Thursday, April 29, 2010

XRay Project Status


This woodsy-looking groundcover on our front yard berm is barrenwort, also called "bishop's hat," named (I would guess) after the shape of the leaves.

Received on the xray project so far: $3,212. We are one-third of the way to significantly raising the standard of health care on this small island. At the drop of a hat and a hundred bucks you and I could drive right now to a med station for a chest xray and antibiotic. Most people on La Gonave would have to walk many hours or days to the only hospital on that island, and even there they currently have no xray should one be required.



Sunday, April 25, 2010

XRay Project Status

You never know where the next white trillium will show up in our garden.

Question... what is the plural of trillium?
a. trilliums
b. trillia
c. trilliae
d. trillii
(answer below)

As of today we have collected $1,162 toward the mission hospital xray. $10,500 total is needed. Thanks for helping us chip away. Many hands make light work, as they say.

Answer: I have no idea.

Friday, April 23, 2010

XRay Project Status



It is not every year that our Andromedae bloom this profusely. This is a good year.

Received so far: $560

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

XRay Project Status

Received so far: $510


The bleeding hearts are in full bloom around the yard right now. Too bad they don't bloom like this all Summer.

Monday, April 19, 2010

Progress


These purple trillium (or should I say purple trillii) are in bloom right now. Not nearly as abundant as the white trillium out there but they're kind of cool. If you look closely you can see the ostrich ferns emerging in the background.

I have been putting in lots of work on Starfysh these past few days. Things are moving forward (necessarily slowly right now). Slowly but surely. I cannot wait until all the organizational work is done so that we can move forward on helping people. I know I've been saying the website will be done soon, and it will. I met again with the webmaster and we are making good progress on that.

I'm not receiving many donations on the xray project right now, but that's because I haven't been beating the drum much since I first posted the need. It will come.

Saturday, April 17, 2010

XRay Project Status

I have been asked to put the donate button back up for the XRay project, so I have.

Received so far $460.








The Round-Lobed Hepatica is now in bloom in my woods. (I am thinking it is called "hepatica" because the leaves are lobed... like the liver).

Friday, April 16, 2010

Ancora Imparo

This is Bloodroot, another early-Spring, brief-blooming flower in my woodland garden.











"The harder I work, the behinder I get."
(refrigerator magnet)

There is an interesting phenomenon in medical learning, and it applies to every field of study. Is is simply this: the more I learn, the more I find there is to learn and the more I realize how little I truly know. Have you ever felt this way? As if I had a chance at knowing everything there is to know in the field of medicine, it doesn't help knowing that the world's fund of scientific knowledge doubles every five years. I will never ever arrive at a point of completing the learning process. The magnet is right.

In her book, Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, Annie Dillard likewise spoke of being overwhelmed:
"I reel in confusion: I don't understand what I see. With the naked eye I can see two million light-years to the Andromeda galaxy. Often I slop some creek water in a jar and when I get home I dump it in a white china bowl. After the silt settles I return and see tracings of minute snails on the bottom, a planarian or two winding round the rim of water roundworms shimmying frantically, and finally, when my eyes have adjusted to these dimensions, amoebae. At first the amoebae look like muscae volitantes, those curled moving spots you seem to see in your eyes when you stare at a distant wall. Then I see the amoebae as drops of water congealed, bluish, translucent, like chips of sky in the bowl. At length I choose one individual and give myself over to its idea of an evening. I see it dribble a grainy foot before it on its wet, unfathomable way. Do its unedited sense impressions include the fierce focus of my eyes? Shall I take it outside and show it Andromeda, and blow its little endoplasm? I stir the water with a finger, in case it's running out of oxygen. Maybe I should get a tropical aquarium with motorized bubblers and lights, and keep this one for a pet. 'Yes,' it would tell its fissioned descendants, 'the universe is two feet by five, and if you listen closely you can hear the buzzing music of the spheres.'"

I sometimes wonder... do we, in our Christian journey, allow ourselves to become mental amoebae, preserving our endoplasm at the expense of missing galaxies of Truth? Paul's endoplasm must have been bubbling when he exclaimed, "Oh, the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable his judgements, and his paths beyond tracing out!"(Romans 11:33). A fitting paraphrase might be "O Lord my God, when I in awesome wonder consider all the worlds Thy hands have made..." Overwhelmed we shout "How great Thou art!," resigning to the futility of defining just how great He actually is. Our exclamation point will just have to suffice for now.

The paradox is this: more information exasperates us. Our senses become numb. We plop down in a heap of mental exhaustion. Acknowledging the impossibility of knowing everything, we give up the pursuit of knowing anything. We lead submissive lives, passively waiting for the scraps tossed our way, settling for whatever email forwards are sent to us, whatever the TV networks decide to air, and whatever sermons or Sunday School lessons others decide for us we need to hear.

The all-too-common response, then, is to throw up our hands in surrender. Disillusioned, we stop learning, demoting discipleship from a required course to an elective one in the curriculum of faith. "If God's paths are untraceable," we say, "why risk getting lost?" We stay home, rationalizing our complacency by concluding that learning earns us no brownie points. Entrance to Heaven does not depend on our Jeopardy performance. (I'll take "Pearly Gates" for $1000, Alex). And if it does not make a difference, why stress over knowing something we can never fully comprehend anyway? If we don't work harder, we won't get behinder, we conclude our logic.

We settle, becoming spiritual lazybones, shifting our spiritual weight from one buttock to the other, trading in discovery for familiarity. "Aha!" for "Ho-hum."

Where does all this leave us then? On one hand we have a God who, despite all our striving, can never be comprehended. Faith is, for us, too wonderful and mysterious to be fully understood. Attempting to do so, on the other hand, seems only to magnify the difference between us and God . . . .

