Rehema Ministries/dba In Step Foundation, Kenya

Two names, one ministry.

Jambo! January 21, 2012

Posted on January 26th, 2012

Jambo Everybody!

Wow!  2012!  We are back in the swing of the busyness of the children’s home!  It has been a crazy five weeks, but I think we are now in the groove!

As most of you know, we had only been back for 16 hours when our precious baby Cindy Lou passed away.  I can’t really remember how much I have previously shared with you about Cindy, so forgive me if I’m repeating myself.  Cindy was a sweet baby who had a rough time from day one.  She was very small and weak when she was abandoned at birth.  She struggled to breathe and to eat, because of a birth defect that affected her trachea.  You could hardly hear her tiny little cry, but her smile would brighten the room.  Basically, she needed 24/7 attention and care.  She slept in my or Meredith’s room and either Meredith, Hoglah (our social worker) or myself took care of her at all times.

Whenever we went to town, we took Cindy with us.  Because of this, Cindy Lou became known as the “Missionary Baby”!  When we would pull up to a gathering of any kind, all the missionary ladies would race out to meet us, trying to be the first one to lay claim to the right to hold Cindy.  (Of course, they also had to compete with little Claire Huffman, age two years, who referred to Cindy as “My Baby”.)  Needless to say, Cindy was very loved by many people.  I think of her and miss her every day!

The autopsy showed that Cindy Lou died of liver disease.  Her liver was enlarged to five times the normal size.  In the weeks before her death, she had suffered from malaria and pneumonia and had not responded to treatment, most likely because her liver was shutting down.  Ironically, her trachea had completely healed.

Throughout this heartbreaking tragedy, I could still see God’s hand in how it all happened, and I thank Him for his tenderness and compassion toward us!  When we arrived here at the home on the evening of December 17th, I was shocked to see how thin and inactive Cindy Lou was.  She was not the smiling, bright eyed baby we had left behind five weeks before.  Meredith gave me the update about all the doctors’ appointments, testing and medications that Cindy had been through over the past few weeks.  (Nobody knew that the liver wasn’t cooperating with the treatment and that’s why she wasn’t getting better.)

The next morning, I woke up at 4:00 AM, which isn’t unusual for me during those first few, jetlag days after traveling.  I woke up thinking about Cindy.  I wasn’t necessarily worried about her…. I just felt like being with her.  I got up and went out to the sitting room to find Auntie Rachel feeding her spinach (the doctor had “prescribed” spinach to be given several times a day because blood work had shown anemia).  She was eating well.  When she saw me, she pushed the spoon away and started jibber-jabbering and smiling.  The aunties were laughing and saying that was the most active she had been in a couple of weeks!  They said she was obviously happy that “her mom” was home and now she would be ok.  I told Rachel to finish feeding her, then I would come get her.

At 5:00, I went back out and got her.  I held her in my arms the whole morning…. like I said before, I just wanted to be with her!  We had coffee and visited with the Kisers (who were getting ready to head home later that day) and the Stewarts and Beth Ann.  We were just catching up on all that had gone on while we were away.  At about 10:00, Meredith and I were standing in the hall talking and I looked down at Cindy Lou, who was still in my arms.  She was gone.  She had just slipped away.  Our sweet, precious Cindy Lou….

I praise God for giving me that last little bit of time with her!   We laid her tiny body to rest under the big tree, saying goodbye with songs led by her many brothers and sisters and encouraging words from Pastor Sam and Pastor George.  Goodbye, sweet baby….

One week later was Christmas Day!  What a happy day it was!  What a true celebration of the birth of our Savior!  You know, I love going home for Christmas because of the special times with family… but I must admit, I love Christmas in Kenya too!  It’s so simple and joyful!  We don’t exchange gifts or go crazy with tons of commitments and engagements and parties.  We simply celebrate Jesus and thank him for our many blessings!

We started the day with a trip to the dump…. not your normal Christmas morning festivities, I know!  There is a family (parents with five kids) who manage the landfill.  They are desperately poor!  Many of their family’s possessions are things that others have thrown away.  (I recognized several items around their place as things that used to be at my place.)  Jeff and I, Sean, Meredith and Beth Ann, went with our twelve oldest kids to take Christmas blessings to this family, who has always been so kind and helpful to us when we make our frequent “diaper runs” to the dump.  We took blankets, clothes, a cooking pot, a chai flask, toys, beans, rice, sugar, tea leaves, chapati flour, cooking fat, etc.  The family was so overwhelmed and thankful!  We were so blessed with the opportunity of blessing a family who has absolutely nothing!  I think it was good for our kids to participate in giving to others, instead of always being the recipients!  The tone for our Christmas Day was set: Appreciation for all that God has blessed us with and thankfulness for the opportunity to share our blessings with others!

