Thursday, August 25, 2011

Picture Post - CHE TOT 1

We told you about the Training of Trainers and the Coordination team last week. This time we wanted to post some pictures from the week.

The CHE coordination team meeting before the TOT began.

The TOT in progress.

One of the participants receiving his certificate for completing the TOT.

The whole group proudly displaying their certificates!

The 1Mission team having dinner with the trainers Dr. Hugo Gomez and Pastor Jacob Sotelo.


Jacob Sotelo will be back in early September to finish the TOT and recruit a few trainers to begin developing the CHE program. We are almost literally on the edge of our seats waiting for Christ-centered community-led development to transform Peñasco!

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Training of Trainers


Right now in Rocky Point something big is happening. One Mission has partnered with multiple churches and organizations working in Rocky Point to host a CHE training of trainers seminar. Almost every major church and organization is represented in hosting the seminar. Its the first time that this many different entities have worked together in any venture that we know of. Its a huge win for the entire community.

Dr. Hugo Gomez traveled all the way from Guatemala to facilitate the seminar. Dr. Gomez is the president of Global CHE Enterprises. He is a specialist in community led development with more than 20 years of experience training leaders with CHE principles. Also assisting with the training is Jacob Sotelo, who is the Mexico area director for CHE.

After the week long seminar the CHE coordination team (which consists of multiple local churches/organizations) will hire 2-5 full time trainers. These men/women will be responsible for spreading the message of Christ-centered community development throughout the barrios of Rocky Point.

You can learn more about Dr. Hugo and Jacob here. You can learn more about CHE here.

This event has been three years in the making so it goes without saying that we are excited about it. We are extremely proud of our Mexico team for pulling this off with absolute excellence.

We also have to thank all of our donors and supporters. Your support and encouragement make all of this possible. Thank you.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Why do we exist?

We believe in mobilizing people to be the change they want to see in their communities.

We don't exist to solve their problems. We don't exist to provide for people.

Currently in Rocky Point there are more than 80 people earning better lives for themselves and their families through the One Mission house program.

That means in the next 6-8 months more than 16,000 hours of community service hours will be served in the community by the community.

People serving together, praying together, eating together, and sharing their lives with each other. This is starting to sound familiar.

Thats why we exist.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

The answer is dignity, not stuff.


Poverty is not a lack of stuff, have you heard us say that before? If it is not a lack of stuff, but we are called to help, what can we do? The answer cannot be to make other people's lives look like ours. We need to empower them to make their own lives what they want their lives to be. They need to own their own development and futures. This builds dignity which empowers communities, over the long term, to solve their own problems and not rely on outside resources. Nothing stifles dignity faster than dependency.

Some of our staff just got back from a trip to the Mathare slums of Nairobi, Kenya. They were visiting an organization there that has been doing development for more than 10 years. The picture above is outside one of the schools this organization runs.

Dependency kills development. If you haven't read the book, When Helping Hurts, now is the time.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Holistic

Its a term that gets used a lot in ministry. Unfortunately, its meaning may have been lost.

Its such an important part of what we do and what we believe in.

Dictionary.com defines it as,
Characterized by comprehension of the parts of something as intimately interconnected and explicable only by reference to the whole.
How this applies to ministry is simple. When working in holistic ministry its important to understand that humans cannot be separated into separate beings. Most common in the church world, we focus on the spiritual but ignore the physical. Another common problem is focusing on the physical while leaving the spiritual up to whatever feels right. In America, its not uncommon to focus exclusively on the emotional.

The problem is, you can't separate humans into separate beings. We aren't one being at a time, we are all human all the time.

Thats why holistic ministry is absolutely essential.

You can't minister to one 'being' effectively without ministering to them all at the same time. How can ministry involve every piece of a human at the same time? The only 'system' that reaches the whole human is relationship. The trick is, relationship is not a system at all. More on that later... stay tuned.


Thursday, June 16, 2011

Our New Trip Director


We would like to take the opportunity to introduce you to Pedro Tapia. He has been married to his wife Susana for 22 years and has three kids; Pedro, Priscilla, and Isaac.

Pedro has accepted the role of Trip Director in Puerto Peñasco. He will be responsible for executing trips, including managing the base camp, running the kitchen, and coordinating the construction process.

In the last two years One Mission has hosted more than 3000 trip participants who have built homes, staffed medical clinics, or hosted outreach events. One Mission believes in utilizing local resources and our most precious resources are the people involved. Adding to our local team is of the utmost importance for the projects to be effective and sustainable.

We are thankful for Pedro's heart of service and we are excited to see how God will use Pedro in his new role as Trip Director.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

The Micro-Macro Paradox


The following is an except taken from the book, "Dead Aid" by Dambisa Moyo.

