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For Love of the Game

Sunday, December 13th, 2009

NWHCM missionary Grant Roszkowiak uses sports to score new ministry opportunities in Northwest Haiti


By Andy Olsen, NWHCM media director

Saint-Louis du Nord, Haiti
— Grant Roszkowiak came to Haiti in the summer of 2009 with a five-year plan.  But the NWHCM missionary has already burned through so many of his goals that these days, it’s looking more like a one-year plan.

The 22-year-old from Savannah, Georgia joined Northwest Haiti Christian Mission full-time after graduating in 2009 from Wheaton College, near Chicago.  It took him just a few weeks living in Saint-Louis du Nord, Haiti, to put a finger on his passions:  Sports and youth.

Now Roszkowiak is spearheading NWHCM ministries that are reaching out to everyone from down-and-out street kids to professional soccer players.

He sees sports as a natural vehicle for the gospel.  “If you play soccer in Sri Lanka and you play soccer here, it’s the same soccer and it just naturally bridges cultures,” he said.

<br>The ASSL soccer team of Saint-Louis du Nord, Haiti.  Photos by Andy Olsen / NWHCM staff

The ASSL soccer team of Saint-Louis du Nord, Haiti. Photos by Andy Olsen / NWHCM staff

Roszkowiak’s most immediate — and somewhat surprising — success story has been his involvement with the Association Sportif de Saint-Louis du Nord, or ASSL. It’s the local professional soccer franchise, about as big-time-sports as one can find in this small Haitian city.

A few weeks after arriving in Haiti, ASSL supporters approached NWHCM and asked about ways the mission could partner with the team.  Roszkowiak jumped in and began attending practices and hanging out with the players.  He led morning devotions with the team and, before long, was unexpectedly appointed to the organization’s board of directors.

“I had no idea what was going on,” Roszkowiak said with a laugh.  The next thing he knew, he was dissecting team budgets and meeting with the city’s mayor.

Though professional soccer players in Haiti earn a reasonable salary (considering Haiti’s larger economy) and are relatively well cared-for, the teams often lack the basic equipment that sports teams in developed countries take for granted.  So Roszkowiak began contacting soccer equipment manufacturers about donating supplies to NWHCM.

The response was overwhelming.  California-based Xara Soccer has given hundreds of adult and youth uniforms, soccer balls, socks, and other equipment like shin guards and shoes.  Canadian soccer equipment manufacturer Admiral donated uniforms and socks they were able to ship directly from a warehouse in the Dominican Republic.

NWHCM has received so much equipment that Roszkowiak has used much of it for youth ministry, as well.  Youth teams in the area and in the Far West, the region of Haiti west of Port-de-Paix, are now playing with the donated jerseys and soccer balls.

Roszkowiak’s next step is to get Bibles into the hands of ASSL’s two Christian players and some of the others.  If the guys on the team come to know Christ, he said, there is enormous potential for the witness they could have in the community.  “These people are the heroes of Saint-Louis,” he said.

REACHING YOUTH
In many ways, Roskowiak’s passion for youth ministry works in tandem with his love of sports.  A football player and swimmer in high school, he began the first Fellowship of Christian Athletes chapter at his school in Savannah.  At Wheaton College, where he continued playing football, he was actively involved with youth at nearby Willow Creek Community Church.

<br>Grant Roszkowiak, NWHCM missionary in Saint-Louis du Nord

Grant Roszkowiak, NWHCM missionary in Saint-Louis du Nord

Shortly after joining NWHCM, Roszkowiak began helping with the youth group at the Citadel Church in Saint-Louis du Nord.  He organized youth community service activities.  And now he has his eye on building a community basketball complex and youth center in town.

“There’s nothing (for youth) to do here. After school, people just hang around, and that’s where trouble happens,” he said  “If I have a safe place where these kids can come and play and hang out, hear the Word, but also just be kids and relax and watch movies and play ping pong or whatever, that’s something.”

Next year, Roszkowiak plans to finish construction of the basketball courts (conveniently located right next to the ASSL soccer field) and launch an annual three-on-three basketball tournament and league.  He hopes the tournament would draw hundreds of youth and provide part-time jobs for pastors and other community members serving as referees.

“If 20 people are playing and 40 people are watching, that’s 60 people right there,” he said.  “Over and over again, that adds up. It’s people hearing the gospel all the time in a fun way, and it’s just something to look forward to.”

