Fear vs Love

Written by Julie Nelson, Long-time Mission Adelante Volunteer

“Sit down--nobody wants you here.” I heard these words whispered from a group of watching teens, as I was standing up, explaining an upcoming event at Teens Adelante. The words were accompanied by the unmistakable smacking of lips that only a girl highly skilled in the art of teenage angst can produce. I was a new volunteer with the teens program and could tell that breaking into this group would be difficult with some of the teens.  I wasn’t hurt or surprised by the words; I had worked with teens before and it was precisely comments like this that made me want to be a part of what God was doing here.  I knew that this teen, like most teens I knew, had at some point experienced loss and heartache. She’d felt insecure and insignificant. It’s our natural human tendency to protect ourselves at all costs; to reject others before we can be rejected. I continued showing up every week, getting to know the teens and earning the right to be heard, and she quickly opened up. We talked about past hurts and future goals.  She would ask me to pray for her and the fear she was experiencing. God was working in both of us.  Those teens were hilarious, kind, wildly talented, and so incredibly smart. God used this community to sanctify, encourage and teach me.

Fast-forward four and half years and I’m still volunteering with Mission Adelante, now with the Leaders In Training (LIT) program. I love getting to be a part of their lives and I love the impact they have on mine. I’m excited about the future, knowing they will be our leaders. But I’ve been thinking lately about that comment from a teen over 4 years ago: “Nobody wants you here.” I can’t help but think that the kids I love and their families are now hearing that same message, except it’s not coming from one angst filled teen; but from lawmakers, people in power, and millions of voices in our nation--from people that could have a real impact on their lives or the lives of their family members. The context is so different, but I think the root is still the same as it was in that teen’s comment: fear.  Fear drives us to hate and blinds us to the beauty God has created in others. I can’t imagine KCK or the US without these kids, and my hope is that they know how loved they are. Even more, I hope people can discard their own fear, so that they don’t miss out on the beauty and adventure of loving people from all places. I know my life would not be the same without getting to know these amazing people.

Current Needs:

  • Are you looking for a practical way to help refugees and immigrants? Consider purchasing from Mission Adelante's Top Ten list on Amazon.  Mission Adelante serves a large number of men, women and children each week and is in need of various items. A link to the wish list can be found on Mission Adelante's website under Give Stuff.
  • Adelante Thrift is in need of High Impact Volunteers.  If you are interested in serving at Adelante Thrift in an on-going basis, please visit our website at www.adelantethrift.com/volunteer

Praying for and welcoming the stranger among us

 

With the current upheaval in the lives of refugees and immigrants in the United States, organizations that serve the vulnerable and displaced, like Mission Adelante, are often inundated with calls from people seeking ways that they can help the refugee and immigrant population.  

A vital way to help is to pray. Pray for refugees who are still in harm's way. Pray for immigrants and refugees as they transition to life in the United States, and experience hardships. Pray for those who work with and for the immigrant and refugee populations here and abroad that God would grant them strength and perseverance to continue to advocate for and help all involved. Pray for our elected officials that they will remember the vulnerable and displaced when they are making decisions.

Prayer is essential to our ministry. Our staff continues to spend much time in prayer and lament for our friends and neighbors in our community.  Prayer is an important part of our programs, from praying with the children who come to our programs on Tuesday and Thursday evenings to praying with and for the volunteers and students who participate in ESL classes together. At Mission Adelante, "we believe that prayer is the most important work in ministry and that our mission depends upon the power and work of the Holy Spirit in individual lives."

One tool that we continue to find helpful, and that we put in our volunteer orientation notebook each trimester is the "I Was A Stranger" bookmark from the organization, Evangelical Immigration Table.  The bookmark has 40 scriptures on it that speak about our need to help the foreigner among us.  The Evangelical Immigration Table has four challenges for us.  First, challenge yourself. Second, challenge your church. Third, challenge your campus.  Fourth, challenge your legislators.  You can order the bookmark or become part of any of the challenges at http://evangelicalimmigrationtable.com/iwasastranger/

We will continue to welcome the stranger, we will continue to advocate and stand up for our immigrant and refugee friends, we will continue to fight for the vulnerable and the displaced. But most importantly we will pray that others will show justice and compassion to immigrants and refugees. 

"Immigrant" is a Beautiful Word

Written by Jarrett Meek, Executive Director

Written by Jarrett Meek, Executive Director

When Oscar arrived in Kansas City four years ago, it was hard to imagine the impact he would make in the lives of others in his school and in the Mission Adelante community.  Though he was born in the U.S., he had grown up in Mexico.  Arriving again in the U.S. as a young teen brought with it all of the challenges you might imagine: a new culture, a new school, new friends, and a new language.  While many would be crushed by such intense changes at such a vulnerable age, the Lord was doing something special in Oscar that would be revealed in due time.

I couldn't believe my ears the first time Oscar grabbed a microphone at Mission Adelante and began to speak.  Having scarcely heard a word from him in his first two years in our community, he was now standing in front of our Latino congregation telling us about how he had shared the gospel with and encouraged classmates at school.  The Lord was using him to counsel and guide his friends.  Somewhere along the way, the word of God had taken root in his heart and was beginning to blossom and bear fruit: a young disciple beginning to make disciples!

Oscar took things even deeper as a participant in our Summer Internship in 2016.  The power of God's word to set us free was proven yet again in his life through forgiving someone who had hurt him.   The intensive discipleship and community dynamic was the context for some significant breakthroughs in his life.  With a genuine, servant heart and love for others, Oscar was becoming a leader before our eyes.  He was up for any challenge, whether it was leading worship, investing in kids, or sharing his story.  He was becoming a disciple who makes disciples.

It shouldn't have surprised me to see pictures of Oscar on Facebook sharing his story and teaching our Latino youth group last Wednesday.  His example of character, love for God and neighbor, a transformed life, and a growing passion for justice issues that affect our community uniquely qualify him to teach other youth.  The caption on the Facebook post said, "Inmigrante es una palabra hermosa", which means, "Immigrant is a beautiful word."  At a time when immigrants are often maligned and looked upon with disdain, Oscar coined a phrase that the youth of our community desperately needed to hear; "Immigrant is a beautiful word." God is using him to heal wounds and lift others up.  It will be exciting to see what the Lord does with Oscar in the coming years!

The Power of a Volunteer

Written by Elena Mamadazarova, Community Development Director

Today’s focus is on one of our High Impact Volunteers at Adelante Thrift, Miss Joyce. Miss Joyce lives in the neighborhood, loves shopping at thrift stores and used to be a frequent shopper at another thrift store in the area. Miss Joyce started shopping at Adelante Thrift when it opened. She soon realized she had a decision to make in her thrift shopping choices, Adelante Thrift became her favorite shopping destination. She used to come to the store and without anyone noticing she would start fixing the clothing section by sizes, gender,  and even color. She was also re-arranging the housewares section without anyone asking her. She was doing it for a while until one day the store’s Executive Director, Antoine Dunn approached her and asked her if she would consider joining the team to assist the staff. Miss Joyce is a retiree and she figured instead of staying home she would come to Adelante Thrift and help. She started to come in to volunteer in November 2015, when she had spare time. Initially she would come only once a week, but it didn’t take long for her to start showing up at the store on daily basis from, 9am - 6pm.

When asked why Adelante Thrift was her shopping choice in comparison to her long history of shopping at her previous favorite thrift store, her answer was simple …”it felt like family, they knew my name before I knew theirs, you come and everyone is nice and friendly”. Immediately Miss Joyce surrounded herself with tasks and is frequently approached by staff for opinions on how things should run in the back production room and on the floor of the store. Besides good people and a friendly atmosphere, “Adelante Thrift is a great store to shop for some unique items” according to Miss Joyce. “The store is kid friendly too, families come with their kids and they love the kids area, where they can play while parents are shopping.”

Last year Miss Joyce was ill and couldn’t come to the store for 3 months, but once she was better she came back to work on jewelry and accessories because it requires less time standing on her feet. “It’s nice to have flexibility as a volunteer and to have the freedom to chose when to come in,  and not feel stressed about being fired for a 3 month absence..” - shares Miss Joyce. The advice Miss Joyce is giving to people that are also in her stage of life is, “if you're retired, you can easily come and find your spot volunteering at the store. If you like fixing things, cleaning, or if you are creative and good with merchandise, if you are good at sorting or organizing, Adelante Thrift is a place for you to use your talents and skills. You will be busy talking with people as well as doing practical things at the store and feel like you are contributing to the wellness of our community.”
Miss Joyce has made so many great friends at the store that last year she went on a week long road trip in an RV to Colorado with Judy, one of the Adelante Thrift staff members. We love stories like Miss Joyce’s and we value how the store is an avenue for people to not only receive but to also give back. Thank you Miss Joyce for your service and your heart for Adelante Thrift.

