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| Sponsors visit to India - 2010 |
| Dear Friends, |
March 8, 2010 |
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I
am writing to share about my recent visit to India
including a chance to visit the efforts of Tom
and Geetha at Foundation for Children in Need
(FCN). I have too many adjectives to describe
my experience so I will settle with calling my
time a mission adventure. |
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I
appreciate getting to see the various efforts
underway to lift people up. I remember the young
women being lifted up through receiving sewing
skills to make their own clothes and pursue future
business opportunities. I remember meeting all
of the children who are being lifted up through
receiving scholarships for their education opening
up their imaginations. I remember meeting the
joyful elderly people living at the home for the
aged who are being lifted up from destitution
to being able to live out their final years in
peace and dignity. And I remember visiting a remote
village where people are lifted up by receiving
basic health care and education through a mobile
clinic service. |
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Besides
lifting up the poor and needy, I witnessed how
FCN helps to extend the mission of the Church
in Andhra Pradesh by supporting the training of
sisters, parish outreach and building up the ministries
of the local diocese. As a mission director, I
was impressed with the level of faith that is
the source and goal of all that happens through
FCN. They witness to the good news of God’s
loving compassion and bring a generous and welcoming
spirit to all they do. |
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I’m
very grateful for my first hand look into the
Church in mission in India. It is a land of many
beauties and contradictions. I’m glad to
see that the efforts of FCN are so focused on
caring for those that Jesus called, “the
least of these”. They are bringing good
news to the poor, care for the sick and hope for
those who are prevented from reaching their God-given
potential. |
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Sincerely
in Christ, |
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Deacon Mickey Friesen, Director, Mission Office |
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Archdiocese of St. Paul
and Minneapolis
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A
moment with FCN sponosred children |
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At
the FCN School |
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Deacon
Mickey blesses St. Anthony's new school building |
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With
St. Anthony's School children |
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At
the tailoring training center |
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With
the girls at the training center |
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Praying
with the physically challenged |
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With
a group of girls aspiring to become nuns |
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Interacting
with the elderly |
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with
the elderly at St. Xavier's Home |
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With
Dr. Geetha at a mobile clinic |
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with
the People of Karunagiri village |
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| Dear FCN Sponsors, |
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I’ve
just spent five amazing weeks in India with Tom
and Geetha. What an incredible difference their
work and your sponsorship is making in the lives
of people. And what a privilege to see it first
hand. |
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This
was my second trip to India. Once again, I was
overwhelmed by the intensity of the experience.
Such great need. And yet people with such great
faith, joy, peace, hope, and gratitude. |
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I’ve
known Tom and Geetha for ten years. During that
time, I’ve seen their single-minded service
to the poor. Faced with endless need, they don’t
lose heart. Instead, they shoulder the burdens
of the most needy. One child, one school, one
elderly person, one village, one college student,
and one future at a time. |
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The
result is thousands of people whose lives are
completely and forever changed. |
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For
three weeks, I stayed at St. Xavier’s Home
for the Elderly, which was built by FCN. It is
also known as Shantivanam, which means peace garden.
It lives up to its name in every way. Not only
is it a clean and healthy home for the sponsored
elderly who have no other place to live. It is
a home for sponsored nursing students who care
for the elderly as they gain practical experience
for their profession. It is a home for sponsored
college students earning degrees in the nearby
village. It is a place of simple beauty with flower
and vegetable gardens tended by the elderly and
students. It is a joyful community of prayer and
song set into motion by Sister Lucy, a woman who
makes ordinary things extraordinary. It is a refuge
where people live with dignity and hope fulfilled.
It is a world away from the poverty, hunger, and
disease that press in on all sides. It is a peace
garden. |
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But
the best thing about Shantivanam is the people
who live there. Lilly, a smart, kind, and beautiful
nurse, is one of them. Her parents could not afford
her tuition after 10th grade. With the help of
her sponsors, she continued her education and
completed four years of college, earning a Bachelor
of Science degree in nursing. In her own words,
she loves her work at Shantivanam because she
can share with the elderly what was given to her.
Without her sponsors, Lilly, like the other students
at Shantivanam, would spend her life in a poor
village working in the fields. |
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I
also had the pleasure of spending time with the
students at St. Xavier’s School. The students
are so grateful for the opportunity to go to school
and so eager to learn. The school was built by
FCN in a rural area where there was no school
and no opportunity for education. Today over 300
poor village children go to school, study English,
and are getting the education they need for a
brighter future – for themselves and for
generations to come who will follow in their footsteps.
