elephant-ride500

On January 20-24, a Global Ministries Staff Summit was held in Chiang Rai, Thailand. Attending were 28 persons, most of them Global Ministries staff serving in various countries. Jeff Bleijerveld, director of Global Ministries, and associate director Donna Hollopeter sat down a few days after returning to talk about the event. Previously, we published their comments about the sessions they had together and their experience worshiping with the Thai churches on January 20. In this final installment, Jeff and Donna tell about the outing on the last day.

Donna: Our last day together, we took a sampan–a long narrow canoe with a huge motor on back–up the river to an elephant farm, where there were many, many elephants. We all rode elephants for an hour—up the hillside, down the hillside, into the river. For a little bit of money, 20 baht, you could buy a bag of food—green bananas and sugar cane—to feed your elephant.

Two people rode at a time. They would bring the elephant to a tower, and you would climb onto a two-seater bench. And off you’d go, with a Thai man riding on the neck of the elephant. The route included going into the river. Then you went onto the bank to another tower, where you got off the elephant.

Even with the Thai rider and a set route, the elephants all seemed to follow their own mind about what they would do. Any time they came near foliage, they came to a total stop to break off big chunks of plants and snarf it down. We were supposed to be following this path, but four elephants decided to cut across a field instead. The riders kept saying something to the elephants to get them back on track. Then there were some that, instead of going partway into the river, decided they wanted to cross the river to get something to eat on the other side.

Jeff: If you think it’s difficult matching yourself to the rhythm of a horse, you should try riding on an elephant. It’s a total core workout. You can’t match its movements. There is no going with the flow.

Donna: After that, they escorted us to a village where they had huge snakes—pythons and boas. You could have a photo taken with a snake wrapped around you, but the only person who did that was Camden Dice. He had a big yellow boa constrictor, probably 14 feet long, wrapped around him. While photos were being taken, he stood there trying to look enthused, and saying, “Why did I do this?”

After that, we did some shopping with some of the village vendors, and got back to the resort, had lunch, and then took off again for the Golden Triangle area.

At the Opium Museum

Jeff: We went through the House of Opium, a museum which tells the story of the opium trade and how it impacted not only Thailand but much of Asia during colonial times.

Donna: There was a lot of reading, along with videos. There were amazing facts about how even the CIA and the British East India Company were involved in the opium trade.

Jeff: It helped us understand why missionaries who entered China with opium traders were called White Devils. For a Westerner, there were may humbling moments.

The museum is located on the Mekong River at the conjunction of three countries–Thailand, Myanmar, and Laos. The Thai royal family personally paid to develop the museum, which is truly world class.

Donna: Thailand used to be an absolute monarchy, but now it’s a constitutional monarchy. Their king is 85 years old, and the queen is 80. They are dearly loved, even revered. He has been on the throne for 60-some years. Both of them are in ill health. They no longer live in the palace, but have taken over a floor of a hospital in Bangkok.

Jeff: As soon as you arrive in the country, you begin noticing photos of the King of Thailand. The Thai people think very highly of the royal family. As an outsider, if you make a comment perceived as negative to the government, it is not appreciated.

Donna: One of their largest celebrations each year is on the birthday of the King, December 5. All industry closes down, and they have an official day of celebration.

The Canadians and Pennsylvanians who made up Team #10

The Canadians and Pennsylvanians who made up Team #10

Top: Bins and cases waiting to be sorted; sorting the tools. Bottom: two tables were needed to accomodate the entire work team.

Top: Bins and cases waiting to be sorted; sorting the tools. Bottom: two tables were needed to accomodate the entire work team.

A team consisting of UBs from Canada and from King Street UB church in Chambersburg, Pa., arrived in Haiti on January 25, 2013. This is a construction team which will work on building a new church in Limbe, in northern Haiti.

A medical team will come to Haiti February 5-12. They will be joined by three ladies from Mission of Hope and Dr. Robinson Germain, a Haitian doctor. This team will go to Les Cayes, in the south, to hold several medical clinics.

