Saturday, January 9, 2021

In other news.


It seems that all we can talk about this week is Covid-19 and American politics. The two headlines are affecting every part of our lives, including our physical, emotional and mental health. While we are a million miles away from the U.S., we still see watch the news from afar, and hurt with our friends and family who are hurting.

 

The headlines in Eswatini are similar, but here our Covid-19 and politics are combined with high level government leaders dying from the virus, government funding not available for basic hospital. Morgues are full and they have had to stop accepting dead bodies so people are encouraged to burn their dead. Government hospitals have run out of body bags, and funeral homes are out of coffins. All of this has led to another police lock down for an unspecified amount of time. Along with all the usual ramifications, this also means that babies will be left to die because they cannot be rescued, people cannot visit us to buy fresh vegetables/milk/eggs and we all move back into a greater state of awareness of health and wellness trying to keep 275 children (many with underlying health issues) safe. 

 

Dups is the main group of funeral homes in the country.


But let me take a moment and share some other news from Project Canaan. This week our 2-year-old toddler named Carol went in for surgery to remove her right kidney after one of our Aunties brought a lump to the attention of our medical team. Several tests resulted in the awareness of a large mass on her kidney, which turned out to be her whole kidney. Thankfully her left kidney is in perfect working condition, but there is no pediatric surgeon in Eswatini and there is no way for us to take her to South Africa at this time for surgery. THANKFULLY we know a wonderful adult surgeon at a private hospital who was willing to do this major surgery. We are further thankful for a dear friend who has offered to pay for the surgery and hospital stay. Little Carol is still in the hospital and in pain, but hopefully will come home to us this weekend and will spend 7-10 weeks in recovery.

 

We continue in our building projects, hoping to have Emseni #6 built for our big boys by March as our other Emseni buildings are full (we will fill the last 7 spaces next week with 3-year-olds who are moving to Emseni before school starts). That means we will have 40 children in each of the five Emseni buildings and 75 children under the age of 3 on the lower campus. O2 is also under construction right beside E6.

 

E6 on the left, O2 on the right.


We have cleared a very large space (18,000 sq feet) for a recreation area, which we hope will one day house a large swimming pool, volleyball, badminton etc.  For those of you who are wondering why we would even consider putting in a pool, we believe that learning to swim is not just for fun or to cool down on scorching hot African days, but it is also life-saving and life-giving. 

 

E5 girls bottom left. E4 boys bottom right.

While the world around us continues to groan in pain, we will continue to give thanks in all things. We give thanks for continued health, financial provision as well as God’s hand of protection over us. We pray for those who are sick, those who are mourning and those who are lost. 

 

In The Message translation of the Beatitudes (Matthew 5:3-12) Jesus said:

“You’re blessed when you’re at the end of your rope. With less of you there is more of God and his rule.

 “You’re blessed when you feel you’ve lost what is most dear to you. Only then can you be embraced by the One most dear to you.

 “You’re blessed when you’re content with just who you are—no more, no less. That’s the moment you find yourselves proud owners of everything that can’t be bought.

 “You’re blessed when you’ve worked up a good appetite for God. He’s food and drink in the best meal you’ll ever eat.

 “You’re blessed when you care. At the moment of being ‘care-full,’ you find yourselves cared for.  (WOW! - emphasis mine)

 “You’re blessed when you get your inside world—your mind and heart—put right. Then you can see God in the outside world.

 “You’re blessed when you can show people how to cooperate instead of compete or fight. That’s when you discover who you really are, and your place in God’s family.

 “You’re blessed when your commitment to God provokes persecution. The persecution drives you even deeper into God’s kingdom.

 “Not only that—count yourselves blessed every time people put you down or throw you out or speak lies about you to discredit me. What it means is that the truth is too close for comfort and they are uncomfortable. You can be glad when that happens—give a cheer, even!—for though they don’t like it, I do! And all heaven applauds. And know that you are in good company. My prophets and witnesses have always gotten into this kind of trouble."

