Myself (tall one) and Winnie, both Matanya's Hope sponsored students, here at Kijabe Hospital for medical treatment.

From Me, Christine Naini, A Matanya’s Hope Student

When I was a small child of Samburu culture, I had a father and a mother but my father got sick. At the tender age of 4, he passed away. I remained with my mom and started experiencing many challenges. The worst of all was when my father’s brother took everything that ever belonged to my father. Because he could not remove the house, he burned it down. We were left homeless and hopeless.

My mother had two children and not a single coin or crumb of food to raise us. She was very brave and took my brothers and myself to a place 2 days away called Sekanani in the Maasai Mara. We started our education at a rural, impoverished day school, but continued to experience a lot of challenges even in that setting.

It is no wonder that teachers see this young girl’s ability. David Pesi shares with the Matanya’s Hope Mission Team: “As a teacher at Sekanani Primary School, I quickly noticed that Christine Naini had the potential to do well. I knew that when she was sponsored and offered a chance to attend a high performing school, she would surely succeed.” David Pesi

Many were the days that we slept without eating anything or could not go to school because we lacked fees. The balance my mother was required to pay was 3,500 ksh which covered one term of my school fees. This was equal to about $35 US dollars. She was struggling to pay for my brother who was in class 8… I knew that I would have to wait. I wondered if I would even be able to go to school again.

When my brother finished his 8th grade studies, some visitors came and played baseball with him. It was a big number of people but he excelled at the game and managed to win. That visitor took him and sponsored him. Our family was so happy for him. He continued with his studies until Form 4 (senior year of High School). During that time, I myself was in class 7. I managed to attend class here and there but I missed more days than I attended because of fees. I happened to be in school on a day when an angel from heaven came to visit my school with Matanya’s Hope.

Our teacher told us to present songs, poems and dancing for our visitors. I presented my composed poem called GIRL CHILD. Then, my special angel, Ann, told me that she wanted to sponsor me.

“Seeing Christine Naini perform in one of the most impoverished school settings was so powerful. She was like a bright star that moved our team to tears. I could not bear to see her talents go unnoticed and forgotten. I saw her as a voice for her people and to do that, she needed education. I volunteered immediately to become her sponsor.” Ann Thomson, Sponsor

That moment was like a dream. I could not believe I would go to school and my mother would not struggle again because of my school fees. My mom was very, very happy because of the sponsorship as well. I quickly joined boarding school where I was able to focus on my studies. Although I did my national exam, I did not manage to attain the marks which would qualify me for a good school. This is because I did the exam only shortly after I joined boarding school and because I was living in an area where education was not strong.

Matanya’s Hope encouraged me and said that I could repeat my 8th grade year in a top Kenyan school in Nanyuki. Although the idea of repeating was very difficult for me to accept at first, I knew that Matanya’s Hope was offering me a chance to succeed in my life. Without repeating, I would not have that opportunity.

I am preparing to finish my 8th grade year this November and I am more confident that I will succeed since I can see with my own eyes how much my grades have improved.

Me having an EKG at Kijabe Hospital.

Me having an EKG at Kijabe Hospital.

Matanya’s Hope has encouraged me in every way. When they heard that I had been experiencing fainting spells, they came from USA and took me to the hospital for full evaluation. I don’t know what would be if they did not come into my life. Whether it is my health, my emotional well being or my education, they have been by my side through it all.

I want to be a surgeon. I pray that one day I will be able to give back to others the way that Matanya’s Hope and my special angel have given to me.

Myself, Jonah, with Nancy Wangui, Quincy and Lilian after Nancy shared her heartbreaking story

I Don’t Cry Often But I Cried Today

My name is Jonah Blumenthal. The last time that I was in Africa was 10 years ago when I traveled with my family to Kenya on vacation. There, we visited Matanya Primary School, an impoverished community elementary school. Today was the first time that I have been back to Matanya. It is not a coincidence that today was also the first time that I have cried in close to a year.

