.

(see his website here)

Please keep your heart open while watching it.

God bless Sendafa.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Push Back The Darkness

This month at Living Word Community Church, we are presenting our Global Missions Focus. As I sat and listened to the guest speaker yesterday morning, one thing that he said kept ringing in my head. This morning and throughout the day it continued to echo in my head over and over. What he said was: "Push back the darkness!" The way that he pronounced it, it was almost a rally cry or a command. Maybe that it why in embedded itself so deeply in my mind.

One scripture that the speaker focused on was Romans 10: 13-17.
  
13For whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.
 14How then shall they call on him in whom they have not believed? and how shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard? and how shall they hear without a preacher?
 15And how shall they preach, except they be sent? as it is written, How beautiful are the feet of them that preach the gospel of peace, and bring glad tidings of good things!

I love these verses. Contained in them are a promise, a logical progression of thought, a conclusion, and a statement of the reward that comes to those who reach out to others with the gospel.

Of course, other that the promise of Salvation, the most important message in this passage is the question of how shall people hear the Word without a Preacher. A Preacher can be anyone. You do not need to be ordained and licensed to tell others the Good News. This is why Missions is so important. By supporting missions, you are indirectly reaching people that you would never have the opportunity to speak to.

I encourage each of you to give to your local Missions programs through your Church. Please also consider supporting Ethiopia.

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Ethiopia Yearning...

I was just sitting here, minding my own business, when it hit me... hard. I miss Ethiopia so badly. The sounds, the sites, the smells, the foods, the scenery, but most of all, the people... especially the kids.

It could be any number of things that make me miss it so much. The slower pace lifestyle, the way people treat each other with respect and courtesy, the way the kids smile even though they have almost nothing, the way you are treated almost as a celebrity...

I guess now would be as good a time as ever to tell all of you that: WE ARE GOING BACK NEXT YEAR!!! I can't wait! I am willing to bet that our next trip is going to be even more amazing than the first. As far as I am concerned, the time can not pass fast enough.

It is not too soon to begin praying for our trip. We want God to use us in an even bigger way this year. I would also like you to consider supporting our trip. In a few months I will be putting up a donate button for contribution.



Thanks for reading, and don't forget to pray for Ethiopia!

Friday, March 18, 2011

Video from Dr. Frew

This is a video from Dr. Frew, the man who is charge of our project in Sendafa, Ethiopia. This video was recorded last year to tell us more about the ministry there.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

New Slideshow

I hope you enjoy the pictures in the slideshow below. The song is "My Own Little World" by Matthew West.



God bless you and God bless Ethiopia.

Friday, March 4, 2011

Life Without Grandparents

Imagine your life without your grandparents. They may have passed on by now, but chances are you were able to spend time with them at some point. They held you on their laps, hugged you, and spoiled you.

Many kids in Ethiopia never even get to meet their grandparents. Why? Because the average life expectancy for a man in Ethiopia is only 52 years and for a woman it is 55 years. The main reason for this is sickness and HIV AIDS.



This is why the Adopt a Village program is so important. Our church is helping raise the standard of living in Sendafa, Ethiopia one person at a time. The clinic that is made possible through this funding helps dozens of people every day with a wide range of illnesses. We now have 500 women on our drug program who are receiving Anti-retroviral at no cost. In many cases, not only do these drugs extend their lives, but it allows them to become productive members of the town again.



 My hope and prayer is that through our support and love for the people of Sendafa, we will begin to see children with grandparents in the years to come.

God bless Ethiopia, and God bless Sendafa!

Monday, February 28, 2011

Team Meeting

Tonight was our team debrief meeting. We all got together to share stories about our experiences in Ethiopia, talk about what worked most effectively and what did not, and encourage one another. We were also provided with traditional Ethiopian food for dinner prepared by a couple of ladies from Ethiopian Outreach Ministries here in York, PA.

