Sunday, October 11, 2009

Eastern Europe and Balkans Consultation

In Mission Together Across the Miles
Eastern European and Balkans Consultation
November 5-7, 2009
West Market Street United Methodist Church
Greensboro, North Carolina

Join Us for a Memorable & Inspiring Consultation Event!

Learn how you can become an In Mission Together Partner Church!

Strengthen your IMT relationships!

Shape the IMT vision for the future!

Provide an opportunity for new churches to get involved!
Link to article on General Board of Global Ministries website

Consultation Agenda Highlights:
Travel “vicariously” to IMT countries.
Hear reports and have an opportunity to meet IMT Coordinators from each country.
Network with others involved in this ministry in Eastern Europe and the US.
Attend valuable “how-to” workshops to strengthen your ministry.
Celebrate achievements, share stories, hopes and encouragement with US and Eastern
Europe & Balkan friends.
Hear an address from Bishop Streiff of Central & Southern Europe.
Who Should Attend this Consultation?
All In Mission Together partner UMCs and VIM teams—lay and clergy.
Local church, district, conference & general agency leadership.
Persons desiring to learn about mission opportunities in Eastern Europe and the Balkans for
the first time.

Registration & Hotel Information:
Early Registration cost - $75 per person (for registrations received prior to September 18,
2009)
Regular Registration cost - $85 per person
Partial Registration - Registrations for the consultation for persons arriving Friday morning are available. The registration cost is $60 before September 18 and $70 after September 18.
Registration brochure [PDF] - Register by completing registration form and faxing to West Market Street United Methodist Church at 336-275-4589. You will need to mail your check for your registration fee to West Market Street United Methodist Church, Attn: Elizabeth Montgomery, PO Box 870, Greensboro, NC 27402-0870. Make checks payable to WMSUMC, with IMT Consultation on the memo line.

Online Registration - Click here to register online. You will need to mail your check for your registration fee to West Market Street United Methodist Church, Attn: Elizabeth Montgomery, PO Box 870, Greensboro, NC 27402-0870. Make checks payable to WMSUMC, with IMT Consultation on the memo line.

Hotel Reservations - Please make hotel reservations at the Downtown Marriot Hotel in Greensboro 1-800-228-9290; Cost is $92 for a double room. The conference block is called the National Eastern Europe Church Conference Block. However, based on experience the full name is not in the national reservation computer. The national reservation computer seems to have it as Nat E E.. For those arriving prior to Thursday November 5, you will need to contact the Marriott directly to receive the block price on earlier days. Contact Christen Wilson at 336-387-8004. This contact will work for any other registration difficulties as well.

Airport Location - The Consultation is most easily reached through the Piedmont Triad Airport (known here as the Greensboro airport) and designated by the code GSO
Rail Transportation - Downtown Greensboro is served by Amtrak with the station located six blocks from the church. Transportation can be arranged between the station and the Church and hotel upon request.

Questions? Contact us!:
Contact Elizabeth Montgomery at 336-275-4587 or emontgomery@wmsumc.org

Monday, August 24, 2009

Armenia
Coordinator:
Cecil Donahue 336-209-5875 cedonahue@bellsouth.net
Orientation: Feb. 13, 2010, 10:30 a.m./Pleasant Union UMC, Greensboro
Project: Home reconstruction and medical support
Location: Berdzor
We will repair/reconstruct homes of local persons in the community that are selected by the AGAPE staff, who coordinate the AGAPE ministry. They most probably will be folks who are participating in the Farm Animal Project. One to two homes will be worked on depending on how many team members we have. Also, if we have team members with medical experience, we will support the local medical personnel in caring for people in the local villages. Armenia suffered from a massive earthquake, dissolution of the Soviet Union and a civil war with a neighboring nation. To date, the peace is held only by a cease-fire agreement and as a result, almost no foreign aid is offered to help folks in the Nagorno Karabaugh area to recover. In Berdzor, United Methodists are the major source of aid. Still today, unemployment is in the 50% range. Housing is a major issue. Also, medical care is almost totally dependent on resources that come from the United Methodist churches in North Carolina. The accommodations and food will be superior because of the work of Project AGAPE in previous years. Team fees include all expenses from
the time you board the plane until the return. Often our fl ight schedule allows for touring a major European city during a layover. Of the two weeks, four days will be spent on air travel, 3 days are spent on adjusting to the time change and visiting historic sites, and 8 days are devoted
to work.
Team 4 June 15–30, 2010 C. Donahue $3,000

Lithuania
Coordinator: Cecil Donahue 336-209-5875 cedonahue@bellsouth.net
Project: TBA
Location: TBA (Possibly back to Pilziskai, Lithuania)
Team 26 TBA TBA $2,500

Palestine
Coordinator: Michael Collins 704-322-9653 mcollins@wnccumc.org
Orientation: TBA
Project: Work/Study/Tour of Israel and Palestine
Location: Mar Elias Educational Institute, Ibillin
Project includes general maintenance, light construction, painting, gardening, as well as other work in the Bethlehem area. This project helps show concern for the Palestinian condition is the West Bank. It will be an educational, sightseeing and construction team. It may also include
spending time with children at the Mar Elias Educational Institute. In building peace and justice in the Middle East, this team will work and study side-by-side with the Palestinian people to understand their plight and explore the area’s sites. The team will be situated in a guest house at the school and a nearby hotel in Bethlehem. Other meals will be at the hotel or nearby restaurants.
Team 32 Feb. 9–23, 2010 J. Birchfield $2,700

Monday, August 17, 2009

Trip to Lithuania

August 18th thru September 12th our missions team from Fairfield UMC in High Point will be going to Lithuania. During the first week of the mission we will concentrate on visiting the United Methodist Churches in Lithuania to see how the Western North Carolina Conference is needed to help. We are all very excited about this portion of the mission, because we will be meeting many new Brothers and Sisters in Christ in Lithuania. Hopefully we will be able to offer them so hope in the areas that they need help and share in God's Word.

