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Posts Tagged curekids

Bernards: Patience

Tigist is a little girl who is 11 months old. The name Tigist means “patience.” Her mother is a young woman who loves her little girl very much. Her mother was taken by force and “married” illegally, meaning the man took her, raped her, and forced her to stay with him. Eventually she became pregnant. When the pregnancy became obvious to her “husband,” he no longer had use for her and kicked her out. According to the predominant religions of this area, it is not allowed to have sex with a pregnant woman, so she was dismissed.

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Anna Haas: Beginning a new year

I’ve been back in San Pedro now for almost a month, so I figured I should give a little update! Despite the inevitable bumps along the road that life always brings, the year is off to a great start for CURE Honduras.

A visit home

I got back on January 4th from the being in the US for Christmas and New Years. The break was just beautiful and relaxing in almost every way. I got to ride my horse (and my sister’s), and I got my fill of nieces and nephews (Well I’m not sure if it’s possible to ever get my fill, but at least I got to spend time with them and see all of them growing so big and preciously as they are). I could go into so much detail about a fun-filled two weeks at home with family and dear friends, but I will just say it’s just what I needed — to spend time with some of the people closest to me. Read the rest of this entry »

Hank Parker reels in support for CUREkids

Hank & Martha Parker and their grandkids

Hank Parker, host of Hank Parker’s Outdoor Magazine on NBC Sports, introduced his affiliation with CUREkids on today’s show.  For those of you not familiar with “the rod-n-reel answer to Michael Jordan,” Hank Parker won his first national championship for bass fishing in 1976, then went on to win many other awards and championships over the next decades.  Inducted into the Bass Fishing Hall of Fame in 2003, Hank now hosts his own fishing/outdoors television program, nationally televised on NBC Sports and the Pursuit Channel.

Today, Hank introduced his viewers to CURE.  The Hank Parker Community is currently raising support for Adriany, an 11-year-old girl who is scheduled for treatment at CURE Honduras. Today’s episode of Hank Parker’s Outdoor Magazine will air again on NBC Sports on Friday, 3 February, at 12:30 PM EST.  Be sure to check out his show and CUREkids community!

Learn more about Hank Parker: http://hankparker.com

Help Wanted: CUREkids Coordinator

Do you blog, or Tweet, or use Facebook for more than just Farmville?
Do you know your way around a digital camera?
Have you ever traveled overseas as part of a short-term missions experience?
Are you smart and organized?
Do you have a heart for the kids and families CURE serves?
Are you an aspiring photo journalist?
Do you have a desire to do something more meaningful with your first year out of college than attending corporate training?
Have you ever considered taking one year of your life to serve God overseas?

If you can say yes to some of those questions, are hard working, and ready for the opportunity of a life-time, then have I got a job for you…

We’re Recruiting CUREkids Coordinators

CURE is recruiting young adults who have qualifications as bloggers and photographers to serve in our hospitals as CUREkids Coordinators. A CUREkids Coordinator is a compensated position within CURE International that serves on a one year term overseas. They live and work at (or near) a CURE hospital in one of the countries in which we serve as a full-time blogger and story-teller, connecting people in the US with the kids we treat in our hospitals through words, pictures, and videos using the tools we’ve built at cure.org/curekids. CURE provides for your housing, living expenses, training, and the tools you need to tell the stories of our CUREkids.

We’re always on the lookout for candidates for the future, but we’re urgently seeking a person to replace our CUREkids Coordinator in Kenya for the beginning of April. If that’s you, click the button below to get more information and start the process or send your resume and references to curekids@cure.org.

I Want Info!

Listen to CURE live on the Dennis Prager Show today!

Give the gift of healing to dozens of kids just like Marjorie

Today, Thursday December 8th, CURE will be featured on the Dennis Prager Show at 9am PST. Listeners will discover more about CURE’s mission and hear stories from our hospitals. Dennis is encouraging donors to give $100 towards life changing surgery for children in CURE’s Central American hospitals.

Each donation will be matched dollar for dollar! Read the rest of this entry »

CURE at 2011 National Youth Workers Convention

Recently we joined hundreds of youth leaders and lay youth workers from around the country for the 2011 National Youth Workers Convention (NYWC) in Atlanta.

And just about everyone we spoke with connected with the fact that you can use your Facebook account to login and follow a child’s treatment, giving them the ability to be notified when the child goes in for surgery so they can pray for that child.

We also showed them how our new personal fundraising system works, and how it will give them the ability to find a child in CUREkids, and then set up a fundraiser for that child on our site in their group’s name. Read the rest of this entry »

Get Well Soon – CUREkids


Watch the Get Well video here: http://www.youtube.com/cureinternational#p/u/7/fVLSJO8ojVk

CUREkids has brought the work of CURE to your inbox and Facebook wall through the lives of the kids we’re privileged to serve, but now our kids want to hear from you. That’s why we’re pleased to announce CUREkids Get Well messages!

