Friday 28 September 2012

Locations and Lessons

This is what the maps in the email will look like
showing where all shoeboxes were distributed
After the Operation Christmas Child shoebox campaign 2011/2012, we were able to tell shoebox donors who gave their £2.50 shoebox donation online which country their shoeboxes went to. This proved very popular and was one of the most successful 'email blasts' we have ever done. We are going to send those donors another email this week. It will contain an update from that country and a map showing the various locations the shoeboxes reached in each country.

It was my job to read through the reports from our partners in each country to get quotes and stats for these emails. I also had to find the towns and villages where shoeboxes had been distributed across the 12 countries in eastern Europe, FSU and Africa. Google Maps came in very handy for this; I learned a new technical skill and improved my geography no end!

In some countries, such as Liberia, matching up the location our partners had described to the maps was a frustrating and time consuming task. I got there in the end and hopefully, our donors will enjoy this extra information and their map. I guess they could go into Google and click that little yellow man to zoom in to see the places for themselves.. such are the wonders of our technological world.

If you would like to take part in Operation Christmas Child this year and would like to know where your shoebox goes, here's where to start  and you can even make a shoebox from the comfort of your home without doing all that tedious shopping around and thinking up of ideas with the amazing 'Shoebox World' 

Barefoot in Minus Five Degrees



Part of my job with Samaritan's Purse involves reading the stories in the shoebox distribution reports and it reminds me how fortunate and grateful I am that I have such an interesting job, which perhaps makes a tiny difference in the world.  Some of the most harrowing stories of Operation Christmas Child distributions were from Romania, which is a country where poverty still bites hard particularly in rural areas. This one is an example written by our partners:


"Getting to the village of Mosoroasa in Romania is very difficult. You need to follow a rutted track and when it rains even this is impassable. These children live in very poor conditions, which are hard to imagine. They don’t have running water, electricity or the facilities for a normal life.

"But when we brought the shoeboxes, we could see extraordinary joy reflected in their faces. The shoeboxes are not just presents. For the poor families, the items in the shoeboxes cover some of the children’s needs for school and provide warmth and clothing.

Our partners continued, “Looking back, we do not remember the hard work or the obstacles we faced, but we do remember the faces of those children which radiated joy when they were holding the shoebox in their hands even though they were barefoot when it was -5 Celsius.

“We remember the tears of the mothers running down the muddy streets to thank us because we went to her poor house. It was a campaign in which God's grace upon us was fully manifested, we are blessed that we are part of the OCC team.”

If you would like to give a shoebox this year here's where to start - or you can even give a shoebox this year without leaving your armchair via Shoebox World

Wednesday 26 September 2012

In Anticipation of Campaign 2012

Monday 24th September 2012 - I ventured out of the attic this morning to attend 2 local schools presenting assemblies - the first of the 2012 shoebox campaign.

The first one needed quite a lot of preparation as it was about International Co-operation and Understanding between countries. A couple of hours research and head scratching later one PowerPoint was produced for Year 12 of Castell Alun in the wonderfully named Hope village just outside Wrexham.

The students are doing their Welsh Baccalaureate, and, following my presentation, they were going to go ahead with ideas of their own, looking at ways to be global citizens. This links in to the work of Samaritan's Purse well and so it's all very admirable for the education of a future generation....

Before I went, I had spent some time renewing the wrapping paper on my shoeboxes. I furtled (technical term) about in the other end of my attic and found some gold starry paper. Next stage was to encourage old Mungo the teddy bear off the sofa and into the box and hope that no one notices that the sweets are far too old (I have been using the contents for demonstration purposes for some years now) to ever bring joy to a child....


Me & Mungo at Ysgol Estyn School, Hope
My second assembly was to little ones at Ysgol Estyn who were eager to tell me all about their own Christmases and seemed to be pretty pleased that they could take part this year. I remembered the lessons I learned from my early teaching days when asking an obvious question - "don't shout out..... Hands up" worked a treat!

So here's to a great campaign......