Tuesday, July 25, 2006

My Bolivian Experience

Hola!
The past few weeks have been crazy, filled with cancelled airplanes, eating grubs, sleeping at airports and getting a bit sick. They also have been filled with amazing love, kindness and the Holy Spirit. I found some of the most wonderful people in Bolivia. Upon leaving Trinidad I left a piece of my heart behind. As short as our visit was, I definitely felt some heart ache upon having to leave. (The lovely Bolivian serenade on our last night certainly didn’t help ease the pain).
I miss being in Trinidad; everything from the motos and the plaza, to the camps, singing and dancing, to the school staff and most importantly the children. I must admit that at first I had my doubts about this trip. Just silly worries about not getting along with the group, going alone, getting sick, etc… In the end all my doubt was washed away. The team this year was awesome and I miss everyone already!
My experience in Trinidad will last forever. Seeing the poverty that some people live in made me even more thankful for what I was raised with. On the other hand, it also made me feel like I’ve been selfish and helped me to want to give more to others. (Matthew 7:12) Out of poverty, the people in Trinidad were able to give us so much; so many good memories and so much happiness. God’s presence emanated through their pure Christian love.
I was saved when I was nine years old. I remember learning Bible verses as a kid, going to Sunday school and memorizing the books of the Bible, especially with my grandparents (Far Far and Far Mor). The past few years I could feel myself straying away from God. Not necessarily through doing bad acts, but just not rejoicing in Him or being as much of a Christian as I knew I should be. My Uncle Mark and Aunt Nancy suggested that I go on this trip in hopes that it would be somewhat of a life changing experience. That I would be able to see how greatly God can influence lives. Through this experience, I feel like I grew not only emotionally, but spiritually as well. Just seeing the people, hearing stories about their lives and hearing the testimonies of others got me fired up. There have been a lot of events in my life where God has shown his presence. At the time I didn’t always acknowledge those events as much as I should have as God’s work. Looking back, I realize that He’s always been looking out for me and has always played a great part in my life. It’s obvious that the hand of God is at work not only at La Palmera, but also in the town of Trinidad. Physically, Trinidad is kind of dirty- open sewers, trash on the streets, lots of poverty. Emotionally and spiritually, it’s the most beautiful place that I’ve ever been to. There’s so much love from the people- everyone is so open and honest. I have yet to find another place where everyone gives their love so freely and openly. In the whole time that I was there, I don’t think that I ever saw anyone fighting, being selfish or not getting along with one another. Not to say that it never happens, but in general (compared to most of the kids I’ve seen in America) the children at La Palmera seemed so much more lighthearted. They shared (50+ kids with one Nerf ball), entertained themselves (hard to find a kid in America who doesn’t constantly say that he or she is bored) and were so grateful just for hugs; for us being there with them.
In general, America is looked at as being time poor and money rich, while Bolivia is perceived as being time rich and money poor. Out of the two, I’d rather have more time. More time to be with family and friends. More time to glorify and serve God. More time to lend a helping hand and better my community. More time to live life to the fullest.
It’s still unclear to me as to what my purpose is on earth, though I will continue to ask for God’s guidance in whatever I do. One of my greatest prayers throughout the last couple of years has been about what I want to do with my life. Lately, I’ve felt a great desire for travel and a need to explore what the world has to offer. I’ve always wanted to help people. In Boulder, I’ve been volunteering as a foster parent (for kittens at a local animal shelter) and have also found joy in being a volunteer teaching English as a second language. I just finished two years at the University of Colorado and after changing my major at least four times, I think I’ve finally settled on sociology and possibly an unofficial minor in linguistics or art. I’m taking this fall/spring off to go to Sweden where I will be a nanny for a family and take a few classes. I’m hoping that taking some time off will help lead me to what I want to do in the future, though I will be praying about returning to Trinidad. I hope it is in God’s will that I’m able to return as a short term volunteer for at least a few months. Even in the short time that I was there, I felt so welcomed that it could have been like a second home.
Thank you Lucho and Lorna for everything you’ve done for us. There aren’t words to express my gratitude for all your love, support and hospitality. I’d like to thank Mark and Nancy for helping to soothe some of my desire to travel and leading me to my latest journey in Trinidad- Beni, Bolivia. I’d also like to thank the Minneapolis Team, especially Homer for all your hard work, along with Far Far, Jerry and Mary, and the rest of my family for all your support. I’m so thankful that I was able to be part of such a remarkable group of people. I’m thankful to God for this wonderful experience, thankful for all of your prayers and thankful for my new friends.
I will continue to pray that I will be able to return sometime in the future, hopefully next summer!
Dios te bendiga (God Bless), Sadie