During the remainder of the mission we will be in Birzai, Lithuania. We will be going to the nearby Orphanage and spending time with the children playing games and making some small crafts.Visiting the "Old Folks" home, as they call it. We will also be installing new windows and doors in the Gifts of Grace Help Center in Paceriaukste and making a few other updates to the Center. There will also be a celebration for the 1st year anniversary of the opening of the Gifts of Grace Center. We are very excited for them and all that they have been able to accomplish this year at the Center. At this time the center is serving about 25 children each day. Some come to bathe, to wash their clothes, and to share in a meal. They are also operating an afterschool daycare for the children in the Paceriaukste village. At other times the Center has been used as a safe haven for mothers and their children until they can be placed in a safe environment. And after all of these wonderful ways of serving our Lord Jesus Christ I believe they have come full circle as they are now holding Worship Service at the Center; as this is the only place of Worship in the Paceriaukste area.

We ask that you please keep us in your prayers and most importantly keep the people in Lithuania in your prayers as there are many who still suffer from extreme poverty. We also ask that you pray for our team to be able to discern how God needs the Western North Carolina Conference to help the people in Lithuania.

May God Bless You by Serving Others Who Are In Need,

Libby Myers
Fairfield UMC/Missions
High Point, NC

Friday, May 8, 2009

Report on Dairy Cows

I am very happy to report that over 43 families have received dairy cows in the cow project for Project AGAPE. More money is in this fund and will be sent with the "Building Team" headed for Armenia in June! It will help us to buy more cows for more families, provide medicine and training, keep the veterinarian for the next generation of the cows.

In the fall, the 43 families will Pass on the gift. 86 families will have been helped!

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Update from Janet Lewis, Missionary in Palestine

Dear Friends,
Many of you have written wondering where I’ve been and why I haven’t written lately, for which I thank you most heartedly. It means you read the things I send and miss them when I don’t! Here’s what’s been happening:

In February I began a speaking tour of the US, traveling first to Jackson, MS then on to Texas and a variety of venues in the Houston area, Austin and the Dallas/Ft. Worth areas. From there I went to Colorado to speak in Aspen, and some other towns in the Aspen Valley (who decided to become supporting churches, yeah!) From there I went back down the mountain to catch a flight to Sacramento, CA. I spent several days hosted by the California-Nevada Conference that included a talk at the Pacific School of Religion and many churches in central California and the Bay area. I am still in awe of the hard work and dedication of the people in all these places who helped to make the arrangements for this trip, and who continue to work hard in support of the Palestinian people and for rights for the oppressed. My hat goes off to them with my sincere appreciation and thanks.

My talks were centered on the illegal occupation, the recent holocaust in Gaza, and the political realities of the region here, a story many people in the U.S. do not hear. This was followed by some specifics of what we as a denomination are doing in the region. In past years this has not been a very popular message. The demonization of Islam and the Strategy of Fear that has taken hold in the U.S. caused people to be extremely critical of anything that presented the Palestinians as something other than the “terrorists” certain lobbyists would have us believe them to be.

On this past tour I was pleasantly surprised by the willingness of people to hear the message with minds open, to ask informed questions, and to ask what they can do to help. For someone like me who expects, and is prepared for, some vehemently objectionable criticism by at least two or three people in the audience, I was most appreciative to realize that people are finally ready to hear a different voice, a different perspective, and to not pre-judge without looking for more information. This made a very exhausting trip very worthwhile. On the other hand, I was horrified to hear that so many people had not heard about the scope of the devastation in Gaza. Allegations of “crimes against humanity” should not be silenced or falling on deaf ears!

Tuesday night, March 17 was not a good night for me. I returned to the airport near Tel Aviv late in the evening, assessed which security person behind the counters at Passport Control looked the most amiable or most bored (these are usually the ones who give you the least amount to hassle) then stood in that line in my jet-lagged state of exhaustion to await my turn. When it came time for me to advance to the booth I made sure I had a smile on my face and voiced a pleasant “good evening” in English. No reply. The young woman simply glanced at the many filled pages of my passport and picked up the telephone. Since she was speaking in Hebrew I had no idea to whom she was addressing or what the conversation was about. Was she talking to her boyfriend (a common practice for bored young adults) or to someone in authority? I found out soon enough.

She hung up the receiver and said, “The Ministry of Interior says that you were here for nine months last year. You are only allowed one three month visa per year. We will give you a one month visa but you will have to go to Akko to get a different visa.” With that she stamped my passport, inked a large number 1 over the 3 month stamp and returned the passport to me. Walking away from the booth I immediately checked, as I usually do, to inspect the visa stamp. Sure enough it said one month. Not a disaster…yet.

In the past few years many of my colleagues have had their passports stamped “Entry Denied” and were turned back at the borders or put on the next return flight out of Tel Aviv. I was lucky. I at least had one month to deal with the problem. After almost 15 years of leaving the country every three months and maneuvering their system to my benefit, my luck had run out.

After a seemingly endless wait for my suitcase, I finally exited the terminal and headed for the Nesher vans (airport shuttles) that go to Jerusalem for my ride up the hill to my home just outside Bethlehem in the village of Beit Safafa. This Palestinian village is slowly being “integrated” as more and more Jews build new apartments and move into an area that has been Arab for centuries. There is even a small, illegal Jewish “colony” located on the side of the hill. Beit Safafa is located inside the West Bank but is in an area that Israel has included into Greater Jerusalem in its push to confiscate more land.

As the van was loading I told the driver that I needed to go to Beit Safafa. “No! We don’t go to Beit Safafa. We will go to Tantur” (a Catholic institute on a nearby hill.) I gave him my usual argument, saying that I lived just down the hill near Tantur and all the other drivers had taken me to my door. “No! We do not go inside Beit Safafa.” I tried to argue that I lived near the Israeli market, next door to some UN workers and they all got delivered by Nesher. “No!” At this point my jet-lag kicked in and I got angry. “Why not?” “No. Not one centimeter inside Beit Safafa.” “But why not?” I insisted. The other passengers were beginning to squirm, knowing the answer all too well. Since Beit Safafa is an Arab neighborhood I have always been the first to be picked up (at Tantur, not at my home) and the last to be dropped off since the Jewish passengers will refuse to go into an Arab neighborhood. The Strategy of Fear is very much at work in Israel too.
I persisted. (I can be very stubborn. Just ask my family.) “Why won’t you take me to Beit Safafa? All the other drivers go there.” (In the past this was true. Things have only recently changed.) “No. We do not go into Beit Safafa, not one centimeter!” “Tell me why not! I want to hear you say it!” He knew what I was getting at and turned away to finish loading the other suitcases. “Because you are a Racist!” I blurted out and turned with an indignant huff to find a private taxi, preferably one with an Arab driver. Exhausted, facing visa problems, and hoping I had enough cash to pay the fare for a private taxi all the way to Beit Safafa an hour away, this was not a good start to my return.

