Archive for November, 2007

 The Team is home! Thanks for your prayers and support! We appreciate the comments and still are checking. What a week of blessing it was!

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It is Saturday night and we are all home.  The first part of tonight’s blog is written by Dr. Irene McIntosh, the director of the D’Iberville Volunteer Foundation.  The #2 in command is Dr. Ed Cake.

Hi! This is Miss Irene from the D’Iberville Volunteers Foundation!  First, a million thanks to the Kiski Crew who blessed our lives, our city, and our citizens with their love, their work, their laughter and their faith in action each day this week! You have been hope to our people. Your warmth, flexibility, willingness to help with anything that needed to be done, your wonderful skills, and your love in action will be cherished for a lifetime by Mr. Ed and me and by this entire community!

I also want to thank those who supported the Kiski Crew from home. We have felt your love, your warm interest, and your caring spirits during this week. Thank you for the financial support for this mission trip! I truly appreciate those who took on the responsibilities of those who were here so that they could come and work in peace! We are truly blessed by the investment of time, prayer and love of the entire Presbytery.

     We  have been blessed by the love of our Lord God ll week long in D’Iberville.  We hope that the transforming love of Jesus Christ that moved and encouraged your Kiski Team has touched you, our internet family and prayer partners. 

 Thanks for journeying with us.

Thank you to our incredible Kiski 33.   No more meetings! We know that your heart has been renewed as we have been immersed in the Grace of God.  Remember the stories, your new friends in Kiskiminetas Presbytery and especially those on the Gulf Coast.   Remember that you have a ‘second home’ in D’Iberville, MS.  Remember that you have been loved.  Remember, and then love  and serve the Lord boldly. 

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The Final “post” is on the Post in our 2nd Home, D’Iberville, MS

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k59.jpg Today’s blog is about the unsung heroes of the week, the office staff. Linda Coulson and Richard Hartsfield shared the duty, which involved data entry (volunteer time logs, volunteer registrations), answering phones, running errands, answering questions, photocopying, scanning documents, and everyone’s favorite, filing. It can be boring, it’s not nearly as exciting as shingling or painting, but it’s extremely important to the D’Iberville Volunteers Foundation. Without accurate, detailed records, D’Iberville would most likely have to raise taxes in order to pay back a larger percentage of FEMA dollars back to FEMA. That’s quite a burden on a community that suffered such losses in the business community (no businesses, no jobs, no money). Without cheerful, helpful voices on the phone, citizens might never open up and ask for the help they need. Without someone to answer the phone and take messages, Ed and Irene might never get out of the office at all, and since they often put in 18-hour days, that would be a crime! So thanks, Linda & Richard, for doing a job no one else wanted to do!       

 Irving Lindsay told me that Mr. Bill showed him around his neighborhood today. It’s mostly vacant lots and concrete slabs where homes used to be, including Mr. Bill’s mother’s house, in which he grew up. With tears in his eyes, Mr. Bill described which families lived where, and what might lie ahead–or not. Irv told me that those moments defined the week for him, gave it meaning and purpose, made it so worthwhile.       

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The Koom Project team told of Koom’s neighbor, who every day walked down the street and invited them to his house for a coke. They finally got there today, and this gentleman, who rebuilt his home with his son’s help and therefore never needed the Volunteers, thanked our volunteers over and over again for caring, for coming, for helping his fellow citizens.

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It’s hard to believe so much was accomplished in one short week! Every one of our crews finished the jobs they were assigned, and some were able to start on another one. This includes an entire roof on what were bare rafters; a semi-demolished chimney with masonry, roof and siding repair & painting and the installation of a gas fireplace insert; soffet & fascia, painting, hanging doors and so on; and assessing every quadrant of the city. In between, they cleared brush, had kitchen & camp duties, delivered appliances, off-loaded shingles & other materials, ran to Lowe’s and the lumberyard for supplies, ate lunch & had photos taken with the mayor at his convenience store, put together patio warmers, went dumpster diving for firewood that they then chopped up, and listened to the stories of the D’Iberville citizens they had come to help.

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 At the end of the day today, they cleaned their job sites, packed up, carted and put away all of the tools, vacuumed the cars, took showers, ate dinner, helped clean up after dinner, attended devotions, packed, cleaned their tents, and finally headed for bed to be ready for our 5:30 a.m. departure from camp to the airport.        

 We thank all of you in Kiskiminetas Presbytery for your prayerful support this week, and for your financial support, which made this trip possible. Remember in your prayers Jim Dietrich, who flew home this morning, a day early, as his father was re-hospitalized and underwent a heart cathaterization. Jim called us this evening with the good news that his dad is doing much better. We also had 2 minor injuries this week, a fall resulting in a sprain, and a dog bite, but both victims are doing quite well. Some people will do anything in order to ride on the motorized carts at the airports!       

Tomorrow night we’ll post our last blog, including, for your entertainment, a game called “Match the Caption to the Photo”. No prizes will be awarded. Keep checking the blog, and keep your comments coming, because many in our Kiski team will only get to see the blog after they get home, and some may want to respond to you as you have responded to them.       

 Praise God, from whom all blessings flow!

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Today’s blog comes from the Marie project.

Hello! My name is Richard Hartsfield and my group from Kiskiminetas Presbytery (PA) arrived here on Saturday, October 27th. I was assigned to a roofing crew and we were given the job of helping Marie with her brand new, beautiful stilted house’s roof. We did not get a response when we knocked on her FEMA trailer several times during the day, only to find that she works the night shift and was sleeping! When we arrived there were only bare rafters. When we left: a beautiful new white shingled roof!