Thursday, July 20, 2006

Bricks, Babies & Schoolwork



On one of our tours we were able to see where and how the bricks are made in Bolivia. Brick is used for most construction and is often a family run business. I'm amazed at how the Bolivian community takes common raw materials and turns them into a family business. It seems that everyone in Bolivia is involved in some sort of an enterprise, even the children. Hard work is part of everyday life, even in the blistering sun.

And babies are part of what's happening at CCC La Palmera. How a society takes care of its little ones tells us about that society. Babies in Bolivia are well taken care of.

And as babies grow, they need to go to school. Education is one of the fundamental gifts that CCC La Palmera gives to the community. When children are properly and lovingly taught, they gain real hope for a productive and abundant life. What a treat it has been to see so many children receive a quality education through the efforts of CCC LA Palmera. And we've been able to see how these children have grown into community leaders, willing to invest their lives back into the lives of others. Look carefully, because I'm sure you can see tomorrow's leaders at their school work today.


Wednesday, July 19, 2006

A Few Pics...









Here are a few pics of our trip. Note the smiling faces and see if you can tell the gringos from the Bolivians. Each of these photos were taken at Mira Flores, the chaco. The lake at the chaco is complete with jumping fish. The fish jump because of the pet alligators. Swimming is optional.

Tuesday, July 18, 2006

To Lucho, Lorna & CCC La Palmera


On behalf of the Minneapolis team, Shelly and I would like to express our deepest thanks and gratitude to Lucho, Lorna and the staff, workers and people of CCC La Palmera for your warmth, kindness and genuine Christian love. These words from Scripture came alive for the Minneapolis team as we learned from the example we were shown:

"And be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God in Christ forgave you", Ephesians 4.32.

We have been touched beyond words at the display of affection shown to us and especially to our dear friend Homer. We salute you, the people of Trinidad-Beni, Bolivia and believe that your example is exactly what Jesus spoke about in John 13.35, the example that Jesus gave to His disciples. May the Lord bless you each richly in this age and in the age to follow.

Dan & Shelly

Saturday, July 15, 2006

Santa Cruz

¡Hola!

As you´ve read below we´re here in Santa Cruz for a short visit. Time is different here in Bolivia. Today becomes mañana before you know it and yesterday fades into the past. We haven´t been able to load pictures up on this blog, but will be able to when we arrive back in Minneapolis. Look for lot´s of details to come forward then.

I´ve been thinking about how the Lord has engineered this teams´s activities from start to finish and have gained a new respect for the Lord. His ways are always right, often surprising and usually not like mine. Rather than letting us board a plane and hurry back to our comfortable homes, we´ve had a wonderful time of getting to know the Bolivian culture better, the Bolivian people better and getting to know our hosts, Lucho & Lorno Velez better. The Lord knew that an extra day or two as a time of refreshment were really needed for this team and so that is exactly what He has provided - in my of my best efforts.

But I´ve been asking myself why Santa Cruz, why have we been placed here in Santa Cruz? Santa Cruz is Spanish for Holy Cross. The Cross is the reason for our time here in Bolivia, it is our purpose, and I suspect that has something to do with it. As I ponder the inexpressible joy we have experienced here I´m reminded of a verse which has been brought up several times on this trip. It speaks of Jesus, the Author and Finisher of our faith ¨who for the joy that was set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and has sat down at the right hand of the throne of God¨. His pain, our reward. The cross is humbling - and joyous at the same time.