It was very nice to be able to share experiences about the trip and about how we "re-joined society" after our return. It seems as though all of us had problems communicating with others what we saw and felt while we were there. I would definitely say that this experience was a "had to be there" thing... which why I encourage each and every person that I talk to about it to ask around with local churches and join a trip like this. It will change you in ways that you could not have imagined and make you a better person.

The entire team a couple of hours before we boarded our plane.
Of course, not everyone who is in the picture above was able to attend the meeting. It was only those of us from York, but the five team members from Romania and the team members from Ethiopia were missed. When people work together for a week who share broken hearts and a common passion for the people they are helping, it forms a bond that is like no other. Most of the members of the team were strangers before the trip and now they are the closest of friends. It really is incredible.

My prayer is that God continues to use us to bless the people of Ethiopia, and allows us all to return to Ethiopia next January. God willing, my wife and I will be there.

Friday, February 25, 2011

Buy coffee... Help Orphans

I just discovered this site that uses a unique approach to raising money for orphans. They sell free trade specialty coffees and the proceeds help care for orphans in Ethiopia and aid in funding for adoptive parents.

I encourage you to check out their website. If you do not like coffee or cannot afford to buy coffee at this time, please consider helping to spread the word on your facebook or twitter account.

Click here to view Just Love Coffee Roasters website.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

A few more pictures...


A grain threshing operation outside of Sendafa, Ethiopia
I thought you all might enjoy a few more pictures of the countryside around Sendafa. This country is so incredibly beautiful!


A small family farm.

A back road between Sendafa and Addis Ababa.
This is the road they used before the Government built the highway.

Mother and daughter go to do the family wash at the river.

Headed to the market.

Also headed to the market. This is a common sight here.

The library in Sendafa. Check out the mountain rim in the distance.

New houses being constructed on the outskirts of town.

 




























































































































































































































This is a view from atop the water tank we were working on.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Defeating a pandemic one child at a time


-TWO MILLION PEOPLE die each year from AIDS.

-TWO MILLION children under age 15 are HIV-positive.

-ONE THOUSAND children become infected each day.

-NINE OUT OF TEN children who are affected by AIDS live in Africa.

(statistics from UNICEF)






Compassion's AIDS Initiative provides the following:

1. Prevention
-health and prevention education
-mother-to-child transmission prevention
-initial testing

2. Treatment
-transportation to and from clinics
aniretroviral therapy (ART) and other medicinal support
-combating opportunistic infections and diseases (TB, malaria, etc.)
-nutritional supplements to aid treatment.

3. Rehabilitative care
-direct, ongoing health monitoring
-housing/shelter assistance
-income-generation assistance





Visit Comppasion's AIDS Inititive website here and help create hope one child at a time today.

Even $5 per month can make a difference. I support this cause and I challenge you to do the same.
God Bless,
-Micah

Friday, February 18, 2011

Guest Writer - Dan Butera

 Dan Butera is a man that I met during my trip to Ethiopia. He and his wife are the hands and feet of the Lord every day as they care for the people of Ethiopia, specifically the poor women who are forced to earn a living by selling their bodies. Dan impressed me with his obvious passion for Ethiopia right away. He had a wealth of knowledge about the culture and history of the land and yes, he speaks the language. Please read about his story below, as written by him.

I live in Ethiopia. And it isn't weird for me. Though I sometimes wonder if it should be. I grew up in York, Pennsylvania and never moved outside of Pennsylvania until I moved here. Growing up in York, I didn't have any Ethiopian friends and I knew very little about Ethiopia itself. It wasn't something that I really ever thought about until one semester in college when I became friends with another student who just happened to be an Ethiopian. All throughout that semester I thought about Ethiopia and by the end of the semester it was largely dominating my thoughts. It was that following summer that I took my first trip here. I came with Living Word Church in York to work on their village adopting project. Even before I took that trip, I somehow knew that I would someday live in Ethiopia. This was only confirmed to me by the pilot's announcement when we landed in Addis Ababa. He said "For those of you who have a connecting flight, we wish you a safe rest of your journey. And for those of you who are coming home, welcome home." He didn't say anything about those of us who were just there for a trip. This may be a small and trivial thing, but I really felt like I was coming home. I clearly remember stepping out of the airport and the rest of that week. I fell in love with Ethiopia. I had found my home. 

