SERVE THE CHILDREN

MERRY CHRISTMAS!

Thank you for your generosity in 2019. We hope you will continue to support STC in 2020.  Your partnership makes it possible for us to give children hope and a future in Liberia, India, Zambia and the Middle East. For our efforts for underserved children, we were awarded the World Peace Award at the United Nations in September 2019!

Major successes in 2019:
– We reopened our school in Monrovia after it was destroyed in a fire
– We raised over $110,000 at our annual auction, a new record
– We gained more child sponsorships than ever before during 2019
– We sent two mission teams to Liberia, two to India and one to Zambia
– We raised $5,000 to feed our school children one meal a day in Mumbai

Would you consider making a final 2019-year-end tax-deductible donation to Serve the Children now?  Any amount would be appreciated, and you can donate by check or online by clicking on the button below. Your financial support helps us accomplish our mission: to offer hope and a future through God’s love to underserved children and families around the world by meeting their educational, physical and emotional needs.
 
 Our goals for 2020:Raise $40,000 to pay for building costs in MonroviaSend mission teams to Liberia, India and ZambiaRaise $125,000 at our annual auction on October 10, 2020: SAVE THE DATE!Increase our computer training program in LiberiaIncrease our vocational training programs in Lasina and MumbaiFinish construction of our 15 Gate Middle School in LiberiaIncrease the number of children we serve at our schoolsHave you ever considered going on a mission trip? You will personally be a part of changing lives, and your own life will be changed too. We have a team going to Zambia May 2 – 16, a team to Liberia in June and two teams to India; one in August and one in October.  Please contact me by emailing doug@servethechildren.com if you are interested in any of these trips.  You can download a copy of the country’s mission team book from our website or we can mail you a copy.
 
Thank you for all you do.
 
Dr. Doug Collier

Go on Mission With Us!

I learn something about myself and being on a team every time I go on a mission trip.  For someone who has never been trained in the field of education, it amazes me that I can go into a classroom and help a teacher.  Being a father and a grandfather helps, but mostly I think it’s my passion for what we do and my experience in life.

Every mission trip and team is different.  We typically build a team itinerary around the skills of the team members and what projects we need to work on in country.  I loved my 2018 Liberia team, made up of a college student, a cabinet maker, a saw sharpener, a warehouse manager and me.  None of us had any direct skills in education or medical care, but we found ways to make a difference. 

We decided to teach basic first aid.  No one on the team had a lot of knowledge on the subject, so we invited a nurse and a paramedic to come to our pre-trip team meetings and train us in some specific skills.  We learned how to treat burns, deal with cuts and perform the Heimlich maneuver.  We taught these lessons to our Liberian staff and older students, and it was very successful. Everyone learned useful skills that can save lives in Liberia.

In May, I am leading a team on my first trip to Zambia.  STC supports two components of the Pure Nard Ministries in Zambia; a school for preschool and kindergarten children, and a partnership with Teen Challenge, serving men who are coming out of substance abuse.  We will be working with the children in their classes, doing some minor construction work and visiting many of the homes of our sponsored children.

STC Board member Zac Barnes is leading a team to Liberia in June. This team will work with our teachers and staff, help in the children’s classes and work on some small construction projects, depending on the team makeup.  Our new school location in Monrovia is up and running.  We are looking for someone to go to Liberia for several months to help our staff develop and help students improve their English skills.

I am returning to India on my 8th trip there in August.  Our team will spend most of the time at our rural Lasina school working with the kids on art projects, integrating computers into the classroom and visiting local villages where the kids live.  Then we will go to Mumbai and help at our day school in one of the slums.  We are looking for someone to go to Lasina for several months to help our staff develop and help students improve their English skills.

Our teams are filling up fast for 2020.  Would you like to go and make an impact for Jesus Christ on a team with Serve the Children? You don’t need special skills; anyone can make a difference. Contact me soon for more information on 2020 and 2021 teams. If you are interested in going to Liberia or India long term to help staff and students, please contact me.

Would you like to sponsor a child?  Contact Angela at angela@servethechildren.com and she can send you information on how you can be involved with a child in Liberia, Zambia or India and help give them hope and a future.
 
Thank You!
Dr. Doug Collier

Serve the Children Update


Thank you for all your concern, prayers and donations to help us through the terrible loss by fire of our newly opened computer lab at the Liberia Sinkor School.  We appreciate your help through this crisis.   Our goal is to raise at least $30,000 to replace the computer lab, and we are almost there!