Early this morning we began our day by serving the students of Matanya Primary School their daily allotment of porridge. Many of these children count on their one cup of porridge (made daily from freshly milled amaranth, sorghum, millet, finger millet and maize) to fill them up enough to stay in school. Without their porridge, many students miss school due to hunger. This was not the reason that I wept.

It was only after meeting Nancy Wangui that I began to become emotional. I was handing out shoes for those students in need, when my Aunt Michelle called me over. I nonchalantly walked over to Michelle to find Nancy quite, and afraid. I was introduced to Nancy because we both wish to become Surgeons. Fortunately, Nancy was willing to open up to me and was brave enough to share with me her difficult history. Nancy explained that when she was seven years old, her mother passed away. Thus, she was left with an infant brother and a father. Unfortunately, her father was (and continues to be) a drug addict who physically abused her and forced her to act as a seven-year-old mother to her infant brother. Nancy had only an aunt (who has five kids of her own) to turn to for help. The rest of her family wanted nothing to do with her. Unfortunately, her aunt could not afford the miniscule payment required to keep Nancy in school. She was sent to an orphanage. It closed. Nancy then found her way back to her aunt’s house where she now lives and attends Matanya Primary School. Unfortunately, due to her aunt’s inability to afford her education, Nancy is constantly sent home due to a growing debt owed to the school.

Now that Nancy resides at her aunt’s house, her afternoon routine is no easier. After walking home from school, she must walk three kilometers to fetch water from the river. Each bucket of river water she collects weighs around 20 Kilograms. After making her journey back home, she must find firewood and help prepare food (if there is to be anything to eat). Only then at dusk, may she begin her homework. Nancy then must struggle to see her schoolwork through dim light off of her Aunts most basic cell phone (if it is working that day).

Now, what makes Nancy special is not just that she has and continues to face difficulty, but that she has the second best grades in her school. Through all of her struggles, her forced absenteeism’s due to lack of school fees, her drive to become educated and to better herself has persevered. Now is when she needs help. Nancy needs support, or she will just be kicked out of school. It was at this point that Lillian, Quincy, and myself decided to pull together enough funds to buy her some time as we search for a sponsor.

She is a very bright and determined girl. You can feel it when she speaks. When she says that she will be a surgeon, so that others will not suffer and die like her mother, you know that if given the opportunity, in 12 years she will be Dr. Wangui.

Unfortunately, right now her education will end in November unless someone intervenes. If you have the means, please help keep Nancy in school and support her goals of becoming a Surgeon. Help us tell her that there are people out there who care about her.

Myself, Jonah, with Nancy Wangui, Quincy and Lilian after Nancy shared her heartbreaking story

Myself, Jonah, with Nancy Wangui, Quincy and Lilian after Nancy shared her heartbreaking story

Solomon Maina receives computer from his sponsors Sue and Jack.  He was speechless!

QUINCY VISITS KENYA

This is Quincy writing—the seemingly random West Virginian who somehow found herself on a plane to Africa on Tuesday thanks to her friend Jonah (he’s probably writing the other blog… if not, I promise he’s a cool guy).

Some background about me (ew I hate talking about myself): I’m super funny, I’m pretty cool, and my favorite color is yellow. Just kidding. But yellow really is my favorite color. As I already said, I’m from West Virginia, but I met Jonah at Brown University where we’ll be sophomores next year. I play rugby, study mechanical engineering, and love to travel. This is my third time in Africa, my first being two years ago to Kenya and Tanzania, and last year I went to Morocco.

As you’ve probably already learned, I’m a fairly terrible writer, and I feel bad for Michelle who has to fix all my awful grammar mistakes and poor attempts at making jokes.

Now that introductions are finished, let’s talk about this trip! A trip where I’ve learned very quickly that “Anything you want to happen fast, expect to happen slow, and anything you want to happen slow, expect to happen slower” (as said in the wise words of Michelle). Do you want to hear the good news or the bad news first? Well, I choose the bad. (If you want to skip all the details, start reading at **HERE** below).