Eventually, Roszkowiak even wants to form partnerships with college and professional sports teams in the United States that would bring athletes to Northwest Haiti to do sports camps and youth events.

It has not all been easy or without complications. But Roszkowiak finds encouragement from a conversation he had recently with another NWHCM missionary.  They were attending a funeral for a local youth who had been killed in a fight.  The missionary turned to Roszkowiak and said: “I finally understand why you do what you do.”  She said she didn’t want this to happen to any of the kids in NWHCM schools.

I want “to give these kids a hope for the future, to make them feel human, to go to a movie and not worry about where their next meal is coming from,” Roszkowiak said. “It gives them an opportunity to experience Christ in a new way.”




On the Frontlines of Medicine

Saturday, September 26th, 2009

At Northwest Haiti Christian Mission’s medical facility, we battle every day against the preventable diseases that cause thousands of deaths across Haiti.  Through health education, immunizations, medical care and our maternity center, we are making a difference on Haiti’s northern coast against very formidable odds.

Our medical staff delivers between 60 and 80 babies and cares for over 2,000 patients a month in our general, pediatric and prenatal clinics. Our staff exemplifies compassion everyday as they face difficult situation after difficult situation, yet they do so with a smile on their face and prayers on their lips.

NWHCM nurses examine a newborn baby after a delivery.

NWHCM nurses examine a newborn baby after a delivery.

Case in point: Meet Sylveste, our nurse manager.

Sylveste is a natural leader. Sylveste lets her faith shine as she rescues the baby that is close to death, restores the faith of a fragile mother, and shares the redeeming story of Christ with patients and staff.

Whether she is completing essential paperwork for the government, having an afternoon seminar with nursing students, or tirelessly working with patients, Sylveste is impacting lives every day!

You cannot have a Christ-centered medical facility without Christ-centered staff like Sylveste. But Sylveste and the rest of our medical staff need your help. We need individuals, churches, and health professionals to step up to the frontlines in this battle. We need people like you to sponsor our medical staff, providing financial support that will meet the current and future needs of the medical work.

Sylveste, NWHCM's nurse manager

Sylveste, NWHCM's nurse manager

Delivering health care in the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere comes at a cost. In fact, the biggest percentage by far of NWHCM’s budget is spent on the medical ministry.

We need you! Would you join us on the frontlines by becoming a staff sponsor? Your investment in our staff’s future will save lives and will forever impact people across Northwest Haiti for Christ.

SPONSORSHIP: YOU CAN HELP!

Your monthly sponsorship of a member of Northwest Haiti Christian Mission’s medical staff provides them with a competitive salary to help care for their family, and enables us to continue hiring and training qualified Christian workers.

Frontline Sponsor Levels

You can sponsor for the full amount each month or designate the amount in $50/mo increments

Nurse Staff Sponsor $250 a month
Lab Staff Sponsor $125 a month
Pharmacy Staff Sponsor $90 a month

Sponsor a staff member today!






Keep Up With NWHCM Travelers

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

Communicating in Haiti can be tough.  But we want to keep you as informed as possible about all the great ministry our visiting groups are getting into.

In June, NWHCM launched our brand-new Travel Blog.  It’s an up-to-the-minute (well OK, up-to-the-day) look at exactly what short-term teams are doing in Northwest Haiti — written in most cases by the travelers themselves.

NWHCM staff do monitor the blog to keep it appropriate, but for the most part it is a real-life glimpse of ministry in Haiti, with all the joys, triumphs, emotions and challenges that come with it.

We’re excited about the potential of the Travel Blog to connect our ministry partners in North America with our work in Northwest Haiti in ways we never have before.  We never want to pass up a chance to form community-based ministry and development, and what better way to engender community than to open up a trans-Caribbean conversation.

As always, you can also keep up with the latest group happenings through our NWHCM travel photos, which are also better than ever.  Please use both of these tools as aides to pray for our visiting groups and our ministry.  Use them to spark new ideas about how you can partner with us and get involved.

You will always be able to access trip photos and the Travel Blog from our Get Involved section.

To view the Travel Blog now, please click here.

To view NWHCM trip photos, please click here.



The Legacy of a “Miss”

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

This article first appeared in the January/February 2009 issue of Northwest Notes.

Every so often, someone comes along who has touched so many lives for Christ, it’s as if they have lived two lifetimes.