Through the years I continued to come back to Ethiopia. Planning longer and longer trips each time. My love for Ethiopia grew more and more each time. I also fell in love with a woman over here (which made it much easier to make the move!). I met Ruth on my third trip to Ethiopia and we developed our friendship through email and the few times when I would make a trip here. We were married on November 28th, 2009 and couldn't be happier about it. Ruth has been an amazing support to me as I have dealt with all the issues that come with moving to a new country.



I was eager to find some way to help the poor and destitute. Each trip that I took to Ethiopia I stayed with my friend Dr. Frew, who also works with Living Word on their project. He has also worked on another project for a number of years called Operation Love Never Fails (OLNF). Each time I came here I learned more and more about that project and also grew closer with Frew. The OLNF offers a helping hand to women looking to get out of prostitution. The main area where the work is done is one of the worst red light districts in Addis Ababa. The women here live in such dire straits that it is incomprehensible. The get paid an average of fifteen US cents for every customer that comes by, the maximum that they will get paid is about one US dollar (and that is only when a guy decides to spend the night). Many of them have children, who are exposed to their mothers' work as they grow up - in fact, the children will often sleep on the top bunk of the bed while their mother works on the lower bunk. To make it all worse, their landlords charge them extremely high rent. We have heard of some women having to pay as much as three US dollars per day. You can do the math and figure out how many guys they need to be with each day just to pay the rent, let alone buying food and paying bills. Needless to say, these women work twenty-four hours per day and rarely ever get a break.

I had, of course, heard so many stories throughout my life about people who live in poverty and all of the problems that come with that. But I never fully understood what that looked like until I saw this red light district. I could never have imagined that a place with this much despair existed. I knew that this was the project that I wanted to help out with, quite possibly the very reason that I came to Ethiopia in the first place. I started to talk to Frew and figure out how I could best help him and support him. I quickly realized that the immediate need was financial. It is quite difficult to do fund raising in Ethiopia, so I looked to other options (such as raising money in the US). I set up a non-profit organization in the US called Fields of Hope. The sole purpose of this organization is to raise money for the Operation Love Never Fails project. We are nearly two years into this combined effort and have already seen a number of exciting things happen. 

For example, a few months ago we registered around forty children for school. This involved buying them all the necessary school supplies, buying their uniforms and paying their tuition. The coolest thing is that all of these children's mothers were previously working as prostitutes and now have other jobs. Not only that, but these children now have an opportunity in life. Far too often in that red light district the daughters of the women will start to work as prostitutes themselves, sometimes as young as seven years old! It was so amazing to see these children, with big smiles on their faces, standing next to their moms, who had a sense of relief on their faces. The children were wearing their uniforms and were so excited about their new school supplies. That is a moment that I can never forget!

I would really like to see this project expand. Actually, Frew and I have often talked of how amazing it would be if we could one day help every woman in that red light district and then close the place down. Right now, because of financial constraints, we are mainly focusing on helping the women in smaller ways. These ways include finding them some small jobs, providing them micro-loans, getting their children in school and various other ways that we can currently support them. It is our dream, however, to be able to open a number of social businesses with the sole intent of providing these women with fair wages so that they can fully support themselves and their families. One idea is to open a coffee shop/bakery. In Ethiopia, coffee shops are very much a part of the culture and people may even go to coffee shops a few times each day. It would be a very profitable business, which would allow the women to receive very fair salaries. It would also help to boost the confidence of these women, as they would have a well paying job that isn't so destructive as what they did before.