Current Needs:

  • If you are interested in becoming a High Impact Volunteer, like Miss Joyce, we have many opportunities in various areas of the store. Please visit the Adelante Thrift website for more information: www.adelantethrift.com/volunteer





 

Important: A Big Transition for our Bhutanese Ministry

Dear Friends,

I'm writing to share about a significant transition that will be taking place with Mission Adelante’s Bhutanese ministry over the next four months.  After a prayerful and thoughtful process, the Bhutanese staff team has come to the decision that it is time to wind down our formal outreach programming for the Bhutanese.  We will hold one last, great trimester and end with a big party on April 22nd to celebrate all the Lord has done through our Bhutanese outreach these seven years.  At the end of April, our Bhutanese staff team will transition off of our staff and Mission Adelante will re-define our ministry with the Bhutanese and explore opportunities for broader refugee ministry in our neighborhood.

As you might imagine, it's hard to decide to wind down something that has been so fruitful.  It's kind of like Michael Jordan retiring while he was still one of the best players on the court!  As we walk carefully through this process, we are sure of a few things. First, the needs of the Bhutanese community are much different than when we began this ministry outreach seven years ago, and we've seen very few new families be resettled in Kansas City since 2013. Second, there are now several Bhutanese-Nepali led churches in KCK.  And, finally, each member of our Bhutanese staff team has a growing sense of "mission accomplished" and a feeling that God is ushering in a new season in each of their personal lives.  These three factors form the basic outline of the "why" behind this big transition.

I'm very proud of the Bhutanese staff team for their courage and faithfulness in the decision-making process.  Their thoughtful prayer and processing through the fall brought them to a point of consensus as last trimester was ending.  For my part, I've had the privilege of walking with them, listening, providing counsel, and giving them my support as they landed on a unanimous decision and have begun walking it out.  While this transition wasn't in the master plan, and there is still a lot of work that could be done, it is clear that the Lord is at work in new ways, which we are discovering with each step we take in this new direction.

As we consider what our ministry with the Bhutanese will look like after our formal outreach programs end, the rising themes are partnership, empowerment and leadership development.  With a great foundation already established, we envision collaborating in new ways with our closest Bhutanese partners as we equip emerging leaders and support Nepali-led initiatives that serve the community.  Our expectation and hope is that this transition will open the way for Mission Adelante to live out our passion for equipping and empowering refugee leaders in new ways.  

The idea of starting a ministry outreach for refugees from Bhutan took us by surprise in 2009 and broadened our vision.  In much the same way, we are sensing that the Lord may be using the ending of the Bhutanese outreach to broaden our vision again to include other refugee groups who are being resettled into our community.  Though there are still a lot more questions than answers regarding this broader vision, we are entering this new season with a sense of expectation about how the Lord may be calling us to lean into the identity He has given us as a ministry with immigrants AND refugees.

Our Bhutanese staff team members will all be transitioning off of our staff at the end of April.  Their willingness--and desire--to stay on for this final trimester has set the stage for us to be able to finish well and celebrate what God has done these seven years.  During this final trimester, they are each discerning the Lord's direction for this next season and they will surely communicate their future plans to many of you when they feel the time is right.  In an effort to make these next four months lighter, we are cutting back on some of their responsibilities and giving them some extra freedom and flexibility to pursue future employment opportunities.  Please pray that the Lord would guide them in this transition.  

This season of change comes with a mixed set of emotions, as you might imagine: a sense of satisfaction about "mission accomplished", a sense of sadness at something ending, a sense of uncertainty about next steps, and a sense of excitement about new vision.  But the overarching feeling for me is that the Lord continues to bless Mission Adelante abundantly.  Our Latino Ministry is thriving under Latino leadership, reaching new people each trimester, making disciples, and developing leaders.  We are creating jobs and transforming our community through Adelante Thrift.  Youth from our community are being developed through our internship.  Our multicultural leadership core is growing deeper and getting more diverse.  Financial support for the ministry remains strong, and our operational infrastructure is efficient.  A major transition like this brings with it waves of different kinds of emotions, but in it all it is clear that God is sovereign and that He is a good, good Father.  

So what’s your part?  Pray us through this next season!  We invite you to engage with us in actively praying for the Bhutanese people and for our Bhutanese staff team as they finish well and discern their next steps.  Pray for our partnerships with Nepali-led churches.  Ask the Lord to guide us as we re-envision refugee ministry and dream about the future.  And pray for our staff, that we would handle change gracefully, patiently, and with encouraged hearts.  For those of you who have supported the ministry of one of our Bhutanese staff team members, we would ask you to continue your support through April.  After April, we invite you to consider continuing to contribute through our Community Leader Fund, which helps us hire staff from within the immigrant and refugee community.  You have an important part to play in this transition!

If you’ve read this far, you must be truly interested in what the Lord is doing in our community and through Mission Adelante.  We thank you for your love and support, for your prayers and concern.  And, we would love to hear from you in this season.  May the Lord bless you richly and grant you peace.

In His Grace,

Jarrett Meek, Founder/Pastor/Executive Director

Trusting that God is with us wherever we go

Written by Megan McDermott, Latino Children's & Youth Director

Written by Megan McDermott, Latino Children's & Youth Director

Who are the people in your life that you consider family?  Is it your immediate family? Your cousins? Co-workers? Close friends?  More often than not, it is the people that we choose to spend the majority of our time with.  

The past few months in Leaders in Training, our after-school tutoring and character development program, we have spent four afternoons a week together laughing, learning, growing, and exploring. Through this deep and spirit-filled time, we have truly become a family.  As we dug into the life of Joshua in our character time, a common verse kept catching our attention:  

Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged, for the Lord your God will be with you wherever you go. (Joshua 1:9)

The kids went even a step further and pulled truths from Joshua that encouraged and astounded the volunteers:

  • Be strong and courageous
  • Be faithful
  • Trust in God
  • Stand firm
  • Be patient
  • Your actions have consequences
  • Trust that God is always good
  • Ask God for help

The culmination of the kid’s learning occurred as the kids embarked on their 9th annual Great Wolf Lodge Trip this past weekend!  As we went around the circle and shared what they were most grateful for, many of them admitted that they were most thankful for each other, their LIT family.  It is important for all of us to feel that we have a place where we belong, a place that, even when the world might try to convince us that we are unwanted, accepts and loves us for who we are.  I am grateful that the kids know that they are wanted and cherished by not just each other, but by the One who created them!  I am thankful that they learn that in the face of circumstances that require courage, they can trust that God will be with them wherever they go.

Current Needs:

  • If you would like to give to Mission Adelante this holiday season through donating items, check out our Amazon Wish List for some practical needed items to make our mission possible, https://www.amazon.com/wishlist. While you are on the Amazon website, you can help out Mission Adelante by choosing us as your charity of choice through Amazon Smile.  smile.amazon.com
  • After Christmas is a great time to clean and organize for the New Year.  If you have items to donate, consider donating them to Adelante Thrift. Donations are accepted Monday - Saturday 10 am - 5 pm.  Adelante Thrift is located at 3720 State Ave. KC KS 66102 (Adelante Thrift can even pick up large items that are valued at $200 or more, call 913-499-7215 to schedule a donation pick-up)

Year-End Giving Opportunities with Mission Adelante

Summer Interns: Mónica, Laxmi, Annie, and Oscar became a family from all places!

Summer Interns: Mónica, Laxmi, Annie, and Oscar became a family from all places!

Year-End Giving Opportunities with Mission Adelante

What a meaningful time to be called to serve, share life and share Jesus with people from all places!  A lot has been said in the last year about immigrants and refugees, and we find that our passion for “loving people from all places” and our mission to make disciples is important now more than ever.  It’s as though the Lord has given us this mission and put us in this community, “for such a time as this.”  

“For if you keep silent at this time, relief and deliverance will rise for the Jews from another place, but you and your father’s house will perish. And who knows whether you have not come to the kingdom for such a time as this?” Esther 4:14

From early on in Mission Adelante’s history, we have played a unique role in inviting believers from across the city to embrace the Greatest Commandments and the Great Commission in a special way with people from other places.  We’ve grasped a great opportunity for Christians who were born in the U.S. to learn and live out the gospel by showing friendship, hospitality, and compassion, by sharing the Good News of salvation by grace, through faith in Jesus Christ.  

"I would love them also if I knew them, but I guess since you love them it's good enough for me. I will love them and pray for them."   -A Friend

Highlights from 2016

  • Leadership Community: This year we launched a multicultural discipleship training group for 40+ participants from our community.  It included an opening retreat, monthly training sessions, and a trip to Los Angeles to attend the Christian Community Development Association’s national conference.
  • Awesome Internship: This year’s summer youth internship may have been our best ever!  We had interns from four different countries represented, including Nepal, Mexico, Costa Rica, and the United States.  
  • Eleven-year Celebration: This summer we celebrated 11 years of ministry in the community with a party in the park, complete with a variety of food, songs, and dances from various countries.
  • Adelante Thrift: Adelante Thrift celebrated one year in March and had its first two profitable months in October and November!  We’re still working hard toward the dream of a Thrift store that provides funding for other ministry initiatives!