I had one full day to empty my suitcase, do a load of laundry (which involves a 2 hour wash cycle and the remainder of the day airing outside on the clothesline in the gloomy weather) repack a smaller suitcase and stuff 22 packets for a Volunteer in Mission team that was due to arrive the following day for their two week trip which I was leading.

The group arrived at the airport in surprisingly good spirits and we headed up to the village of Ibillin and the campus of Mar Elias Educational Institutions, one of our Advance Projects. After dinner I went over the program and did their orientation. We had just finished going over the next day’s schedule which involved their volunteer time in the morning followed by a visit to another partner project then some touring in Akko and dinner in Haifa overlooking Haifa Bay. No sooner had I dismissed the group when the head of maintenance, the person responsible for the volunteer work, appeared. He told me that he had prepared for a very special evening the next night. There would be a big barbeque with Archbishop Elias Chacour, the founder of Mar Elias and recipient of the World Methodist Peace Award, and a representative from U.S. Embassy joining the group for dinner. Immediately my mind started racing, mentally making adjustments to the scheduled itinerary, the phone calls that would have to be made to cancel the dinner in Haifa, the vouchers that would have to be voided, penalties that may need to be paid, and, most importantly, figuring out how to break the news to the group who were already looking forward to spending time in Akko, the port city for the Crusades and site of one of Napoleon’s few defeats that we would no longer have time to visit there. And it was only their first day! Getting to meet with Archbishop Chacour was a priority, however, so the group remained cheerful.

The next two weeks were a blur of activity spent with some wonderfully dedicated and hard workers. Unfortunately about half the group came down with the flu, and we had a couple of “casualties”, a snapped knee, a painful back-wrenching fall, and a lost passport, but the group rallied from all the adversities; painting the Church of the Sermon on the Mount at Mar Elias to get it ready for Easter services, visiting partner project sites like the destroyed village of Bi’rim to learn a bit about the history of the Israel and what it meant for the Palestinian people. After a week inside Israel the group shifted to Bethlehem where they worked at another of our Advance projects, Bethlehem Bible College and the East Jerusalem Baptist Church, while spending a few days also visiting the traditional holy sites and other, less visited sites whose people make them holy, such as Hebron and D’heisha Refugee Camp.

On the last day of their trip I had arranged for them to have a closing worship service at the Lutheran Church of the Redeemer in Jerusalem’s Old City, near the Church of the Resurrection (Holy Sepulcher). After finally gaining entrance to the locked church (they had forgotten we were coming) I pulled out a small bottle of Bethlehem-made wine and some matzo bread for the communion service but had neglected to think about how to uncork the wine bottle. During the opening portion of the service I struggled to dig out the cork with the assistance of a borrowed Swiss Army knife, finally succeeding in cutting away enough to stuff the cork down into the bottle. The group also shared what part of the trip had touched them the most. When it was my turn to share I could not keep back the tears. I am always moved when people who are new to the region and new to the issues have their eyes and ears opened to a different reality, a different “truth.” As has often been repeated, “You shall know the truth and the truth shall set you free.” To see this group experience the truth, to live it, to work inside its walls, was a miracle for me. They were truly a blessing.

The group made it back to the US, and I came back to the office for a short two days before heading to Haifa. I wanted to spend Palm Sunday in a place where I knew I would be welcomed and where I could spend a day not having to think, to have some mental quiet time. The Palm Sunday procession through the streets of Haifa, with hundreds, perhaps thousands, of people filling the streets of this major city was a wonderful example of the vibrant Christian community that still exists in this holy land. It was wonderful to be a part of it.

However, Monday always follows Sunday and I had to get down to the business of renewing my visa. In a nutshell, Monday involved a trip to the Ministry of Interior’s office in Akko, a run back down to Jerusalem to catch one of the Ministry of Interior officials who deals with Christian affairs, followed by a return to Haifa to await paperwork that never arrived. Now it is Pesach (Passover) so all the offices are closed until the day before my visa expires and I have to leave the country. It is a very complicated saga which I will write about after I get that stamp in my passport and I can take a deep breath again. This was one more stress that I did not need in my life, but it’s in God’s hands at this point.

As I was told the very first day I set foot in this land, “You must have unlimited patience to live here.” Too true! Your prayers that I will be granted an extended visa would be most appreciated. After that I will work to help organize a campaign to assist others, especially the foreign Christians who are being targeted, to work on both sides of the ocean to push the Israeli government to change its restrictive policies.

In the mean time, may you all have a blessed Easter and know that the Risen Lord brings us all the promise of a new day, the chance to make the best of that day, the knowledge that our sins are forgiven, and we will be blessed with everlasting life. We look forward to Sunday when we will begin to greet each other for the next forty days with the words:
“El Messiah Kam! Hakan Kam!” Christ is Risen! He is truly Risen!

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Wave of Prayer for Palestine

Each Thursday at noon in Jerusalem, Sabeel holds a Communion service that is open to the community. It is a time to join together to celebrate the Eucharist, to discuss how the scriptures apply to our lives today, and to pray for the specific needs of this region. Following the 2006 Sabeel International Conference, the Friends of Sabeel coordinators met and discussed the idea of "Waves of Prayer." The premise is that in their respective time zones, individuals and groups around the world will pray together at 12:00 on Thursdays, in solidarity with Sabeel in Jerusalem and with "Friends of Sabeel" worldwide. Starting in Australia, passing through Palestine, and on around the world we will pray for Peace with Justice and focus on specific issues each week.
Wave of Prayer, Thursday, 9th of April, 2009

Ø Currently, Jerusalem is filled with pilgrims from around the world participating in Holy Week activities. We pray that they will find their faith renewed and emboldened through these experiences. May they return home with a new appreciation for Christ’s radical message and for the hope that we find in the Resurrection.

Ø Many Palestinian Christians living in the West Bank applied for permits to participate in Holy Week activities in Jerusalem. Last week it was announced that a small but significant number of permits were approved. Unfortunately, this week it was announced that a closure of the entire West Bank is in effect until April 18, the end of the Jewish Passover. We pray that the Christians of the West Bank will have a blessed Easter season in spite of this injustice. We also pray that all Palestinians will soon regain their freedom of movement and their access to Jerusalem.