After our trip to the dump, we hurried back home to get busy with all the Christmas feast preparation!

 Christmas Eve had been spent baking  and decorating about 400 sugar cookies!  (For those of you who know me well, you won’t be shocked to hear that Meredith headed up this huge task and I was very little help!)   Christmas Eve night, the cooks, Grace, Peter, Sharlyne and all the young men who stay here, went to bed early so they could get up at midnight and get started preparing chapati (kind of like a greasy tortilla) for our huge feast!  They made about 250 delicious chapatis!

Jeff and Sean BBQ’d about 35 pounds of beef and 15 chickens!  We made the biggest fresh fruit salad I’ve ever seen!  We also had potatoes and rice…. and of course, Jeff’s famous caramel corn!  Everyone ate to their hearts’ content and the whole day we thanked God for our many blessings and asked Him to remember those who were less fortunate.  It was an awesome (and delicious) day!

In addition to the wonderful food, the kids also enjoyed some new toys!  Some friends from home had sent us back to Kenya with handmade wooden cars (the perfect size for little hands), jump ropes, board games, balls, etc.  The toys were the icing on the cake!  What a perfect day!

We want to express our appreciation to Newmarket Alliance Church, who gave a generous Christmas offering, making it possible for the kids at In Step Children’s Home to have the merriest Christmas ever!

2011 was a good year!  We got some much needed policies and procedures put in place and made quite a few changes in our staff and their duties, etc.  It’s not that things were bad before, it’s just that we had grown so fast that the administrative part of the ministry needed to catch up!  I feel like we’re on a pretty good roll now….for a while, anyway!  LOL!

One major change during 2011 took place in our farm!  Early in the year, we were blessed with two greenhouses, complete with a drip irrigation system!  This addition, along with a few farming fiascos, led us to the decision of hiring a farm manager.  This has turned out to be a very good move!  James has done a fabulous job of raising food production, reducing waste (crops ending up being cow food because of neglect) and keeping the farm running smoothly!  He has also raised the moral of the farm staff by bringing an excitement and positive attitude to the place!  We are now, with the exception of maize, potatoes and onions, producing all our own vegetables!  For a place that uses more than 100 pounds of tomatoes per week, that’s saying something!

While this is all well and good….and definitely a major step toward self-sufficiency….we still have a long way to go before the farm is truly self-supporting.  The next step is to produce enough excess produce that can be sold to cover the costs of fertilizers, seeds, etc.  We are praying that God will provide additional greenhouses, which would make it possible to reach this goal!

Another addition to the farm is two new dairy cows!  These cows were a Christmas gift from Newmarket Alliance Church, the Stewarts’ home church, and we are so very grateful!  We now have four dairy cows, which should be able to supply our milk needs completely!  Before, when we were milking only two cows, we had to purchase additional milk to supplement what our cows were producing.  This was costing us about $200 per month!  We are hoping to now increase our herd each year, as these four mama cows have babies.  (Three of them are pregnant now!  We’re hoping they give birth to heifers, not bulls!)  Eventually, our milk production should be up to the point that the dairy farm will also be self-supporting!

I have so much to tell you, but this is getting long!  I’ll save the updates on the clinic, dorms, school, building teams, our trip home, my new kitchen,  etc. for another time.  Suffice it to say, there’s a lot going on all the time!  But GIGATT!   He is meeting our needs in His time!  We are learning to trust that, knowing that when it’s time, it will happen!   One example of this is reflected in His provision of more missionaries on the ground!  Jeff and I had come to the point where we were running ourselves ragged, trying to keep up with all that needed to be done around here!  The addition of the Stewarts full time and the Kisers part time, plus the Panzeros coming and going, has really taken the pressure off!  Don’t get me wrong…we’re still busy….but it’s a reasonable busy, not a spinning in circles, chasing your tail busy!

We have recently been blessed with another missionary, who has come to serve for six months (possibly longer) as a preschool teacher!  She has a challenging class of twenty-two kids who are 4 years old, or almost 4 years old!  I have been amazed at her organization and careful planning to provide a balanced learning environment, covering everything from learning letters and numbers and colors to activities which will develop their motor skills to creative problem solving lessons, etc.  The kids are responding well and are learning so fast!  And they love school!  On the few occasions that Beth Ann has had to cancel class for the day, her students cry to the aunties that they want to go to school!  LOL! 

Beth Ann is also an early riser, so has taken on the 5:30am responsibility of giving out diapers, etc. to the aunties and  food supplies to the cooks every morning!  This has taken a big load off of Jeff and Sean, who aren’t quite as eager to be up and around that early!