Looking Forward to 2017

  • Disciple-making: Press into the heart of our mission, multiplying disciples in our community.
  • Community Leaders:  Hire Gissel Vazquez to our Latino staff as Discipleship and Music Coordinator.
  • Multicultural Leadership Core: Invest in a core of maturing leaders who are impacting our community.
  • Business Coaching Pilot: Pilot a 12-week training course for community entrepreneurs in the Fall.
  • Re-Envision Refugee Ministry: The landscape is constantly changing with refugees in KCK. In 2017 we will be seeking God's direction in possibly broadening our vision for refugee ministry to include groups from other countries. Please pray with us as we discern God's will. 

Giving Opportunities

This year our year-end funding goals fall into two categories: finishing our 2016 General Fund budget and securing funds for our Community Leaders for 2017.  The General Fund need to complete our budget is $41,000.  To contribute to this goal you may designate your gift to “General” or “Stetler-General”.  Our Community Leader Fund need is $35,000.  You may give online at www.missionadelante.org/give.  Thank you for your ongoing support of the Lord’s ministry through Mission Adelante!

In His Grace,

Jarrett Meek

 

Adelante Thrift, A Place to Serve

Written by Elena Mamadnazarova, Community Development Director

Written by Elena Mamadnazarova, Community Development Director

Adelante Thrift was launched with the mission to serve our community by providing quality, affordable merchandise,job training, and ultimately use its proceeds for other community development initiatives.

Not long ago, Wyandotte Municipal Court approached the store with the proposal for Adelante Thrift to partner with their community service worker program. The store was picked as a place where people who have committed misdemeanors can complete their court ordered community service hours. To say this partnership is easy would be hypocritical.  One thing that was clear for our staff is that the people who come to the store to complete their community service hours might not share the mission and vision of the store. The nature of the service for these people differs from the traditional volunteers that the store recruits. This relationship between the store and community service workers is very contractual, with a very limited understanding of the stores role in the community. Those were the characteristics and the complexities that Adelante Thrift recognized when entering this partnership. At the same time, this partnership was viewed as another way to engage with the people from our community. In order to accomplish the mission of Adelante Thrift, we highly depend on the service of volunteers to keep our costs low, to expand capacities, and create a tangible experience; working together for the common purpose of community transformation. By relying so heavily on volunteers, Adelante Thrift is in a constant state of exploring ways to bring the help it needs to operate to its full potential. The community service program is one of the ways the store receives its volunteers. For almost a year, Adelante Thrift has been partnering with the Municipal Court of Wyandotte and Johnson counties for their court-appointed community service workers program. By being able to receive the community service workers, it helped the store with much needed extra hands to sort and clean donations to stock the store. Each community service worker receives the necessary work, orientation and agreement of the regular scheduled time needed to complete the hours sanctioned by the court.

Adelante Thrift can attest to partnering with some of the hardest working service people. Our hope is that Adelante Thrift is a safe and welcoming environment where people serving their hours can be treated with dignity and respect and can potentially learn new skills, gain structure, discipline, and turn their lives around.

Current Needs:

  • If you would like to give to Mission Adelante this holiday season through donating items, check out our Amazon Wish List for some practical needed items to make our mission possible, www.amazon.com/missionadelantewishlist. While you are on the Amazon website, you can help out Mission Adelante by choosing us as your charity of choice through Amazon Smile.  smile.amazon.com


Important Dates:

  • Adelante Thrift will be hosting a Christmas Fun Day for Kids. There will be games, crafts and cookie decorating!!! December 10 12 - 2 pm. Each child will receive a stuffed animal and/or book. Check out the Adelante Thrift Facebook page for more information. www.facebook.com/adelantethrift.



 

Hope

Advent-Candles.jpg

Written by Kristen Maxwell, Bhutanese Children's and Youth Director

This past Sunday marked the first Sunday of Advent, a time in our year where we pause and celebrate Emmanuel, God coming to be with us.  The first Sunday of Advent is often spent reflecting on hope.  The hope of a coming Savior, the hope of redemption.

Hope is a tricky thing, if you are not careful, it can be misplaced.  You can place your hope in a relationship, a job, a leader, or success.  Where your hope is can wander away before you recognize it.  This Advent I want to encourage our community to dwell in this truth:

“Don’t put your confidence in powerful people; there is no help for you there. When they breathe their last, they return to the earth, and all their plans die with them. But joyful are those who have the God of Israel as their helper, whose hope is in the Lord their God.”                                                                                                                           ~Psalm 146:3-5 (NLT)

I want us, our kids, their parents, our volunteers, and our staff to remember where our true hope lies, because no one can take that hope away from us.  I also want to encourage us to show hope to people, be a light in darkness.  The prophet Isaiah was pointing to the coming Messiah when he said:

“The people who walk in darkness will see a great light. For those who live in a land of deep darkness,  a light will shine.”                                                  ~Isaiah 9:2 (NLT)

How can we, those who have see the light in Jesus, be a light and share His hope this holiday season.

Current Needs:

  • Adelante Thrift is in need of new toys that parents can purchase at an inexpensive price to give as a gift to their children this Christmas.  Donations are tax deductible and can be dropped off at Adelante Thrift Monday - Saturday 10 am - 5 pm.

Important Dates:

  • End of the Trimester Parties will be held the last night of programs for each ministry.
    • Bhutanese Youth Group - Monday December 5, 6:30 - 8:30
    • Bhutanese Kids Club and ESL - Tuesday December 6, 6:30 - 8:30 
    • Latino Kids Adelante - Thursday December 8, 6:30 - 8:30 
    • Latino ESL - Thursday December 15, 6:30 - 8:30 
  • Adelante Thrift will be hosting a Christmas Fun Day for Kids. There will be games, crafts and cookie decorating!!! December 10 12 - 2 pm. Each child will receive a stuffed animal and/or book. Check out the Adelante Thrift facebook page for more information. www.facebook.com/adelantethrift.

Heeding Jesus' command to follow Matthew 19:14

Written by Rachel Pierce, Administrative Assistant

In Matthew 19:13-14 we find that parents are bringing their children to Jesus for him to bless them and pray for them. Jesus' disciples rebuke them, but Jesus replies, " Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the Kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these."

Three years before I joined the staff of Mission Adelante, my family and I became volunteers with the Bhutanese ministry.  My husband volunteered with the ESL program and I jumped in to helping out in Kid's Club.  I started out with a group of 2nd and 3rd graders my first trimester of volunteering.  I enjoyed the group of kids I was given, but my heart and experience was really with preschool aged children.  From my second trimester on I have been leading groups of three, four, and five year old's.  I am in my element with these little ones, and love seeing them grow.  

At the end of the 2014 Spring trimester the little girl pictured above came to Kid's Club for the first time.  She was about four years old then, she came with another little friend.  Her friend adjusted and entered in to the activities at Kid's Club but this little sweetie was scared and shy.  She spoke no English and she cried the entire time, but she kept coming back with her friend. She came back on the last night of the Spring trimester, which is a time when we celebrate with the kids. That night I brought Popsicle's to share with my group of preschoolers.  I handed my new little friend a Popsicle and for the first time in three weeks she stopped crying and smiled.  She ate her Popsicle and we became friends.  From that time on she and I have been friends, she continues to come to Kid's Club and she is in 1st grade. I was away from Kid's Club for most of this trimester so that I could attend my daughter's volleyball games; last Tuesday night was my first time back.  This sweet girl came into the room where we have Kid's Club, she saw me and smiled real big.  She said, "You're here, I have missed you".  It melted my heart, she is no longer in my group of kids at Kid's Club because she has moved up to an older group, but we still have a sweet connection.  I am so glad to play a small part in her life, to help show Jesus to her.  I love showing her how Jesus welcomes her and all of us.

My story is just one of many; I believe that all of our staff and volunteers have stories of friendships and personal connections that they have made with the adults, teens, and children that we meet at Mission Adelante.  Our lives have been changed by the relationships we have made with the precious people that we journey with at Mission Adelante. 


Important Dates:

  • Trimester Break:  Monday November 21st - Friday November 25th there will be no programs. This break gives our staff and volunteers a chance to relax and spend time with family and friends over the Thanksgiving holiday. Have a Happy Thanksgiving!

Lamenting and Hoping With People from All Places

Members of Mission Adelante attended the CCDA conference in Los Angeles, CA.

Members of Mission Adelante attended the CCDA conference in Los Angeles, CA.

by Jarrett Meek, Founder/Pastor/Executive Director

Never have I been more passionate about my calling to serve, share life and share Jesus with people from other places than I am today.   Walking with vulnerable people as they navigate the challenges of living in a new country, helping outsiders become insiders, sharing and living the Gospel of Christ, sowing truth about who we all are as image-bearers of our Creator God and brothers of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ; these are things that matter deeply to me.  At the intersection of the Greatest Commandments and the Great Commission is a beautiful and special calling to love immigrants and refugees and help outsiders become Kingdom insiders.