There's a mosquito net maker in Africa. He manufactures around 500 nets a week. He employs ten people, who (as with many African countries) each have to support upwards of fifteen relatives. However hard they work, they can't make enough nets to combat the malaria-carrying mosquito.
Enter vociferous Hollywood movie star who rallies the masses, and goads Western governments to collect and send 100,000 mosquito nets to the afflicted region, at a cost of a million dollars. The nets arrive, the nets are distributed, and a 'good' deed is done.

With the market flooded with foreign nets, however, our mosquito net maker is promptly put out of business. His ten workers can no longer support their 150 dependents (who are now forced to rely on handouts), and one mustn't forget that in a maximum of five years the majority of the imported nets will be torn, damaged and of no further use.

This is the micro-macro paradox. A short-term efficacious intervention may have few discernible, sustainable long-term benefits. Worse still, it can unintentionally undermine whatever fragile chance for sustainable development may already be in play.




Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Focus Group


A few Saturdays ago the whole One Mission team (in Peñasco) spent half a day asking leaders in the community different questions about their community. We found people that we saw as natural leaders in their community. They hold no formal position of authority, they simply hold influence in a community where natural influence is hard to come by. Below are some great quotes from the experience.
Our community is very open to ideas and willing to serve when given the opportunity, we're not very good at finding that opportunity. - Teresa

There are at least ten drug dealers in my neighborhood I see a couple times a week. - Tony

Two years ago I didn't know any of my neighbors. Now I know almost everyone on my street, our kids walk to school together everyday. - Teresa

There are no safe places for kids other than in their homes, school isn't even safe anymore. - Maricela

Volunteering with people has really built a lot of relationships within my neighborhood. - Maricela

People I volunteer with at One Mission have become part of my family - Jesus

For me, poverty is a heart issue. Its not looking for opportunities or fighting for whats necessary to sustain my family. Its lack of initiative. - Maricela

Poverty is able people waiting for solutions to fall from the sky - Teresa
As you can see their feelings and responses are all over the board. One of the most important discoveries we made from the whole process is that poverty isn't a matter of lacking something (food, clothes, house, etc...). Poverty, according to the people living it, is being stuck. Its not being able to do anything about your own situation. Its the shame associated with not being able to sustain your family. Its not even knowing what you can possibly do today to make tomorrow better.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

What is poverty?

All morning the whole team in Peñasco walked around the barrios asking people one question: What is poverty?

We got all kinds of different answers. We are really looking forward to compiling them into some type of readable format... Stay tuned!!! In the mean time, take a few minutes and answer it yourself.

In your own words, define poverty.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

What does success look like?

Since what we do at One Mission is long term focused, sometimes its hard to define success. What is a win?

Our mission statement is to develop and disciple local people. How do we measure if development is being done? Local people should be giving and serving.

Maricela is a wife and a mother. She has five kids. They live in the barrios and no one in her family has had consistent work in over a year. When she heard that a nearby family needed help with a down payment for some land, she gave $40.

Keep in mind an average salary is $60/week and they haven't had that in over a year.

She doesn't have a savings account. She sacrificed so that someone else could have. It brings this passage to a whole new light. It doesn't take systems, governments, or even organizations.

It takes individuals who have a heart for other individuals.

"We are all we have" - Jacqueline Novogratz


Wednesday, February 16, 2011

207


If you missed it, the 207 ride just happened last weekend.

With a total of 25 riders participate we had 17 finish at One Mission in Rocky Point. These guys are insane. They rode their bikes from Peoria, Arizona to our base camp in Peñasco, Mexico. Its 207 miles. They raised money and awareness of whats going on so close to home. Some highlights:
  • 9 local Peñasco riders joined the group at the border and finished the ride.
  • A local Peñasco police officer that received a home from One Mission was able to provide a police escort the last 20 miles of the ride.
  • Raised more than $8,000
  • Built a home for the Arce Calzadillas family.
Check out the Facebook page and website for more details.

Huge thanks to the following for making it all possible:









Thursday, February 3, 2011

From the Field: River Crossing

Every month we host a seminar on community development at our community center in Rocky Point. In 2010 we trained 540 community members in the difference between relief and development. This past week we added a new piece to the seminar: River Crossing.