. . . Ah... now I see! Learning more of God and His ways is not a threat to His omni's. In discovering truths about God, we do not, as Richard Dawkins suggests, scientifically chip away at His mystery as if we could eventually reduce it to some sort of divine formula.

To the contrary! Discovery leads us, not away from worship, but to it! It did Galileo. Upon discovering the moons of Jupiter, he penned the following words in his journal: "I render infinite thanks to God for being so kind as to make me alone the first observer of marvels kept hidden in obscurity for all previous centuries."

Discovery humbles us and elevates our estimation of the Creator. The more we learn, the greater we realize God to be, and the more properly we can see ourselves in contrast to Him. "Learning is therefore a spiritual calling" says Cornelius Plantinga. "Properly done, it attaches us to God." (Engaging God's World--A Christian Vision of Faith, Learning, And Living). Frances Collins, Director of the National Human Genome Research Institute, which recently completed the colossal task of identifying all of the 3,000,000,000 letters of the human DNA code, voiced it well. "For me," he said, "scientific discovery is also an occasion of worship."

The words discovery and disciple have the same Latin backbone, discere, which simply means "to learn." Learning, for the follower of Christ, is neither elective nor optional. Disciples are, by definition, learners... people with lifestyles of proactive, intentional discovery. Always alert and searching, ears perked, eyes wide open. Fact is, we are students and, as followers of Christ, we will always be students. Students of faith, learners of truth.

"Ancora imparo," remarked Michelangelo, then 87 years old. "I am still learning." A fitting modus operandi for every serious follower of Christ. Active, intentional learning is the essential lifestyle of all who would follow Him.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

The Problem of Mystery

These woodland flowers, Trout Lilies, are plentiful in my garden and woods right now.

"Can you fathom the mysteries of God? Can you probe the limits of the Almighty? They are higher than the heavens--what can you do? They are deeper than the depths of the grave--what can you know? Their measure is longer than the earth and wider than the sea." Job 11:7-9

Atheist Richard Dawkins contends that "the ultimate goal of science is to remove all mystery." I sometimes wonder, have we similarly reduced our faith journey to a mere discipline of study, as if by adding to our fund of observations and insights about God, we will eventually nail it? God now just another notch in our intellectual belt, one more mystery solved? Is it possible that the study of God, though earnest and sincere, might chip away at His infinity? Mystery annoys Dawkins, legitimating, for him, the role of science. For Dawkins, everything that can be known, must be.

What is our problem with mystery? Have we bought in to science's presumption that mystery must go?

We have become uneasy with mystery. Suspect of it, even. "Freedom of information!" we cry, citing our rights. Once given the facts, we then think "What aren't you telling us?" exposing a certain suspiciousness behind our questions. Mystery has become, for us, sinister and untrustworthy. We have made it so. And it is this sinisterization of mystery that has led us to agree with Dawkins' assertion that mystery is the enemy.

For the person of faith, however, mystery is not bad. I find myself agreeing with Leonard Sweet when he says, "If all you can trust and have faith in is the God you can comprehend and understand, then who are you worshiping?" (Soul Salsa)

Where does this leave mystery, then, for those who believe in God? Do we regard mystery as a tolerable necessity of faith, meekly accepting it as the way it is, neither objecting to it nor extolling it? Not knowing what to do, have we sent mystery to the time-out chair for awhile while we figure out what to do with it?

And if we promote mystery from neutral status (a facet of faith we see merely as unobjectionable) to a position of esteem (a celebrated tenet of faith), we must ask ourselves, what is the role of discovery in the journey of faith? Is the very endeavor counter to what we have just said is axiomatic to our faith? If so, dare we strive to know more?

On the other hand, what is intrinsically wrong with wanting to solve mystery? Is our opinion of God affected by how much we know about Him? "We live by faith, not by sight," we are told (2Cor. 5:7). But can sight influence faith?

And where does this leave us, knowing that our tiny, finite minds can never grasp all that is true about God? What can be known about Him and does He want us to know it? Might God melt under the heat lamp of human scrutiny, lessened just a bit with every piece of evidence revealed? Is God sweating it out, worried that we will someday have him pegged? If not... if God is beyond measure, dare we try to measure Him?

Or does God, in fact, want us to know more?

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Island Hospital Video

I have just posted some raw, unedited video footage that I took during my most recent visit to Haiti. It will give you a sense of what it is like to just walk through it. (I know, I am a poor videographer, I don't know how to edit, and I won't win any YouTube prizes either).

Keep in mind, folks... this is the only hospital on this island. It's all they've got right now. If you're interested in helping me with one facet of raising their level of care (xray capability), go to my previous (April 12th) post. Thanks. view video

Monday, April 12, 2010

Update and a Plea


Update on STARFYSH...
Although we do not expect to receive official non-profit designation until later in the year, I am excited that in the very near future we will FINALLY be able to publicly launch STARFYSH. The formation has been, at the same time fun and tedious as we walk the good and necessary path of defining for everyone (including ourselves) just what it is we feel God is calling us to do. I tend to want to sprint to next steps, but have in this process learned the virtues of patience and pace. Exercising restraint is tough, especially when great things are just around the corner. Having said this....

Plea...
We have identified and defined several worthy (and strategic) projects with which we will launch STARFYSH. Pressing needs, most of them. One, however, I believe could be met very quickly if folks out there are impressed to help...