"Oh God be not far from me, make haste to help me!"  Psalm 71:12

After a presidential campaign that produced a barrage of harsh language about immigrants and refugees, which was then affirmed by voters, we at Mission Adelante hurt with our friends from other places, because we know how all of this has affected them already.  We pray and hope with many of you that demeaning and severe words won't become harsh policies, but we also understand and want others to grasp the depth of impact the words themselves have had on people who already feel like outsiders.  The heart of these matters doesn't have to do with a political party, who won or lost an election, or a political ideology.  Friends, supporters, staff, and community members of Mission Adelante have a diversity views on all of these things, and Mission Adelante takes no position on political parties or candidates.  But what we all share is deep respect for the dignity of each person created in God's image, the value of families and work, the Biblical principle of showing mercy to vulnerable people, a passion for the Gospel of Jesus Christ, a love for people from all places, and the sorrow of seeing our neighbors hurting.  Friends, our community is hurting.  Will you lament with us?

"For you Oh Lord are my hope, my trust, oh Lord, from my youth." Psalm 71:5

Our hope is in Jesus and Jesus alone.  He is our Lord.  He is King now and forever!  This truth is the sweetest and most beautiful hope there is.  When we lament with our brothers and sisters, we do not do so as those without hope, for He is our refuge and our strength.  And yet we lament.  When we look apprehensively at the future, we may dread the impact that harsh policies may have on our lives or the lives of those we love.  And yet we hope.  We hope, because, though He told us to expect trials of many kinds, He also told us that the testing of our faith produces steadfastness (James 1:3).  We hope because we know that not even death could hold our Lord, and the resurrection broke forth from the crucifixion!  Our community is hoping in Jesus.  Will you hope with us?

"But I will hope continually, and I will praise you yet more and more." Psalm 71:14

As the Mission Adelante community walks into this new and uncertain season, we invite you into it with us, to love our neighbor, to show hospitality to people from all places, to pray, to serve and to share life.  And most of all, to share Jesus!  Will you love people from all places with us?

This Land is Our Land

Written by Rachel Pierce, Administrative Assistant

Written by Rachel Pierce, Administrative Assistant

Last night I attended my son’s concert at a local elementary school in Kansas City, Kansas.  It was a tribute to the United States, and the kids closed with the song, “This land is your land”.  This school is about 90% ELL (English Language Learners).  It has a pretty diverse student population; with students from various Central and South American countries, and a rising number of students that are refugees from Southeast Asian countries. Last night’s concert was a sea of students from various places; all wearing red, white, and blue and representing what is great about America, our ability to welcome the stranger.  This land is my land, this land is your land, and this land must be Our land.

“Refugees are succeeding in the United States, and their success is the country's too: people with different skills and talents working together to create a better community. Learning about refugees, welcoming them, and perhaps even extending a hand to help them resettle and adjust, is a way to strengthen ties between neighbors and build a safer, happier home for all.”

Cultural Orientation Resource Center (COR)

www.culturalorientation.net

Our final installment for this series on Refugee Resettlement is about ways we can welcome the refugee; ways that we can help them, stand for them and with them, and ways that we can pray for them.  

"For the first 90 days, resettlement agencies work with state and local governments and community organizations to help new arrivals settle into their communities. Refugees are introduced to their local health care system. Although they have had thorough check-ups before entering the U.S., they receive additional examinations by medical professionals in their new communities. Learning English is an essential step to becoming self-sufficient. Agencies help assist refugees to enroll in English courses at their local offices or help families find classes nearby. Newly arrived refugees have endured years of trauma and hardship; that emotional burden does not lift once they’re in the U.S. Agencies, service providers and local communities work together to help survivors of violence and human trafficking receive the support and care they need in order to recover. Parents are informed about schooling options and caseworkers help to enroll children in school. Aid agencies help ensure each child has a backpack, notebooks and other supplies for their first day. Refugees receive stipends to cover their first three months in the U.S., but they are encouraged to find work quickly—and most do. Agencies reach out to local employers, some run by former refugees or other immigrants, to find job opportunities for them. Refugees can also receive support in putting together their resume and preparing for job interviews. Once they acclimate to their new environment, refugees often thrive and contribute to their communities, building their careers, purchasing homes, gaining citizenship."

International Rescue Committee (IRC)

In 2007, Mission Adelante saw a need in our community, and rose to the challenge to try and meet that need.  A group of refugees from Bhutan were being resettled in Kansas City, Kansas.  That was the beginning of our Bhutanese ministry; ESL classes for adults, kids programming for the children.  Our Bhutanese ministry has grown and changed as the needs of the Bhutanese community have changed.  We still offer ESL classes and kids programming; but in the past nine years we have added Bhutanese Leaders in Training (LIT), Bhutanese youth group, Citizenship classes, and house church for Bhutanese refugees. 

Here are a few things that refugees face after they are resettled in the United States after the initial 90 days.

  • Gaining Permanent Residency - Refugees can apply for Permanent Resident Alien (PRA) status (commonly known as a “green card”) after they have been in the United States for one year.
  • Becoming a Citizen - Refugees can apply for U.S. citizenship after residing in the United States for five years.  Many resettlement organizations have citizenship programs that assist, guide, and encourage refugees through the naturalization process.
  • Building a New Life - Refugees spend many years overcoming past trauma, locating family members, adjusting to American culture, building careers, raising families, finding their first dream home, and creating a new life for themselves in the United States.

International Rescue Committee (IRC)

So we have talked about why refugees flee their homeland, what they have to go through to be chosen and processed for resettlement in the United States, and how refugees contribute to our community.  Now is the time to act…

First, read more about refugees from trusted, Christian sources like:

  • Hopeprint is an organization that works with resettled refugees in Syracuse, New York. www.myhopeprint.org  
  • World Relief is an organization that resettles refugees around the country. www.worldrelief.org
  • We Welcome Refugees is an organization that offers information about the refugee crisis and offers ideas about ways to become active in speaking up for refugees. www.wewelcomerefugees.com

Second, read the Bible to see what it has to say about refugees.  Many of our heroes of the faith were displaced from their homeland for one reason or another.  

  • Noah
  • Abraham
  • Joseph
  • The Israelites
  • Ruth

iarf.org/refugeesinthebible.pdf

www.relevantmagazine.com/what-the-bible-says-about-how-we-treat-refugees

“On one occasion an expert in the law stood up to test Jesus. “Teacher,” he asked, “what must I do to inherit eternal life?” “What is written in the Law?” he replied. “How do you read it?” He answered, “‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength and with all your mind’; and, ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ “You have answered correctly,” Jesus replied. “Do this and you will live.” But he wanted to justify himself, so he asked Jesus, “And who is my neighbor?” In reply Jesus said: “A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, when he was attacked by robbers. They stripped him of his clothes, beat him and went away, leaving him half dead. A priest happened to be going down the same road, and when he saw the man, he passed by on the other side. So too, a Levite, when he came to the place and saw him, passed by on the other side. But a Samaritan, as he traveled, came where the man was; and when he saw him, he took pity on him. He went to him and bandaged his wounds, pouring on oil and wine. Then he put the man on his own donkey, brought him to an inn and took care of him.The next day he took out two denarii and gave them to the innkeeper. ‘Look after him,’ he said, ‘and when I return, I will reimburse you for any extra expense you may have.’ Which of these three do you think was a neighbor to the man who fell into the hands of robbers?” The expert in the law replied, “The one who had mercy on him.” Jesus told him, “Go and do likewise.”  Luke 10:25-37

Third, pray for refugees; here and abroad.

"THE WORLD IS FACING THE WORST HUMANITARIAN CRISIS OF OUR TIME….WHAT WILL WE DO? 8.7 million Syrians are predicted to be displaced within the country in 2016, and 4.8 million have sought refuge in other countries since 2011. The UNHCR’s latest figures show the crisis is getting worse. Families are moving not to simply better their lives, but to literally save their lives. And at a time when the west is reeling in fear and anti-refugee rhetoric is ruling the headlines, we as the Church have a responsibility to respond. We cannot sit blindly by as people die, flee for their lives, search for homes, or live in an existence many of us cannot even comprehend. We cannot let the generations to come look back on this time in history and wonder how we sat back and did nothing. We must engage, and we must act."

We Welcome Refugees

wewelcomerefugees.com

Pray for refugees being resettled within the United States (& other countries). While only about 1,500 refugees from Syria were admitted to the U.S. in the past year, that number is expected to rise significantly in the years to come. Many refugee resettlement organizations are urging the U.S. government to accept as many as 100,000 Syrian refugees in the coming year. Pray for coordinated efforts between local churches, non-profit organizations, and governmental entities such that refugees from Syria and beyond would be welcomed and integrated into the fabric of the United States.

wewelcomerefugees.com/pray

Finally, if God is leading you to go deeper; consider finding ways to engage with refugees:

Whether we want to or not, we as Christ-followers must engage in the refugee crisis; whether they come from Bhutan, Burma (Myanmar), Iraq, Somalia, Congo, Eritrea, Iran, or Syria.  We cannot turn our backs on people who just like us were created in the Image of God, but unlike us were not born in a land of freedom and opportunity. Instead refugees have had to flee their homeland because of war, disaster, unlivable conditions, and nightmarish circumstances that have brought them to the United States. Mission Adelante is honored to call refugees our friends and neighbors; we welcome them, we help them, we pray for them.  There are many opportunities, not only in Kansas City, Kansas, but around our state and country to welcome the stranger.  Sometimes it’s as easy as a smile or a wave to someone new; sometimes it is a bigger leap of faith like volunteering to help a refugee learn English or helping a refugee family navigate their way around in their new land.   