Kenya seems to have some problems with their delivery companies (UPS or U-haul should look into staking some business here because Kenya is in DESPERATE NEED). Our boxes (well not my boxes per se, I mean the nearly 2000 pounds of donated goods that Michelle and Ann put together) that were sent to Kenya at the end of March are MIA (well, maybe not technically missing but they’re about a month behind schedule). A recipe composed of a dash of ocean storms, a pinch of Kenyan time, 2 tablespoons of promissory notes, and a cup of miscommunication have created a giant headache for everyone on the trip. Our entire mission depends on these donations (we only have about 10% of what we’ve gathered), so we’re searching for solutions.

You need my passport so I can buy a phone from a chemist?

You need my passport so I can buy a phone from a chemist?

Another “small” speed-bump—actually, speaking of speed-bumps, I have yet to see a speed limit sign, but the giant speed-bumps and omnipresent police checks ensure “safe driving”—on our journey is a three-day ongoing process to acquire a working phone. A cash-only phone deal at a sketchy Nairobi gas station and several shop visits in Meru, including an hour spent at the Chemist (which is a pharmacy, but also specializes in phone activation and Trader Joe’s vitamins which should be refrigerated, but are sitting out on the shelf. If you want any, I’m sure I can get a good deal) have produced nothing more than two cell-phone shaped paperweights.

Our car also has a broken alternator. Do I know what that is? No (thanks for teaching me nothing about cars, Dad). Does it sound terrifying and trip-delaying? Absolutely.

**HERE** In short, we have next to no donations, we can’t call home, and our car is about to ready to keel over. Yay!

On a lighter note, some things are looking up. We bought towels yesterday, so I (finally) bucket showered this morning. For those of you who don’t know what that is, it’s where you boil a bucket full of water and mix this hot water with the freezing cold tap water in a basin. Then you just kind of splash around with soap and water and somehow emerge clean, at least…relatively.

I’ve met some awesome, awesome, awesome people, too. Lillian was the first, a giggly, talkative young girl who’s going to be a high school senior in Albany, Georgia in the fall. She wore a coral pink prom dress this year, has an Instagram account called lillykenya, and wants to be a doctor. Oh and she was born into abject poverty in rural Kenya. When Lillian was 15, Michelle brought her to the United States to live with her sponsors and go to an American high school. I’m struggling to find the words to describe how beautiful, humble, joyful, caring, and thoughtful she is. She’s independent and can be feisty, but maintains an air of strength and modesty that illustrates a maturity and worldly understanding that I’ve never seen before. I’ll meet her grandmother in Karatina (the place of carrot-colored soil) next week and watch her graduate high school in Albany next spring.

The first day, I also met Mercy, Solomon, Lawrence, and Vincent. The four of them are sponsored college students, Jonah’s family being the one to sponsor Mercy for the past 10 Years. She studies food science, while Solomon is studying to become a teacher, Lawrence studies computer science, and Vincent studies economics. It happened to be Vincent’s birthday the day I met him, and I watched him kiss a giraffe for the first time and receive a laptop from his sponsors. I also watched Solomon receive a laptop earlier that day. Their reactions were of such gratitude and speechlessness, that I’m having trouble describing it. You’ll have to see it for yourself because it is beyond humbling.

Jonah took Mercy grocery shopping, while Michelle took Solomon. I write this feeling guilty because food is honestly a struggle for these students. When I go eat at school, it’s a question of where, what, and how much. For them, it’s a question of if. They can’t afford to spend 300 Kenyan Shillings, less than $3.75, to eat dinner some days. Lawrence and Vincent (brothers) lost their dad in January and had to call on friends to find a place to live. Lawrence currently lives with Michael, our guide, because he can’t afford anywhere else. I was complaining I was going to have to live with a roommate in April.