There is a small mission hospital on the island of La Gonave, in Haiti (It's the hospital I have gone to work at over the past 20 years or so). It is the only hospital available to the 100,000 people on the island, but the hospital is in severe need. As I type, most patients are cared for in military tents that were provided following the earthquake (see photo). Even though the hospital building did not collapse there are concerning cracks throughout and tremors continue to be felt. Thankfully, a non-profit in Scotland has laid plans to rebuild the hospital. This is a blessing, but this will, of course take time to complete.

In the meantime there are serious deficits in their abilities to give care, one of which is a functioning xray. As some of you know, about a dozen years ago I oversaw the effort to get their current xray facility, so for me this has sort of come around full circle. The bottom line is, they need xray and they need it quickly. No hospital, even in Haiti, can function well without it. Life-saving and limb-saving care depends on accurate diagnosis and fact is, without xray, patient care is severely compromised.

OK so here I go again.... we've researched it and can get a new xray unit delivered and installed fairly quickly. World Medical Mission, the medical arm of Samaritan's Purse, has a gentleman (Bill Wright) whose expertise and life calling is the installation of appropriate xray equipment in third-world mission hospitals. How's that for specific? Bill said he would put on his docket as soon as we can give him the call. (I have known Bill for a long time... he is the guy who installed the original xray 12 years ago).

Bottom line... $10,500 will do the job of getting a respectable level of diagnostic capabilities for the hospital.... remember, the only hospital for 100,000 precious people.

Know that I am a bit nervous about throwing out this plea so soon after you all came through in magnanimous fashion for the tarps project. And if this one is too soon, or not for you, that's cool. I just know (from experience) that there's always somebody (or somebodies) out there that a need like this will resonate with.

You can send it to either me, Steve Edmondson, or Starfysh. Full disclosure though, Starfysh has not yet received 501(c)3 status yet and so I cannot yet assure the deductibility of your gift.

Send to: 3725 Oak Creek Court SE Grand Rapids, Michigan 49546

As with the tarps effort (500 now-dry Haitian families!), I will keep you all posted on our progress. Also, if you feel comfortable spreading the word about this in your networks....

Thanks, all, for your patience and long-suffering with me. I know I must sound a little (or a lot) whiney at times, but oh well... when people are hurting, we are a bit more apt to swallow our pride.... And man do I have a big lump in my throat.

Love you all.
Steve

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Helleborus: First Flowers of Michigan Spring



Peripheral Vision

Helleborus, the first flower to bloom at my place every Spring.

I saw a strange sight the other day. Driving along, I had to slow down for a squirrel in the middle of the road. Somehow he had managed to poke its head through the bottom of a Styrofoam cup. In doing so, it had unwittingly shut out the visual input from every direction except straight ahead. Loss of peripheral vision had created a dangerous paralysis, despite perfect vision straight ahead. I slowed my car as I went around him, and as I traveled on down the road I could still see him in my rearview, paralyzed and trembling.

Only a very tiny area of the retina, the fovea (where "cones" are concentrated), deals with crisp resolution and focus. The vast majority of the retina is comprised of predominantly "rods" which are 1000 times more sensitive to light than cones and therefore are much better motion detectors. This explains why we are quick to see movement in our peripheral vision. Deer hunters know this. So do deer.

Much is said about focus, I suppose as should be. Scripture is chock full of reminders to "fix our gaze" and to "keep our eyes on the prize." A lot of books about business and about the Christian life deal a lot with foveal, cone-dominant, central-vision issues: focus, purpose, core-values, etc.

But is it possible that, in a world full of human need, God might have created our peripheral vision for a purpose? And might it be possible for us to focus too much on focus, while ignoring the needs off to the periphery of our comfortable, familiar, and safe lives?

Funny how a squirrel and a styrofoam cup can give me a headache.

Thursday, April 08, 2010

The Poverty of Too Much

I am rather irreverent to the books I read. I dog-ear. I underline. I write comments in the margin. I draw arrows from one phrase to another on the page. Someday when I'm gone and somebody goes through the books I've read, they're going to think I was half nuts. (Wait, did I say half?).

You can generally tell which books impact me the most by looking at how much I have marked them up. Just this week I finished such a book, entitled, "Hope Lives - A Journey of Restoration," by Amber Van Schooneveld. Here are a couple of paragraphs from her book that received such markings...

"I am in the greatest poverty," she says, "a poverty of my soul, when I eat my fill and lounge on my couch, while thinking only fleetingly of others not as materially blessed as I have been. My poverty is real when my love is deadened, medicated, frozen by too much. And my soul is maybe in even more danger than those in the poverty of too little."

She continues on...
"I am no great emissary kindly bringing restoration to those people. No. I am simply a fellow human, given a different responsibility and role to play on this earth. God placed me where I am, and he placed others where they are. The goal isn't for others to become like me, a wealthy American. The goal is simply for everyone to have enough. Those in poverty need enough--enough food each day, enough clean water to lead a healthy life, enough dignity to be the masterpiece God created them to be. And for me, straying closer to the poverty of too much, I need to move further back toward enough, to use what I have been given to help lift others toward enough, to use my resources to love as Jesus loved."

Wednesday, April 07, 2010

On Compassion

I've come to the conclusion that this compassion business is tricky.

You see, I give lip-service to being kindhearted, yet I avoid eye contact with most panhandlers in my path. I walk right on by the elderly Haitian man sitting on the side of the road, hoping he doesn't notice the water bottle in my hip pocket. And to the kid who asks me for my shoes I answer, "No, m' pa kapab," knowing full well that's a lie, that I've got another pair in the house.

Why don't I do what Jesus so clearly commands me to do? Isn't there wisdom to the notion of not fostering a sense dependency or entitlement in those we would help? And what about the societal evils that put the guy there? Shouldn't we, instead, concentrate our efforts on addressing the larger issues of poverty? I am torn. On one hand my heart breaks for the tent people, soggy from the rain. On the other, what long term solution is there in just handing them a tarp? On one hand, I feel for the dirt-poor family that can nowhere near afford the $180 per year to send their child to school. On the other hand, so I help a kid go to school... what happens next year, and the next?