 Live from Eswatini ... we are blessed.

 Janine

Saturday, January 2, 2021

Out with the old ...

Family cooking in Eswatini, Bangkok and Barcelona.
 

Early on New Years’ eve day we were awaken by security telling us that they just discovered a break in on the farm. They bent and broke their way into the maintenance container and stole a lot of equipment that is used on a daily basis to maintain the property. Clearly an inside job which required more than one person to haul everything away. The night guard was nowhere to be found, likely having a nice nap in the greenhouse. Good riddance 2020!

 

 

Early the next morning, on New Years’ day, I received a message that one of our big boys was fooling around and broke a window with his forehead. His head was okay, but the window would need repair. Unlike another boy who took a toy in the mouth and lost half of a tooth. The toy is fine, but the tooth, like the window, will also need repair. Welcome 2021?

 

 

While the world took a viral beating in 2020, we were truly blessed with good health, and no Covid-19 cases on Project Canaan (that we are aware of). The Kingdom of Eswatini has also had high impact deaths including losing our own Prime Minister to the virus, along with many prominent business people, government officials and people very close to His Majesty the King. The annual incwala ceremonies are still taking place while the rest of the country is being told to be extra vigilant and stay home, causing confusion and anger among the people. Not unlike confusion in other countries around the world.

 

Overall, 2020 was a year of favor and blessing to Heart for Africa and Project Canaan and we welcomed 18  additional children to our family. We are incredibly grateful to announce that we surpassed our year-end giving goal! Thank you to each of you who make a year-end gift, whether large or small. EVERY gift makes a difference and we are thankful for your love, prayers and financial support.  

 

 

In 2020 I was also able to write my third book, which tells the story of the last 11 years building and developing Project Canaan and explains what we do and why we do it the way we do.  We hope to have it published in February.  

 

Ian and I were able to write a cookbook for Spencer and Chloe with all our family favorites, complete with food photography (thank  goodness for our marketing background), cooking tips and a bit of twisted Maxwell humor. Our whole family loves to cook, and we have had many culinary adventures all over the  world.  (The photo of Chloe below was taken on a walking food tour in Vietnam. Little did we know until later that the fried patty was made of sea worms). Ian makes the best pad thai!

 




I’m not sad to see 2020 behind us, but I would be lying and ungrateful to say it was a bad year for us.  We look forward to another year of serving the Lord with all our hearts and minds, feeding the hungry, caring for orphans, providing employment and educating all with ears to hear and a willingness to learn.

 

Please join us as we continue on this epic and exciting journey of faith.

 

Live from Eswatini … we wish you all a Happy New Year!

 

Janine


Saturday, December 26, 2020

Christmas with our kids = a day filled with joy and hope!

 


Yesterday we celebrated Christmas with 275 children and 100+ staff who provide a loving home for those children. We believe that traditions are very important and not only help with identity and a sense of belonging, but also provide excitement and expectations for life events in the family.


On Christmas morning our children eat delicious fat cakes (big round dense donuts) rolled in sugar and cinnamon. Christmas day is typically scorching hot so the swimming pools are assembled and swimsuits are pulled out of the closet.  Lunch consists of pancakes, crispy bacon, syrup, fruit and a healthy dollop of whip cream. 

 

 

After lunch is cleaned up and sticky hands and faces are washed, we present each child with a wrapped gift and a very special chocolate wrapped in foil. The children all know that the gift contains a new pair of pajamas and they know that they get the same chocolate every year, and they are so excited about it. Every child sits quietly waiting for their name to be called and then they run up to the front of the room, put out both hands to receive the gift (very important in Swazi culture) and curtsy while saying thank you. Then they head out of the Oasis to sit at a picnic table and wait patiently for everyone to receive their gifts so that they can all open them together. Some years we give the chocolate at the same time as the gift (if we remember) and some years we don’t.  

