*****
Monday, October 10, 2011
Friday, October 7, 2011
Quick Trip to Port-au-Prince
On Sunday I left for Port-au-Prince for a few days to take care of some things and also pick up Krischelle Frost who is back for another year or more (more on that next week). Maranatha, the school our students attend, starts at 7am so I left the camera with someone to get some pictures of them on their first day of school!
On my way back to the Plateau I stopped in to get a few pictures of the primary school in Port-au-Prince. My camera battery was dying and I had a long trip ahead of me so I just got a few quick shots of some of the younger classes. A lot of students will wait until the second week to go to school (a frustrating tradition based on a mix of superstition, procrastination, and sometimes legitimate problems), so the classes aren't full yet.


On my way back to the Plateau I stopped in to get a few pictures of the primary school in Port-au-Prince. My camera battery was dying and I had a long trip ahead of me so I just got a few quick shots of some of the younger classes. A lot of students will wait until the second week to go to school (a frustrating tradition based on a mix of superstition, procrastination, and sometimes legitimate problems), so the classes aren't full yet.



Saturday, October 1, 2011
School Starts Monday! Teacher Seminar going on now...
Monday is the big day!!! The past three days have been training for the teachers. Yesterday Gela Cupidon (wife of Wilson Cupidon who has been with Lemuel for years) came all the way out here from Port-au-Prince to spend the entire day today teaching the teachers. We have a few teachers who have taught for years but we also have some fresh out of high-school! These days of training have been great review and challenge to excellence for our experienced teachers while being an important time of learning for those who have never taught before. It looks like we have a great staff - I am excited to see what this year will hold!
I won't be here for the beginning of next week but I will post pictures of the school as soon as I can after I get back.

Sunday, September 18, 2011
Port-au-Prince Boarding Program
One of the big problems we face here on the Plateau is the incredibly low standard of education. In Port-au-Prince we can focus on strictly non-scholastic formation and discipleship knowing that our students are getting quality educations at the schools they attend. On the Plateau, however, the schools leave a gaping hole in the area of scholastic formation. If we hope to make a difference in this area we must find a way to ensure a quality education for at least some of those who will be the area's future leaders. For this reason today the following students left to go to Port-au-Prince to continue their schooling there.
They will live in the Lemuel House under the care of Leon Cameus and his wife and will go to school at a Christian school only about a 5 minute walk away. Every night Leon has devotions with the students and they rotate who is responsible to lead them. We have already seen the positive impact of these times in Mezilien who was there last year.
It was hard to see them go and they will all be greatly missed, but their parents have chosen to send them because they know this is the best thing for them long-term.
The cost to send each of these students to Port-au-Prince is $100 a month on top of their school tuition of approximately $50 a month (including entrance fee). Below I have marked those students who are already being sponsored. If you are interested in sponsoring one of these students, even in part, please contact me at judy.dilus@lemuelministries.org.
Jeffson's mom was only 14 when he was born in 1999. He has been her little "man" ever since. He helps her with his younger siblings, the garden, the livestock and even making food. He is so bright that he almost single-handedly won a competition at church of what family could answer the most questions regarding sermons and studies from the week. The prize was a ferro-cement cistern for his family so that they can now catch rain water off their new metal roof.
Jeffson is sponsored.
Billy (pictured with his mom, Suzette) also just passed his 6th grade state exams. He grew up in Gonaives but came to join his mother on the Plateau after hurricanes Ike and Hannah caused massive destruction there. He is a bright, sweet kid who helps his mom a lot with his baby sister Isabelle.
Billy is partially sponsored.
Olinda is 17 years old. She will also be going into 7th grade. Although somewhat behind for her age, Olinda is passionate about school and learning. She is always eager to learn anything you can teach her. Olinda's mom died when she was eight and her dad died 4 years later. Since that time she has been the responsibility of her older brothers and sisters. For a while we thought she wouldn't be able to go because her oldest brother, who is her primary caretaker, just couldn't afford to cover her expenses. But within the past week it has been amazing to see her whole family rally around her, each giving what they could, so that she could continue her studies. Her little 13 year old brother even sold his goat so that he could help send her to school too. Tears came to my eyes when Manis told me her brother asked if we would buy the goat because this time of year it is hard to find buyers. We are now the proud owners of another goat :)
Olinda is not yet sponsored.
Obed will be going into "Segonde" which is the 11th of 13 grades in Haiti. No matter what school Obed attends he is always first in his class. He is so bright he helps students in higher grades do their homework. Obed hopes to study agronomy after high-school and plans to some day return to the Plateau to work.
Obed is partially sponsored.
Josiane will also be going into "segonde". She has been a huge help to us here on the Plateau for many years now and we will miss her terribly! Josiane struggles with school but is determined to get as far as she can. The Haitian school system is not designed to encourage everyone to complete high-school, but rather to weed out as many potential university candidates as possible. However, if she can complete segonde and possibly Rheto (the 12th of 13 grades) it will open up many more opportunities than if she stops where she is.
Josiane is not yet sponsored.
Mezilien, or Mezou as he is known here on the Plateau, will be going into Rheto. He was in Port-au-Prince last year and, despite starting out behind, was able to excel. Mezou is incredibly bright but also has a heart for his home. He is not interested in going to live in the big city, but rather to learn as much as he can there that he can bring back and use to improve his home town.
Mezilien is not yet sponsored.
I took this picture this morning before they left (Mezou not pictured as he had left in another vehicle earlier in the morning). No, Ani is not going to Port-au-Prince. She was crying so hard because Josiane was leaving that she got Josiane all red eyed and crying too. I let her go to Josiane for a few more minutes while I took the picture... hence Ani looks perfectly happy and Josiane is in tears.
They will live in the Lemuel House under the care of Leon Cameus and his wife and will go to school at a Christian school only about a 5 minute walk away. Every night Leon has devotions with the students and they rotate who is responsible to lead them. We have already seen the positive impact of these times in Mezilien who was there last year.
It was hard to see them go and they will all be greatly missed, but their parents have chosen to send them because they know this is the best thing for them long-term.
The cost to send each of these students to Port-au-Prince is $100 a month on top of their school tuition of approximately $50 a month (including entrance fee). Below I have marked those students who are already being sponsored. If you are interested in sponsoring one of these students, even in part, please contact me at judy.dilus@lemuelministries.org.
Jeffson Belias

