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Dear friends,
Summer and summer camps are finally over! My
last memory of camp is the tearful, dusty face of one of the poorest
children that come to our camps. Her home back in her village
has broken floorboards, nothing cheerful whatsoever in it and
a pile of pots and some potatoes in one corner. There is not much
furniture at all, no toys or books. Poverty and malnutrition has
left a definite mark on her life – her growth is stunted
and her intellect dulled. Her mother had rung before camp to say
that she would not be able to attend as she didn’t have
any clothing to wear for the camp. The camp team invited the child
and brought a big bag of clothing from the humanitarian aid for
her to keep. Throughout the camp she participated in everything
and learnt the lessons and memory verses. On the last day as the
camp bus arrived to take the children home, she walked out with
her new bag of clothes and an armful of colourful teddies and
prizes (also all from the humanitarian aid) that she had won during
the camp. In her bag were all the crafts that she had made during
her week at camp, colouring pencils and books. In her heart was
the memory of all the songs, the gospel message and the love shared
in many hugs. Tears poured down her face! She wasn’t the
only one; many of the little children were just like her. It is
your monetary donations, prayers and aid donations of toys, craft
materials and clothes that have made so much of this possible.
Thank you.
We are so grateful to God for all His blessings
during this strenuous but full-of-fun season. This newsletter
contains an update of our children’s summer camps as well
as the up-to-date news on literature translation, humanitarian
aid and the schoolbag appeal.
The
work of the church continues to grow. The Sunday services, the
Friday seminars and the ladies’ meeting (pictured below)
are very well attended. Ivan is the main speaker in the church.
He is also translating new hymns and the church has already produced
its own hymnal. This year was the first time that I have been
in Armenia during the month of August. The heat is absolutely
amazing, especially in the capital. I was, therefore, humbled
and blessed to see the church members arriving faithfully for
church during the really hot season. One
old lady has to travel on the bus (a very old and rickety affair)
for about one hour to get to church. I was convinced we wouldn’t
see her one particularly hot Sunday but she arrived on time, red
as a beetroot and gasping for water! It is truly humbling to see
how hungry they are for God’s Word. In June eight people
were baptised. It was a lovely service, conducted in our new swimming
pool at the campsite!
Summer
camps this year started in June and stretched to the end of August.
We had nine weeks of camps; each camp being five days long. The
first weeks of the camps were dedicated to children from the villages
within which AM has established Bible clubs. The latter half of
the camps were for the children from Yerevan who come to the Bible
clubs in our charity building. For the first time in our work
(and for the first time in the lives of most of the children)
the village children were invited to camp. We
had two weeks of camps for the children of Arteni. Although the
Bible club has only recently been established in that village
we had such large numbers of children in attendance that two weeks
of clubs had to be run for that village. Baghramian and the border
village Ervandashad also came to camp. The theme of the camp was
“Out of every tribe and nation” and Ruth told the
story of the mission exploits of Jim Elliot and his team to the
Auca Indians. Although Jim Elliot died in his efforts to reach
the Aucas; it was because of his sacrifice, along with that of
the other four brave men, that opened the door for the gospel
to finally reach the Aucas. The children were told the story in
4 parts and on some of the evenings we almost had a riot when
Ruth stopped the story at a very exciting juncture and they had
to wait to hear the next part!
Camps... a Springboard
The
camps play a vitally important role in winning the children’s
hearts. Very often when the children go home and tell the other
children in their village or street what a time they had other
children also start attending the Bible clubs. The restart of
the Bible clubs in Arteni was a particularly good example of this.
Ruth reported in the first week of October that for the first
time the attendance at the Bible club had exceeded one hundred
children, which led to an extra class starting.
Ruth had hoped to delay the restart of the Bible
clubs in Baghramian for one week to give her some extra time to
prepare lessons but Gevork told us that since the end of their
camp the children of the village had regularly rung him every
Saturday to find out if the team were on their way to hold a Bible
club. When the children were told that there was no club that
day they all turned up and waited outside the empty venue just
in case! When Ruth heard that she decided she had to go whether
she was ready or not! Praise God for such keen hearts. We were
there when the team returned for the first Bible club of the year
to Baghramian. The children excitedly surrounded the van and literally
screamed with delight.