Yet I feel com-passion... I "suffer with" these people. I have rather absorbed their pain. And I say to myself, if I were the one sitting along side the dusty road, and I hadn't eaten in several days, and I saw a guy with a water bottle in his back pocket, I'd beg too. "M' vle dlo," I'd say. "I want water." In that moment, you don't fret about who or what is the blame for your thirst.

So you just give the guy some water. And you sneak him some of your food hoping no one's watching. Because at the end of the day, he's not thinking about the societal evils that put him in his vulnerable position. He just wants a drink of water. He just wants some beans and rice.

I think Princess Diana said it well : "You can't comfort the afflicted without afflicting the comfortable." (OK, OK you theologians, so it's not C.S. Lewis). Well, I am "afflicted" and conflicted. I wrestle with what's right and what's not. Maybe one day I'll figure it out, but I doubt it. In the meantime, I'll keep sharing my food and handing out tarps and making my mistakes along the way. After all, one learns to swim by diving in, not by reading a book about swimming. I'll start with the dog-paddle and progress to freestyle and I'm sure I'll suck water through my nose into my cranium plenty of times. I may be a slow learner, but I will learn to swim.

Tuesday, April 06, 2010

The Reveal

For a long time now I have been going back and forth to Haiti, doing my thing, mainly at a little mission hospital in a fairly remote region of that country. Sometimes taking teams. Sometimes going by myself. Sometimes taking one of my kids. Over that time I've taken on several projects for the hospital. Some small and a few bigger ones.

Lately, though, I've been wrestling. For whatever reason I have not felt at ease with the status quo as it pertains to my level of involvement and I've shared a couple times before in earlier blogs how frustrated I am (with myself) that I don't have a good way to say yes to people when they offer me a hand in my work in Haiti.

But for the past six months now, I've have finally brought myself to do more than whine about it. After much prayer and counsel, I have raised the stakes of my commitment to make a difference in Haiti by creating a structure that will enable me to leverage the human resources that God is making so available to me.

On February 3, 2010, articles of incorporation were filed with the State of Michigan, an official document that put flesh on the skeleton of my conviction that there is a vast untapped resource of good people, compassionate and kind-hearted, just itching to give and to do. And waiting for the ask.

Since then, a board of directors has been meeting. Bylaws have been established and volumes of paperwork are near completion, pursuing 501(c)3 non-profit designation, a determination that the IRS will take many months to render.

While we await non-profit status, we will be busy assembling a network of team members, people and agencies in both the US and in Haiti to collaborate in efforts that, by themselves, neither person nor agency could pull off. We are excited that much of that team is already in place.

Our name and brand is ready to be revealed. We have also defined what our initial projects will be and will announce those soon. Our web domain is purchased and web development is underway. Software is being purchased. Printed materials are being developed.

But I think I'm most excited about our unique approach and mission strategy. So important is it, that we worked and waited several months before we settled on a name that would reflect this unique approach. I think you will like it...

STARFYSH

Some years ago an anthropologist by the name of Loren Eiseley compiled a bunch of essays into a book which he entitled, The Star Thrower. Among the essays is a familiar story, but most people don't know where it originated. The story goes something like this...

Once upon a time, there was a wise man who used to go to the ocean to do his writing. He had a habit of walking on the beach before he began his work. One day, as he was walking along the shore, he looked down the beach and saw a human figure moving like a dancer. He smiled to himself at the thought of someone who would dance to the day, so he walked faster to catch up.


As he got closer, he noticed that the figure was that of a young man, and that what he was doing was not dancing at all. The young man was reaching down to the shore, picking up small objects and throwing them into the ocean.


He came closer still and called out, “Good morning! May I ask what it is that you are doing?”


The young man paused, looked up and replied, “Throwing starfish into the ocean.” “I must ask, then, why are you throwing starfish into the ocean?” asked the somewhat startled wise man.


To this the young man replied, “The sun is up and the tide is going out. If I don’t throw them in, they’ll die.”


Upon hearing this, the wise man commented, “But, young man, do you not realize that there are miles and miles of beach and there are starfish all along every mile? You can’t possibly make a difference!”


As if he hadn’t heard, the young man bent down, picked up yet another starfish and threw it into the ocean. As it met the water, he turned, smiled and said, “Yes, but I just made a big difference to that one!”


I like that story. And I'm convinced most people like that story. It gives us permission to not worry about changing the world. We get a lot of "world" stuff thrown at us: "Change your world." "Make a world of difference." World this, world that. The message of the starfish story resonates with what we intuitively know to be true... that singlehandedly I cannot change the world, but I might be able make a big difference for a tiny part of it. For a child or a village or an orphanage.


Furthermore, I am convinced that people want to, and are ready to do and to give and to help. But it's all so impersonal. We pick up a brochure or we see the need on TV. We have no personal connection to those who challenge us to give. What a sad disconnect: plenty of human compassion and ready resources, but a comparatively puny response to our confrontation with desperate human need.


This irony must end.


It is my contention that there are countless worthy causes out there that we do not respond to because no one we know is affected by or connected to those causes. What if, though, the "tarps project" phenomenon could be duplicated? Remember that? People gave because they had a connection... me. And I had the gall, the nerve to make the ask. God, forgive me for doubting that people would respond en force! (By the way, a little company by the name of Lamar Advertising (highway billboards?) heard about and was impressed with our tarps effort and donated 15 pallets of tarps to us to get to Haiti). We are working now on getting them down there.


