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In countries where large portions of the population live on less than $2 per day, purchasing costly hearing aids is well beyond the means of most individuals. To address this need, HOPE International is partnering with the Starkey Hearing Foundation to help distribute hearing aids to over 1,000 impoverished individuals in Uganda and Rwanda. As part of this initiative, HOPE staff members Erika Roberts and Quenton Marty—joined by Adrian Peterson, Larry Fitzgerald, and over 20 other NFL stars representing Pros for Africa—have traveled to these countries to help distribute hearing aids. Below, Erika blogs about her first impressions from the trip.

Erika fitting hearing aids

HOPE staff member Erika Roberts helps fit a hearing aid

I started off this trip thinking that I would not have anything HOPE related to write about until we were actually fitting our Rwanda clients with hearing aids. However, after 8 days of helping to share the gift of hearing, I can say with confidence that the work of the Starkey Hearing Foundation and HOPE International are more similar than I thought. There have been many times after helping restore an adult’s hearing that I have asked how this new ability will aid their businesses and, essentially, their ability to generate income. One man told me that he is a fisherman, and now he will be able to hear other boats coming as well as make better deals with his customers. Another sweet older lady who came to the hearing mission with her sign language interpreter from church wanted to give me a gift after I fitted her hearing aids but did not have it with her. I found out that she makes beautiful bags. Continue Reading…

HOPE staff member, Katie Straight, reflects on meeting HOPE’s clients in Haiti.

One year after Haiti’s devastating earthquake, HOPE International’s Katie Straight travelled to the country to walk in solidarity with our clients and staff as they remembered the pain of January 12, 2010. She joins them in reflecting on the continued challenges and continued promise of what’s to come.

We woke up this morning and watched the sun slowly rise over the hills of Port-au-Prince onto the still-rubbled city below. On the anniversary of the devastating earthquake that shook Haiti one year ago, Port-au-Prince was relatively quiet. Mourners arose early to fill churches with song and prayer, while a great number of the city’s inhabitants stayed off the roads. As we twisted our way through the city, we passed a crowd of people gathered at the foot of the still-crumbled National Palace, listening to politicians speak through crackling loudspeakers about rebuilding Haiti. We drove past tent cities and through the epicenter of the earthquake, where destroyed buildings made somber memorials for the anniversary. For three hours we twisted our way along country roads en route to HOPE’s Savings and Credit Association (SCA) program in Cadiac, Haiti. Continue Reading…

HOPE staff member, Katie Straight, reflects on meeting HOPE’s clients in Haiti.

This morning we hopped in the truck bed of a tap-tap, the “taxi” of rural Haiti, to ride to the weekly market in neighboring Miragoane. What an incredible sight to see thousands of local vendors selling every imaginable item: fruit, rice, freshly butchered meats, fabric, livestock, sunglasses, and jeans. We had the opportunity to see a number of HOPE’s Savings and Credit Association (SCA) clients in the midst of their commerce, busily selling meat from livestock they raised or homemade bread or candies. They stopped to tell us about how they had used their savings to invest in their businesses and care for their families. Without exception they said that they were glad to be a part of the savings program because it has enabled them to have access to money at critical times when they would not have had it before. Continue Reading…

HOPE staff member, Katie Straight, reflects on meeting HOPE’s clients in Haiti.

One year ago today, the struggling nation of Haiti was devastated by an earthquake that killed over 200,000 and left 1.5 million homeless. In the aftermath, stories of broken-down ports and backlogged airports began to cast doubt on the effectiveness of relief efforts—and the effectiveness of the billions of dollars in aid that had been poured into Haiti in the previous decades.

Even as some were predicting that Haiti was beyond hope, we* saw persuasive evidence to the contrary. HOPE has always believed that Haiti’s strength lies in its people. Resilient, determined, and hopeful, their spirits were not crushed. Those who had little began sharing with those who had less. Some of HOPE’s clients, who lived in northern Haiti and were not directly impacted by the quake, took others who were forced to flee the devastation of Port-au-Prince into their homes. We saw, and have continued to see, God at work in their generosity. Continue Reading…

HOPE’s founder, Jeff Rutt, visited several of HOPE’s countries this summer with his daughter Leah. Below, he reflects on the experience.

AnastasiaOver the past several years, I have had the immense privilege of traveling with each of my children to visit HOPE’s work in person, giving them the opportunity to witness firsthand the transformation that takes place when the poor receive the capital they need to invest in their businesses. This past summer, my youngest daughter, Leah, and I traveled to Rwanda, Burundi, and Ukraine: three countries where we witnessed God at work in amazing ways.

In Burundi*, we met Anastasia, a client who first started out with a $50 loan. With that money, Anastasia bought 20 chairs, which she then rented out to people for their events. As she worked hard, saved, and continued taking out loans, she has expanded her inventory to include not only 200 chairs but also baskets, plates, a stereo system, and three wedding dresses in three different sizes. The innovation and determination she has shown is inspiring. Because of her increased profits, she has been able to adopt two girls whose parents were killed in the recent civil war. Anastasia dreams of sending these two girls to the university to get an education—thus continuing this transformation into future generations. Continue Reading…

claire-henry

As HOPE Trips liaison in the Dominican Republic (D.R.), Claire Henry introduced hundreds of HOPE supporters to HOPE’s work in the D.R.* Now at the end of her term, Claire sat down with us to offer some reflections from her time on the ground. As she returns home and looks forward to her next steps, our prayers—and immense gratitude—go with her!

What are some of the things you’ll miss most about life in the D.R.?
I’ll miss the emphasis on relationships. A lot of times here in the States, we’re task driven, whereas the D.R. is much more relationship driven. I learned how to define productivity in a different way, in a much more nebulous and at times less easy to measure way: “How much did I invest in this individual?” Continue Reading…