 

 

As I was video-taping everyone opening their pajamas I felt a tug on my leg and looked down to see a very sad little boy with his bottom lip quivering. It was Willis (given my maiden name following my mom’s death). He was holding his pajamas, but with a very sad face asked if he was still going to get the chocolate. Willis is only five years old, but remembered the tradition (and probably heard the older kids talking about it) and so came forward to make his simple request. I assured him that everyone would be receiving a chocolate and he was relieved. I too was relieved that we hadn’t forgotten them in the walk-in fridge only to find them later. Ian told me that many of the children also asked him about the “expected” chocolate and so while we may have forgotten, they sure hadn’t. I realize there is a fine line between entitlement and tradition, but we really do want to have things that they can look forward to each year.

 

 

Like most mothers I always want Christmas day to be perfect, and that is hard at the best of times, but with 275 children with tradition expectations the pressure is amplified. But we have an incredible team of people who do the heavy lifting and help make Christmas perfect.  I would like to take a moment to thank our Sr. Supervisor for the toddler home and kitchens, Khosi Mamba, for her never-ending smile and willingness to listen, learn and lead. Khosi, you and the kitchen staff made Christmas day perfect for our children and staff. 

 

 

I would also like to thank our long-term volunteer, Bryan Throgmorton, who is the master planner and organizer for all of the 190+ children living at the Emseni campus. He not only creates a daily plan that includes chores, learning, play and activities, but he also makes sure that decorations are put up, and come down in a timely fashion, tables set and decorated and children ready to do whatever they are asked to do next. 

 

 

The only thing that Bryan wasn’t able to do this year to make Christmas 100% perfect was to bring Chloe home. Chloe, you were missed by us all, but no-one more than me. 

 


 

We were all so happy to have Spencer here and ZOOM allowed us to open gifts with Chloe in Canada and enjoy a family visit with the Maxwell clan in Canada, U.S and Scotland.

 

 



We know that this Christmas brought new types of stress to people all over the world, and that stress was wrapped with sadness and loneliness for many, but I hope that you were able to find a way to find joy on Christmas day, and I hope that this blog and our children will bring you hope for today and in the days and months ahead.

 

As we all look forward to 2020 coming to an end, I ask that you consider making your most generous year-end gift to Heart for Africa to enable us to continue to fight hunger, caring for orphans, alleviate poverty and provide education in Eswatini. 

 

To make a year end gift in Canada please click here.  


To make a year end donation in the U.S. please click here.

Live from Eswatini … enjoying a season filled with hope!

Janine

Saturday, December 19, 2020

Do you believe in miracles?

I will never forget July 14, 2017 when a tiny boy was put into my arms. He was a few days shy of his second birthday and weighed only 14 pounds. He couldn’t hold his own head up, he couldn’t crawl nor stand. He hardly had the energy to lift a hand to take some food. His body was skin and bones and he was very very sick with tuberculosis and extreme malnutrition.  His mother was 14-years old when she gave birth and she dumped the him with her Grandmother, just as her mother dumped her when she was born.  The newborn lived with his Great Grandmother for many months, being locked outside her stick and mud hut during the day then locked inside the hut when the Great Grandmother would go away, being completely neglected and starved.

 

We named the boy Jonathan and prayed over him daily, but Jonathan quickly ended up in the hospital for emergency care. Weeks later he came back to the El Roi baby home where we started the long journey to health, and one that none of us were sure would be successful.

 

This past Wednesday Jonathan finished pre-kindergarten and is moving on to Kindergarten in January. As we sat at the awards ceremony Jonathan was called up to the front and given the “Star Athlete” award.  Star athlete???  I believe in miracles because I have experienced them.

Then there is our Grace. A child who was left on the side of the road by her mother, and when found was taken immediately to the hospital where she was in a coma for many days. She was treated for meningitis, but was left blind. We did not know that when she was placed with us, and it was only during development assessments that we realized the depth and breadth of her disabilities. Eventually our medical team broke the news to us that Grace would never be able to sit on her own, or crawl or walk. We already knew from U.S. Ophthalmologist that she was blind and would never see.  