I am convinced, dear friends, that this little "tarps" story need not be that unusual. That there are countless other similar stories waiting to be lived out and told.


Coming soon..... STARFYSH

Introducing...

Monday, March 29, 2010

The Cutting Edge of Faith

All did not go according to plan when our guys arrived at the camp with the first truckload of tarps the first afternoon. Apparently the person who was keeping the list of the families on the hill was not there to meet them, as had been the plan. Not good. So basically what we had was a truck full of tarps surrounded by scores of people desperate to make sure they got theirs. It didn't take long, the guys said, before people started pushing through the crowd toward the truck. I guess the tempers heated up as people started yelling at each other and throwing things, which, of course, made our guys nervous.

Plan A was out the window, which, in Haiti is not that much of a surprise. Survival and success in Haiti is so dependent on adaptability and flexibility. Seasoned missionaries in Haiti are not surprised when plan A fails. And plans B and C. The guys did the smart thing. They high-tailed it back to the house for the evening where they worked on contingency plans for getting the tarps out to the people who needed them.

What they ended up doing the next day was to connect with a few of the church pastors in that area. If anyone has a pulse on their community, its the Haitian pastors.

What ended up working, then, was to distribute the tarps through the existing structure and framework of tiny local churches of that area. Pretty obvious, in hindsight, that churches would be the best way to do it. To be sure, this method would not be as glamourous and sexy as handing them out one-by-one right in the middle of tent city. But the job got done and Haiti is bluer and drier as a result.

I wish I could have been there last week, frayed nerves and contingency plans notwithstanding. For three days our tarp hander-outers (Freddie, Joel, and Steve) lived large. Sweating and hearts racing, they ventured to the cutting edge of faith in God.

The cutting edge of faith... that's where I want to live.

Sunday, March 28, 2010

Of Tarps and Donkeys


This first picture shows a crowd of homeless tent dwellers waiting when the tarps arrived. In the second photo they are thanking God for their couple of tarps. Thanking God.

Dear friends, I am so thankful for your many kind kudos, but please understand, God did this. It sort of reminds me of what Mother Theresa said to someone one time when they had said something nice about her. "Do you think," she said, "when Jesus rode the donkey through the cheering crowds of Jerusalem that the donkey thought it was about him?"

I'm just a donkey, carrying Jesus.

Tarps Pictures

Hey all. Sorry for the delay, but I've been waiting for pics to show you and I just got my first ones tonight. I will, over the next few days tell you how it all went down (some interesting stories), but for now just know that the tarps are there and 500 families are a bit better off.

This first pic shows the first installment arriving near the tent city on the hill. Very soon I'll write about what happened right after this picture was taken. Crazy!

Blessings on you all
Steve

Thursday, March 25, 2010

The Tarps are now covering homes in Haiti

I heard from Haiti tonight: All 1,000 tarps have been distributed! Not without some ruckus here and there, but they're out, nonetheless, and I nominate "tarp blue" as the next Crayola color. I hope to get pictures to post tomorrow or Saturday at the latest.

On a Hill Far Away

My mind wandered a lot from my work yesterday, wondering how it was going on a hill far away. In my mind's eye that Haitian hillside, speckled with the faded colors of bedsheets and t-shirts, faded from a couple of months of night-time drenchings and mid-day scorchings is starting to turn tarp-blue. Not aqua. Not indigo. Tarp.

I kept my cell phone on me while seeing my patients all day yesterday, something I rarely do. I was hoping to hear from that hill, where Jesus is working today. Hoping, but not really expecting to hear. The hill is, after all, very far away.

The bluer the hill becomes, the more comfortable the people will be, the better they'll sleep, the healthier they might stay. They will never know, my friends, who gave twenty bucks to make their life more tolerable. They'll not know what you look like or what your life is like. They have no idea about blogs or Facebook or checkbooks. All they know is that they stayed dry from the rain last night and so life might just be better today.

I stopped by my church to pray for a few minutes last night after work. A friend of mine was also there, doing the same thing. When we shook hands a $20 check (memo: "Haiti tarps") found its way into my palm. "Thanks, Jim," I said. "That just made a really big difference for somebody."

My little 8-day fundraising campaign was supposed to have ended a week ago, but there has been an inertia effect: an unexpected overflow (AFTER the deletion of the "donate" button) has come in... to the tune of $1,120 which has brought us to over $12,000. I am hoping to hear today. If I do, I'll tell them to buy as much food and supplies as the extra $1,120 will buy. If I don't hear, I'll be disappointed but not really surprised because I know it's a remote place.

Seems Jesus does amazing things on far away hills.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Tarp Project Update

As I type, two men are boarding a plane in Miami, heading to Haiti to give a couple tarps to each of 500 families who slept in the rain last night. This week they will finally have a little shelter. Ugly. Temporary. But shelter nonetheless. I hope to post updates. Hopefully they can get word out on how things are going. They will take pictures and video.

Lord, forgive me, for I am jealous.

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Friday, March 19, 2010

Tarp Project Update


Total received: $10,997
Thank you all for the amazing response to this desperate need. I have removed the "donate" button from this page. I will post pictures and updates as I get them. In the meantime, I have caught up enough to be able to write again I think. So much to say.
Thanks for the continued interest. More to follow....
Steve

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Tent City

This is just one of many short video shots I took a few weeks ago. Don't send money, you've already come through in a big way in that regard. I just wanted you to know what you gave to.
Steve

Tarp Project Update

The tarps are in a holding area at the airport in Port-au-Prince, awaiting our pick up. Received so far:$10,727. I'll keep posting updates....