But I never would have known any of this had they not told me. They smile constantly and answer questions honestly. They speak English, Swahili, and a variation of dialects. They’re well versed in math, chemistry, physics, and a slew of other subjects. They don’t want my sympathy or anyone’s for that matter, they want respect. They want to make something of themselves. They don’t want their children to be born into the same situation they were. They work harder than I do because this is probably the only shot they’ve got. If I flunk out, I can go back to West Virginia, fall asleep in my big bed, and work on applying to another college or job. If they fail…well, that’s not even worth mentioning because it’s not going to happen.

These people are amazing. While the pace of this country is frustrating at times, the people are sincere and grateful. While I expected to be sleeping on dirt floors and longing for a shower, we’re sitting at a nice restaurant in the middle of Meru sipping on some vanilla milkshakes surfing the interwebs. I can’t wait to see what the rest of this trip has to offer because I can learn so much from Kenya and its people.

Asanti Sana!

Sijui what I’m saying,
Quincy

Gratitude for Education

Gratitude for Education

Every pencil you donate reaches a child in need.

Every pencil you donate reaches a child in need.


Although it’s nowhere near Thanksgiving, I’ve been thinking a lot about gratitude lately, and what it means to be grateful for something that you have. During periods of mounting stress toward the end of a school year, it’s easy to lose myself in the work and the activities. In a rare flash of clarity the other day in class, I looked around me for a moment, at the bright maps on the wall and the lists on the board, and thought, I should be thankful for this. But how?

When I first had the opportunity to interact with Kenyan students sponsored through Matanya’s Hope, I was ecstatic. I had forever been yearning for new perspectives and connections around the world. I became friends on them and chatted with them through Facebook, typing them messages at night and checking my message feed in the morning to see if they had responded. They told me about the universities they were attending and the majors they were getting, and while we discussed our schoolwork and our families and our futures (embarrassingly, I had to admit that I didn’t even know what I wanted to major in—much less know my future job), I felt as if I were talking with old friends. But one thing constantly surprised me, and it was this; their sense of gratitude. They talked about Matanya’s Hope and the supplies and the opportunities that the program gave them. They talked about their university work with relish, and although they sometimes told me they were stressed, or busy, they always, always made room in that same message to tell me how much they loved what they were learning. And so when I was thinking about gratitude, I immediately thought back to the conversations I had with students sponsored through Matanya’s Hope.

Many Kenyan students live in an unbalanced world. There are not enough opportunities for education, nor infrastructure; distributable school supplies are hard to come by, there isn’t enough money to pay for the school fees, and many suffer from malnutrition or simply the lack of drinking water. I know a student who carried stacks of textbooks in a plastic Jewel Osco bag for months because she had no backpack, even when the bag eventually got worn to tatters. Another walked ten, fifteen miles from school and back, waking early and arriving back home when it got dark. Despite this, students are still grateful for what they have, and for the help Matanya’s Hope has given them to graduate school and get into a university. Matanya’s Hope tries to give students the supplies and tools they need to succeed, from nutrition packets to rainwater collection barrels to even something seemingly insignificant like a sturdy tote bag. Every donation means something—it could keep a child in school for another year, or for the rest of high school.

I have learned to be grateful for the education I have today, for the days in the classroom cramming for tests and discussing world history. I hope that through Matanya’s Hope, another Kenyan student can have the opportunities I have learned to appreciate.
Written by: Christina Li

Donate today.

AS PROMISED – THANK YOU!

In May, 2015
I made an appeal.

For the first new $500 donation, I promised to donate $50 of my own money.
HERE IT IS.

I also promised that when our donations reach $21,625.29 that I would donate $100.
HERE IT IS.

We are still approximately $6,000 from our mission goal.

Please consider donating.
Thank you everyone for making the Matanya’s Hope 2015 mission possible!

From my heart – and from all of the children and communities you bring
HOPE
FAITH
LOVE
through your prayers, supplies, blankets, shoes, bibles, toothbrushes/toothpaste, medicines and so much more!

THANK YOU!