We decided to sell the damaged building for several reasons, including the cost to rebuild, the location on the ocean and the condition of the building after so many years of heavy use.  We purchased this building in 2004 for $45,000 and spent thousands more on improvements and repairs over the years. We sold it for $100,000, including closing costs. The Board decided to rent a building close to our current site in the Sinkor District of Monrovia, the capital of Liberia, and we plan to sign a 3-year rental agreement soon.   

We wanted to stay in the Sinkor District to continue to meet the needs of the children here.  We will use some of the funds raised to remodel one of the classrooms to use as a computer lab and we will purchase around 40 laptops to replace what we lost in the fire. Our server was in the shop when the fire hit so we still have that and all of the Kahn Academy software we use. We are thankful for that.

Our next project will be to raise $350,000 to purchase a new facility in the Sinkor District.  We plan to make it a top of the line school in Liberia with modern classrooms, a fully operational computer lab, a science lab, a library and a vocational school.  It would provide hope and a future to the children in the surrounding area and to parents seeking to improve their lives and be a place where our staff could accomplish great things for the community. Imagine how we could impact this country, one of the very poorest in the world.  Providing these children a great education with computer skills can be a game changer for their families and Liberia.

Come dream with me for the future! Did you ever dream about having tons of money as a kid and think about what you would do with it?  Do you still dream like this? Sometimes we get so distracted by day to day issues of life we forget to dream; to think about life from the eyes of our childhood.  I don’t know about you, but I think my blood pressure would be lower if I did this more often.

If we had, let’s say, $3 million dollars today for Serve the Children, what would we do with it? Here is what I’d want to do: 

Liberia: fund a top of the line school to replace the Sinkor School

Zambia: spend $500,000 to build a first-class school for children of all ages so they could achieve the full potential God has given them.  The school would be able to teach the children every subject they would need to learn to attend college or vocational school and continue to help their country move forward. 

India: can we make a difference in child trafficking in India?  Yes, we can!  We can give young boys and girls educational opportunities that could make an eternal difference in their lives as well as provide them the skills to move into successful careers.  We would build schools and provide vocational training to children and young people who dream of these futures just like our kids dream of them. 

Middle East: open centers and support full-time people to serve thousands of people impacted by war.  We would provide comfort rooms where they could go to escape the horrors of war and have peace for a short while at least.  A place where they could rest, eat a meal and not worry about life and about their families.

Expand the vocational training programs we have in India to other countries.  I dream of empowering women to achieve their full potential by providing them a quality education and workplace skills that give them a well-paying job to support their families and keep them away from human trafficking.

Come dream with me, to give hope and a future to more children and families around the world.

Dr. Doug Collier

God’s Plan

Liberia, West Africa is a country that has become dear to my heart. Although it has only been in the last couple of years that I have had occasion to visit this country, it has been a focal point for my family since 1995.  It was at that time, during a brutal civil war, that my aunts, uncles, and parents adopted 10 children from Liberia.  These kids, all related as brothers, sisters and cousins, joined our family here in the States.  These same kids, now adults, have become as close as my own sisters.  Around the time these war-victim children were adopted to the States, my father Steve Jones, my uncle Nathan Jones, Doug Collier and Sackie Kwalalon started a school (All God’s Children) for child-soldiers, just like the children I now call family.

I waited over twenty years to see Liberia for the first time. We had learned the parents of these kids our family adopted had NOT died in the war as we had been told.  This knowledge led to a trip that included three sisters, my Liberian cousins, to “meet” their parents for the first time in over 20 years. During that wonderful trip, I enjoyed watching reunions with family members, experiencing a culture I had heard so much about, seeing firsthand the places and people that have become part of my family history. But, as incredible as that story is, that is not the trip I want to talk about today.

Since my first mission trip to Liberia in the summer of 2017, I have returned to Liberia two additional times. That’s 41,622 miles of traveling if you’re keeping track. This last trip was nothing like the mission trips before.  It’s actually a mission trip any right-minded mission leader would hush or keep to themselves because it may scare off others from traveling to serve in countries such as Liberia. So, if you’d like to hear about a mission trip that went side-ways and how God is still working, then please continue.