My life personally has been enriched by our friendship with refugee families from Burma (Myanmar), I have one very dear friend from Burma who is like a sister to me.  We meet together about once a week, sharing life and Burmese coffee, her family is my family, and my family likewise.  I help her with English, she shares stories about growing up in Burma.  Our sons' go to school together and are best friends.  We share in the ups and downs of each other's lives.  I cannot imagine my life without this precious sister in my life.  My kids are a part of the Bhutanese kids programs; I volunteer with some of the cutest Bhutanese preschoolers on Tuesday nights.  I also have the privilege of driving some of the Bhutanese kids from school to Mission Adelante for LIT; I love the questions and stories I hear from these kids.  I love hearing about their day at school, I love that my own kids get to experience life with kids from other places.  My family has been blessed, not because we are helping our refugee friends learn about U.S. culture and language; we are blessed because they are teaching us so much about their culture, their traditions, and their lives as outsiders in the United States.

“Now, now,  is the time for the Church to be the Church. In the past, the Church may have been defined by what the Church is against — but, in this defining moment in history, may the Church be clearly defined by what it is for — and the Church has always been for the stranger, the sojourner, and the welcoming arms of the Savior. How can we not move heaven and earth to let the broken in  – when heaven moved and came to earth to let us in?”    Ann Voskamp

You can read author Ann Voskamp’s full blog post and hear about how she, her family, and her community helped welcome a refugee family from Syria.

annvoskamp.com/2016/10/how-we-could-get-to-be-the-kind-of-people-the-world-needs-right-now/



Prayer Needs:

  • Please pray with us for Adelante Thrift to be able to breakthrough financially and be able to impact our community in more profound ways.
  • Join us in prayer for the Lord to draw people who would be willing to volunteer and serve at Adelante Thrift on a regular basis.

Current Needs:

  • It’s not winter yet, but it’s getting cold. Please donate your winter coats, clothes and accessories to Adelante Thrift and they will help keep someone else warm during this cold season. Donations are accepted Monday - Saturday, 10:00 am - 5:00 pm at Adelante Thrift, 3720 State Ave Kansas City, Kansas 66102.
  • Adelante Thrift is looking for High Impact Volunteers  to fill the following positions: 
    • Volunteer Team Coordinator 
    • Donation Sorting Associate
    • Pricing Associate 
    • Stocking Associate
    • Racking Associate

Visit www.adelantethrift.com  for more details

Important Dates:

  • Observation Nights:    Have you ever wondered what goes on at Mission Adelante during a typical program night?  Bhutanese Observation Night - November 8; 6:30 - 8:30 pm. Latino Observation Nights - November 10; 6:30 - 8:30 pm.




 


Refugee Resettlement and how is benefits our community

Written by Rachel Pierce, Administrative Assistant

Written by Rachel Pierce, Administrative Assistant

Our third installment of refugee resettlement deals with the rhetoric that refugees are a drain on our society.  There is a lot in the media at this time about this subject.  Politicians and newscasters alike are spreading a  lot of misinformation and making assumptions about refugees receiving government assistance in our community.  A lot of accusations are made about how they “aren’t contributing to our community” or how they are just “taking from our government and community and not giving anything back”.   There is a lot of hatred and mistrust of refugees and their use of government assistance.   

Misconception: Refugees are a burden to  society.

Fact: Refugees enrich their new communities.

“The U.S. has a long tradition of offering refuge to those fleeing war and persecution. And these new Americans repay the nation’s generosity, becoming taxpayers, homeowners, entrepreneurial employers, valued employees, and even public servants. “New immigrants bring new energies and have the ability to revitalize our communities and our economies,” says Ruben Chandrasekar, director of the IRC office in Baltimore, Md. "Refugees receive limited cash support from the U.S. government for the first few months after they arrive, along with services from partner agencies like the IRC that help them acclimate to their new communities. They are encouraged to find work quickly and stand on their own feet — and most do. Refugees even pay back the loans they take for their plane tickets here.”

International Rescue Committee (IRC)

Previously, I worked for a real estate agent who primarily helped refugee families find and purchase their first home.  One family I worked with stands out in my mind, they were a family that resettled here from Burma (Myanmar).  They arrived in the United States in 2010, a family of seven and they were trying in 2015 to qualify for a home loan.  I was helping them clear up some of the outstanding debts that showed up on their credit report that were hindering them from getting a home loan.  One debt was to the IOM (International Organization for Migration). The IOM is an intergovernmental agency that helps in the resettlement of refugees to the United States.  The IOM will pay for the plane tickets for refugees to leave their home country and fly to the United States, but this is a loan that the refugee must pay back.  This family of seven flew from Thailand to the U.S. (not a cheap trip) and since the time they arrived in 2010, they had moved, they had limited English and were unable to communicate to the IOM that they had moved and needed their billing statement sent to their new address.  They had not been paying their travel loan for five years.  I was able to help them contact the IOM and update their address information.  In 2015 they began paying off the travel loans for their family of seven.  The father was heartbroken, he told his daughter who interpreted for me, “If I had been able to communicate with the IOM in 2010, we could have already paid off our travel loan to them.”  This is just one of many stories of our refugee friends and how they want to pay off their debts and contribute to our society but are thwarted by language and other barriers.

“Refugees enter the United States with authorization to work.  The U.S. government expects a working-age refugee to find a job within six months of arrival.  Resettlement organizations often have employment specialists who help refugees with their job search.  Many states have a designated agency that receives state funds to help refugees find work.  This function is usually coordinated by the State Refugee Coordinator.”

United States Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI)

The majority of our male refugee friends who are of working age (and many of our female refugee friends) are employed at full-time jobs; working at factories, farms, and other places.  These jobs pay a decent wage; but without the language, education, and citizenship needed to advance to a higher paying job opportunity they are stuck in factory work that while it helps, does not give them a livable wage.  Often refugee women stay at home to raise their children, because daycare for their children is not an option culturally or economically.  Most of our refugee friends are one income families, so government assistance is needed to help supplement their food, medical, and housing budgets.  They work, they pay taxes, and they richly contribute to our community.  

"Once they acclimate to their new environment, refugees often thrive and contribute to their communities, building their careers, purchasing homes, gaining citizenship."

IRC (International Rescue Committee)

Mission Adelante played a role in supporting Ram Rai, owner of RG Asian store in Kansas City, Kansas when he opened his store in 2012. We continue to encourage and pour into Ram Rai and others as they continue to make RG Asian successful in our community. Community development and leadership development are something that we are passionate about at Mission Adelante, as we seek to equip and empower emerging leaders from our community.  There are two refugees who are currently employed at Adelante Thrift, and we try and find other ways to partner with local businesses in our community to help find employment for our refugee friends. We want our refugee friends to succeed and feel like they are participating in the economy of our community.  

Farming, while seasonal is also a huge part of how our refugee friends contribute to our community, while doing something they know and love.  They provide a service, a new variety of fruits and vegetables, and an economic boost to our community with farming through local organizations like, New Roots for Refugees.

“New Roots for Refugees, a program started by Catholic Charities in partnership with Cultivate KC, helps refugee women put down new roots by helping them to start their own small farm businesses growing and selling vegetables. New Roots builds on the strengths and experience that the refugees already possess. Farming is a familiar livelihood that offers them some measure of self-determination and self-sufficiency, healthy food for their families, extra income, and a context for settling into their new communities. Agriculture allows them to put down new roots, metaphorically and literally, and to become citizens who produce and give to their new communities. In the New Roots Program, participants start farming with significant training and support from Catholic Charities and Cultivate KC staff. As their farm businesses become established and they develop more skills, they move to greater financial and managerial independence. Eventually they are able to move onto their own land and operate independently.”

New Roots for Refugees

http://newrootsforrefugees.blogspot.com/p/about-us.html

At Mission Adelante our heart beats for people from other places, we welcome the stranger and work to help our refugee friends feel like they belong, working to equip and empower them to lead in our community.  We love, help, and encourage our refugee friends because God commands us to; “He defends the cause of the fatherless and the widow, and loves the foreigner residing among you, giving them food and clothing. And you are to love those who are foreigners, for you yourselves were foreigners in Egypt”. (Deuteronomy 10:18-19)

Prayer Needs:

  • Halloween is a BIG deal in our neighborhood.  Pray for fun and safety for our kiddos and community members. 


Important Dates:

  • Observation Nights:    Have you ever wondered what goes on at Mission Adelante during a typical program night?  Latino Observation Nights - November 3, 10; 6:30 - 8:30 pm.  Bhutanese Observation Night - November 8; 6:30 - 8:30 pm

The Refugee Resettlement Process

Written by Rachel Pierce, Administrative Assistant

"Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed, to me:
I lift my lamp beside the golden door.”
Emma Lazarus (from the poem, “The New Collossus”, found at Ellis island, New York).

