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Passion Play Nicaragua Mission approaching

    Vance Neudorf is a team leader on a Canadian Badlands Passion Play Mission trip to Nicaragua to build a classroom at the Verbo School in Bluefields on the east coast of Nicaragua at the end of December.

    While standing in a long line at a toy store with a Christmas gift for my grandson, I spied a package of Kinder Eggs on the candy rack. My thoughts immediately went to Nicaragua and a boy about the same age as my grandson. We had visited his school and had brought a gift of 200 Kinder Eggs in Tupperware containers. As we left, this boy came running up to thank me. He had eaten the chocolate egg but didn’t understand that there was something inside the orange plastic ball. When I opened it and showed him the toy inside, he did the most ecstatic happy dance I have ever seen. It was as if that little orange egg contained all the treasure he had ever dreamt of.
    The children of Nicaragua have captured my heart and I consider it a great privilege to be able to help them by building a school in the city of Bluefields. Nicaragua is the poorest country in the Americas and the needs are great but the people there are hardworking and resourceful. It amazes me how much they can get done for so little.
    Ed and Ligia Jaentschke exemplify the Nicaraguan spirit. When a devastating hurricane struck Bluefields they responded by taking children into their home and starting a school in their back yard. The school grew and today it educates 350 students giving them the skills they need to participate in the rebuilding of their country. Many girls today work at breaking rocks into pebbles to sell to construction companies. The school is making a great difference in their lives. It is giving them hope and training for a better life.
    The Verbo School also works with children from the dump. These children sort through the trash as it arrives looking for recyclables and food. Our team works with the church to bring food to these families but it is difficult to realize that at times these children must compete with the pigs and dogs for something to eat.
    The children from the dump and quarry who come to the Verbo School are invited to stop by the church before school starts to have a meal. It is often the only meal they receive in a day and at times more than 200 children will show up for a bowl of rice and beans. We have been there on days when there was not enough to go around and the sight of hungry children being turned away was extremely difficult. The infrastructure was all there to provide a meal, all that was missing was 50 cents to buy the ingredients.
    The Verbo church has started a home for children who have to live on the streets just to survive but construction can only take place when teams arrive to help with manpower and funding.
    Children also suffer due to lack of medical resources. One child named Mario had his eye damaged in an accident and he had lost all hope of not being disfigured for the rest of his life. He was telling Ed that he didn’t even want to live any more. After leaving the hospital, we asked Ed what it would take to have the surgery and get Mario a glass eye. The total cost was $50 but neither the family nor the church had the money on hand.
    Our team contributed the funds and a month later, we got a picture of a much happier Mario. It is incredible how far our donations can go to help children in Nicaragua.
    At the end of December, I will be taking a team to Nicaragua to continue work on the Verbo School. A few years back we dug the foundation for a concrete building to replace the old wooden classroom building.  The new building is nearing completion and the school is already using the bottom floor. We will be working to get the entire facility ready for the students to use.
    For this trip, a team from the Canadian Badlands Passion Play will join me and we will be going down over the Christmas holidays to continue the work on the classroom building.
    If you would like be a part of blessing the Verbo school this Christmas you can make a donation by clicking here.
    It takes just a few minutes and any amount, even the cost of a Kinder Egg, will help out (the trip is through Samaritan’s Purse and gifts are tax deductible). This is my personal funding page and donations made here will go to support the Verbo School construction project. If we raise more than we need for this particular project, your donation will assist with many other needs.


New Year’s party kicks off centennial celebrations

    Drumheller is gearing up for a huge bash to ring in our centennial year. This year, the Badlands Community Facility will be the site for a once-in-100-years New Year’s Eve celebration.
    This will also be the first year such an event will be held at the new Badlands Communtiy Facility.
    “It’s quite a momentous occasion and something to be proud of for sure. We’ll be ringing in the new year in style, having a blast and getting started on a whole year’s worth of celebrations for our centennial. It’s something special and something we’ll never see again in our lifetimes,” said Councillor Lisa Hansen-Zacharuk, who helped plan the event with the Drumheller Centennial Committee.
    “There’s going to be huge fireworks right at midnight happening right across the river from the BCF.”
    To help everyone get home safe, the Valley Bus Society will be offering a shuttle service to drive people home within Drumheller.
    The New Year’s celebration gets the ball rolling on a whole year’s worth of centennial celebrations.
    One of the major events being scheduled is on May 15, 2013, the official day Drumheller was incorporated as a municipality 100 years ago when the coal mining boom was just getting underway.
    Plans include another dinner gala for that day.
    The biggest centennial event will coincide with Drumheller’s Canada Day celebration. Other, smaller events will be held throughout the year. Anyone holding an event throughout the year is encouraged to take up the centennial theme.
    Plans are also in the works to create a the Centennial Park, which includes a skate park next to the Rotary Spray Park and a outdoor amphitheater near the Aquaplex.
    For now, the Drumheller Centennial Committee is focusing on ringing in Drumheller’s 100th Anniversary.
    “It’s a kick-off to the centennial celebrations and I think it’s going to be a good one,” said Hansen-Zacharuk.