On February 17th, I was sitting in my own church, surprised to be the one asked to speak on behalf of our team’s trip to Liberia. We prayed for protection, direction and to touch the lives of people in need there. Almost as quickly as the pastor said amen, my phone started ringing. When I returned the call, I got word that the AGC School had caught fire, and that the computer-lab that was set up on our last trip only 4 months before was completely gone – literally every computer reduced to ash.   It was devastating, but in all honesty, about 24 hours later, after praying, crying and fellowshipping we were okay and ready to continue working in God’s plan, whatever that was.

That would have been enough of a setback, but there’s more. On departure day, our very first flight was delayed an hour, making us miss ALL of our connecting flights.   From Chicago on, every flight had to be rebooked with multiple airlines. Well this wasn’t our plan, but we wondered, “God is this yours?” We finally arrived in Liberia, after four flights and one 12 hour layover.

But wait, there’s more!  Upon our arrival in Liberia, we realized all of our bags were missing. During this two-week mission trip most of the team got their belongings on day 7.  I, however, finally received my luggage of personal belongings 3 days before I returned home. These were just a few of the challenges that arose during our trip to Liberia this year, and I have to tell you, I do believe all of this was in God’s plan.  

Even though we arrived a day later, even though we received our clothes and supplies more than a week later, and even though the fire destroyed the computer lab, we were still able to meet with the children. We were still able to meet with faculty. We were still able to meet the goals set out months prior for this trip. Even though this fire had children on the streets crying even before we left the States, a week later I was able to bring art and emotional expression to their classroom. So, in a way we did do our plan. But what about God’s plan?

The day before I left Liberia, the principal of the AGC School asked to speak to me privately. To be honest, he is a man of few words and seems to prefer to watch from a distance rather than dive into the chaos. That said, his words stuck with me. He said to me, “I have to ask you. You know when the fire happened and the computers were burnt, we were all so upset.” I waited for the question. “I asked myself, why are they coming? Why are they coming just to see this mess, there is nothing here for them. And, when you came, you are here and you are smiling, how is that?” What I find so fascinating about his comments and questions is the perception he had of me, us or Americans in general. The question, “Why are they coming to see this mess?” tells me his school had wondered if they were going to be abandoned because of the fire. They wondered about the children’s education, their jobs and their families. What’s more, he noticed we came still smiling and engaging with them. This seemed to shock the faculty into hope. By just showing up, participating and working in the “mess,” everyone’s hope was revived.

This trip really was like no other. This trip had a lot of struggles from day one.  But looking back, God answered our prayers even while the school was going up in flames. He provided protection, not one child or person was injured in the fire. He continues to provide All God’s Children and Serve the Children with direction on how to move forward.  God is opening doors in miraculous ways.  He is creating vision, excitement and hope for the country of Liberia and for those of us blessed to be involved in this next chapter of the Serve the Children/All God’s Children story.  Our God created a connection to the Liberian people this time that I never saw there before, and it’s just because we showed up in crisis. So, in this trip where everything started off all wrong and not according to our plans, it WAS according to God’s plan.

The day I left Liberia, I received more hugs from the children, teachers and staff than ever before. And this time when I left, there were requests and expectations for me to return this year – AGAIN!  That tells me God’s desire for me, and perhaps others, is to connect with our AGC family in Liberia. We are called to continue to support and nurture these relationships because we are all part of His family no matter how messy life gets.

 – Brittany Jones

HEARTBREAKING FIRE – NEED EMERGENCY DONATIONS!


On February 17th the All God’s Children School in Monrovia, Liberia caught fire

  • Entire 3rd floor, including the new computer lab, totally destroyed
  • Water and smoke damage on 1st and 2nd floors in classrooms and offices
  • Building is 4 classrooms short: not enough room for all students to continue classes
  • Over 400 kids with no other school option need a safe place to finish the school year, including seniors studying for their state exams and hoping to graduate

“400 to 500 people from the community gathered and witnessed the fire. Many were crying as they watched a neighborhood fixture and one of the few beacons of hope go up in smoke.  The neighborhood men began fighting the fire as they waited for the fire department. Many of the kids from the school were there and frightened about their future.” –  Steve JonesSTC mission team member, on the ground in Monrovia, Liberia – 2/26/19

Being Present

By Jeni Gregory

I was privileged to go to India in November with the 2018 Serve the Children team.   I see faces in my mind as if it were yesterday.

