Sunday, February 24, 2008

February 18 -- ABCRM Thailand Mission Team’s Last Day Experiences in Thailand

Monday, February 18

Today is our ABCRM mission team’s last full day in this beautiful country of Thailand! We start the day by visiting the Chiang Rai New Life Center facility next to the Fox home where Barbara has been teaching the Akha women sheltered to knit. The Construction Crew team, busy most of the past week in the Sansuk Akha village, is led on a tour of the facilities for the first time by Chuck accompanied by other members of our mission team. Chuck shows us a photo of Paul and Elaine Lewis on the wall of the NLC dormitory that reminds everyone that they are the primary reason why the Akha women are able to be sheltered here as well as at the New Life Center facilities in Chiang Mai. What an impact these two American Baptist missionaries have made on helping Akha people in northern Thailand through their many years of ministry starting in the 1950’s!










Our mission trip is ended by our mission team taking a “fun trip” to see the elephant reserve about 30 minutes north of Chiang Rai as we again all pile into Chuck’s truck. This reserve has about 35 elephants that have been placed there to protect them since it’s now not possible for these magnificent animals to be in the urban areas of Thailand due to lack of food sources and too many people in the cities. Our team members enjoy feeding the elephants bananas and taking a short ride around the small city next to the reserve. Karen Van is the only one on our team who is brave enough to have a giant python placed around her neck at a tourist store located at the reserve!











The last part of our day is spent in touring the “Queen’s Garden” further north from the elephant reserve, where the Thai government has created a botanical garden containing facilities for orchid and other plant research, as well as large area of beautiful gardens containing all sorts of Thai flowers. Everyone on our team is astounded by this beautiful place. It’s another reminder of how beautiful this country of Thailand is!










We arrive back in Chiang Rai about three hours before the mission team checks in at the local airport to fly to Bangkok to then fly back to Colorado early the next morning through Japan. It’s been a wonderful experience for all of us to meet many ABC-IM missionaries who are doing so much to help the people in northern Thailand, and to help in our own way to help Akha people with our construction projects at the Sansuk village with Chuck, as well as to help Ruth with her ministry activities in Chiang Rai. With sadness, we say our “good-bye’s” to Chuck and Ruth at the airport. We hope we can somehow tell our church congregation friends and others about the experiences we’ve had here since arriving on February 8 to give them a true impact of our mission trip, but this will be difficult to do. We’re all so proud of our American Baptist missionaries, and hope we can help them in some way to continue their work here in the future!

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

February 16-17 -- ABCRM Thailand Mission Team Experiences in Chiang Rai and the Akha Village of Sansuk

Saturday, February 16

Today, the Crafts/Teaching Crew in Chiang Rai has completed most of their mission trip projects under Ruth’s direction, so the much of the day is spent in “down time” for them to reflect on what’s happened so far during our ABCRM Thailand Mission Experiences trip. The Construction Crew in the Sansuk village has also decided to go back to Chiang Rai on Friday evening since the cold evenings and lack of warm water for showers has started to take its toll. Those of us working on the Sansuk projects especially enjoy our first hot showers since leaving Chiang Rai on Tuesday. Our mission team members spend the day sharing together their thoughts and the opportunity to talk with Chuck and Ruth about their Chiang Rai ministry activities.

Chuck, Bruce, and Kerry decide to return to the Sansuk village on Saturday afternoon to help with the completion of the kitchen’s new concrete floor, and to do more bunk-bed painting. They are delighted to see that the new kitchen floor has indeed been completed, and work is underway by the Akha workers to install the bamboo lattice that will fill in the cafeteria wall openings. The new tables for the cafeteria will be moved into the eating area after our mission team leaves Chiang Rai on Monday evening.

We are also able to have fun with the Sansuk Akha kids on their Saturday day-off without school, with Bruce showing his badminton prowess playing against an Akha teen. Also during the afternoon, Bruce (who is a highly-skilled pediatric doctor who specializes in curing childhood cancers in Colorado Springs) checks out a few of the Akha students using the medical kit he has brought along on the trip. He found that the kids in the Sansuk village are generally in excellent health.