For hundreds of years the United States has been the destination of foreigners looking for safe refuge from their unjust government. While the United States was founded by settlers immigrating from England seeking religious freedom, and countless others immigrated from around the world to the United States in the 1800’s looking for better opportunities. Despite the historical role the U.S. played in being a home for refugees, it wasn't until after the end of WWII that a formal refugee resettlement process was adopted.

“The U.S. admitted more than 250,000 displaced Europeans following World War II, after which the U.S. Congress enacted the Displaced Persons Act of 1948 allowing an additional 400,000 European refugees to resettle in the U.S.This legislation was followed by later laws admitting refugees from Communist countries such as China, Cuba, Hungary, Korea, Poland and Yugoslavia. The modern refugee resettlement program traces its roots to the 1975 admission of over 100,000 Southeast Asian refugees under an ad hoc resettlement program called the Refugee Task Force. In 1980, Congress formalized the refugee resettlement program in the Refugee Act of 1980, which included the UN criteria for refugee status and set the legal basis for the Refugee Admissions Program. Today this program is operated by the Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration (PRM) of the U.S. Department of State in conjunction with the Office of Refugee Resettlement in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and offices in the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS).”

(From BRYCS, Bridging Refugee Youth & Children’s Services)  http://www.brycs.org/aboutRefugees/refugee101.cfm

Many of us at Mission Adelante have met the refugee’s who have lived in the camps, or in neighboring countries; seeking refuge from their oppressive homeland.  Some of the children and youth that we serve in our Bhutanese ministry program have grown up in refugee camps; with limited resources, and trauma caused from being raised in the refugee camp environment.  

I have a friend who left his home country of Burma (Myanmar) because of religious oppression, he fled to Malaysia seeking refuge.  He didn’t have any documents proving his citizenship in Malaysia. When police came to the restaurant where he worked asking for proof of citizenship, he had to pay a bribe to the police so that he wouldn’t be arrested and sent back to Burma.  

One of our Bhutanese youth, who resettled in the United States a couple of years ago, tells stories of using plastic bags and other trash to make a soccer ball so that he and his friends in the refugee camp would have something to play with.   

Our staff and volunteers could tell so many more stories that we have heard from our refugee friends about living in the camps, villages, and neighboring countries.  Our refugee friends could tell you about the variety of emotions they have felt. From the happiness they felt leaving their oppressive homeland; but at the same time,  the deep sadness they had of leaving their home, family, and friends. The fear and apprehension of the unknown of living in a refugee camp, the anxiety concerning the process of being considered for resettlement in the United States.  The excitement of being chosen to go to the United States, but at the same time feeling regret for leaving family behind; unsure if they would ever see their loved ones again.  

“Today’s refugee will live in a camp for 17 years on average, in limbo until he or she can safely return home or find refuge in another country. Resettlement is a lifesaving and lasting solution for those with nowhere else to turn. It also benefits the countries that welcome them – and yet it is a chance afforded to a mere one percent of refugees worldwide.” (IRC, International Rescue Committee)

Another misconception in our society concerns the refugee resettlement process.  There has been a lot of talk in the media concerning this subject.  There have also been a lot of questions from local and federal government officials about the safety of the refugee screening process.  

At Mission Adelante we seek the facts from trusted sources at resettlement agencies who are on the front lines of the process. We want to share this information with our readers, so that you can have a better understanding of the process. Also, we know from our friends that have gone through the process, how stringent of a process it is.  

Misconception: The refugee screening process isn’t rigorous enough.

Fact: The hardest way to come to the U.S. is as a refugee.

“Refugees are vetted more intensively than any other group seeking to enter the U.S. All those seeking to come here must first be registered by the United Nations refugee agency, which identifies the families most in need. The U.S. then hand-selects every person who is admitted. Security screenings are intense and led by U.S. government authorities, including the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security, the Department of Defense, and multiple security agencies. The process typically takes up to 18 months and is followed by further security checks after refugees arrive in the states.” (IRC, International Rescue Committee)”.

“There are many ways to come to the United States,” says David Miliband, president of the International Rescue Committee, which has resettled more than 160,000 refugees from 50 countries over the past 40 years. “Comparatively, the refugee resettlement program is the most difficult, short of swimming the Atlantic.”

 

Here is the process that a refugee must go through to be resettled in the United States.

Seeking Legal Refugee Status

"In order to receive official refugee status in a country of asylum, an individual has to have left his or her home country due to a well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of race, religion, nationality, social group affiliation, or political opinion.  The office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) is usually responsible for awarding legal refugee status.  In addition, UNHCR often offers refugees protection, assistance, and alternative legal and travel documents."

Seeking Resettlement

"UNHCR refers only about 1 percent of all refugees for resettlement in a third country.  Only when all efforts to either help refugees return home or settle permanently in the country of asylum have failed does third country resettlement become the option of last resort.  The following countries have resettlement programs: Australia, Canada, Denmark, Finland, Japan, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United States.  Other countries accept individual refugees on an ad hoc basis.  Family ties, trade skills, professional abilities, language facility, and various other factors are considered by UNHCR when matching a refugee with a resettlement country."

Referral to the USRP

"Only refugees who have been referred by UNHCR or by the U.S. embassy in the country of asylum are eligible for the USRP.  Usually, a family is referred together as a single group.  The Department of State’s Bureau for Population, Refugees, and Migration (PRM) oversees this program.  The State Department develops application criteria, refugee admission ceilings, and presents eligible cases to a division of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), for  adjudication. The State Department’s Foreign Affairs Manual (FAM) describes the process of application for admission to the United States as a refugee in 9 FAM Part IV Appendix O."

Adjudication

"Refugees who meet the criteria for application to the USRP are interviewed by a USCIS officer who travels to the country of asylum.  The U.S. Department of State contracts resettlement and/or nongovernmental organizations to assist refugees who may need help preparing their resettlement application forms.  The application typically consists of USCIS Form I-590, family tree, and biographical information.  The USCIS officer decides whether the applicant is a refugee as defined under U.S. law.  An individual’s designation as a refugee by UNHCR does not guarantee admission to the USRP."

Approval

"Refugees whose applications for U.S. resettlement receive USCIS approval are matched with an American resettlement organization that will facilitate their resettlement to the United States.  Most of these nonprofit organizations rely on professional and volunteer staff to assist refugees in the resettlement process.  If rejected, the applicant has thirty days to file a motion to reconsider the denial with the nearest USCIS district office.  Generally, a motion is considered only if it contains new information not available at the original interview."

Being Matched with an American Resettlement Organization

"Detailed information on all refugees approved for resettlement in the United States is sent to the Refugee Data Center (RDC) in New York.  RDC matches refugees with one of eleven voluntary agencies that provide reception and placement services for refugees coming to the United States."

Pre-travel Activities

"In order to ensure that a refugee understands that everyone living in America is expected to be self-sufficient and that no refugee should be an undue burden to American society, he or she must complete several additional steps before traveling to the United States.  These activities are undertaken concurrently and can take from 2 months to 2 years to complete:"

Assurance process

"The American resettlement organization must “assure” the Department of State that it is prepared to receive each matched refugee.  This “assurance” is a written guarantee that various basic services will be provided to the refugee and any accompanying family members in the initial resettlement phase.  At this time, the resettlement organization determines where in the United States the refugee will be resettled based on the availability of housing, employment, needed services, readiness of host community, and a variety of other factors.  However, if a refugee has a relative in the United States, every effort is made to resettle the refugee near that relative.  Refugees do not have to have U.S. sponsors to be resettled in the United States."

  • Medical clearance: Prior to coming to the United States, all refugees are medically screened by a healthcare professional working for the U.S. government.  The screening identifies medical conditions that require follow-up or constitute a public health concern.  A few serious conditions may render a refugee ineligible for entry into the United States; however, a waiver may be available.  After being “medically cleared,” a refugee must enter the United States within one year.
  • Security clearance: All refugees must undergo a security clearance procedure prior to coming to the United States.  The level of clearance needed depends on the refugee’s country of origin.  In most cases, the refugee’s name is checked against the FBI’s database of known terrorists and undesirables, as well as the State Department’s database of people who have been denied visas to enter the United States in the past.
  • Cultural orientation: All refugees receive some form of cultural orientation prior to coming to the United States.  Most programs emphasize the importance of self-sufficiency in American society, as well as what to expect in the initial resettlement phase.  Classes range in length from three hours to several days.

Travel to the United States

"The International Organization for Migration (IOM) arranges air travel for most U.S.-bound refugees.  Before a refugee leaves the country of asylum, he or she signs a promissory note and agrees to repay the U.S. government for travel costs. Upon receiving necessary travel details from IOM, the American resettlement organization makes arrangements for the refugee’s arrival."

United States Arrival and Reception

"After meeting, welcoming, and assisting the refugee at the airport, the resettlement organization begins the process of helping the refugee become settled in his or her new community."