Joan Sider (right), from the UB church in Toronto, has visited Haiti numerous times, and participated on both of these teams. And, as she always does, she sent back regular reports. What follows is an account of the first group (you can read about the medical group here). Unless otherwise indicated, all of these daily reports come from Joan.

Friday, January 25

We have arrived safe and sound with all 24 pieces of luggage. We arrived earlier in Port Au Prince than we thought we would. We left Toronto with a temperature of minus 10, and came to one of 32 celcius–warm indeed, but pleasant.

There was a lot more scrutiny with the luggage this trip. When we picked up the bags off the carousel, we noticed several bins had been opened and inspected; they had a tape around the bin saying it had been opened for inspection. I guess that happened in New York. Customs officials here in Haiti opened up a number more. We’re not sure if they were looking for anything specific. One did ask if we had any drugs.

We need to pray now that the next team’s meds all get through without any difficulty.

The airport is amazing–the changes made since even December when I came with Hermmy are quite remarkable. They are truly trying to make it a first class airport. There are still many porters who all want to help you–and get your tip–but even that is better organized.

Our American friends came in earlier than we did and were here waiting to meet us.

The big task of sorting all the materials we brought was next on the agenda. Everyone pitched in, and all is now in readiness for tomorrow’s journey up to Limbe. It is a 6-8 hours trip. We know the highway up as far as Gonaives is good. (more…)

Charles Malson, Sr., remains in ICU at Sparrow Hospital in Lansing, Mich. Son Steve, a former UB minister, writes, “He is going to have another surgery around 2 pm on Monday. It will be extensive. Please pray for us, my mom and my family, because this is a very difficult time for the whole crew. Daddy is a very sick man.”

Cards can be sent to:

Charles F. Malson, Sr.
10928 Easy Street
Carson City, MI 48811
Email: cfmalsonsr@yahoo.com

UPDATE (7:30 pm): Chuck Malson posted this on Facebook: “Ok, so here’s the latest on Pop. He didn’t need the more extensive surgery that we feared he needed after Saturday’s ct scan. The dark mass appears to be blood, not infection, since his blood cells etc. are all going the right direction. So, the surgery today was to insert a tracheotomy in order to make it easier on him to breathe. The doctor is very pleased with his progress. The trach will stay in for a couple weeks and another ct scan will be taken later to double check his progress. Thanks for all your prayers.”

Dan Paternoster (left) and UB minister Charlie Milliken greeting people at the 2011 US National Conference.

We’ve been keeping up on Dan Paternoster (right), a member of the Executive Leadership Team who was involved in a serious accident last August. His wife, Nancy, wrote the following update on February 3, 2013:

“We met with Dan’s urologist a few days ago and were told that the bladder biopsy showed no cancer. The doctor believes that the abnormal area seen the week before was an area of inflammation–perhaps scar tissue from the previous surgery or treatment. We’re both very grateful that we are cancer-free at this time. Our prayer is that it continues that way for a long time.

“Dan’s next appointment is with a vision specialist to check out the nerve palsy in his left eye. Dan may just need to be patient and let the eye heal on its own, which should take care of his current problem with double vision. We were told in the fall that it may take 8-12 months for the nerve to heal. It’s been just over 5 months, so we may have several more months of waiting for healing before Dan can return to work.”

Robert Sommers, formerly the head of financial aid at Indiana Wesleyan University, has been hired as Huntington University’s new director of financial aid.

Sommers most recently served as the technology coordinator for financial aid at Indiana Wesleyan (Marion, Ind.). Before that, he worked as the Midwest regional director for Edfinancial Services/EdAmerica for four years and director and then executive director of financial aid at Indiana Wesleyan for seven years.

“Robert brings a wonderful blend of professional experience and personal strengths to the director of financial aid role at Huntington. Not only does he have an extensive background of leadership in the financial aid field, but he brings a broad knowledge of the higher education loan industry and of core enrollment management techniques to the position, as well,” said Jeff Berggren, senior vice president for enrollment management and marketing.

Sommers graduated from Indiana Wesleyan with a degree in accounting and business administration in 1993 and later earned his MBA from the school in 1998.