After dinner, Chuck, Bruce, and Kerry are blessed by sitting with many of the Akha students gather around an open fire as they enthusiastically sing songs in Akha that are mostly of a Christian theme. They are led in singing by Chuck’s ministry Akha song-leader Yohn, who plays the guitar very well. The students clap loudly as Chuck, Bruce, and Kerry sing “He’s Got the Whole World in His Hands” in English. What a great way to end the ABCRM Thailand mission team construction projects in the Sansuk village!









Sunday, February 17

It’s difficult for all of us here on this ABCRM Thailand Missions Experiences trip to think about this being our last day to worship in this beautiful country! Ruth drives the mission team members in Chiang Rai to the Sansuk village in Chuck’s truck to join Chuck, Bruce, and Kerry already there. The Sansuk schoolgirls again dress in their beautiful traditional Akha outfits to greet the mission team members who arrive about 8:30 a.m. The worship service starts at 9:00 a.m. in the Sansuk meeting building instead of the nearby Sansuk American Baptist church due to its smaller size.

During the morning worship, Yohn leads the singing of worship songs by the Sansuk students and adults, and our mission team again sings “Amazing Grace” as we did the previous Sunday in the Sukasem Akha village church. Ruth’s Akha Crafts Store assistant Iew teaches the students our team a fun song involving hand gestures and a little dancing. Karen Van joins Chuck and Ruth and several of the Akha kids to try to follow along with the song at the front of the service. Everyone loves it!











As a thank-you gift to Sansuk village “headman” Tuliwat and his wife who cooked all of our meals during the Construction Crew’s stay at Sansuk, mission team-leader Kerry presented them with ABCRM 2008 Missions Experiences t-shirts. Kerry also presented Chuck’s Akha ministry support team members Yohn and Amay with the ABCRM t-shirts in thanks for their involvement with our mission team projects. Chuck then thanked the ABCRM Thailand Mission Experiences team for their participation in this mission trip, and for all the great work we did in Chiang Rai and Sansuk in helping the Akha people who are served by Chuck and Ruth’s ABC-IM ministry. We all joined hands at the close of the service in Christian love with our Sansuk Akha friends, followed by Karen Van and Barbara giving the kids a few small “thank you” items. What a great experience it has been for our team to come here to the Sansuk village!











On the way back from Sansuk after having lunch there, Ruth drove our mission team in Chuck’s truck to Mae Sai, the northernmost city in Thailand where you can cross over to Myanmar (Burma). We also visited the nearby “Golden Triangle” area where the borders of Myanmar, Laos, and Thailand meet at the formation of the Mekong River. We took a short river speedboat trip across to an island owned by Laos (no visa required) so we can say we’ve set foot in that country. What a splendid way to end our last Sunday in Thailand!













Only one more full day left in Thailand for our ABCRM Thailand Missions Experiences team on Monday. Our mission team will be seeing a few more sights before leaving for Colorado from Chiang Rai on Monday evening. Our mission trip here has gone been all too quickly!

February 13-15 -- ABCRM Thailand Mission Team Projects in Chiang Rai and the Akha Village of Sansuk

Wednesday, February 13

Today, the two sub-groups of our ABCRM Thailand mission team (the “Crafts/Teaching Crew” and the “Construction Crew”) started working on their respective mission trip projects arranged by Chuck and Ruth Fox for us to do for the rest of the week to help Akha people that the Fox’s minister to in various ways. For the Crafts/Teaching Crew projects the rest of the week included –


o Beth Cook (with her previous experience in library management) helping Ruth’s Family Learning Center school staff to order and classify books for their library spread over several bungalow offices and classroom teaching purposes. Beth became friends with many of the FLC staff and students in doing this project, including IM-ABC Short-Term Missions volunteer Sandy Martin from Indiana. This was a full-time task through the end of the week for Beth that she thoroughly enjoyed.


o Carmen Ferguson working full-time from today Wednesday through the weekend in the Fox’s home-office to help them by updating Excel spreadsheets containing information the Fox’s need to send to ABC-IM staff members at Valley Forge This is office work that the Fox’s have needed to complete for some time due to time spent on their Chiang Rai ministry activities such as the Akha Crafts Store management. Ruth was elated that Carmen could do this work on her behalf.