Ok.  I gotta stop!  Is anyone still with me?  This has turned into a very long update….and I still have so much to say….but I won’t!  For more regular updates on the day to day stuff, please friend me on Facebook!  It’s hard to find the time to sit down and write an update, so when I do finally get it done, it tends to be more logistical in nature….more of the big picture of what is going on in the ministry.  My Facebook updates tend to be more about the funny things kids say and do!  Another great thing about Facebook is the ability to post pictures and videos!  I know some of you (K) are still resistant to the social networking scene, but it truly is an easy way to keep up with what’s going on!

Oh…one more thing….some of you had expressed interest in helping with Lucy’s nursing school fees.  It’s time!  Please send your checks, designated to “Lucy”, to Rehema Ministries, 1117 3rd, Anacortes, WA 98221 as soon as possible!  There were enough of you who wanted to help this amazing young lady, that I think we almost have enough in pledges to get her through her first year (which all has to be paid upfront before she can start school in March).  If everyone who pledged to help her, plus a few more, actually follow through, Lucy’s life and that of her family, will be changed forever!  Also, please message me when you make a donation so I can track it and know when the money is all there!

Ok…gotta go!  We love you all so much and thank you for all you do for our kids!

GIGATT!

Carla and Jeff

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Posted on December 19th, 2011

Merry Christmas. I have sad news, baby Cindy who was seven months old passed away on Sunday morning December 18th at In Step Children’s Home. She was very small and frail when she arrived in May and had been hospitalized several time. She had a hard time breathing and swallowing. On Sunday morning she quit breathing, she was pronounced dead when they reached the clinic. Please keep our staff and children lifted in prayer.

Give A Gift Of Life

Posted on December 15th, 2011

GIVE A GIFT OF LIFE AND LOVE TO YOUR FAMILY and OURS

If you want to do something meaningful and worthwhile for your friends and family this Christmas Season, give a donation in their name or in memory of a loved one, to help complete the Rehema In Step Medical Center. The only remaining work left to be done is the windows, doors and inside of the building. Without your help we won’t get there. We still need $30,000 to complete the project and $6,000 to pay for shipping of the hundred and twenty five thousand dollars of medical equipment that was donated. We will have a small operating theater, plus lab, patient rooms and pharmacy. Our kids will be treated for free and it will be open to the community. We will have dorm rooms for visiting medical teams as well.

To make a monthly pledge or make a one time donation go to our website, www.rehemainstep.com and click on the “Make a Donation” button in the middle of the page. All donations are tax deductible for 2011 if they are posted marked by midnight December 31st. If post marked after midnight they will go on your January 2012 statement.

Thank you for loving our kids, all 107 of them!

Merry Christmas and a Blessed New Year,

Ron & Joyce Panzero, Jeff & Carla Picicci, co-founders

Beth Ann Downer’s Testimony

Posted on October 28th, 2011

Beth is working with Rehema In Step as a pre-school teacher. We are praying that at the end of her six months this will be a perfect match and she will continue full-time with us.

Testimony of Beth Ann Downer

When I was 5 years old, I was looking at a National Geographic magazine and began to cry. The picture was of many poor-looking babies sitting on the ground. Some of them were crying. I asked my mom where the babies were from and she told me that they were from MEXICO. I then said, “When I am big, I am going to take care of the babies.” I believe that this was my call to the mission field.

When I was 15, I was in a car accident with our youth group from church and suffered a closed head injury. I had been diagnosed with epilepsy as a young child but had only had one seizure from the time I was 5 until the accident. After the accident I had three or four seizures weekly. Many of these happened while I was at school and I was constantly teased and laughed at. I had such brain damage that I didn’t know right from left for a year, and had to be walked to all of my classes. I had a marker on my desk in every room. I only got 10-15% in every class that year, including Spanish.

I will never forget the words a doctor told me at that time. He said, “You will never drive; the seizures will never stop; you will never graduate; and you will never learn another language.” I told him that I would learn Spanish because I was going to care for babies in an orphanage in MEXICO. He laughed as said, “You might as well forget your dreams, they will never happen. You will never do anything useful with your life.”

When we left that appointment my mom began to cry, I hugged her and said, “Don’t cry, Mom, it’s okay. I can do all things through CHRIST who strengthens me.” To this day, Philippians 4:13 is my favorite verse. I am very thankful that I can say within three years of the accident the LORD enabled me to do everything the doctors said I would never do!

By the time I turned 19, I had graduated from high school and from a missionary training school, where I learned Spanish, had my driver’s license, and was caring for babies in an orphanage in MEXICO. I was there for eight years. I cared for children in three different orphanages in MEXICO.

On November 12, 1995, one of the babies I had been caring for died during the night and two days later the seizures returned. I ended up returning to Michigan and had multiple seizures weekly for two years.

On May 9, 1997, I had brain surgery. I had been told that no one had ever retained a second language during this surgery, so I would forget Spanish. I told everyone I knew to hurry up and learn Spanish because if I forgot a language during the surgery it would be English, because I did not need to know English to be a missionary. I had a piece the size of two and a half golf balls removed from my brain and still remained fluent in Spanish!