Ø We pray for the Hanoun and Al-Ghawi families of Sheikh Jarrah who continue to struggle with the Israeli High Court over their right to remain in their homes. In spite of original land deeds dating to the Ottoman Empire that establish their ownership, the Court threatens to evict the families and turn their homes over to settlers. We pray for comfort and strength for the Hanouns, the Al-Ghawis, and the hundreds of other families in East Jerusalem whose homes are slated for eviction or demolition.

Ø This month, Sabeel’s longtime partner, the Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme in Palestine and Israel (EAPPI) welcomes its 31st team of accompaniers to the region. Since its founding by the World Council of Churches in 2002, EAPPI has sent approximately 550 people from many countries to serve 3-month terms as human rights observers and to support local non-violent resistance to the Occupation. We thank God for this program and the important connections that it creates between this region and communities around the globe.

Israel Approves First Arab Christian College

Israel Approves 1st Arab Christian College -- the Mar Elias University to Be Established in Nazareth.

HAIFA, Israel, APRIL 2, 2009 After gaining a long-sought approval from the Israeli government, the nation's first Arab Christian university is set to be established in Nazareth.The Mar Elias College has been operating near Haifa as an offshoot of the University of Indianapolis. But after the March 29 approval from the government it is now the first Arab Israel private college and thus stands to serve the 120,000 Arab-speaking Christians in Israel (who are just 2% of the nation's 20% Arab-minority).

According to a press release from the Friends of Mar Elias group, students of every department will be required to take "peace studies" some hours a week, focusing on how "peaceful coexistence and cooperation in multiethnic regions, like in the Middle East, [can] be advanced and secured."

Seeking funds, The Friends of Mar Elias report that a challenge for the institution is financing, as tuition from students "mostly from families with modest income, [does] not cover the running costs," and the college will not receive state grants.Nevertheless, the statement reported that the "project has been enjoying political support from different camps." It noted: "The president of Israel considers the realization of the Mar Elias College as an important contribution to the peaceful coexistence of Jews and Arabs in Israel; the European Union values the project, especially in view of the bilateral Action Plan E.U.-Israel, as important for three goals of bilateral cooperation: regional development, support of minorities and advancement of women; [and] the U.S. administration expressed its great interest in the recognition and support of the college."

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Project AGAPE update - March 2, 2009

Everything is going well with the Project. Here is a brief update on our activities in January-February (you are partially aware of those):

  • We started the year with dozen of quarterly and yearly reports (revenue, mandatory social security, property tax, Heifer, Labor Inspection, etc.) and then left for Berdzor just after the Armenian Christmas.
  • We had a wonderful Christmas event there giving the Christmas boxes to 310 children of the community and the orphanage (one of the parents told me that only on that day they realized that the New Year has come...).
  • Began the distribution for the people of Berdzor. The last distribution before this one in November of 2008 was for the villagers, as the weather at that time was warm for them to walk or ride those awful village roads. We planned so that this one in winter was for Berdzor habitants as they live close. The only slip in our planning was the estimation of the container's arrival which was based on transporting company's e-mail information (they told that the container will arrive in Poti, Georgia only on January 23, which meant that it
    >would be in Yerevan by 25, when I would have completed the distribution). But the container arrived in Yerevan on January 21, so we had to come back earlier just after receiving a call from Yerevan office telling that the December container is arriving in two days. So we had to stop the distribution announcing those people who were next on the lists about its continuation in February and came back going to the customs terminal just the next day, leaving our warehouse/refrigerator in Berdzor for customs warehouse/freezer in the terminal where we worked 10 days, regular period given to all importers to complete the customs clearance. The good thing is, for the first time during the last 5 or more years we took the goods of the last container on January 30 from the customs warehouse straight to Berdzor.
  • We continued the distribution again (during the distribution I opened my eyes in the warehouse and went straight to bed from the warehouse working about 12-14 hours most of the time.
  • When it's warmer and the villagers are our beneficiaries sometimes we work till 4:00 am, because they come from far villages, have no place to stay and will not leave without getting the aid. There were days during the distributions to the villagers in the past, when we left the cold warehouse at 7:00 am in February... this experience was another reason we don't plan distributions for the villagers in winter). This is very tiring, but, as I have told you once, the joy from the good done to the people and their words of gratitude compensate all the troubles... even the cold that I caught in the warehouse and suffered from awful flu for awhile.
  • On Friday, February 13 the humanitarian aid committee (HAC -commission of 17 or more people representing all the ministries and departments in the government) adjacent to the government discussed our application for the VAT and customs duty exemption for 2009-2012. The meeting was good >and they accepted our application for 4 years. The chairperson of the committee spoke highly of AGAPE praising the work of the project and mentioning once again that this is the only international humanitarian organization in the region, and it had a great impact on the lives of the people. He told that had been in Berdzor recently, heard so much from the people about Agape and was amazed to know that teams from the States are coming to repair houses of the habitants.
  • The last week of February was also very busy: one of our employees - Naghash, is going to get pension. That required from me and the accountant a titanic work starting from 2004 - we prepared and gave to the Ministry of Social security financial reports and so called claims to open account numbers on each employee in social security fund (2004,
    >2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 - 5 times 9-15 employees each year, plus feeling in the claim
    >forms, and seniority records for each employee starting from the day they work in their life (not only in AGAPE) and other related docs, the total of 107 pages of reports), so that what was paid to the pension fund for each employee to be considered when they get pension. This was done according to a new law and Naghash will be the first one on our staff to get that pension. When other employees apply, we'll not have to do this again. We'll just submit the yearly reports for each employee starting from 2009 (some 15-17 reports depending on how many staff members we'll have that year including the CEC staff, in addition to other regular yearly reports we submit to revenue and other gov. departments). The deadline for this is March 31, but we submitted reports earlier, so that Naghash didn't lose his February pension.
  • I am sorry, but I have had no time for December, January newsletters, financial reports and 2008 updates. When I am in Berdzor busy with all those projects, I don't have time even to "clean my nose" as people used to tell here. In other words, I don't belong to myself :-).
  • Being in Yerevan only gives me time to work on computer. I had planned to be here by March, so I had time to fulfill part of those tasks. And then in March we'll have again distribution project, this time for the villagers. So, please find attached December, January and February financial reports.
  • I'll work on newsletters and updates this week and send to you.
  • Everyone is doing well here and sending their warmest greetings to you!

