Back to School!

Back to School!

While the Ministry of Education is maneuvering the system and making changes daily, our students hardly seem to notice as they enjoy the official start of the 2023 school season. It feels great for us and for them to have a sense of normalcy finally. Smiles and laughs greeted us at our annual (again!) backpack distribution event, where we gave out book bags, supplies and books to each student in our Child Sponsorship Program. Thanks to our sponsors, the day was not only well received by the many students but their parents as well.

ACE staff seemed to enjoy the event as our own Arlene was present with her camera, taking pics of each child as they displayed their name on a sign to identify them after all this time. If you have ever had a child, you know they can grow rapidly from one year to the next – try two!! We loved to see how much they’ve changed and how ready they are for this new year ahead!

Remember all that PB&J we ask each team to bring down? Well, every student received their own PB&J to take home and share. ACE will always find a way to utilize what teams bring down, and this has been a long-standing traditional donation from our volunteers. Kids learn better when they are fed and happy, so we are starting the school year on the right foot, thanks to all of you!

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From Child to Family: Sponsorship Reimagined

From Child to Family: Sponsorship Reimagined

Back in 2005, as part of our community outreach, ACE began helping a few students get to school and have a meal every day at lunch time. Then, more and more volunteers got involved and committed to helping one student at a time with us, evolving into what our Child Sponsorship Program is now – a relationship between sponsor and child to meet basic school needs.

Before March of 2020, through this program, ACE made sure children got to school, provided uniforms, shoes, some books, and some lunches for students who needed that mid-day meal. The sponsorship originally started at $30 per child per month for one year. As needs and inflation rose, ACE raised the fees to $35 and then our current $45 monthly plan. We have not raised our basic sponsorship cost since 2015. As we grew into serving our special-needs and 2nd Story (high school) students who had more specific requirements, the option of a higher sponsorship rate or multiple sponsors for one child was introduced to cover the cost. 

Our program has always factored the parents in. When things were normal, pre-2020, mom and/or dad were required to go to PTA meetings, be employed or in job training (with which ACE would often help) and take an active role in their child’s studies and activities. But we discovered along the way that there was more at stake. Where there was one sponsored student in a home, there were sometimes three or more siblings with the same needs and more. Home improvement – and sometimes an actual home – was necessary. A sense of peace and purpose for the entire family unit was often lacking, and the pandemic brought on more fear and chaos.

When COVID hit and schools closed, we mentioned in some of our social media and newsletters that donations normally used for educational needs were being used for food and staples as our families were desperate to survive. We were grateful that our sponsors understood this temporary shift to keep their children and families afloat.

Even with all our efforts at ACE to help with remote learning and tutoring during the lockdowns, many children simply didn’t have the means and have fallen behind. Classes are set to resume this fall, and our public school system in St Mary is struggling to figure out how to reintroduce students to the day-to-day tasks of learning in a structured social setting, while their home lives have also become more complicated in these difficult years.

Long story short, our Child Sponsorship Program has become more than just handing out books and uniforms. There is a need, we often say, to go deeper, not wider. ACE has always tried to find the root of a problem and fix that before anything else because one thing affects the next. We have realized that the family unit should come first when determining what is best for the child, not the other way around, so we are looking at expanding our program to encompass Family Sponsorship.

D’Vaun, our Sponsorship Coordinator in Jamaica, sees the situation first-hand:

From the perspective of the father, I’ve always been asked what’s the most difficult part of my job – dare I say, it’s not a job, it’s my calling. My response to that question, unfortunately, has always been consistent: having a desire to help but limited in the ability to do so.

The current model of “child” sponsorship is really individualistic, though we do our best to accommodate the family as a whole. The finances are designated towards a specific child and using it outside of that scope would make us bad stewards of the sacrifices entrusted to us by donors. And then the pandemic hit. We were forced to reevaluate how to use the funds we had to support the child through the entire family’s needs. Growth requires us to adapt to new climates and make the necessary changes in order to progress.

“Family” sponsorship is our solution to my desire “go deep” with our families. I will be in a better position to address the needs when a family of one mom, no dad, four children, perhaps one with special needs, who all live in a dilapidated sardine can, who are hungry, mentally frustrated, emotionally uncared for and have no resources to survive.

I can offer the possibility of employment for the parent or siblings older than 18.

I can offer therapy to a suicidal child that struggles with anger issues.

I can build a home welcoming another family to our village.

I can step outside the parameters of what is typical (books, bags, uniform, taxi and lunch) and minister to the needs that are present while still maintaining our commitment to changing lives and transforming communities.

All 200+ of my children come from family units with no less than three people. ACE wants to see that the child will bloom, but the family is the tree that supports all the blossoms.

The logistics of how a Family Sponsorship will work are being discussed by both our Jamaican and Stateside staff, and we will have more details forthcoming. We want to make sure we factor in hiring enough qualified staff to evaluate and manage all the needs of a family, with adequate vehicles to withstand the wear-and-tear of driving the crumbling roads for multiple home visits, determining the exact pricing structure, and, most of all, how this will impact you, our sponsors, and the relationship you have with your children and their families.

Nothing is changing today, but, as with everything in life, once you see the big picture, you instinctively and passionately strive to do better and expand your opportunities. We appreciate your prayers and any feedback you may have as we move through this process. We are committed to our vision of changing lives and transforming communities, one family at a time.

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Marla’s Minute: Big Red is Dead

Marla’s Minute: Big Red is Dead

Farming is not an easy business to be involved with in Jamaica, especially if you are trying to raise a herd of beef cattle and grow a business so more Jamaicans can earn and help their families. ACE and Green Life Farms are not exempt from struggle, no matter how lofty our goals.