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Tarp Project Status

Received so far: $10,487. This afternoon your 1000 tarps were loaded on a cargo plane in Fort Pierce, Florida and will be flown in to Port-au-Prince tomorrow morning. From there they will be transferred to a secure holding area where we will pick them up next Tuesday morning and move them "into position" to make a big (wet-to-dry) difference for 500 families.

Raw and Uncut

If you want to know why I'm doing what I'm doing, watch this.

Monday, March 15, 2010

One Week Ago to the Minute

One week ago to the minute I shared my heart with those who might listen. I shared of a simple notion to scrounge up enough money to buy a bunch a tarps and haul them down to a little hillside in Haiti. Residing there is a settlement of people who are living in makeshift homes made of sticks and t-shirts, unable to get out of the rain when it comes.

One week ago to the minute I hit the "publish post" button on my blogger, wondering what the response might be. Hoping, yet you never know...

Today, exactly one week to the minute after I hit "publish post" I have just added up the sum total of your response and am amazed...

Received so far: $9,947. Within the span of exactly one week, we have provided for the shelter of 497 families.

Solomon was right... a cord of three strands is not easily broken. Your partnership in this little, yet significant cause has confirmed to me what I have long held to be true: that God has planted deep inside us all an ache... a yearning to make a difference, to matter. Friends, this day, you have mattered, and I praise God for you.

We have purchased 1000 tarps. They are in our possession and as I write are on a truck barreling down through Florida on their way to an awaiting cargo plane. In just over one week, the first of 500 little water-drenched homes will be dry for the first time.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Tarp Project Status

Received so far: $8657... enough for 432 families. Two days to go, then we begin the process of delivering.

You're all amazing.

Tarp Project Status

Received so far: $8067. So far, 403 families will be dry.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Tarp Project Status

Exactly $1000 came in today. Received so far... $6467 with three days to go.

Friday, March 12, 2010

Tarp Project Status

Received so far: $5467... enough so far to keep 273 families dry! I am so grateful for the overwhelming response... in just 4 days.

OK folks, here's where I am. Very quickly I must move this from the fundraising stage to implementation. If you are going to give, please do so quickly. In fact, let's make next Tuesday, March 16th the last day to collect funds.

I am humbled and amazed...

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Tarp Project Status

I am gratified by the response of friends, friends-of-friends, and friends-of-friends-of-friends.

Received so far: $3601

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Tarp Project Status

A quick update....

I have arranged for online donations. See upper right of this page.

Next Thursday, March 18th we will take as many tarps as our 10 day fundraising can afford down to Fort Pierce, Florida, where over the next two days they will be transported by cargo plane to a holding area at the Port-au-Prince airport. Early the next week (two weeks from right now) these tarps will be distributed and will, in their humble but effective way, improve the lives of a couple thousand displaced people, living on a hillside in Haiti. Keep giving... your gifts will translate almost immediately into dryer shelter for these people. Thanks.
Steve
Received so far: $2,210

Monday, March 08, 2010

Dry Would be Good

[Video added March 10th]

Tonight's post is different. I desperately do not want to lose my reader, therefore tonight I will not wax philosophical. I'll get right to my point.

I have just returned from the most heart-wrenching visit to Haiti I've ever had (including my visit in the immediate post-quake days). On the top and side of a hill, across the valley from the Haitian home where I stayed these past few days, was a small "tent city," a refugee camp of hundreds of families whose homes were destroyed in Haiti's earthquake. Now, most of you know I returned to Haiti mainly to follow up on the field hospital we had started right after the quake. But I could not take my eyes off that group of people, herded like sheep up on the side of that hill.

Neither could I physically stay away. So this past Wednesday I made my way down and then up the side of that hill to find myself among the most pitiful scene I have ever seen... and friends, I've seen a lot over my years of work down there. Perched atop that hill were (and are) the most pitiful, rickety make-shift dwellings you can think of: scraps of whatever people can find (mostly cloth and cardboard) draped over frail stick frames. Not one had a floor covering of plastic or sheet metal or anything; all floors were dirt and rocks. The people were gracious to me, most inviting me right into their "home."

Please indulge me here, for I MUST describe this to you, realizing full well you have may have seen the footage on the nightly news.

Friends, I saw NO food in any of the homes, and I went through a lot of them. "Inside" these tiny homes the ground was soggy from the all-night rain we'd had the night before. Seems bedsheets, lace tablecloths, and cotton dresses don't hold back pouring rain.

I found babies lying on the wet dirt. I do not remember seeing any buckets of drinking water, although there must have been some somewhere. I saw lots of kids, mostly just wandering around, nothing much to do.

I could go on but you get the idea. [ADDENDUM: March 10th at 6:30AM]... I have just posted a video clip on YouTube. Watch it now, then return to finish reading this...

Friends this is detestable to me. This is unacceptable for the human race and, personally, I cannot not respond with with whatever resource God has given me.

The problem of Haiti is way over my head. Her issues are too complex and difficult for my cauliflower of a brain to grasp. What is the answer to getting a million homeless people into permanent shelters, much less homes? I don't know. That's for much smarter people than me to figure out.

What I do know is that the really rainy season is just weeks away. That if these people cannot stay dry, many of them will die, and that it is wrong to die all because you can't stay dry.

What I do know is that I must do my part to help these few precious Haitians, loved and valued by God. And that there are longer-term solutions than what I have, and I'll make my mistakes along the way, but I'll go down in flames trying...

To my point....

Prefab tents will not work in this particular encampment. Most of it is on un-level ground, parts of it right on the side of the hill. After much consideration, research, and planning, I have a plan to provide two tarps to each family on that hill. I know tarps are not glamourous. They are ugly. But they are adaptable and configurable to the uneven terrain and irregular dimensions of their living space. They can cover the ground and keep food dry. Tarps are NOT a long term solution, but friends they are cheap and will keep people dry and I can get them there quickly.

