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Tijuana
Christian Mission
(food distribution) |
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The bottom line is that Tijuana
is unlike anywhere else, and requires a unique approach if one is to fully
understand it. It is not an easy place; the sense of danger, grit and poverty
can be utterly overwhelming. But if one is willing to recognize it for
what it is, in all its ghastly poverty and grime, and its extraordinary
flashes of beauty and kindness, and its tremendous energy and cultural
frisson, it can be a very rewarding place to explore.
U.S. Border Patrol officials were proudly showing off the border fence
to some visiting German government officials, who are immediately appalled,
and say to their embarrassed guides, ìWe tore OUR wall DOWN.î |
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Beans
R Us! We put hundreds of pounds of beans and rice into small bags
for distribution at one of the poorest areas in Tijuana. |
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"Homes"
are one or two rooms made of discarded lumber, shipping pallets and tar
paper. Many have no running water, electricity or toilets.
Most toilets are made by digging a hole in the ground and building a small
outhouse around it. That makes the smell seem worse than the flies that
buzz around children and the hordes of sickly dogs. Children walk
the unpaved streets to reach the nearby city dump to mine for broken
glass or metal for less that $1 a day. |
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We
unloaded our bags from the van and passed them out to families up and down
the streets. Our efforts were rewarded with a smiling "Gracias."
Unfortunately, we only scratched the surface in that our efforts only provided
a few day's food for about one tenth the homes. Maybe the biggest
benefit from this project were the changes that took place inside ourselves. |
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Get
involved. Sponsor a child. Volunteer at the mission.
Send donations.
"The more people that are exposed
to this type of benevolent work, weíll have a more compassionate church
leadership and a kinder country." |
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