Our team was honored to work in a Mumbai slum considered to be the largest in the world.  Open sewage, extraordinary poverty, lack of education, sex trafficking … all combining to beat down the human beings who lived there. The people we worked with were like you and me.  They had dreams for their families.  They had hopes for a better life.  They were very hard workers who strove to put food in their children’s bellies every day.  They laughed, they cried and they understood why Serve the Children was there.

The most important part of my being on a team is remembering that it is not what I DO that is critical.  It is about BEING with people.  In fact, the importance of “BEING” seemed more significant than I remember on other trips. I knew I needed to slip into God’s intention. It was a comfortable place that did not require me to do anything but rest in His Presence. That lesson came across clearly through one particular little girl.

I don’t know this little girl’s name.  Yet I knew she needed to be near me.  She kept looking at me the way I remember my own children staring when they needed ME. My instincts told me it was not about something I could do.  She needed to be close, with me paying attention.  I might have been unable to solve the greater problems she was facing in her young life, but I could do something about her need for my attention. 

I scooped her up and put her on my lap.  Immediately I could tell we both relaxed.  It was as if, at least for that moment, we were both where we belonged…in the love and safety of God’s grace. I knew that me just being present was enough, as long as God was in it.

God may ask you to go on a mission trip and there is no doubt it is to serve others.  Your first reaction may be to say, “I have no tools that could be used.” When I went to India, it simply meant showing up, being present and giving my best self in service. God filled in the rest.  That was His lesson for me. What does He want you to learn?

We have exciting mission trip opportunities for 2019!  We have a team going to Liberia June 15-28. The first team meeting for this trip is on Sat. March 2.  We also have two teams going to India August 3-16 and October 12-25 and a team going to Zambia June 30-July 13.  If you are interested in going on any of these trips check out our website for more information and email Doug@servethechildren.com.

STC’s 2018 Accomplishments

Serve the Children has so much to be thankful for as we move forward in 2019. Your donations, prayers, and volunteer help achieved many things.  We thank you for all your support and generosity. It is amazing to see all we accomplished in 2018. 
 
2018 accomplishments include:

  • We raised over $100,000 at our annual auction in October
  • We completed a furniture building vocational training program at our Sinkor School in Liberia with a grant from The Netherlands
  • We started partnering with Pure Nard Ministries in Zambia, supporting a small school
  • We started a vocational training school in Lasina, India
  • We started using computers to teach basic subjects at our Sinkor School in Liberia
  • We established four comfort rooms in the Middle East
  • We are adding a second location in the Mumbai slum

You make it possible for us to accomplish what we do in Liberia, India, Zambia and the Middle East to give children hope and a future. As we look forward to 2019, we hope you will continue to support Serve the Children. Thank you for all you do! Please feel free to contact any of us at Serve the Children if you have any questions or need help.

Doug Collier- doug@servethechildren.com

Leslie Rios- leslie@servethechildren.com

Angela McGovern- info@servethechildren.com

Empowerment

MERRY CHRISTMAS!

I am very grateful for your support for Serve the Children during 2018.  Recently, I returned from a 15-day mission trip to India with April, Jeni and Noel.  One of the goals of STC mission trips is to become involved with kids and young adults on a personal level, and we had a great time doing just that. 

We want to empower people.  Empowerment is the process of helping people become stronger and more confident. We believe that the children and young adults we work with in India were created for more than poverty with no opportunity, so empowerment is a vital part of what we do in our two locations.

In Lasina, we are transitioning from a residential school to vocational training. We have closed the hostel and will transfer our students to other local schools, but we will continue to support them by supplying funds for their uniforms, school supplies and school fees. We started a vocational school on the campus and currently teach young people from local villages Microsoft Office and tailoring. For just $80 per quarter for a 3-month course, we can teach them a skill that can secure a good paying job.  Without these skills, these kids would probably end up as farm laborers earning about $3 per day.  Lasina is a very rural village and we are the only option for vocational training close by. In June, we plan to add two additional courses: mid-wife and nurse’s assistant. 

In Mumbai, we have two ventures empowering women and children.  The city is surrounded by slums and we work in one of the smaller ones.  In this area, children as young as 3 years old are left to fend for themselves in appalling conditions while their guardians search for work to scrape a living. Girls like the one pictured in class with me here, as young as 13 years old, are married off so the family has one less mouth to feed.         .

We give these children an opportunity to learn English and provide a meal for them, which is often the first meal for them that day and possibly the only meal.  Sponsored girls can attend a local full-time school and escape the risk of being married off.  All of these children were created for something more and we provide them the opportunity to reach their potential.