o Barbara Fuller finding her calling during our Thailand ABCRM mission trip by doing Ruth’s suggested project of teaching Akha women staying at the Chiang Rai New Life Center (located next to the Fox’s home) to do many types of knitting using the knitting needles and yarn Barbara brought along with her on our trip. Barbara was amazed how quickly these Akha women learned how to make scarves, booties, and other knitted items in just a few days. She’s showing Chuck Fox a few knitting stitches she taught the New Life Center women in the photo on the right.


o During the February 13-17 mission trip project time, Beth, Carmen, and Barbara (along with Karen Van at the end of the week) helping the Akha Crafts Center staff do various tasks, such as rolling the new craft-item material purchased with part of the $4500 in ABCRM funds provided for our mission trip in-country projects on to rolls used for material storage. Our mission team Crafts/Teach Crew became friends with all of the Akha Crafts Store women (Iew, Mio, Pisamai, Luta, Ami, and Duen). No special team-building was needed to make this happen!


For our mission team’s Construction Crew (Bruce Cook, Carl Ferguson, Karen VanValkenburgh, and Kerry Hassler) now are staying in the Akha village of Sansuk along with Chuck through the rest of the week. Today they saw the “before” conditions of the Sansuk school’s eating area, kitchen, and dormitories that will be greatly improved through the use of some of the $4500 in ABCRM mission trip funds provided for our mission trip, including –

o Putting in of a new eating area and kitchen concrete floor (about 1800 square feet in total) to replace the current flooring where some areas are simply dirt. The open wall spaces in the eating area and kitchen will be filled with concrete block and bamboo lattice by Akha village workers as part of this project. These facilities are used every day to feed all of the Sansuk school’s 57 elementary- and primary-level students.


o Replacement of current old wooden eating tables with new formica-topped tables, as well as replacement of old shelving used to store eating plates with new shelf units. These tables and shelves were designed and constructed by Chuck Fox again using part of the $4500 of ABCRM mission trip funds provided for our in-country mission trip projects.



o Replacement of the wood tabletop of the kitchen’s food-preparation table with a new top that will improve the sanitation of the food that the Akha school students are fed.






o Painting of school dormitory bunk-beds by our mission team’s Construction Crew using paint paid for out of this mission trip’s ABCRM in-country project funds.






o Putting in bamboo framing in the boys’ and girls’ dormitories to support mosquito netting to protect the students from getting mosquito bites while sleeping. Although malaria and yellow fever are not a problem in the Sansuk village, the students’ health will be generally improved by this mosquito protection especially during the summer rainy season.


o Building of a covered porch area near the girls’ dormitory where they can dry their clothes on clotheslines during the rainy summer months instead of hanging them under an edge of a nearby thatched roof.
The Construction Crew met the Sansuk village Akha “headman” Tuliwat for the first time on Wednesday, as well as the Chiang Rai AKHA Foundation staff members, Chiang Rai University student volunteers, and Sansuk Akha adults who would be helping with the ABCRM mission trip projects. Tuliwat was the “project leader” for all of the various projects Chuck Fox had planned with him for our in-country mission trip projects, and our Construction Crew members are acting as their “labor servants” to help get the job done. In this way as it should be, the Sansuk school improvements the ABCRM mission trip project funds are paying for (and the Construction Crew labor we’re donating) will be “owned” by the Sansuk Akha people, not by our ABCRM Thailand mission team.


During this Wednesday morning, the Construction Crew learned how we will help construct the new concrete flooring for the school’s cafeteria/kitchen by carrying sand and stone in plastic buckets from where it was dumped about 50 feet from the construction site, and then help when needed to help mix the sand and gravel with Portland cement bags with hoes and shovels to create batches of concrete that each cover about 100 square feet. The mixing of the concrete by hand was very messy and tiring, and a lot of this work will be done by the AKHA Foundation staff and university student volunteers. Finishing of the concrete surface will be done by Akha workers from the village who are experts at doing this specialized work.