This money has now been donated to Matanya's Hope with each challenge met

This money has now been donated to Matanya’s Hope with each challenge met

Carrie, Cheyenne, Savannah, Brooklynn and Ardean after returning lost documents to Matanya's Hope.

A MISSION AT HOME

Carrie, Cheyenne, Savannah, Brooklynn and Ardean after returning lost documents to Matanya's Hope.

Carrie, Cheyenne, Savannah, Brooklynn and Ardean after returning lost documents to Matanya’s Hope.

Well, let’s just say, this post is straight from my heart.
No pretense.
No formalities.
Just the re-telling of a story for the world to hear.

PREVIOUSLY:
I decided to take the typhoid oral vaccine – though for those who know me,
you know my thoughts.
Figured, it’s better to just do it.

Lucky for me, I got every side effect but one.
Rash… headache…
you can read the insert if you want to know the rest.
Wasn’t pretty.
I kinda look like the human version of a dog with fleas the way I am scratching!

I just had too much to do to let any of that stop me.
With the mission days away,
I ran to the bank. Made my deposit.
Thank you sponsors and donors for every hard earned coin you are dedicating to our mission programs and kids.
2nd stop: PO Box. 2 envelops. Head pounding.

I had to go to Jewel.
My fridge is empty and my mom is coming.
Heavy storms expected tonight. No choice.

I push myself through Jewel. Collect the necessities and heck out as soon as I can… I just want to get home. My head really hurt.

I don’t even know what to do first.
I put the groceries away.
Then, I force myself to go to the computer to continue working on mission documents.
An hour passes.
Have not heard from mom. Hmm.
Two hours.
This doesn’t make sense.
I am getting worried.
2 1/2 hours…. now I am really worried. Why hasn’t she called yet?

My gosh!
My phone is in my purse!
I race to get it.
She’s called TWICE!

I immediately listen and learn that I missed the lunch I was invited to by mom and her friend.
I was so sad. I never want to give up a precious moment with my mom.

But I’m glad she’s safe.

I push “call” to return her call. She sounds unusually close.
It was pretty hilarious actually.
Mom is at my front door!

After a beautiful reunion,
we go into my house.
Within moments, I notice that I am missing important documents.
I haaaaaaad them.
I can picture them.
Manila envelop.
2 long white envelops sticking out.
Papers folded inside.
Where is it.
I go through my steps, one by one.
I can see it so clearly.
PLEASE SURFACE (I’m begging God).
PLEASE.
I can’t do this.
NOT NOW.

It’s no where.
I go through my car.
Through my papers.
In every room I’ve entered…and rooms I didn’t enter.
My mom checks.
My son checks.
HE goes through my car.

I am so stressed.
Let’s just say these papers are critical.
And my tithe money is in there too… money I am saving to send a girl to school.
My heart is breaking.
I talk to God…. maybe someone was supposed to find it? Maybe they need it more than Linzy? I don’t know what to think. God, I really need these documents. Please Lord, please… ”

Mom and I get into the car and retrace my steps.
Jewel doesn’t have it.
I drive around in the parking lot. It’s not in any shopping carts.
I go to the post office. They don’t have it.

I have not been anywhere else.
I know the money is gone.
My head is about to burst from the headache and the added stress.

We get home.
I want to cry – but I need to maintain calm… for me….for my mom…
I open a book looking for solace.
“For we brought nothing into the world and we take nothing out of it.” it says.

Somehow, those words melted the stress away from me like heat to butter.
I let go.
“It’s not mine”, I thought. “It’s money and paper. All can be replaced. It’s not worth the stress I have been putting on myself.” I let it go.
Wow.
I checked in with myself… really?
That simple?
Yeah I really let it go.

That night I tried to sleep, but the stress kept me awake until 4:39 am.
Sometimes there is just no escape.
I was going to have to call…
and in the mean time, pray
that these papers appear.

I still had to do the hardest thing.
Deep breath.
I picked up the phone…
and…
I called one of the people who’s letter I thought I lost.