(From the USCRI, United States Center for Refugees and Immigrants)

http://refugees.org/explore-the-issues/our-work-with-refugees/refugeeresettlementprocess

Most of us born in the United States have at least one ancestor that was born in another country.  Our ancestors were welcomed into the United States.  We need to remember our past and welcome the stranger just as our ancestors were welcomed.  As Christ followers we are reminded over and over again in the Bible of the commands from God to welcome the stranger.   In most places in the Bible when God commands us to love and help the orphan and the widow, He also commands us to love and help the foreigner among us.  In Leviticus 19:34 God reminds the Israelites, “The stranger who resides with you shall be to you as the native among you, and you shall love him as yourself, for you were aliens in the land of Egypt; I am the Lord your God.” This is a reminder we all should consider, our ancestors were outsiders at one time, and we should love, help, and welcome the outsider among us.

Important Dates:

  • Have you ever wondered what goes on at Mission Adelante during a typical program night?  Latino Observation Nights - November 3 & 10; 6:30 - 8:30 pm.  Bhutanese Observation Night - November 8; 6:30 - 8:30 pm. 22 S 18th St Kansas City, Kansas 66102.

Refugee Resettlement in the United States

20160807_175007.jpg

Written by Rachel Pierce, Administrative Assistant

The media has been shining a spotlight on the refugee situation in the United States this past year, a lot of confusion and mistrust of refugees and the resettlement process has come from many sides, both locally and on a national level.  The heart and mission of Mission Adelante is, "To make disciples by serving, sharing life, and sharing Jesus with people from other places."  Loving people from other places is in our DNA.  So when given an opportunity to share the truth about the refugee situation, Mission Adelante will do its best to advocate for our refugee friends.

Those of us who live and serve in the Kansas City, Kansas community have a unique opportunity to say hello, share a smile, and shop for groceries at the local market with a variety of people from displaced countries. Countries like Burma, Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria; and many African countries like, Congo, Somalia, and Ethiopia.   We have the honor of sharing coffee or tea with them in their homes; learning about them, their customs and culture, to hear their stories, hold their babies,  and to learn how to make food from their homeland.  We are privileged to cry with them when they mourn, and to laugh with them when they rejoice.  We have a small glimpse of what life can be like for them. When we hear about the fear and apprehension that others have about our refugee friends, it saddens us.  We  want to support them, to stand with them, we want to help others understand them and the uniqueness they bring to our country and  to our community.
 

The next four weeks we would like to share some facts and experiences about refugees that are resettled in the United States.
The first misunderstanding about the refugee is this:  "They want to leave their home country."
The truth about the refugee is this:  "They are forced to leave their country because of war or persecution."

According to the International Rescue Committee (IRC),

"Refugees leave their country because they have no other choice. They fear for their lives and those of their families when their governments will not or cannot protect them from war, sectarian conflict and serious human-rights abuses. Often they must leave their homes without notice, must travel with few belongings or none at all, and face perilous journeys involving great hardship. They risk their lives to cross borders, knowing they will be unable to return home until conditions improve, which can take decades. In 2015, 134,044 refugees submitted applications to the United Nations refugee agency (UNHCR). Of that number, 25 percent were survivors of torture and other types of violence, and another 34 percent were in desperate need of physical or legal protection."

Also from the International Rescue Committee (IRC):

"They are men, women and children fleeing war, persecution and political upheaval. They are uprooted with little warning, enduring great hardship during their flight. They become refugees when they cross borders and seek safety in another country. They are displaced when they are forced to flee their homes, but remain within the borders of their native country. The 1951 United Nations Convention relating to the Status of Refugees, as amended by its 1967 protocol defines a refugee as a person who "owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality, and is unable to or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country... The United States will not recognize persons who have participated in war crimes and violations of humanitarian and human rights law, including the crime of terrorism, as refugees. They are specifically excluded from the protection accorded to refugees."

Many of our staff and volunteers have heard stories from our refugee friends, they have seen the wounds; both physical and emotional.  We have shared life and served alongside them, we do not fear them; because we know that there is so much that we can learn from each other.  We want our readers and supporters to become aware and educated about refugees, to seek the truth and share it with others; it is a passion of ours at Mission Adelante to Welcome the Stranger.  More importantly Jesus commands us to welcome the stranger, "For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in,"  Matthew 25:35 (NIV) Together we can all stand with refugees for better understanding and representation.  

New beginnings, and dreaming about the future with our LIT students

Written by Megan McDermott, Latino Children's and Youth Director

Written by Megan McDermott, Latino Children's and Youth Director

The launch of a new school year always brings with it the beginning of a new year of our Leaders in Training (LIT) program at Mission Adelante.  Last week, as we launched our NINTH year of Latino LIT, we did a lot of team building activities to help the kids and volunteers get to know each other. Amidst fun games of trying to get an oreo cookie from their forehead to their mouth without using their hands and relay races that required them to lean on each other as a team, I had each of the the thirteen kids interview a partner.

It was a spur of the moment activity with a mix of silly and serious questions, created to help them go a bit deeper with each other.  We always want them to feel like LIT is their second family, a place where they can be themselves with each other.   As I read back over their responses the next day, I was moved by some of the the things they shared.  Here are just a few of the fun responses that they wrote:

What do you think you will be doing ten years from now?

  • Go to college to be a veterinarian
  • Be a surgeon
  • Be a professional soccer player
  • Be finishing up cosmetology school

What advice would you give your parents?

  • Be relaxed
  • Travel more
  • Don’t work so hard
  • Listen more to us

One of the main dreams of LIT is to raise up generations of leaders that will transform the community.   We know that a bright future requires a strong focus on the present, and a deep foundation in Christ.  Please pray for all of the children and youth that we serve, that they would come to know God in a more real and intimate way this year.   

Current Needs:

  • Our Leaders in Training (LIT) students are hungry when they arrive at Mission Adelante after school.  We go through about 80 individually wrapped snacks a week! Next time you are at Costco or Sams, think of us!  You can drop them off at Mission Adelante during regular business hours, Monday - Thursday 9:00 - 5:00.



 

 

    

 


Reflections on Doing Justly, Loving Mercy, and Walking Humbly

A Team from Mission Adelante was inspired to do justly, love mercy, and walk humble at the annual CCDA conference this month.

A Team from Mission Adelante was inspired to do justly, love mercy, and walk humble at the annual CCDA conference this month.

Written by Jarrett Meek, Executive Director

Recently, a passage from the Old Testament prophet Micah has been on my mind.  "With what shall I come before the Lord, and bow myself before the God on high?", asks the prophet.  "Shall I come with burnt offerings, with calves a year old?  Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams, with ten thousands of rivers of oil?  Shall I give my firstborn...?"  What does the Lord require of us?  As Micah ponders this questions out loud, his mind goes first to external religious practices.  He mentions sacrifices and wonders if the Lord will be pleased with his burnt offerings.  It seems clear he's setting this idea up to be torn down.  Then he goes a bit further, multiplying the sacrifices by really big numbers; "what if my sacrifices numbered in the thousands and tens of thousands?  Then would the Lord be pleased?"  And then he proposes the ultimate act of religious devotion; "What if my religious zeal was so great that I were to give my FIRSTBORN!"  The way he asks the questions communicate the answer: zeal for religious practice does NOT please the Lord.  

Today we might say something like, "What if I pray each morning?  What if I get up at 4:30 a.m. to pray each morning?  Then would the Lord be pleased?" Or, what if I read the Bible in a year?  What if I memorize a whole chapter from the Bible?  Then would the Lord be pleased?"  I believe the answer to these questions is like the answer Micah was implying; the Lord is not impressed by our religious activity.

Micah is not meaning to toss out spiritual disciplines or practices all together.  He just wants to put them in their place.  When he finally gets around to answering the question, he says, "He has shown you, oh man, what is good and what the Lord requires of you."  He reveals his answer in 3 parts:

  1. To do justly
  2. To love mercy
  3. To walk humbly with your God.

Doing justly means, in part, seeking the good of our neighbor, especially our neighbor who is vulnerable to suffering injustice.  If we want to please God, Micah reminds us, we must care deeply about injustice and do something about it.  

When I think about loving mercy, the first thing that comes to my mind is the famous book/musical/movie, Les Miserables.  For those who have seen it, the image of a man, Javert, who loves judgement and the law contrasts in the most powerful way with a man who has received mercy and loves to give it, Jean Valjean.  The Lord is pleased with a person who loves mercy.

Walking humbly with our God has many expressions.  Humility should characterize our relationship with God and should permeate our relationship with our neighbor.  The apostle Paul said it well when he wrote, "Do nothing out of selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility count others as more significant than yourselves."  (Philippians 2:3)

As Mission Adelante lives out it's mission, our heart's desire is to please the Lord.  We love to talk about the greatest commandments: to love God and to love our neighbor.  The passage in Micah 6 gives us another way to remember and apply what Jesus said was most important.

Current Needs:

  • Our Leaders in Training (LIT) students are hungry when they arrive at Mission Adelante after school.  We go through about 80 individually wrapped snacks a week! Next time you are at Costco or Sams, think of us!  You can drop them off at Mission Adelante during regular business hours, Monday - Thursday 9:00 - 5:00.

 



 

Skating into Youth Group

Written by Drew Hammond, Bhutanese Apprentice/Bhutanese Youth Group Coordinator

Over the weekend, Youth Group was officially launched at a local skating rink. Why was renting a roller skating rink an essential activity for Youth Group and what does it have to do with the Gospel?