Now your family has the chance to share words of encouragement with a child in a CURE hospital. Here’s how:

  • Go to http://cure.org/curekids/getwell
  • Fill out a personal message to a child currently in treatment at CURE hospital.
  • Optionally, upload pictures to send along with your message.
  • You can even link a YouTube video to your message.
  • Click Send, and your message will be sent our our CUREkids coordinator.
  • We’ll notify when your Get Well message is received.

Get Well messages are a great new way to become part of the ministry of CURE International. They’re also a wonderful opportunity to connect your own children to kids thousands of miles away that need their love and encouragement.

So what are you waiting for?
There are kids in CURE hospitals that need your encouragement today.

Send a Get Well message!

Post Script: A Real-Life Example

Last week, I sent this get well message to a young girl at CURE Kenya named Kiloret and received the following reply this weekend.

Hi Mr. Worrall –

My name is Jenny. I just wanted to thank you for taking the time to send a Get Well message to Kiloret. Her mom seriously couldn’t stop thanking me, and her and the other Maasai people in the room kept raving about your picture with Eliana…

Kiloret, meet Joel & his baby Eliana

I’m pretty sure her mom loves you…she couldn’t stop saying “Asante”. And the guy on the right is our surgery tech, Peter, who graciously translated your message into Maasai…how awesome is that!?

Thanks so much for investing in Kiloret & CUREkids. You’ve blessed Kiloret and her family in a way I can’t actually express…

His,
Jenny England ::: CUREkids Coordinator – Kenya
CURE International
“If you spend yourselves in behalf of the hungry and satisfy the needs of the oppressed,
then your light will rise in the darkness, and your night will become like the noonday.”
Isaiah 58:10

Anna Haas: Smiling through the suffering

Aldo lives near Tegucigalpa, about five hours from our hospital. He lives with his three brothers and 500 other children in an orphanage called Nuestros Pequenos Hermanos (Our Little Brothers and Sisters). Aldo has a congenital disease called neurofibromatosis, as well as limb length discrepancy (his left leg is shorter than his right leg), a dislocated hip, and scoliosis. Needless to say, he’s had a difficult journey, and although it’s looking brighter ahead, it’s a long road. He had his first operation approximately one year ago, in which the surgeons put an external fixator on his leg.  Over time, it was supposed to lengthen his shorter leg. To make a long story short, the fixator did not work as it was intended, and Aldo now has more complex problems.

He came to the hospital yesterday with Carol, a physical therapist (originally from Austria) who works at his orphanage, to see what the next step in his treatment will be.

We are blessed to have Dr. Tim Mead here this week with his wife Jana.  They are visiting before they move to the Middle East, where Dr. Mead will be the new medical director at CURE in the United Arab Emirates. Dr. Mead was the medical director at CURE Kenya from 1998-2011. He and Dr. Bridgeman discussed what would be the best option for Aldo, and decided that it will be to remove the fixator and then place a rod in his left femur bone, because it has become so thin that it will break if he stands on it without the fixator. Aldo is basically wheelchair-bound right now, although he uses a walker in physical therapy.  After this next operation, he will be on his way to being more mobile. As of right now, he sleeps laying his chest on his lap, because his hips have become so stiff from being in a seated position for so long that he cannot lay down.

The beauty in all of this is that we have Dr. Mead and Dr. Bridgeman here to make sure that he gets the best care possible, and that Dr. Bridgeman will be here to see his treatment through till the end. What’s even more beautiful is Aldo’s shining smile through all of this suffering. He has a smile that lights up the room and an attitude that’s ready to have fun. He’s excited for life despite his circumstances, and we know that this can be attributed to the fact that he accepted Jesus the last time he was here (one year ago), and since then his life has changed — he has hope in the midst of all of this.

When Dr. Mead was explaining on the phone to one of the directors at the orphanage what the procedure is going to be, he said, “This kid has the world’s best smile, with some of the world’s worst problems.” This is true, and Aldo, despite his physical circumstances and being 14 years old and only in second grade, knows the secret of being content in all circumstances and keeps smiling through all of it.

When asked over the phone by one of the orphanage directors how long the recovery process will be, Dr. Mead replied, “Since we are going to bathe him in prayers, he’ll hopefully heal within six to eight weeks.” So please join us in praying for that!

If you would like to support Aldo’s surgery, please visit him here.

Originally posted at: http://annagracehaas.blogspot.com/2011/10/aldo-smiling-through-suffering.html.

Collins: Pioneer in Uganda


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Meet Edna

Edna Banda from Malawi had bowed legs and was unable to attend school, but today she’s at the top of her class thanks to CURE Malawi and donors like you who helped fund her treatment.