James Maddox waits outside the United Brethren In Christ Church in Holly Hill where food was being distributed to the needy Tuesday morning, January 8, 2012. (Photo by Jim Tiller for the Daytona Beach News-Journal)

James Maddox waits outside the United Brethren In Christ Church in Holly Hill where food was being distributed to the needy Tuesday morning, January 8, 2012. Click photos to enlarge. (Photo by Jim Tiller for the Daytona Beach News-Journal)

Volunteers, from left, Michelle Blocher, Kathy Bruce, Lisa Kuntz and Amy Koteskey (all from Emmanuel Community Church in Fort Wayne, Ind.) on Tuesday morning, January 8, 2012. The church helps feed 800 needy families a week. (Photo by Jim Tiller for the Daytona Beach News-Journal)

Volunteers, from left, Michelle Blocher, Kathy Bruce, Lisa Kuntz and Amy Koteskey (all from Emmanuel Community Church in Fort Wayne, Ind.) on Tuesday morning, January 8, 2013. (Photo by Jim Tiller for the Daytona Beach News-Journal)

Pastor Chuck McKeown leads a group of volunteers in a quick prayer outside First UB church in Holly Hill, Fla., before serving food to the needy Tuesday morning, January 8, 2012. (Photo by Jim Tiller for the Daytona Beach News-Journal)

Pastor Chuck McKeown leads a group of volunteers in a quick prayer on January 8 outside First UB church in Holly Hill, Fla., before serving food. (Photo by Jim Tiller for the Daytona Beach News-Journal)

Deborah Circelli, Education Writer, Daytona Beach News-Journal

The reporting for this article occurred on Tuesday, January 8, 2013. At the time, the staff and spouses of Emmanuel Community UB church (Fort Wayne, Ind.) were in Florida on a staff retreat, and they took this day to serve at First UB’s food pantry. As a result, nearly all volunteers who appear in the photos are from Emmanuel. The article was published January 10, 2013, by the Daytona Beach News-Journal.

With his 15-year-old Chihuahua peeking out from inside his jacket, James Maddox rolls his wheelchair up to First United Brethren Church (Holly Hill, Fla.) to get in line for a large box of food after a half-hour ride in his motorized chair from his home.

The 65-year-old, who is on disability because of spinal and hip problems, has been getting help for about four years, starting when the food pantry was with another church in Holly Hill that closed more than a year ago.

The United Brethren moved the pantry from Open Bible Church in December 2011 after initially helping out the church at its location when Open Bible’s pastor passed away.

“We were afraid if we didn’t move it to our place, it would just go away,” explained Chuck McKeown (right, with wife Vicki), senior pastor of First UB church. “After we got involved with them, it became very clear it was something that was needed.”

A new building was constructed for the pantry, helping to serve more than five times the amount of people previously served, according to officials at Second Harvest Food Bank of Central Florida.

The small church in a short time has become the largest single-site pantry in Volusia County that receives food from Second Harvest, not including Halifax Urban Ministries and its five locations, according to Bob Thomas, branch manager in Daytona Beach for Second Harvest Food Bank.

Second Harvest distributes food to 105 partner agencies in Volusia County, including 70 food pantries.

“They are the only food pantry in Holly Hill,” Thomas said. “They are getting inundated with clients and get overflow from Ormond Beach and Daytona Beach.”

Maddox said the church helps him with food because the food stamps he receives don’t last the whole month.

“This helps get me through,” Maddox said. “They are a good church — more than excellent. I’ve seen some (church volunteers) go into their pocket and help you out.”

First UB spent about $31,187 on food in 2012, serving about 71,000 people and distributing almost 673,000 pounds of food. The total number of people served includes people coming to the pantry more than once.

The church served 21,824 people in the last few months of 2012, compared with 3,673 people in the previous location for April, May and June 2011, according to Second Harvest.

Overall, Second Harvest and its agencies in Volusia County distributed 4.4 million pounds of food last calendar year, up about 1 million pounds from 2011.

Second Harvest is focused on providing more fresh produce, which is free to agencies, and distributing more low-sodium, sugar-free food. Agencies receive free fruits, vegetables, dairy and baked goods, but pay 18 cents a pound to Second Harvest for meat and canned goods.