About 10 o’clock in the morning, the first concrete batch was mixed on the cafeteria floor and spread into one corner of the corners. Our Sansuk cafeteria/kitchen renovation project is underway !!!





Thursday, February 14
As the Crafts/Teaching Crew continue to work on their Chiang Rai projects under the direction of Ruth Fox, the Construction Crew continues to complete the Sansuk school cafeteria/kitchen project by helping to make more batches of concrete, carry concrete blocks used for the new kitchen walls being constructed by Akha workers, and painting the school dormitory bunk beds. It’s been a lot of work, but thankfully the weather has been relatively cool in the 50’s and 60’s under cloudy skies.

As the Construction Crew is sleeping in Sansuk guest homes with no heating, it’s been very chilly in the night with temperatures falling into the 40’s, but Chuck has brought along sleeping bags to keep us warm, and our Akha host families also provide us with warm blankets. We wake up every morning to the sounds of multiple roosters competing to see who has the loudest cock-a-doodle-do. Thanks to Chuck’s pre-trip suggestions, all of our Construction Crew have brought along ear-plugs to help sleep through the morning rooster-crowing.

The Construction Crew mission team members are now staring to make friends with the Sansuk school kids who normally walk to school about ¼ mile away \ at 7:30 a.m., and return in the afternoon from a full day of academic and Christian studies at 4:30 p.m. We have all found these kids are absolutely beautiful and delightful, at all times respectful to us and all adults they interact with, active in their play outside after school without having any video games or toys other than shared badminton and soccer sports equipment provided through ABC-IM funds.

Even more amazing is when the Sansuk school girls from grades 3 through 12 treated our Construction Crew team members to a display of their native Akha dancing after supper in the Sansuk village community building that was built several years ago thanks to ABC-IM funds. These beautiful Akha young women are made even more beautiful when the wear their elaborate Akha outfits that they make themselves usually in about one month, starting around the age of 10. They performed various types of traditional Akha dancing for us, including one dance where three or four each interlock a leg in the center and hop on the other leg in a small circle. They invited our Construction Crew team members to dance with them on Wednesday evening, but we were sorely lacking in our Akha dancing abilities! Chuck said that the young Akha women dancing for us every evening after dinner is a real treat since they are normally very shy about dancing for foreigners like us. It is almost impossible to not have a strong sense of Christian love for all of these Akha school kids that we see every day!







Friday, February 15

Today at the Sansuk village, we reached an important milestone in our Akha school cafeteria renovation project as the last batch of concrete was mixed to complete the new floor! We are now helping the AKHA Foundation, Chiang Rai university volunteers, and Akha workers to finish the new kitchen concrete flooring. One particularly difficult part of the kitchen project is to break up large rocks with a 20-pbound sledgehammer to level out one corner before new concrete flooring is spread over it.


Everyone working on this project (especially the Sansuk village “headman” Tuliwat) is very happy with our school cafeteria renovation project so far, with the new kitchen concrete floor to be completed on Saturday. The Construction Crew also continues to paint school dormitory bunk beds. During the afternoon, we took a work-break to learn how the Akhas make “mochi” by pounding raw rice put into a stone bowl with a large pole. It’s hard work to smash the rice into a chewy paste that the Akha then cook over a stove or open fire to eat after dipping small portions of it into a bowl of sugar. The Akha students and adults love it, but we non-Akha Construction Crew members can’t each much of this mochi at a time.












Also, our Sansuk village project team has now completed the frames for mosquito netting in the boys’ and girls’ dormitories. Chuck’s being tall (about 6 feet-6 inches) was quite an asset in securing the bamboo poles to the rafters as part of this project. The Akha kids are delighted when the see the new netting and also new bed pads after they return from their school day. Monday evening.















Also today, the construction of the clothes-drying porch next to the girls’ dormitory was completed by the Chiang Rai AKHA Foundation workers and Chiang Rai University student volunteers. Great progress is being made on our Sansuk mission trip projects!

