I am here for the first time with my twin sister Ansley my dad John-Taeke (JT) and my mom Nicole. There are 8 other teens here on this trip to build 20 houses. I am going to share some of my thoughts on the experience, testimonies, and points that stood out.
It has been a great experience for me personally because it has been really eye opening to see all the not-so-well-off people in El Salvador.It is great to hear the stories of how the new governor has changed El Salvador. Since 2021 there has been little to no gang violence in El Salvador. But before 2021, gangs ruled El Salvador and it often wasn’t safe to be outside.
It is also really cool to hear the testimonies from the people in the community that we are building in, because there seems to be a common factor in the testimonies. The common factor seems to be 1 or 2 parents waking up 5am or earlier to go to work. One mother got up at 4am to walk an hour to work. She worked two four hour shifts in the day, and returned home in between for lunch, and to spend time with her 2 year old son. In total, by the end of the day, she walks 4 hours to and from work, 6 days a week. She also has an even bigger pressure of caring for and helping to provide for her mom and her oldest sister (1 of the other 11 siblings in her family)
Who has a mental disability and when her mom passes she has to take care of her oldest sister. To top it all of she hasn’t gone to school since grade 6 (she is 18)
Some things that come to mind are:
- on one property, the Sarnia team built 5 houses over 2 days. The property belongs to the grandma. 3 of her kids got houses and 2 of her grandkids got houses.
- our team (Scott’s team) has a master builder named Rapha (pronounced Rafa) who has a great appreciation for the younger teens building because they are the people going to come again. He also has been working for or with Shelter since 2010 (the year I was born). He views his work more as an act of Service to the communities in El Salvador he just loves what we call his “job”.
- In El Salvador so many people want houses that there have been scams, like you pay $60 for a house and are told “we will come and build it for you once we receive a deposit”, but then they just take the money and not build the houses. I just think it is sad that people take advantage of other peoples housing situations, because these families may not be in that situation because of something they did. Like in our Daily debrief, someone shared that a girl got kicked out of her step mom’s house after her dad had died. She was 13 at the time. Now she is 26 with 3 kids, and is getting a house for the first time since being shunned.
But none of this would have been possible without Shelter, an organization that finds people in a community most in need of a house and shares the word of Jesus with them and gets them a house fabricated by WGM, an organization that when Shelter couldn’t keep up to the increasing manufacturing of the houses (2022)
, took over manufacturing the houses and sending workers to build them alongside with us (that is what company Rapha works for, but building the houses on the job sites for Shelter)
Over all, l it has been a good experience and as I am sitting here tonight writing this, we have 3.5 days to go in El Salvador, 2 more houses to build and hundreds of more memories to form.
Thanks to all the people back in Canada and the U.S who are praying and who financially donated! We could not build 20 houses with out your help
Thank you
-James
Great post James!
ReplyDeleteWow, thank you for sharing your experiences and these stories James. May each additional day bring more blessings, joy, experiences and deeper relationships with the Lord , each other, and the people of El Salvador. We are proud of all of you here at home, holding you in prayer and wishing you a safe trip home.
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