One other thing that I always try to do when I talk to people about Ethiopia is to break the stereotype about this country. Before I came here, I didn't know what to expect. I knew little more about Ethiopia than the famines and poverty. What I have come to learn since moving here is that it is such an amazing country. The nature is vast and incredible. There is a ton of water, in fact a large part of the Nile Basin is in Ethiopia. There are waterfalls and lakes. There are mountains. There are cold areas and hot (in Addis, where I live, the year round temperatures range between 45-90 degrees). It is an amazingly beautiful country right with history. A place definitely worth visiting in your life!




If you are interested in reading more about what we do or to stay up to date with the work that we are doing, please check out our website www.FieldsofHope.net

Thank you for your time,
Dan Butera

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Fields of Hope February Newsletter

 The newsletter below of from Dan Butera, who works in Ethiopia with Fields of Hope, an organization that helps prostitutes find new jobs and new lifestyles. It has been published here with Dan Butera's permission, and can be viewed in it's original form here.

I wish I could send some warmth along with this newsletter, I'm sure many of you could use some of the famous Ethiopian sun to warm your day. We're well into the dry season and the sun is starting to get pretty warm during the days, but still not above 85 or 90 degrees. The weather here is very comfortable year round, but in an odd way I actually miss the seasons in Pennsylvania. Though, I guess I should count my blessings to be able to sit here typing this newsletter in shorts and a t-shirt!


We were very happy to see some of our friends a few weeks ago. A team came here from Living Word Church in York, PA (and some from Bethany UMC in Red Lion, even a few people from Romania came along!) to work in a village called Sendafa. I knew a few of the people on the team already and the rest quickly became my friends. Ruth and I were even lucky enough to host two of our friends, Dawn and Rena, for an extra week. It was reat to be able to show them a bit of what it is like to live in Ethiopia. It's not without
frustrations, but it is a pretty great life anyway.

It has been very amazing recently to see the progress that is happening in the project. Many of the ladies that we have set up doing small jobs have really been working hard and have been quite successful. We even helped some of the women open bank accounts so that they can save money each month! There's is always a lot more work to be done, but it is so encouraging to see success stories.

No matter how many times I see the area where we work, it never stops breaking my heart. We just recently drove through some of that area during the day time and again at night. It is an area full of such desperate struggle – it is extremely difficult to comprehend. Seeing that area again really made it clear to me exactly why we are doing this work and just how important it is to help these women.

We are continually coming up with new ways to offer a helping hand to anyone looking to stop working as a prostitute. Our current focus is to set people up doing small jobs. Current examples of this would be giving some of the ladies a small amount of money to buy fruits and vegetables, they then sell these by the side of the road for a profit. They have been doing a good job at it and are on their way to being self sufficient. We are
also looking into options such as butter churning and soap making.

We are also going to continue the current ways that we support these ladies. For some of them, we give them basic supplies (wheat, cooking oil, soap, etc). For others, we pay for everything associated with sending their children to school. Sometimes it means just visiting them in their houses and listening to their stories. Other times it means providing them with medicine. In all cases, our main goal is to show them love, to let them know that people care about them and to give them a new chance in life.

Let me tell you about Haregewoign, one of the women who has been helped by our project. When we found her, she was working as a prostitute in one of the worst areas of the city. She would get paid around 15 US cents per customer that came through her door. Her chances of having HIV are very
high, though we are still waiting for the results to come back. She is a single mother to her seven year old son, Ermias. It is very difficult to raise a child in
those conditions, but she had no other choice. This story could very easily have an extremely sad ending, like so many other stories about ladies who are working as prostitutes in this area. Thankfully
this story does not. Operation Love Never Fails, which is a project of the local nonprofit that we are working with, started helping Haregewoign about a year and a half ago. The biggest thing that we have been able to do for her is to help her and ten other women start a small business, a small trash collecting service.

Since there are no big doortodoor trash collection companies here, most people hire someone to take the trash from their house to the larger central collection areas. So, we helped these ladies by buying them such things as uniforms, gloves, shovels and big wheelbarrows. With these things, they travel around on foot to each of the houses or businesses which have hired them.