Blessings,


Nara

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Palestinian Stories

Palestinian Stories for Reflection
Palestinians living in the State of Israel
Emir lives in the State of Israel. His family has been there since before the birth of Jesus. A Christian, Emir is also an Arab and Palestinian. He has an identity crisis of sorts. He speaks Arabic at home and attends a school for Arabs, yet under law all classes are taught in Hebrew and English. The school needs much work, but the government will not allow the school a permit to rebuild.

The neighborhood is run-down. It looks like a place from the late 1800’s. There is a new Jewish neighborhood being built up above them, slowly encroaching on their family lands. Trash is constantly being thrown down the hill on top of their land. There is not much the people can do. They have documentation of living on the land for centuries, they do not have legal documents from the Israeli government to the land and cannot get them.

Emir will graduate from High School next year. Being Arab, he is exempt from military service. Even if he wanted to serve, which he doesn’t, he would not be permitted. He can’t plan his life after school – universities will not allow him to attend before his Jewish neighbors, who must go into the military, and without the military certificate, he will not be able to find a job. He will be one of the 30% of young adults roaming.



Palestinians living in the West Bank
Abad is Roman Catholic and lives in the West Bank town of Aboud. Technically it is under the Palestinian Authority rule, yet the Israeli military has roadblocks and barricades throughout the area. Of the land “under the Palestinian Authority” less than 15% are actually controlled by the authority.

Abad’s wife is 8 months pregnant. The clinic and Pharmacy on the main road to Aboud have been destroyed along with 12 homes. Israel said that they “posed a threat” to the Israeli settlers who have built illegal settlements across the creek from Aboud. There are over 600 check points set up in the West Bank “to protect settlers.” Abad is concerned that his wife might not make it to the hospital for the birth – they must cross at least three check points. Last week his young brother was insulted – made to drop his pants at the check point while soldiers laughed and pointed rifles at him, “checking for weapons,” they said.

Abad’s family owns Olive Trees and produced olive oil for hundreds of years. A single tree can produce $700-$900 of oil a year, every two years. Last year the Israeli government built a new road to the settlements through Abad’s farm. They cut down over 100 trees and tried to pay $3 a tree to Abad. He refused the money - it was an insult! Now, his home is on one side of the road and the olive trees are on the other side of the road. There is a fence on both sides of the road with signs warning, with a skull and cross-bones, “Do not cross under penalty.” In order to work his own farm he must travel (by foot) to a check-point five miles away, cross over, and then go back to the trees – a two hour trip to cross the road. The trees are suffering – the water supply has been diverted to the settlers.

Last week Abad tried to take is produce to market. He had a buyer waiting near Jerusalem. He was fortunate enough to get a permit to take his produce to market. He used his entire family inheritance to hire a truck, it took days to travel the Palestine roads and go through the many check points. But he was at the gate. For eight hours he sat as the hot sun shone on his oil. Finally the soldier says, “Go home,” and he was not permitted to cross towards Jerusalem. The oil has now spoiled, good only for making soap. But that would only be good if the Roman Catholic Priest can smuggle it in packages for delivery. In the distance he sees miles and miles of the large concrete barricade imprisoning his family. He wonders, “How much more can I take?”

Palestinians living in Gaza
Elias lives in Gaza City with his wife and children. The shelling of the month-long battle has just ended. He has been depressed, but his depression has turned to anger. For years the people have survived on humanitarian goods crossing through the border which is open only a few hours a day. His children, 7, 5 and 3 have never peered through the border. They have never known anything but the slums of Gaza City. There are many people eager to work, eager for peace – but they are not allowed to leave. The air strip in Gaza, the ports – they are blocked – not allowed to operate.

Elias is caught in a cage. In 2006, he did not supported The Palestinian Authority, not Hamas, thus now he is treated as a misfit in the community. Because of his politics, he has a hard time getting provisions for his family. Yet, he, too, was forced to flee last to the UN-supported school for shelter during the fighting. Yesterday, a plane dropped leaflets saying, “Leave, this area is about to be attacked.” But, “Go where?” No place was safe. He reflects back on some of the scenes from just the day before – women and children screaming. A father pleading with an Israeli soldier who was holding his little girl by her hair – so afraid she had peed in her pants. He remembers seeing it: the child’s head lying all by itself in the rubble. As he gets closer, he realizes – “That’s my child!” Thus, the birth of another Palestinian terrorist.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Eastern European Consultation

The Eastern European Consultation will take place on November 5-7 at the West Market United Methodist Church in Greensboro. As more information is made available, it will appear on this blog.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Latvia-Lithuania Consultation

April 24-26, 2009
Fairview United Methodist Church
Maryville, Tennessee

It’s been two years since the last Latvia-Lithuania Initiative Consultation and much has happened. Churches and ministries have grown. New partnerships have formed. New missionaries have been assigned. Wesley Camp has become a blessing to both countries. There is much to share and celebrate. Friday will be a time of discovery and celebration. Saturday the initiatives will meet separately. Sunday will include worship and thanking God for the great things He has done.

Friday evening will be a very special time. The Friends of Estonia are meeting on the same weekend in Sevierville, TN less than an hour away from Maryville. After dinner, we will travel by bus/car pool to Sevierville to join in celebration and worship with the supporters of the three Baltic Countries. Holston Conference’s Bishop James E. Swanson will be preaching. There will be an opportunity for fellowship after the service. Maryville is located on the “quiet side” of the Great Smokey Mountains National Park. The Park will be celebrating its 75th anniversary in 2009 and springtime in the Smokey’s is beautiful. Knoxville, Oak Ridge, Gatlinburg and Pigeon Forge are all but an hour away. There are many hotels and restaurants in the area. Fairview UMC is eight miles south of the Knoxville Airport. It is a church known for hospitality and missions. There are a number of connecting and partnership churches within easy driving distance.

We encourage you to mark your calendars for this event, and plan to come discover, celebrate, and plan for the Kingdom ministries The Jameson Inn of Alcoa is holding rooms for the conference at a rate of $68.00 per night. (Phone: 865-984-6800 or alcoa.tn@jamesoninns.com). The Jameson provides shuttle service from the airport. Reservations must be made by March 23, 2009 to take advantage of this rate. A limited number of host families will be available on a first come, first served basisTransportation from the hotel to the church will be available. Registration information, forms, and a preliminary agenda are available on this website.