Jeffson is sponsored.
Billy Brutus

Billy is partially sponsored.
Olinda Louis-Juste

Olinda is not yet sponsored.

Obed is partially sponsored.
Josiane Dumesle

Josiane is not yet sponsored.

Mezilien is not yet sponsored.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011
GREEN!

“But now listen, Jacob, my servant, Israel, whom I have chosen.
This is what the LORD says—he who made you,
who formed you in the womb, and who will help you:
Do not be afraid, Jacob, my servant, Jeshurun,whom I have chosen.
This is what the LORD says—he who made you,
who formed you in the womb, and who will help you:
Do not be afraid, Jacob, my servant, Jeshurun,whom I have chosen.
For I will pour water on the thirsty land, and streams on the dry ground;
I will pour out my Spirit on your offspring, and my blessing on your descendants.
They will spring up like grass in a meadow, like poplar trees by flowing streams.
Some will say, ‘I belong to the LORD’; others will call themselves by the name of Jacob;
still others will write on their hand, ‘The LORD’s,’ and will take the name Israel.
I will pour out my Spirit on your offspring, and my blessing on your descendants.
They will spring up like grass in a meadow, like poplar trees by flowing streams.
Some will say, ‘I belong to the LORD’; others will call themselves by the name of Jacob;
still others will write on their hand, ‘The LORD’s,’ and will take the name Israel.
...in comparison to this passage regarding the Babylon in Jeremiah 50:
A drought on her waters! They will dry up.
For it is a land of idols, idols that will go mad with terror.
“So desert creatures and hyenas will live there, and there the owl will dwell.
It will never again be inhabited or lived in from generation to generation
In an area like the Plateau trees cause passerby to stop and ask, "What is going on here?" It forces people of the Plateau to compare what Satan has offered them for generations with the beauty and life that Jesus Christ can bring.
Over the last two months we have had more rain than I have ever seen here and the result is breathtaking. Does this mean there will never be a drought here again? Probably not. But one can hardly walk away from the striking beauty of God's creation that they see here, especially in stark contrast to the desolation that has been Satan's signature on this area for so long, without marveling at the grandeur of God.
I know I have posted some of these old pictures before but it is always amazing to me to look back at the way things were not too long ago in comparison to today.
Over the last two months we have had more rain than I have ever seen here and the result is breathtaking. Does this mean there will never be a drought here again? Probably not. But one can hardly walk away from the striking beauty of God's creation that they see here, especially in stark contrast to the desolation that has been Satan's signature on this area for so long, without marveling at the grandeur of God.
I know I have posted some of these old pictures before but it is always amazing to me to look back at the way things were not too long ago in comparison to today.

When Manis graduated from high school his dream was to become an agronomist. But he could not even afford to pay the bus fare to get him to where the entrance exam was to be taken - let alone pay for university. Several years later Manis dedicated his life to God's service and now God has given him the joy doing the agronomist type work he had always wanted to do.

Other pictures from today:
I had trouble getting some of these pictures because it was drizzling off and on!
What a great problem to have!
I had trouble getting some of these pictures because it was drizzling off and on!
What a great problem to have!













The rains this summer have allowed hundreds of saplings to take root so that when drought comes they will be able to withstand it. May we so root ourselves in Christ that no matter what life brings our way we may stand firm in Him. And may the fruit that we bear draw others to Him.
They will be like a tree planted by the water that sends out its roots by the stream.
It does not fear when heat comes; its leaves are always green.
It has no worries in a year of drought and never fails to bear fruit.
Jeremiah 17:8
It does not fear when heat comes; its leaves are always green.
It has no worries in a year of drought and never fails to bear fruit.
Jeremiah 17:8
But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, forbearance, kindness,
goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.
Galatians 5:22-23a
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