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It Takes a Village to Change Another

It Takes a Village to Change Another

It Takes a Village to Change Another

Aldea Nueva is a village tucked into mountains of The Cerro San Gil of Izabal. From El Faro it is a good 30-minute drive and then a good hour hike in deep mud straight up until you reach a small community of about 40 families, a one-roomed schoolhouse, one church, and of course a soccer field. Many of the men of this village used to work in a teak wood farm near El Faro but two years ago the trees were cut and the farm is now in the growing stage which requires little help leaving the men of the communities without jobs.

Pastor Gerardo, the pastor of the Evangelical church of Punta de Palma and pictured above in the red shirt, gets together with all of the pastor’s once a month to have their denominational meeting. It was in one of the these meetings he heard direct from the mouth of the pastor of Aldea Nueva that the people there were in great need. He took it upon himself to speak with the members of his church and starting five years ago they began to travel to Aldea Nueva to bring what little they have to bless others.

The beauty of this project is that it began in the heart of the local church. They have seen how El Faro has helped many of the villages including theirs and decided to do something themselves. Last December pastor Gerardo approached Luis Pedro Rios, the director of missions, to see if we had any shoes, clothing, food, toys, or children’s activities we could donate to them to give to Aldea Nueva. Throughout the year we have many teams donate clothes or leave clothes behind and we wash and save them to sell to raise money for missions projects. We still had a lot of clothing left over from the year and were able to give them three big duffle bags full of clothing and shoes and the church of Punta de Palma raised money and bought members of their church to travel and bless Aldea Nueva.

It has truly been inspiring to see this small church make such a big difference in another community. The people of Punta de Palma don’t have much and yet they are giving so much. They are looking beyond themselves and their circumstances to recognize that God can use them as much or even more than the people of El Faro.


The fact that there were older men whose foot size was a 7 or 8 at the most trying out shoes that were sizes 12 tells me that they don’t have enough resources to keep their daily needs taken care of.  We need to pray that God strengthens the church in Aldea Nueva and provides them with work, health and education.
Luis Pedro Rios

We want to help Gerardo’s church and encourage them to be the difference. They dream of doing various outreaches each year and we want them to dream big without boundaries. Saying this, there is a huge physical need of the people of Aldea Nueva and the surrounding villages that are even more remote. Puerto Barrios is too far for these villagers to travel to receive health attention so many have lived many years with pain.

In January we would like to team with Gerardo’s church and reach out to these remote villages to meet their physical needs.  We will be teaming up with a nursing team from the states and also partner with Guatemalan doctors and dentists to see as many villagers as we can in two days. In order to do this we need help purchasing medical supplies and medications, the hosting of the doctors, and also transportation to the village. These people need to know that they are not forgotten.

If you would like to help support this medical trip and bring physical healing to those who have never seen a doctor before please click HERE

The Touch of Love

The Touch of Love

The Touch of Love

Living with a disability is a huge disadvantage all over the world, but especially in Guatemala where 14% of the population lives with a physical or mental disability. With almost no government help, those with disabilities live very isolated lives. According to the World Health Organization, people with disabilities make up 15% of the world’s population making them the largest minority group with 80% of them living in developing countries. Children comprise approximately one-third of the world’s disabled population and approximately 65% of the disabilities affecting children are preventable (Community Based Rehabilitation, M Peats).

DSC_0072Mayra Duran began working with children with special needs at El Faro in 2012. Toward the end of last year Mayra became aware of two special cases in the village who were in desperate need of physical therapy. At the same time that Mayra was to start working with them a group of physical therapy students from Shenendoah University traveled to El Faro with the purpose of meeting the disabled children to teach them and their families exercises. With God’s perfect timing intertwining Mayra and Shenendoah, Mayra knew that God was opening up opportunities to work with these children. In addition, a young girl from the village named Elsa began her first year of physical theraphy school and was able to team up with Mayra to work with the patients.

Mayra traveled with the team to the houses where she was taught specific exercises to do with the patients. A second team came from Shenedoah later in the year and with the progress that Mayra and Elsa had done with the patients already this year were able to add additional exercises.

DSC_0084Karlita is a beautiful young woman who is 22 years old. When her mother was 8-months pregnant she contracted hepatitis causing Karlita to be born deaf, blind, and with cerebral palsy. She can sit up, but she doesn’t walk and has to eat all her food in liquid form because she can’t swallow. When Mayra and Elsa first began to work with her, Karlita would not let them touch her without her mother also there and fought against the therapy exercises. Today Mayra and Elsa arrive at the house where they immediately have her feel their faces to know who they are and she is able to perform her exercises. Shenendoah provided leg braces and exercises to strengthen her legs and since she has been making progress towards walking someday.

Melvin is 18 and when he was seven months old contracted meningitis causing him to have cerebal palsy and also loss of his motor skills. He never has walked and had never received any kind of therapy until Mayra started visiting him. Spending all his life in a hammock has caused him to be extremely limited in his movements and that is specifically where Mayra and Elsa focus. They are working on exercises to strengthen both his arms and legs and have seen much progress especially since he can now stretch his legs.

Elsa meets with the patients three times a week walking from her house which sometimes takes an hour. The distance doesn’t affect her because she is so excited to work with the patients and continue to learn.

Karlita and Melvin are just two stories of the hundreds that exist across the county of Guatemala. We applaud Mayra and Elsa for the time and love they invest in the lives not only of the patients, but of their families. We are also so grateful to Shenendoah University for the teams they have brought down because they are helping make a change for the disabled community of Guatemala.