At First UB, more than 150 volunteers help the food pantry, which also provides hygiene products and other items. The church gives out about 840 boxes of food a week, on Tuesday and Thursday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. and between Sunday church services.

People can come twice a month, but any new clients may be even more limited on how often they can get food.

“People get between 30 and 40 pounds of food. We don’t turn anybody away,” McKeown said. “There is a great need in the Holly Hill area. People aren’t finding jobs. Things aren’t getting better.”

First UB, which has about 350 people attending three church services on Sunday, also took over the private K-12 school from Open Bible Church and serves about 90 students. McKeown’s youngest son, Josh (left), is the youth pastor and principal of the school. Josh and his brother, Matt (right), do most of the preaching on Sunday, their father said.

Jeff Lilly, one of the officers from Open Bible Church who was also the temporary pastor, said church members thought they would have to shut down everything after their pastor, James Baker, got sick and later died.

“We would have had to close the doors (on the food pantry). We couldn’t have done it,” said Lilly, who is still involved in the food pantry.

Joyce Dismuke, 57, of Holly Hill, who is on disability, has received food off and on for a year from First UB.

“They have been a blessing for me. I love when they pray with us, too. The people here have a beautiful attitude,” said Dismuke, who also gives extra food she receives to other neighbors who need it.

Keith Chandler, 57, of Holly Hill, also said his food stamps don’t provide him enough to get through the month. He walks with a cane from knee problems.

“They are friendly and helpful to us,” Chandler said before volunteer Jon Cavarretta carried out his food.

Cavarretta likes helping, especially the children whose “faces light up when you give them a huge cake.”

Huntington University announced a tuition freeze for the 2013-14 academic year. It applies to all incoming and returning students, including traditional undergraduates, adults enrolled in professional programs, and graduate students.

Huntington University will also continue to safeguard its students’ financial success through its innovative Loan Repayment Program. The program reimburses all or part of a graduate’s loan payments if their employment income falls within certain thresholds.

Huntington previously adopted a tuition freeze for the 2004-2005 school year. Since that time, Huntington’s tuition increases have been low.

Across the United States, the average tuition at four-year private institutions this year is $29,056 and the total cost of attendance averages $43,289, according to The College Board. Currently, Huntington’s tuition ranks 23rd out of the 31 independent colleges and universities in Indiana and 56th out of the 109 members of the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities.

Huntington University’s undergraduate tuition will remain locked at $23,300 next year. Room, board and fees will rise slightly to bring the total sticker price to $32,200, or an overall increase of 1.6%. This figure includes a new technology fee which will underwrite a campus wireless and cloud printing initiative.

“Due to generous institutional aid through scholarships and grants, the average student only pays about 60 percent of the full tuition amount before other sources of financial aid, such as state and federal grants and loans, are factored in,” said Jeff Berggren (right), senior vice president for enrollment management and marketing. He also noted that more than 90 percent of undergraduates receive financial aid in the form of scholarships, grants, loans or work-study assistance. He added that all students should file the FAFSA and use tools such as online net tuition calculators to look beyond the sticker price.

Tuition for HU’s professional and graduate degree programs will remain at current levels for next year, between $348 and $466 per credit hour, depending on the program.

Charles and Doris Malson

Charles and Doris Malson

Chuck Malson passed along this information about his father, Charles Malson, Sr., who has been in the hospital since Friday, January 25. “He is responding a little more lately. He seems to be more aware of his surroundings. Still not awake fully and that may be a good thing, since he isn’t breathing on his own, yet.”

Beth Palmer wrote the following update on Wednesday, Jan. 30: “Daddy is still in a coma. He has shown some signs of coming around today. His breathing test indicated he wasn’t ready, so they couldn’t remove the ventilator. He isn’t awake enough to fight the tubes, and that is fine with us. They have taken cultures, etc., to see why he has a slight fever. They put in a pick line a few minutes ago, have taken the ex-rays, and plan to take out the central line if the pictures indicate a good line.