In Matthew 14 we find my favorite story of Jesus. Just before this story, Jesus has sent the disciples ahead of Him on a boat. Late at night He comes walking on the water to them and they become afraid. Jesus says to them, “Take courage, it is I, do not be afraid.” Then in verses 28-33 are where my favorite part happens: “Peter said to Him, “Lord, if it is You, command me to come to You on the water.” And He said, “Come!” And Peter got out of the boat, and walked on the water and came toward Jesus. But seeing the wind, he became frightened, and beginning to sink, he cried out, “Lord, save me!” Immediately Jesus stretched out His hand and took hold of him, and said to him, “You of little faith, why did you doubt?” When they got into the boat, the wind stopped. And those who were in the boat worshiped Him, saying, “You are certainly God’s Son!”

Our students of Youth Group find themselves in a similar situation as Peter. They hear Jesus calling them to step out in faith, but when they do, the things around them cause their faith to falter in fear. Youth Group is a space where students can experience Jesus reaching out to them, inviting them into greater trust and worship; even when we are at a roller skating rink. While it is a bit of a stretch to compare falling down at a roller rink to walking on water, the vision is still there. Many of our students had only roller skated once, if at all. They were excited to learn something new and were overjoyed when they could watch their own progress, and the progress of their peers. This created a wonderful opportunity for the staff of Mission Adelante to not only help students back to their feet when they fell, but to teach them how to balance and eventually skate at full speed. If we had not rented the skating rink to have a private party for ourselves, there would have been far too many other people for our students to feel safe and comfortable falling down, getting back up, and growing in their skills. That is exactly what Youth Group is like.

Youth Group is a place where our students can be welcomed, loved, and accepted as who God has made them to be; and encouraged to become followers of Jesus. Surrounded by adult followers of Christ, who can walk with them through the challenges that come, all the while encouraging them to be courageous in their faith so they can joyfully worship God and experience spiritual family.  

To read more about Youth Group, see a previous Adelante Express written by Drew Hammond here: A Spiritual Family for Third Culture Students

Current Needs:

  • Our Leaders in Training (LIT) students are hungry when they arrive at Mission Adelante after school.  We go through about 80 individually wrapped snacks a week! Next time you are at Costco or Sams, think of us and purchase some snacks for us.  You can drop them off at Mission Adelante during regular business hours, Monday - Thursday 9:00 - 5:00.

 

A celebration of culture

Written by Rachel Pierce, Administrative Assistant

Written by Rachel Pierce, Administrative Assistant

In September,  Mission Adelante will achieve 11 years of ministry in Kansas City, Kansas. But we celebrated a little early, in August we threw a little party with 350-400 of our friends.  There were many beautiful things about that night, many wonderful moments, and great memories.  

The weather that evening was gorgeous, for those of you that have been to other Mission Adelante end of the summer trimester parties, it is usually hot, very hot.  Not this time; there had been rain showers off and on all day, but it cleared up for the party.  There was a nice cloud cover, and a cool breeze. The food was delicious; everybody brought food from their culture.  Rice, fried chicken, tortillas, curries, charro beans, noodles, pizza, pollo mole.  Plates were filled with a little bit of everything; food from Bhutan and Nepal, from Latin American countries, and the United States. On the hill were people from our Bhutanese and Latino ministries, along with our new and long time volunteers; sitting together sharing food, and laughter.  It was beautiful to see.  Long time volunteers were honored for their faithfulness to the ministry at Mission Adelante. Our current ESL students from our Latino and Bhutanese ministries were recognized for their hard work and determination.  

We watched our friends perform songs and dances from their culture, in their language.  The entire program was emceed in Spanish, Nepali, and English, a true celebration and tribute to our diverse community.  Our meal was even blessed by a prayer from our Community Development Director, Elena Mamadnazarova, in Russian.  It was truly a celebration of culture.   The kids from our Bhutanese Kids Club program and our Latino Kids Adelante program performed a song together.  We ended the night celebrating with our founding family and the friends who came alongside them to start Mission Adelante 11 years ago.

We thank God above all for this celebration of culture; for giving the Meek's this vision, dream, and passion for people from other places.  We are thankful for the mission team who stood alongside the Meek's from the very beginning. We give thanks for our staff (past and present), for our volunteers, donors, prayer warriors, and supporting churches who have championed the mission and work of Mission Adelante.  We are excited to see what God has planned next for Mission Adelante!  

 

Enjoy a slideshow of pictures from our 11 year celebration!

Current Needs:

  • We are in need of volunteers for our Bhutanese and Latino Programs.  
  1. Latino Leaders in Training (LIT) meets Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday afternoons.
  2. Bhutanese Elementary LIT meets Monday & Wednesday afternoons
  3. Bhutanese Middle School LIT meets Tuesday & Wednesday afternoons
  4. Bhutanese Youth Group meets Monday evenings
  5. Bhutanese ESL & Kids Club meets Tuesday evenings
  6. Latino Teen’s meets Wednesday evenings
  7. Latino ESL & Kids Adelante meets Thursday evenings

Visit our website for more information or to sign-up: www.missionadelante.org/serve

Important Dates:

  • Volunteer Orientation: Saturday September 10, 9:00 am - 1:00 pm. Orientation is an introduction to our vision and ministry programs at Mission Adelante.  We will also tour the neighborhood and share a meal from a local restaurant.  A $5.00 donation is suggested to help with the cost of the meal.  If you are interested in serving at Mission Adelante visit: www.missionadelante.org/serve.
  • Volunteer Huddle: Monday September 12, 6:30 - 8:00 pm.  Our volunteer huddle is a time for us to gather together with our current and new volunteers to give them a deeper look into our ministry programs.  We will also have dessert and fellowship time.
  • Our Fall Trimester will begin soon, with our Bhutanese programs starting Tuesday September 13, 6:30 pm - 8:30 pm and our Latino programs starting Thursday September 15, 6:30 - 8:30 pm.   

What makes your heart beat?

Written by Megan McDermott, Latino Youth and Kids Director

When I think about Christ, one of the things I always think of is the servants-heart that He displayed. He was always giving His time, wisdom, patience, and love to every person He encountered.   He made time to stop and befriend those that others simply walked past.   I think His heart beat was for true relationship, community, and ultimately healing for us.  Mark 10:45 reminds us that, “For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life as a ransom for many.”   

As we go through our days, do we ever stop to ask ourselves what our heart beats for?    How are we being the hands and feet of Jesus in Kansas City and around the world? I wanted to share with you the words of a dear friend and long time volunteer at Mission Adelante, Brad Gregory, and his answer to this question.

‘About 10 years ago, I heard of a new serving opportunity in the heart of Kansas City, Kansas called Mission Adelante. I had been looking for a place to serve outside of my church and it sounded like a good place to start. I had no idea what I was getting involved in and no concept of what I could actually do to help. I literally stumbled upon helping with Kid's Adelante and the older kids. I had a fabulous teaching partner in Felipe Ham and we became fast friends. I quite literally learned to study the Bible each week by preparing for the classes. I now think that I was the one sent there to learn! The curriculum we use with the children is called Firm Foundations and I believe it gave me just that, a firm foundation in the Bible! Over the years, I have forged many long-term relationships and in recent years, even started meeting with several of the volunteers before classes to eat at one of the many superb taco eateries in KCK. We meet at the end of the evening to pray with and for each other. At the end of the day what we are building is a family. "We are building a family that is centered on being Christ to the neighborhood and showing this love to each other in a meaningful way!"

Current Needs:

  • We are in need of volunteers for our Bhutanese and Latino Programs.  
    • Latino Leaders in Training (LIT) meets Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday afternoons.
    • Bhutanese Elementary LIT meets Monday & Wednesday afternoons
    • Bhutanese Middle School LIT meets Tuesday & Wednesday afternoons
    • Bhutanese Youth Group meets Monday evenings
    • Bhutanese ESL & Kids Club meets Tuesday evenings
    • Latino Teen’s meets Wednesday evenings
    • Latino ESL & Kids Adelante meets Thursday evenings

    Visit our website for more information or to sign-up: www.missionadelante.org/serve

  • Latino Leaders in Training is in need of journals for their creative activities.  If you are interested in purchasing the journals that the kids will use for the year, please contact Megan McDermott at Meganm@missionadelante.org before Sept 6.
     

Important Dates:

  • Volunteer Orientation: Saturday September 10, 9:00 am - 1:00 pm. Orientation is an introduction to our vision and ministry programs at Mission Adelante.  We will also tour the neighborhood and share a meal from a local restaurant.  A $5.00 donation is suggested to help with the cost of the meal.  If you are interested in serving at Mission Adelante visit: www.missionadelante.org/serve.
  • Volunteer Huddle: Monday September 12, 6:30 - 8:00 pm.  Our volunteer huddle is a time for us to gather together with our current and new volunteers to give them a deeper look into our ministry programs.  We will also have dessert and fellowship time.
  • Our Fall Trimester will begin soon, with our Bhutanese programs starting Tuesday September 13, 6:30 pm - 8:30 pm and our Latino programs starting Thursday September 15, 6:30 - 8:30 pm.