My husband and I just returned from a mission trip to inland Jamaica, where we worked at a deaf commune, an infirmary, and an orphanage. Here is one small story from our trip.
The Orphanage.
It’s a small place, with around 30 children and a handful of female caretakers in pastel scrubs. The children are wide-eyed, well cared for, clean, and loved, but even so, they have all been dismissed by their families — cast out, sent away.
They are, to someone, somewhere, unwanted, unwelcome.
Tim, my husband, was playing with a small group of boys aged 4-5. Children tend to flock to him for reasons I’ve never been able to articulate — Tim is a big guy, quiet and strong, with a heart to match. Somehow, kids are able to pick up on this. I don’t know how, but they do.
There was sidewalk chalk on the ground, and after a while I noticed that the kids flocking around Tim all had smeared sidewalk chalk all over their faces.
“Are they eating the sidewalk chalk or something?” I asked Amanda, the woman who runs the orphanage. “Do you want me to stop them?”
She was watching the kids, too, and shook her head. “This is a woman’s world,” she remarked after a moment. “Men don’t come to the orphanage. These boys don’t have any male role models.
“I want your husband to know what a difference he is making, even just playing with them for a little while.
“That sidewalk chalk on their faces? Those boys are drawing on beards so they can be more like Tim.”
What a moment that must have been. We just never know what sort of impact we have on people or when it might happen. Great post.
That is beautiful. Thanks for sharing. What an honor that had to be for Tim!
Thank you, Jill!
I loved witnessing that moment. Tim made a great impact on those boys (even if he was counting injuries from the swing!)
Thanks, Betsy!