Download Program For Event
Download Registration Form

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Mustard Seed Mission, Bulgaria 2008


Mustard Seed Mission Bulgaria 2008
West Market St. UMC’s Final Report


“…one body, one Spirit…one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all…” Ephesians 4:4

Introduction
As with all mission trips, the primary purpose was to grow together as disciples of Jesus Christ as we nurture each other in the faith and serve together out of our love for Jesus Christ and in response to His call. Whatever we “accomplish” will be through the power of the Holy Spirit and to the glory of God, not us. We are traveling to Bulgaria to further our relationship with our partner churches in Pleven, Mizija, and Voyvodovo. The purpose of this ministry is to build up the body of Christ. We will do this by being in mission together, by worshiping and serving together, and be developing Christ-centered friendships with each other.
This team of 18 people:
- Conducted a VBS at an orphanage, as well as at the Pleven, Mizia and Voyvodovo churches.
- Cleared grounds at Pleven church, and prepared the original sanctuary (which is still under construction) for the first worship service in 50 years.
- Conducted seminars on Methodism at the Mizia & Voyvodovo churches for lay people and at the Pleven church for all clergy in Bulgaria who wished to attend.
- Started a prayer shawl ministry at all 3 churches.
- Provided musical concerts for the communities of Mizia and Pleven, and performed during worship at Pleven.
- Worshiped and had fellowship with our brothers and sisters in Christ in all 3 communities.

Team Leadership
Overall Team: Elizabeth Montgomery
Children’s Ministry: Amy Kreimer
Devotionals & Hospitality: Mary Ann James
Treasurer: David Johnston
Music: Brian French
Seminars: Dave Melton
Prayer Shawl Ministry: Betty Betts

Mission Team Recruitment & Preparation

Bridge to Bulgaria Event/Information Meeting
In October, 2007, we held a congregation wide event designed to introduce to the congregation the IMT ministry and our partnership with the 3 churches in Bulgaria. We had a luncheon featuring Bulgarian food. We actually had a bridge decorated with sunflowers (very prevalent in North Central Bulgaria) that participants could walk across, viewing blown up pictures of our brothers and sisters in Christ in Bulgaria along the way. We had Cyrillic stations for making your name tag in Cyrillic and learning the Cyrillic alphabet. There was a trivia quiz on Bulgaria and a slide show from the vision mission trip that had taken place that summer to create the partnership. People had donated Legos, so that children could literally build a “bridge of understanding” to Bulgaria. The children also enjoyed making Martinitzas while Bulgarian folk music played in the background.


Those who were interested in learning more about the actual mission trip planned for the following summer were invited to an Information Meeting following the luncheon. At this meeting, they received an Information Meeting detailing the specifics of the trip and to cost, in addition to an application.

Mission Team Orientation Meeting
Approximately 5 months prior to departure, we held an Orientation Meeting for the mission team so they could start to get to know each other and learn more about Bulgaria in general and their mission in specific. The team leaders were also introduced, and the music and VBS leaders recruited help from among the mission team members. These task forces each prepared for the trip in advance and on their own schedules.

The packets contained the following information: team roster, mission trip description and purpose, team roster, a list of “Things to Remember While Serving on a Mission Trip”, general information on Bulgaria, a map of Bulgaria, Information on each of the partner churches, Team Leadership, Packing List, Trip Itinerary, Trip Finances sheet that itemized per person mission trip costs and the amounts budgeted by the church (see budget attachment for further detail), and Dates to Remember. We reviewed each aspect of the packet in detail.

Language Classes
Two former Peace Corp members to Bulgaria and current Duke seminary students provided Bulgarian language instruction, instruction on learning the Cyrillic alphabet and reading Cyrillic, and Bulgarian culture and customs. These classes were extremely beneficial and took place for 6 weeks. They also provided auditory CD’s as well as informational handouts. In addition, they helped with the translation of VBS and Prayer Shawl materials.

Sponsorship
Each team member was paired with a sponsor group that provided some supplemental funding as well as prayer partners for each day of the mission trip and letters of encouragement for each day of the mission trip. Members of the UMW also made prayer bracelets for the mission team members as well as one for each one of them to give away to a brother or sister in Bulgaria.

Commissioning & Final Team Meeting
The team was commissioned during the contemporary and traditional services the Sunday prior to departure. The team met following worship to pack all materials for VBS and the Prayer Shawl Ministry in addition to the shoes the team members were donating to the orphanage. Luggage tags were distributed, those who had not been on a Mustard Seed Mission were “pinned”. They then had a final meeting and communion service.

The Mission Experience

Music
A quintet consisting of a trombone, violin, English horn, Euphonium, and keyboard performed several musical concerts for our partner congregations as well as the communities in which they reside. This provided a unique opportunity to transcend language barriers and promote the church to the community in a non-threatening way. The first concert was held in the town concert hall in Mizia. It was well attended, and even the mayor came and made a presentation of gifts to the musicians. They next performed prior to the worship service in Voyvodovo, then the following day at the orphanage in Borovan. They performed a brief concert prior to the Methodist seminar for Bulgarian clergy that Rev. Dave Melton conducted in Pleven.


One of the most moving musical experiences was their performance in the original sanctuary in Pleven. The sanctuary is unfinished, but the team cleaned it up for the first service to be held in there since before communism. Tears streamed down the faces of the congregation members as the musicians played familiar Methodist hymns that have not been heard in that sanctuary for more than two generations. Their final performance was in an art gallery in Pleven. It was a lovely setting, and was also well attended. The churches in both Mizia and Pleven received good publicity from the events, and the mayor was also present at the concert in Pleven.

Children’s Ministry
The team led an abbreviated Vacation Bible School at all 3 partner churches using the Godly Play method of telling the Bible story about Jesus as the Good Shepherd, and offering crafts related to that theme. In addition, the children played games, sang songs, had a snack and helped to make a “He’s got the Whole World in His Hands” banner that would be brought back to our church. Our children made one for each partner church as well. The VBS’s at all 3 churches were very well attended.


The team also did a program at the orphanage in Borovan. One of the parishioners from the Pleven church did a wonderful job as a clown, communicating to the children, making them laugh, and helping to tell the Bible story of David & Goliath. The children then did crafts, sang songs along with our small orchestra, and had a snack. The team had brought them shoes and Beanie Babies, which they loved. The team hopes to engage in future ministry there along with our brothers and sisters in Christ at the Pleven church.