“Lots of our family and many friends have dropped by to support my mom and the rest of us here during this difficult time. My mom was looking at the list of those we knew who had come to visit, and the list contains 70 different names. We didn’t think to keep the names of those who have called or sent texts. We appreciate everyone so much. Please keep us in our prayers as family and friends travel to and from the hospital when you pray for daddy.

“Maybe it would be a good idea to pray for him to progress enough to be taken off the ventilator. His body continues to heal, and the doctors are pleased with his progress. The lead surgeon said we should not despair. Daddy is getting amazing care here at Sparrow Hospital.”

Cards can be sent to:

Charles F. Malson, Sr.
10928 Easy Street
Carson City, MI 48811
Email: cfmalsonsr@yahoo.com

Dan and Nancy Paternoster posted this January 27 update on Dan. As reported previously, Dan was in a serious bicycle accident in August, and cancer was discovered in the process. A couple months later, Nancy was diagnosed with breast cancer. Dan is a member of the denominational Executive Leadership Team. He and Nancy are from Fowlerville UB church in Fowlerville, Mich.

Dan Paternoster

Dan Paternoster

Much has happened this past month. The first week of January we made the rounds of the cancer specialists and decided that we were not pursuing any further treatment for Nancy’s breast cancer at this point. All the cancer was removed during the biopsy, and no futher cancer was found during the subsequent surgery. There will be follow-up mammograms every six months for a few years.

Dan had his bladder scoped mid-January, and the urologist saw a “rough” spot which wasn’t normal. He wasn’t sure if it was a reaction to the chemo treatments, scar tissue from his previous surgery in October, or a cancerous growth. It appeared to be in the same location as the previous tumor. So, this past week Dan had another bladder biopsy and we’re waiting for the results.

Earlier last week, Dan had an EMG and it was determined that there is regrowth in the nerve roots on his left side. The doctor who did the test called every resident, student, etc. in his office to see Dan, because it’s rare to see this kind of regeneration after such severe damage. The damage to these roots is what’s causing his inability to lift his left arm past shoulder height. We’re thankful for this good news and looking forward to complete use of his left shoulder, arm, and hand again.

The ENT doctor visit confirmed that Dan has excellent hearing, but the humming in his ear is something that will always be there. The change in the shape of his ear canal is due to some cartilage from his jaw (probably when it was dislocated in the accident) pushing on his ear. It doesn’t make a difference with his hearing, but will most likely lead to arthritis in his jaw.

Dan’s biggest hurdle to returning back to work and normal life is his vision in his left eye. He still has double vision most of the time and is scheduled to see a specialist in February.

Beth Palmer sent this update on her father, Charles Malson, Sr., along with some background on what led to his hospitalization. Rev. Malson is scheduled to undergo surgery Saturday afternoon, January 26.

“On Wednesday morning (January 23), Charles Malson fell in the bathroom, striking his head. When my mom found him, he was cold and unresponsive with wounds. He was taken to the Carson City hospital, and they transfered him to Sparrow Hospital in Lansing.

“After several tests, they discovered that he had a section of his small bowl area that had detached from the blood source and had died, sending bacteria into his system. They removed this area that night, and he is to have surgery again to attach the two ends if they are healthy. He faces another surgery in a couple days to attach the muscles. There is too much swelling from the two surgeries to do this safely at this time.

“He is in an induced coma and will remain there for a few days. He is doing well.”

Chuck Malson added in the early afternoon on Saturday, Jan. 26:

“If all goes well, they may be able to close the incision today, otherwise they will reattach the intestine today, and close on Monday. The reason, as I understand, is that pressure in the abdomen is released better with the wound open, but if enough has been released by surgery time, they can close. So, either one surgery today, or one today and one Monday. It may be that the delay from yesterday will be a good thing, and he might be two days ahead if they can close today.”

UPDATE 5:30 pm: Beth Palmer writes, “Daddy’s surgeon just reported that he has been able to attach the sections of his bowel and there will be no ostomy. He will remain in a coma for another day or two and in the CCU for several days. He will then be moved to a surgical floor for more recovery. Grandma is doing well also. She is a trooper as you would expect. About 25 family members came to be with her during the process.”