This past week, our prize bull Big Red was slaughtered in our own field at night during a full moon. Yes, it was tragic. And yet, we don’t know what to do. In our book, The Mango Tree Gospel, we write about desperate people doing desperate things, and there is the fine balance of need versus crime. We pray for those who feel the need to take from others and for how we can prevent this in the future, like the ability to hire more personnel to stand watch. We are doing our best to build a business, but the loss sometimes makes us want to quit. 

The hopeful news is that Big Red left behind at least 18 to 20 pregnant cows who will drop their calves in August if all goes well. Maybe one of them will be a male. Pray for the protection of our animals, our health, and our staff as we continue to move forward in this part of ministry, pursuing our micro business opportunities amid challenges like this.

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Movers and Shakers

Movers and Shakers

Summer has barely begun, and we are already in awe of our volunteers and staff! We believe that success starts when leadership leads, and that’s exactly what Courtney and Emily Simmons, board members for ACE, did to get our season going. The Simmons brought their own family as well as long-time ACE friends from Sugar Hill Church who have invested their time and muscle over the years to be the first team of the summer. Despite busy schedules, they made ACE a priority and, boy, did they get things done!

For starters, do you remember single mom LaToya from last month’s newsletter, our very own “Jamaican Cowgirl” who was learning to train horses to round up cattle? We mentioned that she and her children received a home a few years ago through our sponsorship program. Well, they’ve moved – their house moved – literally! 

During the first week of June, the team and our staff helped LaToya dismantle her home piece by piece to store at Green Life Llanrumney Farms until our July volunteers are able to build it back for her on the Green Life Village property. It’s an unconventional way to move from one location to another, but it works! LaToya and her children will stay for free at the farmhouse on the property in the meantime until her home is rebuilt. It will be the first home placed at the village this summer, and ACE plans to build her an indoor bathroom in the new location.

The team also cleaned out our water tanks and got our farm one step closer to being made whole for future employment of local farmers. Not to be outdone, in week two, we had a small but mighty team that cleared out our 16’ cistern and worked hard on the farm. After several weeks of no volunteers, it was a joy to see so many accomplishments in a row!

Thank you all for getting things off to a great start, for giving up vacations and taking time to serve. We can’t wait for the rest of our teams to keep the ball rolling!

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Marla’s Minute: Melrose is a Rose

Marla’s Minute: Melrose is a Rose

I love those moments where special people make an impression. One of those for me this year was from one of our wonderful partner churches, Trinity on the Hill, during our Men and Women’s Conference last February. While we’ve been to Trinity many times, have had volunteers come down and even have had members serve on our Board for years, I had never gotten to know Melrose that well until recently.

Melrose has suffered the loss of her daughter and her husband over the past few years, but she is one of those people who never lets loss keep her from finding joy. She is thankful for every day and finds her purpose in making others happy.

Melrose journeyed to Jamaica to serve ACE and help us with our conference and all the day-to-day work that comes with it. When she got home, she wrote a little journal entry about her time here. With her permission, we thought you would enjoy her perspective and outlook on life. I know we did. Thank you, Melrose, and we look forward to seeing you in Jamaica soon.

Blessed

Do we go on mission trips to serve or be served?

Do we go on mission trips to bless or to be blessed?

I thought I knew the answer to that question.

I did not.

The last night of the prayer conference, I asked the women in my small group to list their prayer requests so I could take them home with me. You might think the women would ask for prayer for things that might make their lives easier, but they asked me to pray for them to know God better and serve Him more.

The Jamaican people we met have very little, yet those who know Jesus praise Him through circumstances we cannot imagine surviving.

Their requests humbled me:

“To listen and follow God’s way, not my way.”

“Give me opportunities to be Your servant and an example.”

“To serve God more.”

The women I was supposed to serve, served me.

The women I was supposed to bless, blessed me.

“You will be blessed when you come in and you will be blessed when you go out.” ~ Deuteronomy 28:6

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Our Community is Transforming

Our Community is Transforming

ACE’s vision from the beginning has been “changing lives and transforming communities” one person at a time. One of our most needy communities that lines our farm property is Hampstead, and one woman we met there through our sponsorship program is a testament to that transformation.

Meet LaToya Newell, a sponsored child’s mother who received a home several years ago with her four children. LaToya used to be what we call a haggler. She would buy our things from thrift shop and other shops, then flip them to make income for her and her family. Hard times fell on LaToya, who also has a special-needs child, and much of her income shut down.

Until…

ACE needed an animal caretaker at our micro-business, Green Life Llanrumney Farms. For those of you who don’t know the story about the farm, in short, it’s for ACE to incubate small agriculture businesses for our local families who are unemployed and want to work but have no training or ability to compete in the tourist trade market miles away.

That’s where Ricky comes into LaToya’s life. Ricky is one of six horses GLLF has on property to be trained to round up cattle when they get “way up in the bush” and LaToya is going to teach him! At first, she was very nervous about being close to such a big animal (her first time). But after the introduction, the bathing, the saddling, and then the riding, she’s getting to be a natural – a real “Jamaican Cowgirl,” says LeRoy, our horse trainer in St. Mary who is working with her.

LaToya said it is great therapy for getting back to the simple things that really make a day at work fun and fulfilling. It started with a sponsored child, then a family, a home, a skill, a future. Thank you, sponsors, for changing this life and ultimately transforming our community one person at a time.

 

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