In a very poor area of Mumbai, we teach tailoring classes to groups of women.  After completing the course, they can use the certificate to get work in a local clothing factory or they can use their earnings to purchase a sewing machine and establish their own business.  We had the privilege of visiting the home of three sisters who have completed our program.  Two of them are in college and one is finishing high school.  They are able to pay for their educational costs with the money they make from tailoring.  They would not be able to be in school otherwise, since their family could not afford the fees. 

I invite you to join me this Christmas with a single gift of $80 to sponsor one student for a three-month computer or tailoring class, or donate $360 and change the lives of four people in 2019. They were created for something more, and with your help, they can have hope and a future.

Dr. Doug Collier
President of the Board

Thank You!

Thank you for all your support at Serve the Children’s 15th Annual Dinner & Dessert Auction!


On October 20th we raised over $100,000!  We are so thankful for your attendance and your giving. Because of your generosity we are able to make a difference in the lives of children across the world through the following kinds of projects:

  • School supplies for our children and staff
  • Textbooks and replacement of desks and chairs in our schools
  • Equipment for our computer lab
  • Medical supplies for our nurse to treat our children and staff
  • 10 new kids received sponsorship
  • In the slums of Mumbai, India, many of the women and children earn a meager living by picking rags from the dump and selling them. They are vulnerable to human trafficking, disease, and malnutrition. We offer a day school for children ages 2 to 15 who would otherwise have no hope of education. Your generosity will provide supplies, food, and a brighter future for these children.
  • Pure Nard Preschool in Zambia provides students with a warm, Christ-centered learning environment. Right now, the only primary school option for our students is an overcrowded government school.  Because of your support we can build on the foundation of quality education by beginning construction on a first-grade classroom.
  • Junior high classrooms at our rural 15 Gate School will give students practical help for the future in an area where there is no other opportunity for education. Many of our 15 Gate students are the first ones in their families to learn to read. Providing further education at our school will not just help them personally; it will enable them to benefit their families and motivate them to invest in others in their community.

Your gifts make it possible for the kids we serve to not just survive but to thrive and FLOURISH!  These kids have a HOPE and a FUTURE because of you!  

Why Missions?

I am Angela and I have three young children.  I have always wanted to be a mom and it is an amazing part of who I am.  Every mom has hard days, and on those days, I remind myself that the Lord has called me to be the mom of these specific kids and that it is a job that I alone can do.  I have been so blessed to be able to work part time and stay at home with my kids for their entire lives and would not change this opportunity for the world.  It is a great joy, but I have to be honest; it can be difficult and lonely at times. Sometimes it’s easy for me to forget other passions and desires the Lord has put in my heart.

For many years, one of those passions was to go on a mission trip to Africa, but I was busy being a mom and occupied with other projects, so this longing took a backseat.  Finally, I knew I just had to go. The challenge I faced was that I had two kids at home and my youngest was only two years old. I struggled because I wondered if it was okay to leave my kids and be gone for an extended period of time.  I thought, “What if something happens and I’m not there to help them?”  Yes, it was hard to leave my kids at home and travel across the world. But I believe it was one of the greatest gifts I have given my children.

    

I believe that Lord gives us all passions, dreams and gifts to be used for His kingdom. It is so easy for the circumstances of life to keep us from pursuing what He has put in our hearts.  I know for me, I wondered if it was okay to want to do other things besides parenting, things that would take me away from my kids for a time.  What I realized was that I can share these gifts, passions and dreams with my children and show them that the world is bigger than the little pocket they live in.  I can be a living example of being obedient to the call Christ has placed on my life. Even though my kids were too young to go with me, they were part of helping me get ready.  We prayed for the kids I would meet and practiced the skits and lessons I would teach the children in Africa.  When we say “yes” to the Lord and allow ourselves to be His hands and feet to the forgotten ones, we can bring our own kids along for the journey. We leave a legacy for our own children and show them that others are more important than ourselves, and I believe I am a better mom because of it.

Do you feel called to go a mission trip?  Yes, it can be more complicated when you have young children and it does take more planning and requires enlisting the help of others.  But you are not only planting seeds of hope in the children and people you will meet; you are planting seeds of giving and love in your own children and family. I plan to go to Zambia and India with Serve the Children in 2019.  Come with me!