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 RMI
is responding to the overwhelming need for
food by providing food packets. These
pre-mixed packets are rice based, fortified
with vitamins and nutrients and have been
scientifically created to help those
suffering from scabies, malnutrition and
other life threatening illnesses. Each
packet serves a family of 6.
We need your
help to get this food into the hands of
needy, hungry families! For $25,
a case of these food packets will provide
one meal every day for a month. That is 216
hot nutritious meals, less than .12 cents a
meal. What better way to have an immediate,
practical effect on a Haitian family’s life!?
This is a
great project to involve your whole family.
Most of us can handle $25 for a case of
food. Challenge your family, prayer group,
Bible study, your deacons, pastoral staff,
Sunday school class or church. How about
your workplace? Can you get your
favorite restaurant to put out a collection
jar? Do you spend that much on Starbucks
coffee in a week? How about feeding an
entire family for a month instead? Your
local Christian school can take on this
challenge…kids helping to feed other kids!
Story:
What will I fix for dinner?
Standing in
front of her well-stocked pantry, Lacy
wondered what she should fix for
supper…would it be chicken potpie, meatloaf,
leftover turkey (no-they were all tired of
that) or the pork steaks she’d just bought?
At the same
time in Haiti, Rosemarie sat by the fire in
her outdoor “kitchen” and pondered the same
question, what would she fix for supper?
They ate the last of the meat 3 days ago.
Since then they’d finished off what little
rice they had. With a sigh, she peeled the
remaining patat (a root vegetable similar to
a potato) to fry and began to fix some
cornmeal gruel. Hopefully the younger
children would find it filling enough and
wouldn’t notice the absence of meat or other
vegetables. The older kids and her husband
would, but what were they to do? The floods
last month wiped out their crops so there
was not only no food, they had nothing to
sell in the market to buy more food. The
older 2 kids would have to quit school
because there was no money to pay for it
after the first of the year. She shook her
head - that was the least of her worries.
The next crop harvest was months away. Food
was the immediate need. Some of her friends
were feeding their children dirt cakes [Made
of clay, water, a dollop of shortening and a
pinch of salt, they have no nutritional
value, exacerbate malnutrition and are used
only to dull the pangs of hunger.] just to
fill their stomachs. She’d considered it
when she saw them in the market Saturday.
But she didn’t want to resort to that. What
was she going to do?
Meanwhile
Lacy began to cut the vegetables, set the
table and get the steaks ready for the
grill. She would fix the meatloaf tomorrow
and put the cauliflower with it then she’d
save the potpie for the weekend after their
shopping trip to the mall.
Two mothers
fixing supper, caring for their families,
but worlds apart. Can we here in the US even
imagine what life is like for the Haitian
people? Since January 12 they have gone
through a devastating earthquake, a deadly
cholera outbreak and a flood producing
hurricane. Three strikes yet the Haitian
people are not “out for the count”. They are
a resilient people. Despite all they have
gone through in this year alone, they
continue to cling to the Lord, they continue
to put their hope in Him and continue to
smile and somehow carry on. Despite their
circumstances, they still greet you with a
smile and hearty handshake. Wow! What an
example for us!
Could you?
Could I?
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