After recovering from surgery, I cared for children in an orphanage in JAMAICA for one year and then attended Elim Bible Institute. It took me six and a half years to finish the three-year program at Elim because I had a few seizures and had trouble paying the tuition.
I graduated from Elim in 2006 and became a career missionary with Elim Fellowship. Since then I spent two and a half years caring for children in two orphanages in PARAGUAY, and during the summer of 2010, I went on a mission trip to KENYA and volunteered at two orphanages there.

Currently, I am in Kitale, KENYA, teaching preschool at Rehema/In Step. I will be here until April and am seeking the LORD as to where HE wants me to serve long term.

When GOD gives you something to do and the obstacles get in the way, don’t give up. Never quit. Don’t even hesitate or turn around. Just give it to JESUS and trust HIM with all that is within you, because you too can do all things through CHRIST who strengthens you! GOD Bless you!

Esther

Posted on October 26th, 2011

WEDNESDAY, 26 OCTOBER 2011

Esther

Beautiful little Esther joined our home yesterday! As with most of our kids, she comes with a heartbreaking past, but can now look forward to a bright future!

Esther is two years old, but because of malnutrition and untreated TB and HIV, she’s the size of an 8 or 9 month old baby! She has a beautiful smile, with perfectly straight, surprisingly white teeth. (Many times, kids with malnutrition and/or HIV, don’t have very healthy teeth.) She’s too weak to stand or even crawl. But she can sit up, feed herself, drink from a cup and doesn’t miss a thing going on around her! Even though she’s pretty quiet right now, I can tell that she has tons of personality ready to burst out of her when she gets a bit stronger and more comfortable in her new surroundings!

Esther’s mom died (probably of AIDS) in November of last year. She had been in the hospital for some time, being cared for by her eight year old son, who was also taking care of his baby sister, Esther. (Here, when you’re in the hospital, you also have to have a “caretaker” staying with you. Her dedicated son took on that role! Amazing!) When she died, her young son walked all the way back to their village (about 20 miles), carrying his sister on his back, to tell his grandma that her daughter had died and to start his new life of caring for himself and his sister. What a hero! If it wasn’t for him, Esther never would have survived.

One year later, their condition had become so desperate, that a concerned villager reported their situation to the children’s department. The children’s officer was shocked when he went to the village to investigate. He knew he needed to rescue the children, now aged 9 and 2, immediately! He drove them to Kitale and called us to come pick up Esther. The boy was taken to a rescue center, hopefully temporarily, while the children’s office looks for a home to take him in permanently. We are praying that he gets placed soon, as the rescue center is mostly former street boys (rough and tough), most of them older than this boy. It’s not an environment that would be easy for a little boy from the village to thrive in. We are also praying that he ends up being placed in a home where we can easily arrange for he and Esther to have regular visits and grow up knowing and loving each other!

I know that many of you are thinking that we should just take the boy in also! Don’t think for a minute that that thought hasn’t been spinning around and around in my head since yesterday! But, we just can’t! Our policies of only taking in babies are there for a reason! We can’t risk the masses to save the one…. I know that sounds cold, but unfortunately it is the reality of our world! (If anyone feels they need a more detailed explanation of our policy of only taking in babies, please feel free to inbox me.)

I didn’t set out to write a blog about Esther’s brother…. it just sort of turned out that way. He’s the hero of this whole story! He hasn’t even been to school because first he was taking care of his sick mother, then after she was gone, he took care of Esther! What a special kid!

Esther is a special kid too! She’s a fighter! If she wasn’t, she wouldn’t have survived up to now! Today, we took her to AMPATH (HIV AIDS clinic). She will start antiretroviral medications in a few weeks. First, she needs to get her strength up, take some antibiotics, eat a balanced diet, etc. She will also start TB meds, which are hard on the body, but necessary for survival of the disease. She’s got a long road ahead of her, but she’ll be ok!

GIGATT!

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Meredith Laini (Tender-hearted)

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We are always thankful when one of these little one are rescued.

Jacob

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Benson Ipukito

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Benson is a very healthy and happy boy.

Mordecai “Mode” Watua

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Mode and brother Churchill were placed with us after their parents disappeared.

Evans Lore

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His bright smile and long eyelashes are unforgettable!

Kelvin Wambua

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He was beaten and tortured by his aunt, rescued by neighbors.

Jackson Mkulima (Farmer)

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Jackson has learned to eat more than his share! He is healthy and happy!

Moses Mpendwa (Beloved)

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Moses is a well adjusted, happy boy.

Brian Kamari

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Brian is doing so well and continues his treatment.

Matthew Issac Mwaaminifu (Honest)

Matthew

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Born on New Years Eve and abandoned.