Most of these children live in the school hostel
where they receive healthy meals and medical attention
that would not be available in their villages. |
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One
of the highlights of the trip was meeting Jyoshna,
my sponsored child. She is a smart and beautiful
eighth grade girl whose parents struggle to make
ends meet. She studies hard, is proud to be second
in her class, and hopes one day to go to medical
school and become a doctor. She is just one of
the 2,000 sponsored students who are reaching
for their dreams. |
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I
also visited several poor rural villages where
Tom and Geetha conducted medical camps, including
health education and medical care. Tom and Geetha
make regular visits to these remote villages,
which have no other access to medical care. Geetha
treats each village patient and provides the necessary
medicine with the help of Lilly and the nursing
students. Many of the aliments are caused by malnutrition.
Other diseases are not seen in the United States.
Some of the sponsored students come from these
very villages. The difference between growing
up in these villages and going to school is $240
a year. |
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Among
these many projects, Tom and Geetha also provide
dictionaries to high school students, clothing
for the physically challenged, and food for flood
victims. |
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What
an amazing difference sponsorship makes in the
lives of people -- for both the sponsor and the
sponsored. It goes far beyond food, medicine,
and education. I encourage you to go to India
and see it for yourselves. You won’t be
the same. |
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All
the Best, |
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Deborah Rhodes |
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Deborah
talking to children in a village |
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Deborah
with the elderly |
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FCN
distributed clothing for 400 physically challenged individuals
on January 12, 2010 |
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Debroah
with her sponsored child, Jyosthna and her family |
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Deborah
teaching English |
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with
girls at FCN School |
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| Namaste, |
February
2010 |
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A
few years ago we googled “Porumamilla”
because my ( Sumathi ) roots and found “FCN”
website. We contacted Tom Chitta and because both
of us are born in the same village. He replied
that he was happy to help us further with all
the information we wanted. |
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Last
year in December we renewed our contact by e-mail
because we planned a visit to India and we wanted
to see where I came from and to see the real life
in India, not only the touristic spots. Tom arranged
a stay for us and a schedule for the 4 days. |
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From
Chennai, my husband Luc, myself and our daughter
Rani took the train to Kadapa and there Tom’s
brother Mareddy was waiting for us with the driver
to bring us to St.Xaviers home for the Elderly.
This is a clean, healthy and peaceful place for
sponsored elderly who have no other place to go.
It is also a home for a few nursing students who
take care for the elderly and a home for college
students from the nearby villages. |
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It
is a beautiful project which combines different
goals into one concept: elderly who can enjoy
the last years of their life in a healthy environment
with the help of the nursing students who have
the chance to study and practice, and college
students who help the elderly but at the same
time have the possibility to go to college. All
this is under the leading hand of Sister Lucy
who is also a perfect guide!!! |
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The
following days we visited together with Sister
Lucy and Mareddy the villages nearby, Rameswaram,
Varikuntla, Govinala Reddy ST colony, Kasinayana
and Akkulanarayanapalli. People are living there
under circumstances of which we thought they did
not exist anymore. People there have barely no
income, they have no medical support and the children
have no chance to go to school. |
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It
is in those villages that we have seen the good
work Tom and Geetha and FCN team. They organize
medical camps to provide medical care and health
education. But the most important is they advise
and encourage the parents to send their children
to school so that they have a chance for a better
life in the future. |
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The
last day we visited the tailoring center where
young women have the opportunity to learn a job
so that they can earn their own money and survive
in this hard world. |
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Our
highlight was the visit to the FCN school which
is built by FCN in a rural area and today more
than 300 children from the nearby and poor villages
have the opportunity to go to school. They follow
the courses, they can stay overnight, they have
3 times a day meals, they have medical support
if necessary and clothes are provided. By sponsoring
a child there you known that this child will be
able to read and write, to know how to speak English,
to be aware of the importance of education, to
become a person with a great future |
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We
already visited some countries in Asia, but what
we have seen and experienced in India and especially
in Porumamilla left us with a mix of different
feelings. |
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We
want to thank Tom, Geetha, Sister Lucy, Mareddy,
our driver, our cook in the home of the elderly
( she prepared the most wonderful meals ) and
the rest of Tom’s family for sharing and
showing the real life in India and those people
will always be in our heart and we will never
forget them. |
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The
moment that we returned to Belgium we decided
to sponsor a girl around the age of 6 years as
it is important for our daughter Rani (also 6
years) that she knows that the world she is living
in, and the opportunities she is having are not
common in other countries. |
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We
are looking forward to receive news about our
sponsored girl and we already planning a return-
trip next year. |
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Greetings, |
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Sumathi, Rani and Luc |
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Welcome at FCN Office |
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Explaing about sponsorship |
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At FCN school |
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In a class at St. Antony's School |
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With inmates of Shantivanam |
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In a village |
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