Tuesday, April 3, 2012

ESEPA Project, San Jose, Costa Rica

¡Qué emoción!  How exciting—our first foreign library ministry opportunity.  Well, yes, the other library trips have certainly been in foreign countries, cultures, and languages, but this year’s library project branches our ministry into our first Spanish-speaking seminary library.

This new chance to minister to evangelical seminary professors and students is the first time our team has ventured into a second-language library.  As the team-leader this time, my responsibilities include putting together a team and budget, investigating the library’s inventory and needs ahead of time, arranging room and board, transport, budget, and project supply preparation. 

I am excited to see how the Lord is leading this project. Please read more about the blessings already experienced at La Biblioteca III

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

The Last Chapter, with notes from Ginger

Jonathon helps labeling.
Ginger Kirk's last entry to her prayer team relayed how she and Bev completed the trip after deciding to stay an extra week:
  • over 7600 books were catalogued
  • with the help of many Santiago Christian Academy folk, each book was also labeled and shelved (in order, of course)
  • Over 3000 books were culled and will be "recycled" however the school decides.
  • The biographies and easy reader books will still have to be done by the SCA library volunteers 
  • As Ginger states, "We give praise to the Lord for giving Bev, Tia and I the opportunity to do what could be done for the school and its' library, and most especially, for the kids who attend school there, who can can go to the library computer and actually find the books they want."
My last two books entered.


As for myself, this experience proved excellent and exhausting and absolutely enriching.  I loved the work--even though it's been a while since I've sat at a computer and just worked a straight 9- or 10-hour day of "manual" labor. I love books! I love books for kids and libraries, too!  I thank the Lord for this opportunity and I thank Bev and Ginger for sharing the experience with me--they were great roommates, by the way.




The "before" and the "after"

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Chapter 10: Teams of Friendships

This trip to Santiago has been a special opportunity to minister to missionary kids (mks) and their families—albeit in a behind-the-scenes type of way. Libraries in Christian schools around the world are just one of many amenities these schools offer as they serve their population in so many academic, spiritual and emotional areas.

Dr. Beverly Monroe enjoys and shares her love of books by taking small teams to English-speaking Christian seminaries, schools and churches in non-English-speaking countries to help get their libraries organized and online. These endeavors increase the efficiency of and access to the myriad of adventures and resources available through the written word.

Dr. Bev Monroe retired from Cedarville University in the 1990's; however, neither she nor her husband, Dr. Allen Monroe, has truly retired. Both keep active, Dr. Allen teaches and preaches, and Dr. Beverly brings libraries into the 21st century by way of the computer; plus, they both conduct workshops, wherever needed around the world. According to Bev, they love it and pray that God gives them many more years of such service.

Each of Bev’s teams includes folks from all walks of life. Back in 2005, when she came to our school in Costa Rica, she brought her daughter, Deb Haas and another mutual friend from Cedarville, Ruth Ager. The last five trips have included Ginger Kirk, a friend from Brevard, NC (where the Monroes now reside). Ginger has come along with a drive to get the job done and a great sense of just-at-the-right-time humor. Ginger is a retired NCIS special agent—yep, the whole investigative thing, and she says it’s not totally unlike the television show, except that they don’t get a case done in an hour—ever—and they do not brandish guns to the degree shown at the hourly climax. She loved her job, and she is not done with round-the-world travel; however, now her investigations deal now mostly with Dewey Decimal numbers and authorship.

This trip to Santiago included Bev, Ginger, and me. One of the frequent questions posed by those we met was how we all knew each other. I have known Bev since 1982-83 when I had her as a professor for Children’s Literature at CU—and let me tell you, I was not calling her Bev at that point. :) Bev and Ginger know each other from their church, Cornerstone Presbyterian, in Brevard, NC.

This was the team. But also incredibly special on this trip were the many new friendships made, and for me, the old ones revisited. I cannot speak to every conversation, every hug, every game time, every dinner, every city tour, and every dessert—but we enjoyed getting to know so many fantastic people serving in Santiago. Not everyone was with ABWE, but the ABWE missionaries and the families at SCA (Santiago Christian Academy) were our hosts, and they provided everything we needed. Very thorough and very hospitable. Thank you all, so very much.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Chapters 8&9:More of what I've done and what I've learned in Chile

So many enriching experiences this past week, but first we must celebrate 4,424 books entered to date!

April 19, 2010 -- Went to take pictures of chapel and was asked if I wanted to teach the elementary kids a new song.  I couldn't resist: of course I picked one of my favorite kids songs "Levanta tu casa," only finding out later that in elementary EVERYTHING in elementary is to be done in English.  Oops.

That evening we went to a delicious Korean restaurant with the Chois and we ate delicious pork wrapped in sesame leaves... and many other delicacies I had never had.  We pray that to all these wonderful people who have been so gracious and giving to us, we have been a blessing to them as well--a reflection of Christ's love and service.

April 20, 2010 -- More library work, of course, and for supper another Korean family brought us such a beautiful detailed meal -- miso soup, vegetable wraps with shrimp and pork and other things we did not recognize, --she even included chopsticks, beautiful napkins, and tea.

April 21, 2010 -- More data entry in the library. For supper we went to a family birthday at the Davilas--celebrating Christopher's 14th birthday with stir fry and decadent apple crisp cake. We played Catch Phrase and laughed a lot.  We also enjoy God's small world when we walked in and found out that the husband Rodney is Costa Rican and that the family works with the mission that Ginger and Bev's church works with--Mission to the World.

What I have learned this week:
  • Police are nick-named "pacos" and are required to drive with their emergency lights on all the time (it's just when the sirens wailing that you have to worry).
  • Traffic jams are called "tacos," so that means if you have a transit policeman, you have a "taco paco"?
  • I'm very impressed with the taxi drivers downtown:  they wear casual dress slacks, light (alpaca?) sweater vest, with a bright red tie.
  • Santiago has a lot of American restaurant chains, but I especially like that they have DUNKIN DONUTS (for the coffee, not the donuts)!
  • And as we enter autumn here, we are getting colder and colder. During the day the temps get into the mid to high 60s, but it seems like for only about an hour. And at night, the temperature drops to the mid-thirties, and these buildings do not have heat nor insulation. It is in fact, chilly in Chile.