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

February 9-12 -- ABCRM Thailand Mission Team Experiences in Chiang Rai and Sukasem Village

Saturday, February 9

Our last morning in Bangkok began with a hotel breakfast and then mission team devotions. How odd it was to sit around the breakfast table with the mission team just a block from the Dieselberg’s NightLight ministry discussing our feelings regarding the rampant Bangkok prostitution and sex trading, and the necessity of Jeff and Annie to reach out with Christ’s love to the women (and men!) caught up in this horrible business as the prostitutes and their customers wandered in and out of the breakfast area for the buffet. Suddenly it seemed helping those in prostitution was not a far-away problem, but a real life issue as it surrounded us everywhere. These images are unforgettable!

After packing up, we met in the lobby and headed to the airport to catch our flight to Chiang Rai. Upon our arrival in Chiang Rai, we were met at the airport by Chuck Fox, ABC-IM missionary in this city of 100,000 people. We passed mostly rural areas riding to our hotel in Chuck’s truck, where our hotel sat on a large, beautifully gardened property on the outskirts of Chiang Rai. What a contrast to the crowds and congestion we just left in Bangkok!

At our hotel, we received the “Baptist room rate”, a lower rate given by hotels in northern Thailand to American Baptist guests in appreciation for all the great work our ABC-IM missionaries have done over the past 150 years to help people in this area. After unpacking, we met Chuck, wife Ruth, and their family for dinner at a local restaurant. We were joined by Karen Smith (shown in the photo on the right), Director of the New Life Center women’s care facilities in Chiang Mai and Chiang Rai, and Angela Sudermann, ABC-IM Short-Term Mission Opportunities Coordinator at Valley Forge. Karen was in Chiang Rai that evening thanks to an invitation from Ruth Fox to meet our team, and Angela just happened to be there on her way to Chiang Mai to meet with ABC-IM missionary Duane Binkley. We felt fortunate to enjoy a meal with Karen and Angela, and to talk with them about their activities. After dinner, we shopped at the Chiang Rai Night Market. With Chuck’s assistance, some great deals were negotiated for souvenirs, and we saw for the first time beautiful Akha crafts being sold by Akha women. The evening ended with everyone going to the nearby Swenson’s Ice Cream Parlor next to the Night Market. It was indeed a great way to end our first day in Chiang Rai!

Sunday, February 10

Breakfasts here are delightful. Fresh fruit abounds along with “sticky rice” and an array of Asian breakfast selections. After breakfast, out mission team piled into Chuck’s double-size-cab Toyota truck (some of us riding in the truck bed) as we went with Chuck and Ruth to the Akha village of Sukasem about 1 hour from Chiang Rai. Sukasem is a Christian village where the Akha residents have pledged to Akha church leaders to not use drugs or alcohol. Homes there are built of bamboo with thatched roofs nestled in a small valley.

We were greeted with smiles and waves as we entered the Sukasem village. We met the Akha Baptist Area Director Pedru who serves 12 Akha villages in this area, and sipped tea and ate delicious Thai “apple bananas” waiting for church to begin around 10:00 a.m. Chickens and their chicklets, cats, and dogs wandered around us as we ate. We were unexpectedly blessed to attend the service since it was a special day with a new Akha pastor for the village being installed by his younger brother Pastor Pedru with blessings also by Chuck and Ruth. The new pastor was being paid by the Akha Baptist Foundation about 600 baht a month for his upcoming pastoral duties, only about $20 a month!

After about an hour of visiting we made our way up the hill to the little church made of cinderblocks with cement floors, constructed by donations from International Ministries under the direction of Chuck Fox. The church windows had no glass, only wooden shutters which were opened for light and to allow the gentle breeze to flow through. Women sat on one side of the sanctuary, men on the other, while small children played on the veranda. Singing was joyful and beautiful. What a heritage we have as American Baptists that made this Sunday service possible for the Akha people in the Sukasem village!