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We met Marie the second day and her wonderful little chihuahua/pug mix with the huge ears. The third day she cooked our lunch – we loved it!

The work was just plain hard, lifting OSB board (that’s what has taken the place of plywood), shingles, scaffolding and various nailguns and tarpaper rolls.a6.jpg

Our boss, Ron, is admired by all–he’s like an extremely intelligent chimpanzee, scampering around rafters, leaning over the edge, staying six steps ahead of the rest of us, handling full OSB sheets by himself, demanding quality. Ron, forgive me for calling you a chimp!

Ron even put in safety boards for us – you have to remember that we were working 20 feet off the ground (stilts, remember?). But the sun was our greatest safety danger. Several of us were overcome by it and had to retreat to shade. Even with the breeze, we were working in temperatures exceeding 90 degrees F.k522.jpg

The crew is amazing. With a strong and wise leader, each person leaps to do the next job. We constantly lie to each other and kid each other. I provided the humor Tuesday by splitting out my pants and having to work that way for the rest of the day. But the humor is gentle and the affirmations constant. It’s amazing to work with Christians: they say things like “Thank you”. We pray before we start the job each day!

Tomorrow the crew starts on another job.

p1010001.jpgOn Tuesday, we gathered a crowd to go hear Marie’s Katrina story. Her mother insisted on staying in her home during Hurricane Camille, so Marie figured she’d sit out Katrina. She woke up early in the morning and found rising water on her floor. One of her dogs drowned, in spite of Marie’s numerous efforts to coax him out of the house as the water climbed higher and higher (Marie can’t swim). Ultimately, when the water reached near the roof, Marie floated to a tree limb and climbed it onto her roof. She and her other dog spent 4 1/2 hours of the storm up there, huddled under the overhang. Once the water receded a bit, she used the same limb to climb down, but it broke off the tree and plunged her into the water once more. Finally, she wrapped a blanket around herself and waited for assistance. Her house was pushed off the foundation at an angle, and had to be demolished. She says her FEMA trailer is so small, she and the dog have to negotiate and coordinate their movements!

Tonight, 3 carloads of us went to Ocean Springs to watch the fireworks over Biloxi celebrating the opening of the new bridge, replacing the one Katrina destroyed.

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Someone commented at dinner “I can’t believe tomorrow’s our last day!” It’s wonderful seeing new friendships blossom and so much being accomplished. We all so appreciate the responses to our blogs (we post them every day by the picnic tables), and while we hate to leave when there’s more to be done, we can’t wait to get home to share our stories and photos!

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Today’s blog is a combined effort of the entire team pictured here.  Be blessed! 

The mission of the Assessment Team (The Street Walkers) is to canvas the D’Iberville area to ensure that no person needing assistance falls through the cracks. This is the final assessment as the DVF plans to close May 31, 2008. We traveled two by two to offer assistance, to listen, to give hope,to encourage, to hug and occasionally pray with the people we met. Two of our group stay at camp to do follow-up phone assessments to determine if there are still repairs to be done or if their file can be closed.

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Some of the people who have needs are: Vera, who is suffering from cancer; Debra, who needed food immediately for her family; Mike, who has many health problems and still needs plumbling, mildew removal and drywall replacement; Joan, an elderly woman who told how she lost everything and spent the storm night with 600 other handicapped people sleeping on a concrete floor; Dwight lost his home and all his musical equipment; Jason, who watched the storm surge explode two neighbors’ homes and wash them into his, knocking it off its foundation; Deanna & Ed who lost everything in Hurricane Camille and then lost it all again in Hurricane Katrina, including 3 members of their immediate family who have died in 2007.

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Members of the assessors team are Mary Winters, Linda Blakely, Prudy Young, Kyle Skarada, Sally Early, Cindi Boyer, Shirley Clark, Ellen Lawrence, Betty Grunstra and Sue Brickell. PLANTING SEEDS of HOPE….We will hold God’s people in our hearts.  

The Kiski crews are working so hard that they’ll finish many of their jobs tomorrow, so we’re scrambling to arrange new job assignments by contacting property owners, assessing the work needed, ascertaining whether materials are on hand or need to be purchased, and whether Thursday and/or Friday will be convenient for the owners to allow the volunteers on site to do the work.

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Halloween in D’Iberville means “Trunk or Treat” in the park. It began in October 2005, two months after Katrina, with many streets still clogged by debris and without streetlights. A few folks decided to provide some normalcy for kids by setting up a safe place for trick-or-treating. They advertised it as best they could, decorated the open trunks of their cars or beds of their pickup trucks, and parked side by side. To their surprise, other folks also came with candy mobiles. They hoped to get maybe 50 kids, but over 2500 people showed up! Someone had been inspired to bring a truckload of candy, a genuine miracle, because otherwise they’d have run out in the first 5 minutes.   Trunk or Treat has become a D’Iberville tradition, and we were invited to help distribute the Volunteers Foundation’s candy. Two carloads went over, and Irv Lindsay and Jack Loucks really got into the spirit of it, greeting each and every child who came by with great enthusiasm! 

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 We go to bed exhausted this evening but filled with the assurance that God’s Spirit continues to give us the strength and joy to carry on. 

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