I have set the gears into motion to purchase and deliver tarps, thousands of them, to this hillside. We have been quoted good prices on tarps, and our delivery and distribution methods are set. And we can pull it off within a couple of weeks.

It will cost us 20 dollars to keep a tent-home dry. This covers the costs of purchasing two tarps, shipping and distribution right to that hillside.

Please help me. Part of what I'll do is establish an online payment set-up, but it will be several days to get the banking stuff all approved and lined up. But the clock is ticking on these people. So in the meantime, and if you'll trust me with the money, you can send it to me in the mail or even deliver it to my office. Now I am fully aware that most of you reading this don't know who the Sam Hill I am and I won't blame you if you wanted to go other directions with your charity. But if it would help you can read back through my blog, or you can even visit my practice website to check out that I'm not a wacko or a shyster. All I ask is that if you give, do so quickly.

Send to:
Steve Edmondson
107 North Bridge Street
Saranac, Michigan 48881

[March 10 addendum: or DONATE ONLINE (see upper right)

Finally, if you wouldn't mind, would you send links to this blog and to the Youtube video to people you think might respond? Its the best way I know of of pulling this off quickly.
I will post daily updates (below) on the response to this plea.

Thanks everybody.
Steve

PS Not to be presumptuous... but if response is great, and we get enough tarps, we'll stay on focus at this encampment, getting them other basic stuff, like buckets and mosquito nets. And food... food would be good.

Project Diary / Total Funds Received
March 8 Blog posted
March 9 Total received $40
March 10 YouTube video posted
March 10 Total received $2,210
March 10 ONLINE DONATION now available (upper right)
March 11 Total received $3601
March 12 Total received $5467 (273 families)
March 13 Total received $6467 (323 families)

Sunday, March 07, 2010

Refugee Desperation

Click on the picture and study it. In the distance you can see a small refugee camp built on the side of a hill. Their homes are made of cloth scraps composed of curtains, tablecloths, and clothes... all draped over bush and tree branches. Dirt and rock floors. About 10 ft by 10 ft or so.

I hope tomorrow to have posted a video of my time in this makeshift village. It is heartwrenching and once it's up I am going to ask you to do me a favor and get as many people as you can contact to view it as soon as possible. These people need our help and they need it yesterday.

Saturday, March 06, 2010

Jesus Knows...

My entry today will be brief, as I am battling a bug I must have picked up in Haiti. In Mexico they refer to it as "Montezuma's Revenge." Down here it is called "Haitian Happiness". What a misnomer! For I am none too happy about this.

A few days ago (exactly seven weeks post-earthquake) I walked up on the disturbing sight and stench of a newly-discovered body dug from the rubble. I know this picture is disturbing, but I felt it was discrete enough to show here. [SEE ADDENDUM BELOW]. Dear friends, this mound of rotting flesh was once a living, breathing human being... with a spouse and children, perhaps. And for sure precious in the sight of God. The way I look at it, pictures like this might keep our hearts tender toward the (continued) repulsiveness of what is going on here.

Writing this just now has reminded me of an old hymn sung in the church I grew up in. It went like this:

Jesus knows all about our sorrow.
He will guide 'til the day is done.
There's not a friend like the lowly Jesus
No not one. No not one!

Health permitting, tomorrow sometime I hope to post a significant blog and video link regarding a refugee camp I spent some time in this week.

Keep praying for Haiti. (And you can throw one in for me if you want).

Steve

March 9 ADDENDUM
I have decided to remove the picture I initially posted with this blog. I guess it is really unnecessary that I show it. In a way, my posting it just prolongs the anguish. May this precious person rest in peace.

Friday, March 05, 2010

Jonas



I am currently in Fort Lauderdale, enroute home from Haiti and itching to start posting again. Not surprisingly, I have not had phone nor internet access so I'm anxious to pick up where I left off. My time in Haiti this time was very productive, but in different ways than when we were here at the field hospital. The pictures here were taken when we arrived on the island of LaGonave. Every time I come to LaGonave, Jonas is there with his broad smile, Haitian flag, and a hug. I was only on LaGonave for about 18 hours, having meetings with the schoolmaster of a primary/secondary school as well as the hospital administrator of the hospital in the same village of Anse-a-Galet. I was also able to swing by an orphanage not too far from there. The next day I returned to Port-au-Prince where I was given a tour of the parts of the city that were particularly hard-hit by the earthquake. The next day I traveled to Petit Goave to visit the field hospital that we had recently set up. Yesterday I was able to spend some time in a refugee camp that was visible from the Haitian home where I stayed while there.

I noticed a big difference in Haiti this trip (as compared to right after the quake). The media is gone. And, although there are a lot of relief agencies and work teams here right now, I just know that world attention shifting away to other things. Problem is, Haiti's humanitarian crisis is far from over. Hunger and lack of shelter will claim many lives over the next half year.

I will be sharing with you very soon about some ideas I have about helping the refugee camp I visited (around 200 families, I estimate). There are probably thousands of similar camps in Haiti right now ("tent cities" they are called here). And, of course, I can't do anything about that... but I figure I can help this one. Stay tuned... I think we just might be able to do something very cool.

It will be good to get home.

Steve

Sunday, February 28, 2010

What Next?

I have been leaving teasers and hints for some time now about how frustrated I have felt regarding my ill-preparedness in leveraging the human resource that I have been blessed with to good effectiveness. I have been working hard in the background of all this earthquake and blog stuff at stepping up my game in this regard and am ready to reveal just what it is I'm up to.