As I consider the friends I´ve left behind in Trinidad I´m encouraged, and that encouragement comes from Santa Cruz - the Holy Cross. The joy, the relationships, the real fellowship is meaningless unless it has permanence. So much of what goes on in the world will end in the void of nothingness, but not so with the Holy Cross. The Cross is our entry into eternal and abundant life (and there is no other way of entry), and this cements the joy we have exerienced. I have met, I have be able to know, I have had fellowship with my eternal brothers and sisters. There is no ¨goodbye¨, but instead ¨chau¨. I like that. I like the knowledge and assurance that relationships based upon the Lord Jesus are permanent. The cross changes lives forevermore.

While we´re thankful for this time in Santa Cruz, we do need to return to the US. Please join us in prayer that our LAB flight tomorrow evening will fly as scheduled, that we are able to reschedule our connecting flights and make it to our homes and families safely. Also, please pray that the remaining bins to make it to Trinidad. There are 10 bins that have yet to arrive.

There is much more to write, and that will come in due time. Press on, pray on and be blessed.

Dan

Friday, July 07, 2006

Bolivia Team 2006

Hola Everyone!
I just thought you might like to here that Joseph, Lisa and I did make it safely back home. Joseph was very kind and bought us lunch before the plane ride. After we got home Lisa and I managed to talk our parents into spending the evening together and going to watch fireworks!
We have been praying and thinking about all of you alot these past few days and our glad that you are doing so well. We'll continue to pray about the crates and hope they make it there soon.
Question: Did your suitcases also go MIA (missing in action)???

I also want to tell you guys that I will be headed up to Camp Dellwater to help with the teen staffing next week. Long story short, my sister and I seem to have been an answer to pray for helping with the work up at camp.
Anyway, that's the news from here in the States!
Love and God Bless,
Alicia
P.S. If any of you meet a young lady there that goes by the name of Carolina Desiree give her a really big hug and tell her the Tucker family says hola.

¡Hola!

After many travel challenges we´ve arrived at La Palmera. Yesterday we had a wonderful time at Mira Flores and the campamento. It was a very special time of welcoming from our wonderful Bolivian friends. Our hearts were touched and we experienced inexpressible joy.

This morning we enjoyed cow´s head soup and several very special baptisms at the Mira Flores lake. Such a beautiful place with beautiful people and now beautiful memories. Eternity will not be long enough to tell of the joy we´ve experienced.

Today we had time for our first siesta - a refreshing afternoon nap. Tonight we´ll be privileged to cheer on the La Palmera Football team. Tomorrow´s plans are full and we´re all looking so forward to meeting even more of our special friends. When our luggage arrives we´ll begin work at the nursery, etc.

Thanks to everyone who prayed for our safe arrival. The hand of the Lord was upon us the entire way. Blessings to all.

Dan

¡Hola Amigos!

It´s Laura here. There´s so much going on that I would love to share but time is tight and the internet connection is shaky!

We had a 10 hour bus ride from Santa Cruz to Trinidad on Wednesday and arrived late that night. The scenery during the bus ride was amazing!

On Thursday we spent the entire day at the camp and had a wonderful time! The kids´ greeting was so warm and welcoming. The day was spent reuniting with old friends and making new ones. We watched an exciting soccer game and will be going to a professional one tonight!

Thanks for your prayers everyone! God´s hand is very evident at the school and camp here. Everyone is experiencing something truly special and wonderful.

Well I don´t know how long the internet will hold out, so I´m signing out now! Please ignore any typos and mistakes - the keyboard here is slightly different.

I hope all is well in the United States and we´ll be sure to update ASAP.

Lisa, Alicia, Joseph, and Nate - we miss you and are praying for you! We think of you often.

God bless and chau!

Laura

Monday, July 03, 2006

Quick Update From Miami

We arrived in Miami without incident only to be met with a cancelled flight to Santa Cruz. We're hoping for a flight out tomorrow but are unclear as to when that would happen. The search for accommodations for tonight has begun. More to follow as we have details.

Please pray for a quick resolution leading to God's ultimate glory.

Dan

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

Packing Night

We packed our team bags tonight and had a wonderful time. Please join me in thanking the Lord for Al & Mary Mendenhall, Bill & Sue Brody and Bob Devine for their help tonight. You guys and gals have been a great blessing to us all. Below Mary giving a quick farming lesson to Al, apparently a lesson with a bit of humor.