Are you a regifter?

    Christmas is the season of giving, and for most there is great simplicity to wrapping up a present, sliding it under the tree and waiting for that moment of uninhibited joy when their loved one reveals their new socks.
    Or it could be your son who has for weeks has had visions of Ninja Turtles dancing in his head opening his new pajamas.
    Gifting can be a minefield, and it is not just making sure you are getting what the person wants or needs. There are considerations of finance, relationships, tastes and all of these stresses begin even before the mall.
    In fact, sometimes they begin when you already have the present in hand, and you know it is perfect. Why? Because last Christmas someone gave it to you.
    You may have already have one of the items, or maybe it didn’t fit. For one reason or another it is in the closet and still has Scotch Tape residue.
    To regift or not to regift that is the question?
    Marina Flater admits to regifting.    
    “If it is something I can’t necessarily use or I have multiples of that you can regift, but you don’t make a big deal about it, and you don’t tell the whole world, because the person who gave it to you feels good because they gave you a gift, and the person you give it to feels good,” said Flater.
    She has a few rules. One is you never regift something from your mother. Another is if you can’t use the item and then regift it.
    “You have to have a good heart and do it for the right reasons. If I got a gift, and I knew someone else could use it more than me,” said Flater.
    Shannon Dart says she never regifts. Her feelings are that it takes away the meaning of the gift.
 But if it is something she won’t use, she pays it forward in a way.
    “I usually give a lot of it to Greentree School’s White Elephant Sale,” said Dart.
    Tammi Garbutt says she has regifted.
    “I can’t think of an example off the top of my head, but yes, if I have a duplicate on something, yes,” said Garbutt. “If it is still sealed, then absolutely.”
    She has no qualms about taking an item back to the store straight away either.
    “Maybe you get something from someone who just doesn’t know you and if they have given you a gift receipt with it, then I see that as permission to take it back, exchange it and get what you want,” said Garbutt.
    Dart agrees and has returned gifts.
    “We don’t want to say we don’t like it, we smile and say thank-you. It might be a duplicate, or we might have it, or it doesn’t fit. I find more and more gifts have receipts with them,” said Dart.
    Another tough spot to be put in is when a neighbour comes to the door with a present, and you had no plans of doing the same.
    Flater said she would reciprocate if there was enough time. She’s not about to bake a new batch of cookies on Christmas Eve, however.
    Dart said if a neighbour brings over a gift, she feels obligated to return the favour.
    “Maybe not the next day, but within the week,” said Dart.
    Another minefield is the annual Christmas gift exchange. What do you do when, for example, you have an exchange with family or coworkers, and one of the ground rules is a dollar limit on the gifts. Do these include sale prices? If there is a $50 limit and you find a $50 pair of gloves on sale for $20, are you done shopping?
    For Flater she soldiers along in the mall to spend as much of the limit as she can.
    Dart also agrees that you keep shopping.
    “I just try to think of the other person,” said Dart.
    Garbutt also keeps shopping.
    “I would throw in a box of chocolates,” she said.
 The one other conundrums that many face is the gifts to teachers. It may seem that even as pure the intent may be, can teachers really take home and keep 25 toilet paper roll and macaroni art “World’s Greatest Teacher” crafts.
    Dart is a teacher, and taught most of her career at the junior high level, and admits as kids get older the presents drop in number.  And while it seems that it would be difficult to keep everything, Dart says she cherishes them all.
    “I can’t speak for all teachers, but the gifts I got meant a lot to me, so I would sign the back with the date and who gave it to me and keep them,” she said. “I think it is the thought that counts.”
    Flater says consumables are the way to go for teachers.
    “Chocolate, wine, Tylenol… always consumables…but don’t sent wine to school with the kids!” said Flater.


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