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I need to admit something: Sometimes I intentionally look away from photos of children living in poverty. Not the really sad ones – I mean photos of adorable kids with big eyes and bright smiles. And it’s not that I don’t like kids. I love them, actually. I’m that crazy lady who inevitably asks to hold someone’s baby, whether I’m in my parents’ church or a church in a Congolese village, and I’ve been that way since I was about four years old myself (Did you just get a mental image of toddler me carrying a baby half my size?).

Guilt is one reason I look away. If you’ve had the privilege of participating in some kind of mission trip, you probably know the simple joy of playing with cheerful kids who seem to come running from every direction. Across language barriers, we laugh and take pictures and give piggy back rides. We hold hands and give hugs and swear to ourselves that we’ll never forget their names. But honestly…I’ve forgotten most of their names. Distance and time have eroded those details in my brain, and I feel a twinge of guilt when I look at cute photos.

Pessimism is another reason. Despite all the wonderful things that are happening as God’s Church moves in the world, I know that at least some of these kids will still be living in the same slums years later, living out the same cycle of hopelessness their parents walked.

And finally, I look away out of fear that those cute kids will make me lose focus. Continue Reading…

Leap Forward logoNot sure how to celebrate leap day? Read how Alberto Francisco y Freuli used a loan from Esperanza, HOPE’s partner in the Dominican Republic, to provide a brighter future for his children, then take action to help others like Alberto Leap Forward at leapfwd.us.

Alberto

Before receiving a loan from Esperanza, Alberto struggled to make ends meet. Though he worked 18 hours a day in the grueling heat of the Dominican sugarcane fields, he was paid less than $7 a day—barely enough to provide for his four children, aged 4-11.

With his first loan from Esperanza, Alberto opened a small store. As he faithfully repaid his loans and accessed larger sums, Alberto saved enough money to purchase a motorcycle, which he uses for deliveries. With his profits, he has been able to send his children to school, and he dreams of one day owning his own cooking store. “Before the loans,” he explains, “life was very hard. … Life is better since HOPE has come.”

Leap Forward logoRead how Svetlana Shepeleva used a loan from HOPE Ukraine to provide a better future for her family, and visit leapfwd.us to learn more about how you can help clients like Svetlana this February 29.

Before taking out loans from HOPE Ukraine, Svetlana stayed home to care for her three children while her husband provided for the family. When her husband’s business failed 12 years ago, however, he turned to alcohol as a refuge and left Svetlana and the children to provide for themselves. Svetlana and her entire churched prayed constantly for her husband, and several months later, he returned and repented.

Svetlana Shepeleva

While the family was reunited, they were forced to start over again. With no capital, Svetlana and her husband became employed at a market that was only open two days a week. Each day, they had only two or three bags of flour and sugar to sell, leaving them only enough profit to buy bread and milk for their family. When Svetlana took out a loan from HOPE, however, she was able to use the capital to increase her inventory. Gradually, as the couple accessed more loans, they were able to offer more products, build one kiosk and then a second, and finally move into a small store.

Now, not only is Svetlana able to feed her family and improve her home, she was also able to send her oldest daughter to medical school. As someone who has seen firsthand the difference that steady employment can make, Svetlana hires former drug addicts who might not otherwise find a job. She and her husband give credit to God for everything that they’ve been able to accomplish. “We are not afraid of difficulties,” she says. “Let difficulties be afraid of us!”

Leap Forward logoRead how Linda Rondina used a loan from CCT, HOPE’s partner in the Philippines, to provide a better future for her family, and visit leapfwd.us to learn more about how you can help clients like Linda this February 29.

Before Linda and her husband, Joseph, opened their first restaurant, she ran a variety store and he worked as a motorcycle taxi driver. Money was scarce: they and their four children lived in a small house that doubled as the store, and they often had to borrow from relatives to pay school fees. “I remember times when all I could give my children for dinner was a single piece of fish,” Linda recalls. “The four of them would have to share that piece of fish.”

Linda Rondina

Linda used her first loan of $89 from CCT to increase her store’s inventory, but she and Joseph dreamed of opening their own restaurant. As the couple accessed larger loans, they eventually sold Joseph’s motorcycle and used the proceeds to open Joanjo Panciteria. While the first year was difficult, they persevered—and today Linda and Joseph have expanded to operate in four locations.

An astute businesswoman, Linda has also opened a piggery, feeding the pigs with restaurant scraps. With the profits from her businesses, Linda is not only able to feed her children but also to pay for all of them to attend school. “The loans have made it so much easier to do business,” Linda says, “and because of this, I have fewer worries now about the future of my children.” Remembering their own struggles to provide for their family, the couple also gives generously, housing relatives and employing several neighbors in need.

Professional volunteer Lindsey in Peru

I have lived my life in comfort. I have always had enough to eat, a place to sleep, a way to get to where I need to go, a loving family. I have never wanted for anything vital for survival. The hardest decisions I have made to date are where I would like to go to college and which job I should accept. Probability would have indicated a life very different from the one I currently live. I am an outlier. I cannot ignore my location outside of the bell curve. How do I respond to this? More importantly, what is the work God has crafted me to do? Continue Reading…

When it comes to fighting global poverty, it often seems like there aren’t enough hours in the day. That’s why this leap year, HOPE is challenging our supporters to take advantage of the extra 24 hours to dream big: what might happen if we donated that one day’s salary to help those living in poverty Leap Forward?

Clients like Christine are using small amounts of money to take huge steps forward. With an initial loan of $60, Christine purchased a single roll of fabric, and she invested subsequent loans in expanding her selection of fabrics, diversifying into men’s clothing, and purchasing a new sewing machine. With her profits, Christine pays her children’s school feels and her family’s health care costs. She also generously tithes to her church and provides clothes to those in need.

Your extra day can make a difference for people like Christine. Visit leapfwd.us to calculate what your leap day is worth and donate that amount to help even more entrepreneurs in Congo take a Leap Forward.