I had to.
I can’t tell you that Lying did not cross my mind.
It felt like such a tempting option…
but
I could not do it.
I don’t want to lie.

VM
Oh thank God!
I left an honest message…integrity and calm.
RELIEF.

I kissed the remaining idea of that money good bye.
Have to believe that whoever found it would need it more than I or Linzy.

The cycle of preparations continued like a whirlwind.

The relief was great, but a sense of urgency was quick to fill the gap. Documents, entries on the computer, phone calls, conversations with members of the board… my brain was quickly becoming fried. I was exhausted.

I mean exhausted. When my phone rang, I could hardly look.
It’s an unrecognized number…
It almost hurt to expend the energy, but something inside of me said “get it”.
I took the call.
“Is this Michelle Stark”, they asked.
“Yes it is”, I replied.
“Hi, my name is Adean. My sister found your envelop.”
“Oh my gosh! Really!
Thank you! Thank you!” I could hardly believe what I was hearing!

We met at Starbucks… hugged, exchanged stories…shared coffee…got my envelop back…
and my mom and I celebrated a family of angels, right here in the USA.

The gift of honesty is so profound.
You don’t have to travel far from home to do missions.
Just be kind to others.
Live right….
And the world is a better place.

To Arlean, Carrie and 3 beautiful, amazing children…
Thank you so much

Thank You Office Depot!

Laurie of Office Depot, Homewood, presents Matanya's Hope with a shopping cart full of donations for our kids in Kenya!

Laurie of Office Depot, Homewood, presents Matanya’s Hope with a shopping cart full of donations for our kids in Kenya!

Thank you Office Depot!

What an incredible surprise I was blessed with two days ago! I went in to Office Depot in Homewood for my fairly routine purchase of ink, paper and miscellaneous printing. Laurie was there to help me. You have to understand… I’ve shopped Office Max / Office Depot for almost 10 years and Laurie is the epitome of “that wonderful salesperson” I always hope to get.

Today was another joy filled experience, printing and sharing ideas.

But it was far from routine! After paying for my printing and ink, Laurie asked me if I wanted any school supplies for our kids in Kenya. I could hardly believe my ears. “Yes!” I said. “Thank you!” With those words, Laurie went to the back of the store and moments later, presented me – or Matanya’s Hope, with shopping cart overflowing with school supplies for our kids in Kenya.

I don’t know if there are enough words to thank you, Laurie for thinking of us, and Office Depot for making this donation possible.

Today you were a blessing to hundreds of children in Kenya.
May you be even more fulfilled by the overflow of this great gift!

Can’t wait to share pictures with you from Kenya!

Michelle

WE ARE ALMOST THERE!

Thank you Sponsors and Donors!!!

Thank you EVERYONE who donated in support of our Mission

OUR BOXES ARE PACKED.

THE ITINERARY OF HOPE IS WRITTEN.

WE ARE SO CLOSE TO OUR GOAL.

There is still time to help.

DONATE TODAY.

Help Matanya’s Hope reach the children in need.

THANK YOU.

YOUR DONATION IS TAX DEDUCTIBLE:
DONATE: www.journeytohelpafrica.com or www.matanyashope.org

SEND CHECK TO: PO Box 562 Homewood, IL 60430

this is Pamela; she is in 5th grade.  She is an orphan.  People in the impoverished community contributed money until they could make her a dress.  Thanks to my Synagogue, Pamela is sponsored and can now go to school.

YOU can change the world!

TOGETHER, we can make a difference!

Your support is making an impact on the children we serve in Kenya.

The lives of these precious people are being changed, comforted… and given hope
because YOU care.

TODAY, you can help make a difference in the lives of so many by saying YES!

YOUR DONATIONS TRANSFORM LIVES!

YOU CAN:
SPONSOR A CHILD

Jeff Wambugu, sponsored by BJ and Harry, receives a book during the Matanya's Hope mission.

Jeff Wambugu, sponsored by BJ and Harry, receives a book during the Matanya’s Hope mission.