And Bill and Sue seem to be quite shocked at the numbers on the scale. Of course there's more humor because I'm the one being weighed.

Notice Bob in the background. In every picture Bob is working away taking care of all the details. Hard work and deep thought must go together.


Of course it wasn't all hard work. There was time for promoting a fine American product - Jell-O. I think Shelly is putting on the full-court sales pitch and Homer isn't buying. So much for her sales abilities.

I wonder how many U.S. citizens really think about Jell-O no-bake mixes. I can trot off to the local grocery store and pick up just about any food imaginable, including Jell-O no-bake mixes. Shoot most of the time I can have someone else cook dinner for me and even deliver it to my home. But this isn't the way most of the world lives. We complain and clamor about equality and lift this up as a great virtue, but do we really see world-wide equality in the 21st century?

I have so much, I need so little and yet dog gone it all if I don't horde for myself and fail to really live out world-wide equity. Thank you, thank you, thank you to all of our supporters who have sacrificially given so that we may inch closer to real equity in this world. I have been deeply touched by your generosity. You have brought the words, "that now at this time your abundance may supply their lack, that their abundance also may supply your lack" closer to home. Isn't it a simple yet profound truth that the right thing to do is for those with abundance to supply those who lack? I need to give Jell-O a little more thought.

Thankfully everything fit in the allotted containers and now we trust that it will arrive safely in Trinidad and on time. Here is what we started with just for the nursery:

So again, thanks to everyone who helped out tonight. Many hands made light work and each item was tenderly packed with loving care. You guys and gals are great. Be blessed.

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

Obstacle...

Well, we’ve hit our first obstacle in this great adventure. LAB has cancelled our flight from Miami to Santa Cruz, Bolivia. LAB very graciously offered to fly us down a day earlier, but unfortunately there are not enough available seats to get us from Minneapolis (and Portland) to Miami. So, we’ll leave on July 3rd instead of July 1st.

One of the wonderful things about our great God is that He permits (or causes) changes in our plans to bring about a better plan. There is something very special in knowing that God is God and we are not.

As I think about the heartbreak of this team waiting an additional two days to meet and be re-united with the wonderful people of Bolivia I’m reminded of Proverbs 13.12:

Hope deferred makes the heart sick,
But when the desire comes, it is a tree of life.”

Doesn’t that sum up the Christian experience? We long to be with the One we love – and our hope is deferred for a brief moment in time. But hope deferred is not hope that disappoints; it is hope that ultimately becomes a tree of life. So we press on and pray on with confident expectation (hope).

Monday, June 26, 2006

Bolivia Team 2006

Bolivia Team 2006
Hi Everyone!
Alicia here, I'm new at this so we'll see how this works.
If you have read the previous posts you already know a little about what we are doing and where we are going. Please continue to pray for us as the mad scramble to get all our luggage and anything else together by Saturday, July 1st begins.
Anywho, I don't have much to say, so type at ya later!
Alicia

Monday, June 19, 2006


Here is the team from Minneapolis at our last team meeting. We're missing our teammates from Iowa, Colorado and Oregon.

Sunday, June 18, 2006

Demos Gracias al Señor

Demos gracias al Señor
Demos gracias
Demos gracias por su amor

Demos gracias al Señor
Demos gracias
Demos gracias por su amor

Por las mañanas las aves cantan
las alabanzas de nuestro Salvador
y los cristianos también cantamos
las alabanzas a nuestro Salvador

English version:

We give thanks to the Lord
We give thanks
We give thanks for His love

We give thanks to the Lord
We give thanks
We give thanks for His love

In the morning the birds sing
the praises of our Saviour
And the Christians also sing
praises to our Saviour

Cristo Mi Salvador

Cristo mi Salvador me guardará
Me guardará
Me guardará

Cristo mi Salvador me guardará
Siempre me guardará

English version:

Christ my Saviour, He will guard me
He will guard me
He will guard me

Christ my Saviour, He will guard me
He will always guard me