Pat Hamilton is one of those people.

Known almost universally as “Miss Pat,” she is a tough-as-nails, veteran missionary to Haiti whose legacy is overshadowed only by her modesty (Pat might not have given me permission to write this if I had asked her).

MULTIMEDIA SLIDESHOW: Miss Pat in her own wordsThere is hardly a program or project at Northwest Haiti Christian Mission that does not owe something to Miss Pat’s two decades of service there.

At the end of last year, she went home to retire in Ramsey, Illinois.

To say she will be missed would be an understatement.

Miss Pat, 78, raised six children and a clan of 11 grandchildren and four great grandchildren. She worked at a nursing home in the United States for years, honing skills as caregiver that would serve her well later in life.

She came to Haiti in 1983 shortly after her husband died, at a time in her life when most people would have been thinking about retirement.

Miss Pat began her ministry at a clinic in Marchand Dessalines, a city southeast of Gonaives. She worked there as a lay nurse for five years (the word “miss” is Creole for “nurse,” and the moniker stuck). Missionaries decided to close the clinic after a large hospital moved into the area, and Miss Pat went back home with plans to work with American Indians.

But at a missionary convention in 1989, she met Larry Owen, then executive director of NWHCM. That October, she headed to Saint-Louis du Nord as a full-time, residential missionary.

During her years with the mission, Miss Pat launched what eventually grew into today’s nutrition program, clinic and gran moun home, among other programs.

In 2004, Miss Pat moved farther west and founded the mission’s campus at the Baie des Moustiques, which now has a church, school, clinic, and feeding program of its own.

I interviewed Miss Pat last summer. She talked of all her adventures, and how God had watched over her for so many years.

“When I think about going back to the States, I hope I don’t just turn into a mushroom,” she said.

If history is any indication, that seems pretty unlikely.

– Andy Olsen, NWN editor



The Power of a Meal

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

By Mary Beth Winkler

As the Sponsorship Coordinator of Northwest Haiti Christian Mission, I travel to Haiti three or four times a year. One of the programs that has always been dear to my heart is our nutrition program, which is for children between ages 1 and 4 who have been identified as being in at least second-degree malnutrition – though more often, we find them in third-degree malnutrition.

These children come to the mission five days a week and receive two meals a day. They receive medical care and, when they are old enough, they attend our mission schools. Food and fuel costs in Haiti rose significantly in 2008, and while we continued the nutrition program, we were not always able to provide the most nutritious food.

The food supply was also dramatically affected by the hurricanes that hit Haiti late last summer. Countless gardens were destroyed. When I was in Haiti in September, many of the children did not look as healthy as I would have liked.

Judline, 3, with her mother at NWHCM's Saint-Louis nutrition program

Judline, 3, with her mother at NWHCM's Saint-Louis du Nord nutrition program

Fortunately, it was right at this time that God blessed us with a container of food from Feed My Starving Children. It could not have come at a better time. We served the children this food every day, and when I returned to Haiti in January I could see a great difference in the children. Their little bodies had filled out, their skin looked better and they seemed to have more energy.

The biggest difference I saw was in a little girl named Judline. Judline is 3 years old and has been in our nutrition program for a couple of years. She has cerebral palsy and, while it is not a particularly bad case, she has never been able to walk. In the past, she would stand, and I would work with her and her mother to do exercises to strengthen her legs, but she still wasn’t walking.

But in January, I walked down to our nutrition center and the first thing I saw was Judline walking over to greet me. As I spent some time with her, she clearly had better control of her arms and her facial muscles. Certainly, she still has cerebral palsy, but she has made great strides, and I believe it is due in large part to the nutrients she is getting in the Feed My Starving Children food.

Judline’s body is much stronger and healthier, and she can better compensate for her physical challenges. I am so grateful for this food and the difference it is making in our kids’ lives, and I know that the children and their mothers are, as well.

Mary Beth Winkler is a child sponsorship coordinator for Northwest Haiti Christian Mission. For more than a decade, she has facilitated life-changing donor relationships in Haiti for babies, malnourished children, special-needs children and the elderly. She lives in Versailles, Kentucky.

Click here to learn more about NWHCM’s life-saving nutrition programs.

You can make a real difference today in the life of a hungry child by providing a meal for as little as 5 cents.

To make a donation, click here.



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