It goes like this:

Draw two lines with chalk on the floor to be banks of a river. Draw two circles representing stepping stones and a larger circle to represent an island. Two people come to the river and want to cross but do now know how to swim. The current is strong and they are afraid to cross. A third man comes along and sees their difficulty. He offers to help them cross on the stepping stones but they are afraid. He agrees to carry one on his back but only manages to reach the island where he leaves the first man. He then returns to get the second man but is now too tired to carry the next man. The third man refuses to carry the man who is left but agrees to help him walk across on the stones. Halfway across the man feels confident enough to manage on his own. Both men cross the river and the one man is left on the island and shouts for help as the first man walks away completely forgetting that he is left there. The man that was helped across the river goes back to the man who is left on the island and teaches him to do it, so he in turn can also teach others.

And then we ask a bunch of questions trying to draw out the following points:

When you carry the person, you don't teach him to do it himself.
If you teach someone something, do it in a way that he can then teach others.
Sometimes you hurt more than help a person by doing it for him.
You learn better by doing and not just seeing.
A teacher was needed.
We learn by example and encouragement.
Explanation needed.
Repetition important.
Sometimes we only do half a job.
Doing it for someone doesn't get the job done.
We don't need vast experience to teach someone else.
Real development is helping people do things themselves, not doing it for them.
The last part shows the importance of multiplication.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

2011 Goal #11: Implement Metrics

We've always been interested in how to measure success. We spend a ton of time and a ton of energy doing what we do, we want to make sure its making a difference. Without measuring what we're doing how can we know we're making a difference? Some metrics that we might implement this year are: baptisms, small groups, church attendance, event attendance, houses built, families in the process for a house, etc....

Another thing this effects is moving forward. All new programs or initiatives will be extremely measurable and trackable.

If we believe this story is true (we do) then we don't have any choice but to track and make sure we're doing the most with what we have.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

2011 Goal #6: Increase Volunteer Hours to 200

One Mission believes that impoverished communities around the world need to see themselves as active participants, not passive recipients of the change necessary to improve their conditions.

In Rocky Point we build around 50-60 houses per year. Every person who applies to receive a home through One Mission has to volunteer a certain amount of hours in their community. This is to make sure they actually want their community to get better.

Previously the requirement was 45 hours. Usually the applicant would help out by helping build a few of his neighbors houses. We've partnered with five organizations: two schools, one church, one retirement center, and one government organization. Now every house applicant is responsible to go to at least one of these organizations and help out.

The requirement is officially 200 hours of volunteer community service. This accomplishes a few things:

1) a lot more is being done in the community
2) people begin to understand the importance of volunteerism
3) people understand that it is up to them to earn their house
3a) its no longer just luck or connections - its fair and its their responsibility.
4) other things that we'll blog about in a few months

And as always, they are still encouraged to help build their neighbors home. Its so important that goals get accomplished using as many local resources as possible.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

2011 Goal #4: CHE Vision Seminar

What is CHE? Technically it stands for Community Health Evangelism. Operationally it is a whole lot more.

Its a method of community development that is started, owned, and sustained locally. From their website:
Community Health Evangelism (CHE) seamlessly integrates evangelism and discipleship with disease prevention and community based development. The work is wholistic, seeking to meet the whole need of individuals and communities through complete obedience to everything Jesus commanded. Read more about CHE at this link.
Now onto the actual goal: Host a vision seminar with 20-30 participants.

What is a vision seminar? Its a two day event, hosted by One Mission led by a CHE representative. This event explains the vision, the purpose, and some of the methods behind the CHE program.

Who attends? Because we're in a unique location with multiple American based NGO's and a plethora of local church leaders we are going to be hosting an English and Spanish vision seminar. Pastors, organization leaders, lay leaders, teachers, even government officials can and should attend the vision seminar. We haven't sent out the actual invites yet so we're keeping the roster under wraps until they've had a chance to confirm their attendance:)

What happens next? Thats the beauty of it. After the vision seminar some people naturally want to do it and the others don't. Its the people that believe in the vision that take the next step. The beauty behind this whole concept is that it is owned by locals and we (as an American NGO) get to support in whatever way we possibly can.

Stay tuned for our next post: Increasing the volunteer hours required to receive a home from 45 to 200!

Friday, January 14, 2011

2011 in the Barrios

We are a goal oriented bunch of people here at One Mission in Rocky Point. We set goals for everything. Last month one of our goals was to set 15 goals for the next six months!

I won't share all the boring details with you but here are three of the goals we're really excited about:

1) CHE vision seminar complete with 20-30 participants.
2) Volunteer hours required for a house to increase to 200 from 45.
3) Implement metrics (home visits, leaders being trained, hours served, etc...)

Over the next few posts we'll be unpacking these goals a little bit. Stay tuned: next post is all about CHE! What is CHE? What is a vision seminar? Who will be there?

On a separate note, thank you for reading this blog. We couldn't do anything at all without people like you supporting us and encouraging us along the way. THANK YOU!