I leave for Haiti this afternoon, gone for just a week this time, home next Sunday. I plan on returning to the field hospital where I can help out a few days. (I just received an email from a doctor friend of mine who said that they had been treating nearly 600 patients a day there!). But mostly I'll be working on my next phase... Can you say "teaser?" I knew you could. Seriously though, it is not my intention to make a big melodrama out of the big reveal. I won't string it out and will, over the next several communiques, tell you all about it.

During my time in Haiti this week I will be writing and would love to post a blog daily. But internet access will be very iffy this time around, so if you don't see a post any certain day, keep coming back. I AM WRITING, and will get them up first time I get a chance.

Continue to pray for Haiti. Word is that 300,000 people have now perished as a result of the earthquake. This number continues to rise.

More tomorrow, from precious Haiti.
Steve

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Navy Troops

These guys wouldn't let me bring this baby home. Just kidding. This baby is one that had meningitis that improved enough that we were eventually able to send her home with her mom. The troops were all just the nicest guys. Good thing, because their guns looked like they might have been able to shoot real bullets.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Sacramental Mindfulness

This very sick child's sunken eyes and racing heart betrayed his dehydrated condition, in his case probably related to Typhoid Fever, a severe gastroenteritis caused from a virulent species of Salmonella. Contracted by drinking tainted water, Typhoid Fever is endemic in Haiti.


Next time you drink a glass of water from the tap, be thankful you don't have to worry about getting Typhoid Fever.


As I've said in earlier posts, I am someone that tends to wax reflective, paying attention to everyday realities and events in order to see if there might lie truth beyond the obvious. Here's my thinking...


Our basic inclination, I think, as earthly creatures, is to hold physical and spiritual realities at arm’s length from each other, sequestering the spiritual from the physical. I believe we have been duped by modernity, which asks: “If we can examine it, measure it, quantify it, analyze it and predict it, then how could there possibly be anything divine about it?” In our dualism we lose the reverence of what God has made. Ken Gire, in his book, The Reflective Life quotes Abraham Heschel on this point: “Let your conceit diminish your ability to revere and the universe becomes a marketplace for you.” (Abraham Heschel, God in Search of Man: A Philosphy of Judaism). Gire goes on to state: “We can objectify the world or sanctify it. When we objectify the world, we view it and all that is in it as existing solely for our use, whether that use is for pleasure or profit or patriotism. When we sanctify the world, we view it and all that is in it with appreciation. In doing so, we recognize them not simply as objects, but as objects created by God that in some way reflect Him and all that is dear to Him, the way a work of art in some way reflects the artist and what is dear to the artist’s heart.”


We tend to confine the sacred to a fenced-in-area,” Philip Yancey states in Rumors of Another World, “the ‘spiritual,’ reserved for church activities. Many people rarely give God a thought apart from an hour on Sunday morning, when they sing songs of praise, listen to a sermon, and then reenter the secular world as if passing through air lock.”


How do we rediscover, then, the art of seeing the divine in the ordinary, of regarding created things and created order less as physical, chemical, and physiological marvels so much as testimonials of their Originator? Philip Yancey, in his book Rumors of Another World, articulates it best: “As a start,” he states, “I can aim to make daily life sacramental, which means literally to keep the sacred (sacra) in mind (mental). In other words, I seek a mindfulness - a mind full- of God’s presence in the world. I have no desire to escape the natural world, the pattern of Gnostics, desert monks, and fundamentalists who flee “worldliness.” Nor do I deny the supernatural, the error of the reducers. Rather, I want to bring the two together, to reconnect life into the whole that God intended. This world, all of it, either belongs to God or it does not. If I take seriously the sacred origin of this world, at the very least I must learn to treat it as God’s work of art, something that gave God enormous pleasure.”


Lord, God… Creator of all that is…. Creator of me… please awaken me to the reality of Your presence in the world you have placed me in. Help me to see at least some of the “glimpses of truth Thou hast for me.” Amen.


“In every act of creation God is present, waiting to be discovered. The essence of the spiritual journey is the discovery of the presence of the sacred in everyday things, in everyday people, in everyday life.” Leonard Sweet, Soul Salsa



The Lurking Presence of God


"Our world is saturated with grace, and the lurking presence of God is revealed not only in spirit but in matter--in a deer leaping across a meadow, in the flight of an eagle, in fire and water, in a rainbow after a summer storm, in a gentle doe streaking through a forest, in Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, in a child licking a chocolate ice cream cone, in a woman with windblown hair. God intended for us to discover His loving presence in the world around us." Brennan Manning, The Ragamuffin Gospel

God rarely shouts for our attention. He is often subtle and quiet. Lurking, even. Hoping we'll perceive His presence in the room. Hoping we'll see that He has carefully and deliberately planted clues about Himself all around, and hopes we'll recognize them for what they really are. Leonard Sweet refers to them as "small-scale epiphanies."

"Life's treasures are buried right under our noses. Can we relish the wonders of small-scale epiphanies and everyday events?" Leonard Sweet, Soul Salsa

Monday, February 22, 2010

"What Just Happened?"


OK gang, I've been chided for not letting people outside of my practice community know about the presentation I'm giving this Saturday night entitled, "What Just Happened?... a remarkable story of compassion unleashed."

Of course, you're all welcome. Just, please... no making out in the back row. (You know who you are).

Steve

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Pharmacist

This is always a fascinating site to me. Every so often we'll pass a guy selling medicines out on the street like this. How would you like to buy your medicines from this pharmacist? Some day I'm going to stop the car and get a closer look at this drug store.

Enlarge the picture so you can look closely at this man's surroundings. This is urban Haiti.