Sponsorship is the ultimate gift of HOPE.
“Give and it is you who shall receive.” HOPE makes a difference. That is exactly how Matanya’s Hope feels about each one of the precious students in our program! We are so humbled for each one of you who’s unselfish actions have helped make a way for those in desperate need.

Matanya’s Hope is passionate about loving these children every day as best as we can. Because of your compassion and support, HOPE is being received through education and as one of the greatest gifts these children have ever received! Thank you! The stories we share are stories that you made possible through sponsorship and Changing the World ONE CHILD AT A TIME!

DONATE A BLANKET

Moreen Mbogo celebrates the gift of her very own  blanket!

Moreen Mbogo celebrates the gift of her very own blanket!

Through Matanya’s Hope, not only are the physical needs of our children being met, but we are sharing the gift of HOPE…of prayer…and of love with human beings across the globe. This world becomes very special. People across the globe are knitted together through the gift of love.

Our blanket donors have not only created a legacy of warmth for these children, but they have delivered the message of HOPE and LOVE with each blanket! ONE KNOT AT A TIME… these fleece blankets are amde from recycled plastic. Therefore, they are excellent in retaining body heat, something so valuable to anyone trying to sleep on a cold night. You may not find the villages we visit on a map, but infrared will surely pick up the new-found warmth in homes across Kenya’s terrain.

SEND A PAIR OF SHOES

Imagine I had no good shoes and now I have these!  Thank you!

Imagine I had no good shoes and now I have these! Thank you!

I am constantly amazed by the goodness of people through the gift of SOLES to SOULS. I’ve witnessed God’s blessings through thousands of new or gently used shoes, labeled, packed in boxes and finally delivered to Matanya’s Hope recipients across Kenya.

It takes a compassionate heart… empathy… and the desire to do something beyond self to make this world a better place like you are doing! Most children where we serve have little more than a torn pair of pants/skirt and a top. Until recently, few had the privileged access to so much as a jacket. Affordability challenged the very basic comforts of life. Thank you for your support. Through your donations to Matanya’s Hope, so many more children are being clothed in your child’s hand-me-downs and are now walking to school in the comfort of shoes! Amazing!

PROVIDE SCHOOL SUPPLIES FOR A CHILD IN NEED

Lisa Leger donates thousands of crayons, pencils, markers, erasers & pencil sharpeners to Matanya's Hope students.

Lisa Leger donates thousands of crayons, pencils, markers, erasers & pencil sharpeners to Matanya’s Hope students.


It’s one thing to travel across the globe to Kenya and quite another to travel with a purpose beyond self. Much thanks to Matanya’s Hope Donors, we are so excited to deliver thousands of pencils, crayons, markers, erasers and other school supplies to our children in need.

Many of you may not realize, but one of the greatest joys is placing a pencil in the hands of a child and watching them light up with joy….or watching a child color with crayons and markers for the first time in their life!

During our last mission, our team met a young girl named Rachel. She was orphaned and lived with her elderly, jobless grandmother. Rachel often went without food to eat. She had no shoes. Neighbors got together to purchase enough material to make her a simple dress. Rachel slept on a dirt floor and covered herself with the same clothes she wore…to sleep…and to wear…day after day.

It is donations like yours which made it possible for Matanya’s Hope to bless Rachel with a blanket, school supplies, clothes…. and HOPE. We are actively seeking a sponsor for this precious 5th grade child. ONE SPECIAL FAMILY / PERSON will change the world for this little girl!

FEED A SCHOOL 1 HOT MEAL A DAY FOR A YEAR FOR ONLY 6 CENTS A DAY PER CHILD!

Hot Nutritious Porridge is made from locally grown grains and is cooked daily to feed more than 850  students.

Hot Nutritious Porridge is made from locally grown grains and is cooked daily to feed more than 850 students.

As soon as our mission team saw the hunger and dehydration which ravaged so many children of rural Kenya, we knew we could do something to help. Through your donations, we have been able to feed almost 1,000 hungry children every day of school! Through the gift of Micronutrients, we have been able to assure that 1,500 children get every vitamin and mineral they need on a daily basis.