During the service, our Colorado mission team sang along with the Akha people such hymns as “Onward Christian Soldiers” and “How Great Thou Art” in Akha in the Akha language using hymnals that showed the words in Akha, Thai, and the phonetic Akha word pronunciations in English. This was made possible by the work that American Baptist Paul Lewis started in northern Thailand in the early 1950’s (and continues even today) to create the first written Akha dictionary, and to provide the Akha word English phonetic pronunciations and meanings so that other English-speaking people could communicate with the Akhas. Also, since the Akha people had no knowledge of a “music staff” for notes, Paul Lewis’s wife Elaine created a singing system for the Akha people where the “do, re, mi, fa …” words were written in Akha to tell them which tones should be sung. How joyous it was for us to sing with the Akhas!

As part of the church service, our ABCRM mission team stood before the some 80 Akhas attending to sing “Amazing Grace” as we would in Colorado. We were awed by then the Akha congregation standing to joyously sing in return “Amazing Grace” in their Akha language accompanied by a guitar. What a sign of all of we brothers and sisters in Christ sharing our fellowship in this way!

As an example of what a small world it can be, Beth (Currier) Cook on our ABCRM mission team sat beside ABC-IM missionary Ruth (Gilson) Fox during the Akha church service. They had discovered the night before they both had a connection with former American Baptist missionaries and Beth’s “Uncle Bryant” and “Aunt Sara Jean” Currier. The Curriers had served in Burma when Ruth’s parents had been missionaries there many years ago, and knew Ruth’s missionary aunt and uncle. Also, Pastor Pedru who installed the new church pastor been installed by Paul Lewis many years ago as an Akha Baptist pastor. How deeply entwined our missions of the past are with today’s work to spread the teachings of Christ to the Akhas and other people in northern Thailand!

After the dedication of the new pastor and the completion of the service during which Chuck preached and both Chuck and Ruth gave their blessing to the new pastor, we were fed a delicious meal at Pastor Pedru’s home in the Sukasem village cooked over an open fire in the home’s kitchen. When we returned to Chiang Rai in Chuck’s truck, some rested at our hotel with a few went with Ruth to enjoy a relaxing Thai full-body or foot massage, quite a treat after all our experiences at the Sukasem village!



Monday, February 11

Our ABCRM mission team gathered for breakfast and devotions in our hotel before starting our tour of mission trip activities in Chiang Rai that day. We learned that American Baptist missionary projects in northern Thailand come in many forms. Our first stop was to attend the opening ceremonies at the Sakasartsuksa School located just a half-block from the home of Chuck and Ruth. This private school supported by the Thai government was started in 1957 by American Baptist missionaries, with the first classes composed of a handful of students meeting in a small bamboo house. Its purpose was to educate tribal children of northern Thailand who otherwise would have no educational opportunities as they are not considered Thai citizens. This school is now a large multi-building compound attended by 2200 students from various local tribal groups, mostly Akha.

Almost 60 percent of the Sakasartsuksa School’s students come from Christian homes, where some students live in the school’s dormitories and some commute there daily. Support now comes from a variety of sources other than American Baptist churches, but the school still honors its American Baptist heritage with classes in Christianity and the reciting of the Lord’s Prayer every day before classes start. Our ABCRM mission team members were the honored guests of the school’s opening ceremony this day, with our mission team leader Kerry saying a few words to all the students about where we were from, and also our bringing greetings from their brothers and sisters in Christ in the Rocky Mountain Region to these students.

We met with the principal after the ceremonies. Mr. Songsaeng was raised in a Christian family and his father was a leader of the Baptist Churches in Burma. His concern was that his school not only change minds but also hearts. Many tribal families deal with issues such as drugs.

Our next stop of the day was at the Akha Crafts Center Store across the street from the Fox home. We took advantage of this opportunity to see the beautiful items made by the Akha Crafts Store staff under the direction of Ruth before heading on to the AKHA (Akha Kinship and Holistic Alternatives) Foundation in Chiang Rai. AKHA Foundation leader Yote Kukaewkasem (mentored by Paul Lewis) focuses on helping many Akha villages in the Chiang Rai area, including protection of the forest environment, creating economic opportunities for Akha communities and families, educating Akha youth, improving Akha health conditions, providing Akha crises relief programs, and solving Akha/Thai community problems through negotiations.

