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Austintown church group helps in Africa


Published: Fri, March 6, 2009 @ 12:06 a.m.

By Linda Linonis

Helping people of poverty-stricken Sierra Leone, Africa, is mission of church.

The cost was $2,200 for each member of the mission team at Highway Tabernacle Church, 3000 S. Raccoon Road, Austintown, to go to Sierra Leone, Africa. That’s about eight and one-half times the annual income — $260 — of the average person in the country of 5.5 million people, who endured a decade-long civil war that ended in 2002.

Ordinary people of Sierra Leone, which is rich in natural resources, can’t fathom spending that amount of money when 75 percent of them live on less than $2 a day. Trade in “blood diamonds” perpetuated the devastating civil war, said the Rev. Jonathan Moore, senior pastor.

Though the country is mired in poverty and everything from infrastructure to basic school supplies is needed, three first-time mission team members, Chuck Swanson and Helen and Gene Helton, said they found a happy people.

“When we gave soccer balls to a school, they were so thrilled,” said Swanson, a detective sergeant with Youngstown Police Department. “One team member passed out yellow smiley face stickers and the kids wore them so proudly.”

Helen Helton added that basic school supplies were a huge hit with school children. “The simplest things made them so happy,” she said.

The Rev. Mr. Moore led the eight-member missionary team. The pastor, Swanson and the Heltons recently met to discuss the February trip, which took months of preparation and fund-raising. Team members got inoculations for such maladies as yellow fever, malaria and typhoid.

Mr. Moore, who had served as a missionary in West Africa, said the men’s group at Highway wanted to “make a difference” and that’s how the mission trips started in 2004. Mr. Moore said the church has spent a quarter of a million dollars on the effort, including travel costs, items they take and what they’ve built there.

“We’ve built 10 steel-structure tabernacles [churches], put roofs on various structures and done a lot of teaching and preaching,” Mr. Moore said. Tools and generators also have been gifts. Highway Tabernacle partners with the Assemblies of God on the project, which has involved 29 Highway members so far. Mr. Moore said the people have welcomed them warmly. About 60 percent of Sierra Leoneans are Muslim, and 30 percent are Christian.

“I’ve had a desire in my heart to do this,” said Gene Helton, who’s a two-time retiree — from GM and Eagle Heights Academy, where he met his wife, Helen, who was an educational assistant there.

His wife, Helen, added, “I felt that God said go, and we went.”

In Sierra Leone, Helen Helton drew on her background as a licensed practical nurse, in the health clinics offered by the team. “We talked about malaria prevention, cycle of contamination, birth spacing, hand washing and basic cleanliness,” she said. She said the group also visited a hospital, where they left materials for patient education.

Mr. Moore explained that this team had the opportunity to meet with the paramount chief (king of the village) in Kono. “To do anything substantial, you need his approval,” Mr. Moore said. “We were lucky enough to have an audience and that’s building a bridge.”

The team could communicate with the people of Sierra Leone because the official language is English, spoken on a limited basis, along with a derivative of English called Krio.

Swanson had the opportunity to meet with the police chief in Freetown. “Their biggest problems are theft, fraud, child abuse and rape,” he said. “Not every officer has a gun. Four-man squads carry guns,” he said, pointing out the lack of basic equipment. The police, he added, are stationed at various checkpoints, and they only had one vehicle to use.

Swanson led two devotional sessions with the police. “I never expected to do anything like that. It wasn’t planned but it was working through God,” he said.

Mr. Moore and the team members said one of the greatest joys of the trip was visiting schools. Attending school is not mandatory, and is reflected in a literary rate of 35 percent. With donations, the team was able to pay annual tuition of $40 for six children. “Parents really sacrifice to send their children to school,” Swanson said. “It’s a privilege for them.”

Mr. Moore said one school they visited had some 2,100 pupils, who greeted them in the courtyard. “They just pressed against us,” Helen Helton recalled. “They were elated to see Americans.”

linonis@vindy.com


Comments

1Steveliller(4 comments)posted 3 years, 2 months ago

I know this is going to bring a lot of people tremendous torment because I dare to question. But alas, I do.

Are there no more poor, hungry, needy children left in Youngstown? Are the schools all topped off with supplies? Every one fed, clothed, sheltered? Is North Eastern Ohio awash in do-gooders so much so that they now need to travel to make a difference?

Just the money they spent on travel and the school supplies would have made a huge difference in a lot of little lives in the valley. I don't think these people should be honored for their works, I think they should be questioned about their priorities. Mail the soccer balls and supplies because postage is far less that plane tickets. Then spend the travel money to feed some hungry people at home.

Once again, I guess I just don't get it.

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2lanieb(2 comments)posted 3 years, 2 months ago

Alas, you should be careful how you comment because you don't get it.

You do not know how much these people have used their resources not only for the children in Africa but also for the children here in our community.

You might, and I mean might, have a point if they have not seen our schools as a mission field also, but they do. The money, supplies and time they put in puts most people in this community to shame. They have built a local school here. They teach and financially provide to "our" kids here.

They are not just concerned for our community but for our world. Just think how much better this world would be if more people were concerned for their fellow brother and I don't mean the one just down the street.

They practice what they preach here in Youngstown and in Africa.

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3Steveliller(4 comments)posted 3 years, 2 months ago

Charity starts at home. But not much publicity in that.

A church is a community organization and that should be their priority. I can see the need to help others. But honestly, what what helped in Sierra Leone or Youngstown by paying the airlines $2200 a pop to get these folks there and back.

Again, mail the charity, spend the saved money helping out some kids that they drive by every day.

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4lanieb(2 comments)posted 3 years, 1 month ago

Okay so say you spend 2200 on a vacation, yipee for you. Should I be upset that you spent that much on vacation when you could have spent it on "the community"? I know that one couple took that money they were saving for their dream cruise and decided to obey the calling from God and spend that money going on this mission.

The people paid their own way there. They also had a contractor in the group and other men who taught some building techs to make the work easier for these people. Oh and let us not forget the 2 nurses and 2 teachers that went and set up clinics and taught the women how to manage them and birth spacing and such. Oh, oh how about all the hugs and love the children were shown?... but all of that could have been put in the form of a check and sent through the mail, right?

Next time you want to go on vacation, give it to the kids down the street instead. Because you think that's how we should spend our money. There are some things that you just can't put a price on and stick it in the mail.

BTW- church    (didn't see anything about community organization)

–noun 1. a building for public Christian worship.
2. public worship of God or a religious service in such a building: to attend church regularly.
3. the whole body of Christian believers; Christendom.
4. any division of this body professing the same creed and acknowledging the same ecclesiastical authority; a Christian denomination: the Methodist Church.
5. that part of the whole Christian body, or of a particular denomination, belonging to the same city, country, nation, etc.

And yes, AOG has churches where they went and yes they did preach every night there and had a revival meeting and general council.

But we should forget about them too because they don't live in our "community", right?

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5Steveliller(4 comments)posted 3 years ago

Africa. The cradle of humanity. Where human beings got underway. Thank GOD they have people from America to show them how to do it because with us they are lost. Is that what you are seriously trying to say. And what of the people in the Mahoning Valley who need education, health care, and compassion? What I am saying is valid no matter how you try and redefine it. Charity starts at home. Maybe if we lift up one of our neighbors that child might someday go on to help make the world a better place.

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