 

 

Well, Grace can see, she can sit and crawl and walk and dance and talk and sing. She is one of our extra special children who has extra special needs, and we are thankful to have her in our family. I believe in miracles because I have seen them. Enjoy Grace singing and dancing in the video below.



Then there are two other extra special girls who I want to update you on today. Both were burned as newborn children, both are strong and vibrant members of our family and both are testaments to the power of prayer, love, financial support and medical care from our friends in the U.S. and Canada.

 

Shirley has been to the U.S. twice for reconstructive surgery and we don’t anticipate her needing any more. She graduated from Kindergarten this week and was so proud to receive her certificate.  

 


Phiwa has also been to the U.S. twice for reconstructive surgery, and still has a long way to go in her healing process.  She came to us as a “boarding school” student two years ago and couldn’t speak any English and she couldn’t read or write as she was not able to attend school because of her facial burns (the other children were abusive to her). This week she not only passed 1st grade, but she got STRAIGHT A’s and is on tot 2nd grade in January. This is a testament to her hard work, great tutors, an educational psychologist and special education techniques from private school teachers in the U.S. who helped her catch up and WANT to learn. Phiwa is part of a very large global village of people who love and care for her and she in return is a blessing to all of us.

 

I believe in miracles because I have witnessed them.

 

 

None of these children would have been able to receive the care that they desperately needed if it weren’t for the generosity of people who have given sacrificially to help save the life or change the life of a Swazi child.

 

Would you join us in providing the ongoing care for the 275 children who currently call Project Canaan “home” and help us be able to continue to say “yes” to other children in need? We have a matching gift of up to $175,000 for our year end giving campaign so for every dollar you donate before December 31st, it will be doubled! This might be the best Christmas gift you ever gift – the gift of life and love.

 

To make a year-end gift in the U.S. please click here.

 

To make a year-end gift in Canada please click here.

 

I hope that you experience miracles in your own life and find inexplicable joy during this sacred season of hope.

 

Live from Eswatini  … enjoying having Spencer home.

 

Janine

 


Saturday, December 12, 2020

Are you anxious, angry or afraid?

 

For a moment, perhaps even for a few minutes while you sip on your coffee and read this blog, would you consider being thankful rather than being anxious, angry or afraid? Those seem to be the three A’s that we are watching on TV, in social media and from afar. For this moment let's think about the three A’s being alive, abundant and affirmed.

 

It’s always a good week when we receive a newborn baby. This newborn baby girl was found in the bushes near a church. The mother obviously gave birth in a hospital and then dumped the baby, perhaps hoping someone would find the child. A passerby did hear the baby crying and now that baby is our 275th child living at Project Canaan and it was a joy to have Spencer here to travel and pick up the baby with me. Baby Jacklin is alive!

This week Spencer arrived home from Chicago and what joy that has brought us every minute of every day. Spencer has been working at Heart for Africa for the past six months and is passionate about our Khutsala Artisans™. This week the three of us spent the entire week lifting and hauling boxes, doing inventory (more than 10,000 pieces), and trying to fix a fried computer (with the last back up being March 2019 – obviously more computer training is required here) all in 100F+ temperatures with full humidity. Our cold showers and evening on the patio never were so sweet, but still missing Chloe who wasn’t able to travel due to Canadian travel restrictions. We are thankful for video calling, and decent internet (when it works). Our joy is abundant.

While we were not in a position to give out Christmas bonuses or host a Christmas party as we have in the past, we were able to provide all of our employees with fresh vegetables, milk and eggs from our farm. We are also able to provide them with a trip to the “store” each year, where they get to choose multiple articles of clothing for themselves and/or their spouse or children. This year each woman who works on Project Canaan got to choose four bras IN ADDITION to the clothing so that was an added blessing from our friends in Canada and the U.S.. This was a difficult year for everyone all over the world, and we are thankful for our Project Canaan employees. Our staff is affirmed.