Our next stop during the day was to visit the Mekong Minority Foundation (MMF) in Chiang Rai led by ABC-IM missionary Scott Coats, son of well-know northern Thailand missionaries Bob and Patricia Coats who started over 60 American Baptist churches especially among the Karen people from 1957 through 1995. Scott’s MMF organization focus on helping all the Mekong Delta tribal groups (Karen, Akha, Hmong, Lahu, Lisu, Mien, and Tai Yai) to develop and raise up leaders among these people, emphasizing through training how to lead based on Christian ethics and morality in all that they do. Although Scott has been here several years connected with World Concern based in Tacoma, Washington, he has organized in recent years the independent MMF Foundation to carry on the work of building tribal leaders (see -- http://minorityleadership.org/English/minoritypeople.htm).

After our visit with Scott, we stopped by the Family Learning Center in Chiang Rai to see the completion of this international school’s “Sports Day” where Ruth Fox is the principal. Sports Day involves five multi-aged groups of the some 80 elementary/primary English-speaking students at this school competing in various athletic events to see can score the most points. We ended the day by returning to our Chiang Rai hotel dinner with Chuck and Ruth after Chuck showed us the typically street markets where food and other items are sold. We discovered when the hotel’s evening soloist starting singing American songs from the 60’s and 70’s that Chuck/Ruth and Carl/Carmen are great dancers. It was another nice ending to a busy day in Chiang Rai!


Tuesday, February 12

Today’s ABCRM Thailand mission trip activities started with visiting the Family Learning Center for a more in-depth tour after briefly seeing the school’s Sports Day events on Monday afternoon. Many missionary children attend the school as well as Thai children and children of other non-Thai’s who are spending time in this country for business or other reasons. It’s located in a former “bungalow motel” with 35 cabin units used for classrooms and school offices. The curriculum is based on home-school teaching materials, but Ruth hopes to soon achieve an accredited international status for the school. Christianity is emphasized in the curriculum although not all children are from families who are Christian.

On this day, our mission team attended the hour-long worship time that FLC holds for all students in the school’s primary meeting room every Tuesday morning. All the students joined in singing contemporary songs with words displayed on TV monitors, and sharing of prayer concerns raised by the students and staff. Ruth invited Beth Cook from our mission team to provide the worship message in the form of story-telling to all the school’s students that they tremendously enjoyed. What a joyful service it was to start our day’s mission team’s activities!

At the end of the school worship service, Bruce Cook of our team presented a $1200 donation to the school’s building/grounds supervisor Mooh, a member of the Karen tribe. This money came from the Cook’s building contractor who had been working on their home in January, and heard about our ABCRM Thailand mission trip from Beth. Although the Cook’s contractor had no knowledge about the need for $1200 by Mooh to buy a much-needed pickup truck that had been found by a Chiang Rai friend who was selling it for $1205, Ruth Fox (much to her amazement) found about the Colorado contractor’s $1200 donation and made the “connection” for Mooh to receive the donation forwarded by First Baptist of Colorado Springs through the Cook’s. Mooh was total overwhelmed by Bruce’s giving of these funds to her, as were the school students and our mission team members who witnessed this amazing way in which the Holy Spirit can work in our lives!

After a tour of FLC by Ruth, our mission team checked out of our Chiang Rai hotel, and prepared for the next five days of doing our primary ABCRM mission trip projects. Carl, Kerry, Bruce, and Karen helped Chuck load up his truck with construction supplies, sleeping bags, and other necessities for their school renovation project at the Sansuk Akha village located about an hour from Chiang Rai. Barbara, Beth, and Carmen moved into the Fox home to in parallel do crafts projects with the Chiang Rai New Life Center women, help the Akha Crafts staff and Ruth with various Crafts Center work-items, and to help with FLC library projects under Ruth’s direction. Our ABCRM team was looking forward to doing “hands-on” work projects with our Akha and Thai friends, where the $4500 cost of the materials associated with these projects was covered by 2008 ABCRM missions-focused funding for our February 6-19 ABCRM Thailand Mission Experiences trip. Our mission trip members are excited about the rest of our week here that lies ahead!