Monday, March 26, 2007

Touching Hearts, Changing Lives


If you’re a regular visitor to our blog you’ll know that we’re celebrating our tenth anniversary this year. Our leaders have been in China for the last couple of weeks and on March 17th attended a very significant event – a banquet to mark ten years of partnership with the Chinese Government in Hunan Province. Over one hundred children and carers attended the meal and cruise down the Xiang river. It really was a high profile night. There were TV cameras galore and the local police turned out to provide an escort.

At Chinese celebrations everyone loves to make a speech. It’s like having a wedding with umpteen best men! ICC leaders, Government officials and ICC staff all joined in. One of the young men who has been in our care since the very early days was invited to make a speech too.

Chen Shi spoke about how he’s experienced love, received hope and been given an opportunity to grow, develop and study. He spoke of the sense of family and belonging that he knows and described life in the group homes, proudly sharing how he contributes by shopping and cooking. He has a place at University and shared his dream of an independent life in the future. As he spoke, he paused frequently and touched his heart as if to take strength from within. His face shone with love and joy at all he had to celebrate and his moving speech was one of the highlights of the evening.

I can guarantee there’ll be many more stories like this over the coming months, so please keep reading and join us in thanking God for all He has done in the life of Chen Shi and many others. He truly is awesome!

Monday, March 19, 2007

A Gift from the River


Most of us know the story of Moses. We may even have acted it out in Sunday school, dressed in Dad’s dressing gown and with the obligatory tea towel on our heads. You can imagine how stunned we were when we saw part of that story become a twenty-first century reality. International volunteer Alison Kennedy tells what happened:

“Yang Hong Tao was found floating in a basket down a local river during the floods of July 2006. We met him in hospital, where he received treatment for a few weeks before being discharged, parentless, into our care at the welfare centre.

In hospital he was known to giggle and share his smiles, but it seems the shock of moving to the welfare centre caused him to withdraw and for the first few months his feelings, other than pain, weren’t freely shown.

Meeting Yang Hong Tao today you would not believe him capable of hiding his emotions. A quick head massage or armpit tickle and Tao Tao’s glowing face breaks into an infectious giggle. This week when he uttered his first words a new joy stirred - the joy that fans flames of hope and encourages us to press on with the task of bringing God’s love to children like Tao Tao, who are trapped by circumstances and their physical bodies. “

I can’t begin to imagine what Tao Tao’s parents must have gone through, or what drove their decision to abandon him. It’s unlikely they’ll read this blog, but somehow I hope they know that he is safe, well and happy. I’ll be in Hengyang in a couple of weeks and I can’t wait to meet him.

Monday, March 05, 2007

Come on and Celebrate!


Now that I’ve reached a certain age, it seems like policemen look ever younger and time flies by at great speed. I can hardly believe it’s ten years since ICC opened Oasis House in Changsha. Yet the calendar confirms that it’s true. Things have changed so much since the first group of disabled children came into our care – now we have community group homes in four locations around Changsha city, as well as our project in Heng Yang. We run a foster care programme, a training and education department, and a sheltered workshop.

If you read this blog regularly you’ll know we like to mark significant steps in our journey, so throughout 2007 we’ll be celebrating our Tenth Anniversary. We began in January with parties in all our homes, where everyone performed songs, skits and dances. One of our Chinese managers has been with ICC since the early days. She gave a heartfelt speech during the celebrations:

‘We are a family, whether we are carers, therapists, nurses, children or volunteers, and we remember each other. We remember all who have been a part of this family over the years; all the workers, all the volunteers and we remember all the children we have loved - not just the ones who are here but also the ones who are in foster families.”

These past ten years, we have seen many people play a part in this work and our manager has seen most of them come and go. I can imagine the journey she has seen the children and young adults make as she’s watched their lives change before her eyes. From a place of desperate need she has seen them become happy, joyful people with hope for the future.

It’s encouraging to look back and see how far we’ve travelled and exciting to contemplate what is yet to be. God has blessed, guided and provided for all our needs, not least the many people who have partnered with us. Thanks for reading the blog, for your support, and for your companionship on our ten year journey.

Let’s celebrate!