 

In addition to those things (and I really could write an epistle this morning), I’d like to add a few more fun photos that you might not be giving thanks for today, but we are. 

Below is our nurse Anthony who is now doing circumcisions at the El Rofi clinic (strongly advised to reduce transmission of HIV/AIDS in adulthood). He is so excited to have the opportunity to provide this service for our baby boys while reducing the risk of exposure to Covid-19 (and everything else that is infectious here).

 

I am eternally thankful that Spencer gets to be a big brother to 275 children, and watch our biggest kids grow (and aspire to be as tall as he is!). He also enjoys seeing his friends from Kenya, whom he met when he was only 10 years old. Both Anthony and Denis have known Spencer for 15+ years!

 



Lastly, and this might seem just silly, but …

 

When I was a girl, we would eat Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) once a year. It would be the day that my mom and I drove an hour to the “big” city of Timmins, from our small town of Matheson. We would do our Christmas shopping, which neither of us really enjoyed, and then reward ourselves with KFC for dinner. The 60-minute drive home was almost unbearable with the smell of that delicious, annual “cheat” sitting in the back seat. Well, KFC is the only fast food chain in Eswatini that is similar to a Canadian restaurant, and Ian and I picked up KFC last week. For those of you who have eaten it here, it is THE BEST KFC you will ever taste. We aren’t sure if it’s because it’s the only fast food, but it is a real treat. As we arrived home and started unloading the bag I couldn’t help but see the outside of the KFC bag which read “Add HOPE”. What a great idea. Let us all add a little hope to everything we do and say today.

 


Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.Philippians 4:6-8

“So do not fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you and help you; I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.” Isaiah 41:10

 

Live from Eswatini … enjoying a hopeful, joy-filled day.

 

Janine 



Saturday, December 5, 2020

Everything is a buzz on Project Canaan (pardon the upcoming pun)

 
Spencer is on an airplane coming home for Christmas! I am still in shock that this was possible, and equally saddened that Chloe is not able to come (quarantine restrictions won’t allow it). During the last eight months we all just assumed that Christmas travel would not be possible, but then it was! And our boy is coming home. I simply can’t tell you how happy that makes us, and the children are so excited to see their big brother.
 

This week we opened our first “flow hives” in our apiary (a location where bee hives are kept) on the farm. What is that you ask? According to www.honeyflow.com “The Flow system is a whole new way of extracting honey from Langstroth-style European honeybee hives. The bees fill the honey cells and cap them off. When you insert the Flow Key and split the honey cells, gravity does the rest of the work, and the honey simply flows into the trough, through the tube and into your jar.”

 

Now Project Canaan really will be a land flowing with milk and honey (and abuzz!), and we will be able to provide our children with fresh honey and also sell it in our gift shop.


We have been working diligently on our tourism program for 2021 and the focus of the tours will be showing people the laying barns, dairy, greenhouse and the new apiary will be a highlight of the tour.  The goal is to inspire and educate people in the field of agriculture as well as display how our woodworking and bead craft is helping us work toward our goal of sustainability. We recently learned that 70% of all tourists coming to Eswatini are from neighboring South Africa and 10% from Mozambique, so we want to be ready to welcome people back to Eswatini when the time is right. Meanwhile we will be able to host local visitors (and hopefully schools and students) who want to come and learn about what is happening right here in the Kingdom of Eswatini!

 


2020 has been a year of complexity, challenge, blessing and favor and for that we give thanks to the One who has been with us at every step. Now we need to finish the year well and I am inviting you to join us in giving thanks by making a year-end gift that will be matched, dollar for dollar, up to $175,000! Please help us feed hungry children, care for orphans, alleviate poverty and educate the next generation of leaders.

 

Make a year-end gift in Canada:   http://www.heartforafrica.ca/2020yegivingca/

 

Make a year-end gift in the U.S.:  http://bit.ly/2020YEGivingUS

 

This is our toddler named Treasure. Isn't  she just the cutest  little girl!?
Live from Eswatini  … doing the happy dance.


Janine