Children are coming to school to eat. In exchange for this marvelous gift, they are learning and are growing stronger by the day. Schools are reporting that children are rarely missing school due to sickness and are demonstrating increasing stamina and alertness. These donations are nothing short of a miracle…and an answered prayer. Thank you for your hearts!

It costs only 6 cents a day to feed one child!!!

DONATE A CHICKEN AND PROVIDE FOOD AND SUSTAINABILITY FOR AN ENTIRE FAMILY!

Thanks to Kelly, several families received the gift of chickens during Christmas this year!

Thanks to Kelly, several families received the gift of chickens during Christmas this year!

What a privilege it is to be the heart and the eyes which get to witness loving these children. Your gifts help to transform a hurting world to a world of hope and wonder. These gifts don’t erase being orphaned or poor … but they do bring hope and that is a huge part of the answer to these people’s prayers!

The gift of chickens enables families to harvest nutritional eggs not only for consumption, but also for sale. Sometimes this gift enables a family to earn a living for the first time in their lives.

Chickens are a remarkable gift that doesn’t cost much but provides a family with the gift of life!

We believe even greater things are going to take place this mission!

DONATE TODAY
www.journeytohelpafrica.com DONATE
www.matanyashope.org DONATE

or send your tax deductible check to:
Matanya’s Hope
PO Box 562
Homewood, IL 60430

She sleeps on a dirt floor.  She has nothing but shredded remnants of clothes to cover herself with.

DEAR BLANKET ANGEL…

Blanket Angel Brenda Hobson of Decatur Middle School, Indianapolis  Indiana sewed over 100 fleece blankets for Matanya's Hope over the last two years

Blanket Angel
Brenda Hobson of Decatur Middle School, Indianapolis Indiana sewed over 100 fleece blankets for Matanya’s Hope over the last two years

She sleeps on a dirt floor.  She has nothing but shredded remnants of clothes to cover herself with.

She sleeps on a dirt floor. She has nothing but shredded remnants of clothes to cover herself with.

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Dear Blanket Angel,

I am an orphan.
I dream of so many things…
a family…
a mommy…
a daddy…
love…
food…
shoes…
and a blanket.
Oh how I would love these things!

But today, I am especially praying for a blanket.
Last night was cold.

I sleep on the dirt floor.

Sometimes it’s so cold
and I shiver a lot.
During rains, the floor becomes wet.
Rain enters our mud hut.
I don’t sleep on those wet nights.
I can’t.

The floor is hard
but I get so tired, sometimes I sleep anyway.
I wake with pain.
It’s not comfortable.

My list is long, I guess.
but I am writing to thank you
because I learned you make blankets for children like me.

I call you “My Blanket Angel”
and I pray that this year,
you will visit me.

With love,
God’s child
Kenya

A blanket made with love can warm the heart of a child in need.

A blanket made with love can warm the heart of a child in need.

Please DONATE today and help Matanya’s Hope transport these blankets to Kenya.

Your donation is tax deductible and can be made safely via Pay Pal
www.journeytohelpafrica.com DONATE
www.matanyashope.org DONATE

or send your tax deductible donation to:
Matanya’s Hope
PO Box 562 Homewood, IL 60430

Thank you for helping us make a difference for children who are counting on us to hear their needs.

Much thanks goes out to everyone who made and donated blankets to Matanya’s Hope.
The Dawn Brancheau Foundation * Bear Hugs Foundation * Ann Thomson * Brenda Hobson * Hanna Regenhardt * Andrea and Arthur Stark * LeCavalier Family * Kate Buckner

Matanya's Hope Vice President Ann Thomson pictured here with Brenda Hobson, Decatur Middle School, Indianapolis  IN

Matanya’s Hope Vice President Ann Thomson pictured here with Brenda Hobson, Decatur Middle School, Indianapolis IN