Though these women have only been doing this for a year and a half, they are lready self sufficient and no longer require our support. It is such an amazing thing to see someone go from such a difficult like into such a fulfilling life. While she still doesn't have very much, she is completely free from such a despairing life. She is now able to support herself and her family without the need for any additional help. Whenever you see her she has the biggest smile on her face. You can see that she is relieved and proud that she is successful at her new job.


We have also helped her son, Ermias, to get into school. At the start of the school year we bought him his uniform and school supplies and
also paid his tuition. I remember meeting him the day we gave them his school supplies. He seemed so happy and very interested in his new backpack. His mom was also thrilled that day, had a huge smile on her face the whole time and came up to me with that big smile and said “thank you very much”.





To learn more about Fields of Hope or subscribe to the newsletter, please visit their website www.fieldsofhope.net 

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

The Children of Sendafa






 Another day in Nigeria the children beg for bread
The crops failed, the well ran dry
When they lost the watershed
A baby dies, its mother cries the children gather 'round




They're wondering what the day will bring
Will they be the next one found
Do you dare to look into their hollow eyes
In the crowded sheds the children lay their heads
To escape the Haitian heat





The hunger pains drive them to the street
Wondering if today they'll eat
Some found food in the refuse heap
Others find disease







Some find it harder just to live
When they can die with ease
Do you dare to look into their hollow eyes




The least of these is hungry
The least of these is sick
The least of these needs clothing
The least of these needs drink





The least of these knows sorrow
The least of these knows grief
The least of these suffers pain





Lyrics from "Hollow Eyes" by Petra - describing the life of children in third world countries and challenging us to do something about it.



Click here to hear the song on Youtube.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Meet Dr. Frew and the PAAV Team

Dr. Frew and his wife
I want to introduce you all to one of the sweetest men I have ever met. Dr. Frew (pronounced "Fray-ewe") is a native of Ethiopia. He is a general practice medical doctor. Living Word Community Church currently employs Dr. Frew as as the leader of our efforts in Sendafa, Ethiopia. (you can learn more about our Project Adopt a Village efforts by clicking here) Dr. Frew has a wife and two boys. The boys are named Israel and Nathaniel. Both are very bright, intelligent boys who are very well behaved and perfect gentlemen. Dr. Frew graduated from Gondar College of Medical Sciences located in Gondar, Ethiopia in 1990.

We refer to the people that work for Dr. Frew as the PAAV team. It stands for Project Adopt a Village, which is the program that got our church involved with Sendafa about five years ago. These staff members are truly wonderful, selfless people who are God's hands and feet every day as they show true grace to the people of our village.

Ageritu (left) with my wife Bianca
 Ageritu is a nurse that works directly with Dr. Frew when he is at the clinic. When she is not helping at the clinic, she is helping minister to the HIV patients in the village.











Eshete



Eshete is the accountant for the PAAV team and for Dr. Frew's prostitute ministry. He also manages the micro-economic loan ministry. He has been with the Doctor since the beginning of his ministry.
















Shamilas (left) with Birhanu
 Birhanu supervises any of the construction that is financed by the PAAV team, such as church building and renovations/repairs, and the building of new market stalls to accommodate the micro-economic loan recipients.

Shamilas is a counselor at the clinic who helps recently diagnosed patients learn about their condition and how to change their eating habits and behavior, and tell them out how to take their medication, as well as side effects etc.





Sheweyaged
 Sheweyeged is one of the first woman to recieve antiretroviral drugs from our program. She now helps on the team with the people of Sendafa. She speaks very little English, but has a way of communicating with hugs and smiles. She is a sweet lady.
.














We were very privileged to get to know the PAAV team and their ministry. It was such a blessing to see the love and grace that they extended to their people. The are all very passionate about their work. We learned a lot from them during the week that we worked with them.