School
in Armenia officially starts on September 1st. The week preceding
this is one of hectic bustle in the AM offices in Yerevan. On
a normal Saturday the charity offices are shut. The Saturday before
school started I was just making my morning coffee when the doorbell
rang. It was a family requesting a schoolbag for their child.
Very soon the queue outside the door necessitated the calling
in of the office personnel that deal with humanitarian aid. Some
very smart looking children with schoolbags were soon filing out
of the office and proudly going down the road. Aside from within
Yerevan, schoolbags were also distributed in Arteni and Ervandashad
(the border villages where we have children’s Bible clubs).
Michael Harrison also accompanied Gevorg (our local director)
to Nagorno Karabakh this year. There they distributed about a
hundred schoolbags in two different schools.
Each
schoolbag also contains a children’s Bible storybook and
Gospel tracts. Please pray for the recipients of these schoolbags
that they will be touched by the Gospel in their lives. The schoolbag
appeal is ongoing throughout the year. We will be packing and
sending schoolbags from England ready for next September but also
for children who will come for help during 2009.
Recently, a number of people have asked for up-to-date
information on how to put together a schoolbag. The best type
of schoolbag is the rucksack type. Please do not put anything
second-hand into a schoolbag as these items must last the child
the whole school year. Each schoolbag is opened and checked and
a children’s Bible and tracts are added. So if there are
some items that you cannot find, do not be concerned about donating
a partially packed schoolbag. Similarly we would very gratefully
receive a donation of a quantity of one of the single items or
the contents of a bag without the bag itself, for example.
We regret that Armenian Ministries cannot collect
individual schoolbags from you so if you wish to donate to the
“Time for School” appeal but find that you cannot
get bags to us, you can donate the money for a schoolbag and assign
it for this appeal. AM will then buy the different items and put
a bag together on your behalf. Several hundred schoolbags were
sent in this manner for 2008 and were very gratefully received.
For more details about what should go into each schoolbag, please
take a look at the Time
for School information page.
September
2008 saw the answer to many prayers when 50,000 copies of the
newly printed Armenian New Testament and Psalms safely arrived
in Yerevan from the UK. These Bibles were generously donated by
the Trinitarian Bible Society in London. We would like to express
our most sincere gratitude to the TBS for this donation and also
for all their hard work in printing and arranging the shipment
of the Bibles to Armenia. Of
course, we praise God for their safe arrival and for how they
were cleared through customs without any problems. Already many
Christians have received their copies and some organisations have
also visited and requested a larger number of copies for their
congregations. Please pray for Sona as she continues to work on
the Old Testament; although the work is progressing very well,
it is a very slow and laborious task. The translation of other
literature continues; Isobel Kuhn’s biographies, “The
Calvary Road” by Roy Hession, and Gospel tracts.
I have spent most of my summer with around
three hundred boisterous, active and dusty (!) children and have
been forced to confront the truth of my own words in several of
our previous newsletters where I have focused on the lack of toys,
colour and occupation in these children’s lives. The theme
of the camps, “Out of every tribe and nation”, was
backed by a jungle theme. The children were invited every night
to the jungle shop (brought to us by missionary airplanes!) and
to be able to buy toys and goodies from the shop, they had to
collect jungle money – bananas, pineapples and parrots.
I was very surprised at the things the children bought. Almost
no one bought sweets; they were much more interested in teddy
bears and knitted bears (even teenagers). They
bought colouring books and pencils and most surprisingly, they
bought the beautifully illustrated English books which have been
sent in the containers from the UK. I witnessed many of the children
sitting and “reading” an English book and looking
at the pictures. It is with this is mind that I wish to introduce
to you my sister Ruth’s new project – “Read
for Joy” - She desperately wishes to address the need for
books in Armenian; not just good quality, colourful books but
books with the message of the Gospel. Please take a look at the
Read for Joy webpage
for more details - thank you!
Yours by Grace alone,
Perouz Harrison
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