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If you want to know more about Mayra and how you can support her, please click HERE

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El Faro Dental Program

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El Faro Dental Program

Wendy Maldonado has been our official dentist at El Faro for the past two years. After completing her internship for med school, she decided to return as a full-time missionary and be in charge of dental outreaches.

The vision that she has for the dental clinic and outreaches is to serve God through the abilities, profession, and time that the odontologists have with the purpose of reflecting the care that God has for each person through a good free dental treatment in villages that don’t have access to this service and taking every opportunity to share the love of God to the patients.

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On a daily basis in the clinic on the grounds at El Faro Wendy attends to six to seven patients of all ages from different parts of Izabal with some even walking more than two hours under the sun. The advantage of the dental clinic is that Wendy has more time to talk slowly with the patients and pray for them.

This year alone Wendy has led dental outreaches in 10 different villages (with some repeated) for a total of 615 patients. For these medical outreaches she has had the help of 12 dentists who gladly donate their time and abilities to this project as well as Guatemalans and foreign helpers who although aren’t dentist, help in cleaning the dental instruments or serve as dental assistants.

“We want to reflect the love of God wherever he might take us”

Wendy chooses villages that do not have access to a dentist where people in the greatest of pain have to travel long distances with only a Tylenol to ease their pain. It is for those people who don’t have the means that Wendy sets up clinic and performs cleanings, extractions, and fillings. Educating the people so that they value their teeth and learn to care for them instead of having them extracted is a huge goal.

10559816_10206153627780432_349406509156102736_nTwo months ago Wendy led a dental outreach in a village called ‘Lagunita’. Wendy and her team traveled one hour and a half up river in a boat where they ended up having to carry their equipment to a school where they would be working for two days. This medical outreach was special because during their lunch time the dentist were separated into groups of two and went to different houses of the villagers who had a meal prepared for them. Wendy was assigned a house that could only be reach by taking a very small wooden canoe with wooden oars where you couldn’t make too much movement or else the canoe would tip.

When they arrived at the houses they had the opportunity to share with the patients they had attended to. Wendy was repeatedly thanked because her patients had been in constant pain for so long. They were able to talk over meals and the dentists would leave praying over the houses and the families.

“It’s amazing to see what God does in the medical outreaches and in the form in which he uses us and taking us places we would never imagine. God is blessing many people in the villages but undoubtedly it is us who end up being blessed to be part of this project.”


If you would like to read more about Wendy and how you can support the dental program, click HERE

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Women’s health is a very important issue in Guatemala mainly because of the lack of education. Simple topics including menstrual cycle and female anatomy are avoided leaving women with many fears and doubts concerning their own bodies and how they work.

Macie Holstein, a recent graduate of Georgia College with a degree in Public Health, came down with her church to do a medical trip and stayed as a volunteer an extra week with the focus of doing a women’s health outreach. She prepared lesson plans to include diet, personal hygiene, a woman’s anatomy, menstrual cycle and menopause, personal care during and after pregnancy, and how to prevent teen pregnancy.

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A team of women from El Faro banded together with Macie and for four days traveled to different villages including Las Esbobas, Frontera, Santa Maria, and Punta de Palma. One of the neat activities each woman did was write down the dreams they had for their children before they were to have kids of their own. Focusing on a bigger picture and dreaming for them creates an atmosphere of striving for something more. In addition, one of the things that was stressed throughout the week  was the importance of talking openly with their children about these topics often avoided.

We believe that this is just the beginning to informing and empowering the women in the villages that surround El Faro through educational outreaches. We have seen too many young women give up dreams due to an unplanned pregnancy and also many who live in fear because of not understanding how their bodies work. The response was positive and we saw the desire in the women to learn more.

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Mayrita-headphonesHealing The Children is an organization that has come to Guatemala for 8 years to help deaf children by giving hearing aids for those who need it. This year three deaf students from the Special Education program at El Faro received the invitation to go to the medical trip for a free hearing test, in Puerto Barrios, Izabal. Mayra Duran, the missionary who runs the special education program at El faro, traveled with her students and their parents on November 6th to the medical trip. They went through five different stations: First, the cleaning of the ear. Second, the hearing test that was performed by a doctor who also was deaf. Third, adjusting the hearing aid. Then, education which included a short lesson on how to use the devices correctly. And finally, they saw pediatrician to see if there was any infection in their ears. Two of the three students received their hearing aids. One of the students wasn’t able to receive a hearing aid because the test showed that she was completely deaf. However we thank God for this opportunity and it was a big blessing to have this medical check for free.

Delmi is a deaf girl who lives with her grandmother two hours away from El Faro walking. Her grandmother is sick and can’t walk very well, but she made the effort to take Delmi for her hearing test. She can hear now! Delmi and her grandmother are so thankful with God because she can hear now with her left ear. Having a hearing aid will allow her to communicate better and to continue studying. Next year Delmi will start coming to El Faro to learn how to read and write. She is so excited!

The deaf ministry at El Faro has created an awareness in the villages that there is hope for families to be able to communicate with their deaf child. It has opened up so many opportunities including learning sign language and also being able to receive hearing aids through the help of amazing organizations like Healing the Children. If you would like to know how you can help or if you would like to donate to this ministry, contact Mayra Duran at mayrasofiaduran@gmail.com

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