Sharing Methodism
Pastors Dave Melton & Rob Hutchinson led a series of seminars on Methodism for both clergy and lay people at all three partner churches. The theme for the series was “What’s so Amazing about Grace”, and it focused on the Wesleyan ideas of prevenient, justifying, and sanctifying grace. They engaged congregation members in discussion, and answered questions. At the end of the service in Voyvodovo, we held a “Remember your Baptism” service because that is one of only two sacraments recognized by the Methodist church. This was a very moving experience for those who may had been baptized as infants in the Orthodox church, and many of whom have the mistaken notion that they must be re-baptized as adults to be full fledged Christians.


An all day seminar for clergy only was held in Pleven, and pastors, including the DS, came from all over Bulgaria to attend. Finally, there was a seminar held for the lay people in Pleven, and this was done as a small group discussion combining our team members and Pleven congregation members. We were able to share the ways in which we have each experienced the different types of grace in our own lives. It was a very moving way to share our faith, and yet at the same time “learn” what it really means to be a Methodist and the ways in which that differs from Orthodoxy.

Prayer Shawl Ministry
WMS has a prayer shawl ministry, whereby women gather once a week to knit shawls that will be blessed by a pastor and then given to those who have had illnesses, or suffered loss, or even had great joys in their lives. These shawls are also presented to people all over the world that our church serves in mission. The knitter of each shawl commits to pray for the person who will receive the shawl as they are knitting it. They are later told of who received the shawl, and they continue to pray for that person.


We decided that this would be a good ministry to start at all 3 partner churches because many of the women already knew how to knit, and it would be a ministry they could continue on their own in service to their congregation members and their respective communities. The women at all 3 churches very much enjoyed this ministry and sharing with the women in this way on the mission team. This was yet another way that we could be in ministry with our sisters in Christ that bridged the chasm of language. The team brought what they thought would be enough yarn to launch the ministry in each church, but the response was so overwhelming at each church, that the team had to purchase more yarn in Pleven. The UMS at WMS will continue to send yarn for this ministry at all 3 partner churches.

Helping Hands
On the day on which the Methodist seminar for clergy was held in Pleven, some team members cleaned out the original sanctuary so that services could be held there the following day, in addition to cleaning our the church yard of overgrowth and debris. Is is hoped that the land where the church yard now resides can later be developed as office space to give the church a consistent cash flow from office rent. However, it should be noted that while the team members were willing to do much more to clean the yard, they were stopped by the person in charge from the Pleven church because many of the team members doing this work were women. This kind of sexism should be something that future groups are forewarned about to avoid misunderstandings. The local people do not appear to appreciate the female contributions to manual labor.

Worship
The team and congregational worship experiences were some of the most meaningful times of the mission trip. First of all, we created a devotional guide that included contributions by congregation members from all four partner churches, including Dick Arnold. This devotional guide was translated into both Bulgarian and English and was distributed to all four congregations and the mission team.
Each night, the team had a worship/devotional time which included Vladimir, Nellie, Daniel, and Nina. Daniel’s wife, Nina, joined us for the worship times in Pleven. These were very meaningful times of music, worship, and sharing.

Fellowship
Meal times became wonderful times of fellowship with our brothers and sisters in Christ in all 3 locations. We had wonderful times of sharing with Vladimir, Daniel, Nellie, and Nina at mealtimes in restaurants, and on several occasions the churches prepared meals for us, which gave us an opportunity for fellowship and sharing with the congregation members at all 3 churches. In addition, the members from the Pleven church joined us for a walk and some refreshments in Kaylaka Park in Pleven and several members joined us in our team devotional and worship times. Congregation members also attended the concerts in each of the community venues. These times of laughter, fun, food, and sharing helped us to form relationships and to deepen the ties that bind us as partners in ministry. Given the busy schedules most of us keep stateside and the dearth of opportunities we have for building Christ centered relationships, these times of fellowship were a gift indeed.

Side Trips
Aside from the long walk through Kaylaka park and several fun outings to local restaurants, the premier side trip was to the Troyan Monastery. This fully functioning monastery was a lesson in the history of the Orthodox church, and Daniel Topalsky’s history with that church (he attended an Orthodox seminary) provided us with a unique perspective and insight into the history of our church. There were also wonderful places to purchase local handicrafts and pottery in this lovely village. Finally, the team was able to enjoy Sofia on its final day prior to departure. The team toured the oldest Orthodox church and Roman ruins, dating to the time of Constantine in addition to the first Methodist church in Bulgaria whose founder, Albert Long, was the first to translate the Bible into modern Bulgarian. A long time parishioner conducted this tour, and then joined us for our final team devotional time in the church chapel.

Accommodations
The team stayed in the “Paradise Motel” in Mizia for the first part of the trip. These accommodations are not the best, but they are all that is available for a large group at a reasonable price. All prices have increased since Bulgaria joined the EU. Groups should be forewarned that the motel in Mizia is loud, has a sewage problem in one of the rooms, and does not have polite or accommodating service. The food is also mediocre, but there are other more desirable restaurants in Mizia. There is no place to stay in Voyvodovo, so the motel in Mizia is the only place to house a large group.


The hotel in Pleven, the Hotel Gallery, was a far more pleasant experience. The service was excellent, the breakfast food good, and the rooms were very nice. The hotel featured art from local artists and was on the bus line for easy transportation to and from the Pleven church and downtown Pleven. The small boutique hotels in Sofia were another matter. While reasonably priced and clean, they were small (it took two of them fairly far apart to accommodate the group), and not that close to the center of town. They offered no food either, but the group found a wonderful restaurant to in which to eat in Sofia.

Recommendations
It is difficult to improve upon a trip that was so transforming and so fulfilling, but there are a few recommendations (in addition to those that will be brought forth from the team evaluations):
- Seek to find better deals for better accommodations in Mizia and Sofia.
- Provide time to learn more about the local culture and heritage in Pleven.
- Encourage the Pleven church to reach out to older children in the community through children’s ministry.
- Encourage greater participation from the local partner churches in the orphanage ministry.
- Engage the partner churches in some type of ministry with Gypsies. There seemed to be some commonly held biases against them in all 3 churches. Maybe race relations and the ways that all our churches could grow in this regard could be explored in the future.
- Provide more opportunities for the small group sharing that was conducted in the Pleven church.
- Continue the practice of the joint devotional guide and the prayer shawl ministry, as well as opportunities for sharing music.
- Include the local church in the planning and execution of the children’s ministries, and assist them in publicity (as they did for the music concerts).
- Provide booklets translated in Bulgarian to supplement the Methodist seminars.


Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Lithuania - info from Libby Myers

(Three of us are taking a) trip to Lithuania to explore the needs of the area this coming summer. My idea is that Debi Auman and I and Regina Zidoniene from Birzai would travel around Lithuania and we would set up meetings with all of the Methodist churches in Lithuania. We would then speak with them about what their needs are and also visit the village areas around these churches to see firsthand what is needed. We would also meet with John Campbell, the DS in Lithuania. Of course through all of this we would gather information that is needed through pictures and conversations to be able to come back and relay their needs to you and all concerned.

I will be traveling to Lithuania in July with a team and Debi and I could actually go early for this part of the mission and then meet up with our team on the arrival date. I believe if we could handle this in this way that it would save time and money for the conference.

A little background on Debi Auman. She went with us to Lithuania this past summer and winter. She is the wife of Pastor Keith Auman who is a pastor in the High Point District. Debi is head of marketing at Guilford Technical Community College and is very well versed in the "business community". Through previous jobs she has traveled all over the world. She has also fell in love with the mission work that we are doing in Lithuania and is involved with local mission opportunities here in High Point.

As far as Regina I have known her since my first visit to LT in 2004. I have been 9 times to LT and Regina has been our constant contact and who is with us to guide us in our mission work in LT. She is also the Director of Pagalbos Centras(the Help Center) and a Lay speaker in the Lithuania UMC. So, she knows many people throughout the LUMC.

Libby Myers

Church and Society: Photo Story on Palestine

The following Photo Story on 60 years after the dispossession of Palestinians was sent to me from the General Board of Church and Society.
http://www.umc-gbcs.org/site/apps/nlnet/content.aspx?c=frLJK2PKLqF&b=4924319&ct=6646585&tr=y&auid=4444542

Palestine/Israel Update

Dear friends,

Peace to you from a very different city than the one from which I sent my last update!I apologize that it's been so long since I have written, but it has been a time of great transition for me. In early December I said my goodbyes (for the time being) in Jerusalem and headed back to the U.S. Since then, I have spent time with family and friends, moved to Washington, DC, begun my second placement site as a mission intern with the United Methodist church, and watched with fear and anger as Gaza burned once again.I apologize for not sending updates on the Gaza situation out to this list. I have posted a host of articles, links to alternative news sources, opportunities for action, and reflections on the war (and continuation of the siege) in Gaza on my blog, http://hoseyblog.blog.com/.

It was difficult, after living in Palestine-Israel for so long, to see just how poorly understood the situation is here in the United States, and just how much poorly contextualized and falsely 'balanced' reported can contribute to this lack of understanding. As we watched, the most powerful and best funded military in the Middle East savaged the most densely populated area of the planet, killing some 600 civilians, more than half of whom were children. Perhaps you were as worried, confused, or enraged about this travesty--which was carried out with US made weapons, with US funding, and with the political, diplomatic, economic, corporate, military, and moral support of the US--as I was. Perhaps you felt like you did not have enough information to understand what was happening. Perhaps you wanted to do something but weren't sure what to do.I would like to urge you to educate yourself and to act for a just peace in Palestine and Israel.

Here are a few small steps that you can take:
  1. See some of the alternative resources on my blog (http://hoseyblog.blog.com/) and on the website of my new placement site, the US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation (http://www.endtheoccupation.org/), an organization that works to address US involvement in the root causes of the violence in Palestine and Israel.
  2. Pray. Pray for peace and justice. Pray for the people of Gaza. Lift these prayers up in churches and in prayer groups and Bible study groups. Pray for the Christian community in Gaza, which was just as threatened and effected by this most recent explosion of violence as the rest of Gaza.
  3. Invite someone who was spent time in Palestine and Israel, and who met with peacemakers and justice seekers from Israeli, Palestinian, and international communities, to give a presentation on the situation and on what they saw to your church, class, or organization. Let me know if you'd like me to speak, or if you'd like me to recommend someone in your area who might be able to speak to your group.
  4. Once you've learned more about the situation, write letters to editors, to elected officials, to local papers. Ask for a more even-handed US policy in the Middle East. Ask for an end to the siege on Gaza and the 41 year old occupation of the West Bank, East Jerusalem, and Gaza. Ask for an end to military aid that is used to commit human rights violations and target civilian populations in our name.
  5. Finally, look for other opportunities for action and engagement. Join movements for selective divestment from companies that profit from the occupation of Palestinian land (for example, the divestment campaign in the United Methodist Church, see http://www.unitedmethodistdivestment.com/). Look into information on boycotting Motorola, whose bomb fuses and communication equipment was used to attack civilians in Gaza.

Support grassroots movements for justice and peace in Palestine and Israel. Again, please feel free to get in touch with me for more ideas.I will continue sending these updates out, as close to monthly as I can, to let you all know what I am up to, what shape my evolving understanding of mission is taking, and where I'm seeing God in all of this. In the meantime, please continue praying for peace and justice in the Holy Land. And I will keep praying, in gratitude for all of you.

God's peace,


David Hosey

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Europe World Desk Blog

Thank you for your interests in working together in ministries and missions throughout Europe. This is our first attempt at working together in mission relationships using blogs.

I see us sharing information in several ways:
1. Using this Blog: The blog will cover information I receive through the General Board of Global Ministries, work we aredoing within the Commission on Mission/Outreach, and news I receive through emails, … It is a joint process. I am urging others to join us share information that can benefit the total mission work. Share information you wish to be placed on the blog in one of two ways: email information to me, mcollins@wnccumc.org or share your comments after each posting.
2. Enews: The WNCC-enews is our number one way of sharing information. If you have not signed up for the WNCC-enews please do so at http://www.wnccumc.org/.
3. Conference Calls: As time and finances permit, we will have conference calls to share information.
4. Commission on Mission/Outreach: The Commission (or its future organization) meets two-four times a year through conference calls or in-person. Libby Myers is the Europe Desk Coordinator. Should items be brought to our attention through the Blog or other means, Libby will bring this to the Commission’s attention.

I am looking forward to partnership with you.

Mike Collins