shepherd of the hills news - Shepherd of the hills Children Foundation
Transcription
shepherd of the hills news - Shepherd of the hills Children Foundation
FAMILY DISCIPLESHIP EDUCATION SUPPORT SHEPHERD OF THE HILLS NEWS VOl. 1 ISSUE 1. March 2008 Mission Statement: We exist to glorify God by rescuing & discipling children, educating students, training young leaders and establishing homes . shepherdofthehills.org.ph In this Issue: President’s Letter 2 A Time of Renewal and Forgiveness 2 Tintin Bersola Babao, an Ambassador for Children’s Welfare 9 Ambassador Kenney visits Shepherd Baguio 10 Meet Shepherd’s Partners 12 DSWD License no. SB-2007-L 0131 Accreditation no. SB-2007-057 WELCOME TO OUR FIRST ISSUE! We are excited to introduce this installment as the very first of the Shepherd of the Hills Newsletters! We will be sending out regular newsletters to inform you about different events and happenings so you can share in the spirit of Shepherd with us. If you are new to Shepherd of the Hills, now is the time to learn about our great organization. Focused on Christian values and life skills, we have three homes for children: one for infants in Manila, one for young children in Zambales, and our newest Home in Baguio for adolescent teens. Each of these Homes is focused on child development, and providing a nurturing, safe environment for children to grow, ranging in ages from babies to teens. We have dedicated trained staff who are devoted to these children, and we are always looking for others who wish to share in our mission of caring for and ministering to children. Shepherd of the Hills has been active for 31 years. There is still a long way to go with how Shepherd hopes to serve our children and community. We pray to improve our current Homes in the services offered and facilities built, as well as to improve the education of our children, scholastically and of God. We welcome you along for this journey and are happy to share our mission with you. A Message from the President Child rearing is a 24 hour ministry done not mechanically or for commercial reasons but simply by caring for a child in need. 2 24/7 is a phrase commonly used by companies to signify round the clock service. Whether in communications or food service, the idea is to provide a 24 hour service to ensure ultimate customer satisfaction. For 31 years, Shepherd of the Hills Children’s Foundation has continually provided 24 hour rearing services to its’ clients: abandoned, orphaned and underprivileged children seeking some degree of satisfaction in life along with a home, family and a degree of personal achievement as they mature in age. But we do not call them clients. We call them “our children” the moment Nathan Mejica they enter our fold because we want to build relationships with them. We do not call our work service but rather ministry. Child rearing is a 24 hour ministry done not mechanically or for commercial reasons but simply by caring for a child in need. In this ministry, we have taken upon ourselves the responsibilities of other people, an uncomfortable yet faith filled response to a divine calling. Our mission is to rescue, disciple and educate children, training them to be future leaders and thereby making them responsible and productive members of society. It is our goal to rescue and rear godly children who would otherwise be living a life of misery in an unhealthy and at times, an unforgiving, environment. The task is difficult but we are providing hope. The undertaking costly but the children are worth it. The mission stressful, but rewarding in that we positively affect these children’s lives. The responsibility is burdensome but is up to God who makes our success possible. We need to constantly affirm ourselves of God’s mandate by treasuring, protecting, training and inspiring the children, giving them both the opportunities and the tools to become all that God wants them to be. Shepherd of the Hills’ Foundation has grown from an individual home into three fully functioning centers in three regions in the Philippines. We have educated children from preelementary to high school in addition to sending them to vocational school or university for further schooling. We would like to raise more funds to expand and improve the services of each facility while maintaining our current levels of support for our present projects. We need to raise PHP 8M or US$200K alone for the upkeep of the home. I ask that you continue to support us and spread the word for others to join in this worthwhile endeavor. If you would like to be part of our family and our mission, please drop me an email. We will be reaching out to many more children this year and should try to remember that the children we meet on the streets wandering and begging are as important as you and I are in the sight of God because His own image is etched in their hearts. They have potential. They have hope. Let us just give them the chance and opportunity to develop these. It’s within our power and our responsibility to do so. A TIME OF RENEWAL AND FORGIVENESS These past months, Shepherd of the Hills’ teenagers Teens clasped hands as a sign of acceptance and forgiveness for one another. have been pursuing their own paths of forgiveness and thereby, renewal of their commitment to God and themselves as disciples of the Lord. Our Baguio teens completed their own “Personal Spiritual Profile,” designed to help evaluate their spiritual background and upbringing as well as to assist the children in seeing how negative patterns of thought and behavior may have developed in their lives. The profiles were all confidential, only the individual seeing their own paper and their designated counselor. At the completion of the worksheets, all were burned as a symbol of forgiveness and freedom from past sins committed by themselves and by people in their lives in the past and at present. This act of repentance paved way to a renewed sense of purpose and life as a child of God, motivating the teens to share their renewed faith with others they come in contact with, especially in their outreach to local schools and teens. By: Zab Karr US Peacecorp Volunteer 3 Why do we do what we do? Nathan Mejica The best thing for people to understand the reasons why we do what we do is to show figures and facts about the current plight of the Phil. society and the children affected by it.. In this way, passionate and compassionate people alike, churches, corporations with community awareness programs and those who are involved with organizations with similar direction may have a clear picture of the vulnerability of children who are at risk and at the same time fully appreciate and support the various ministries and work for children. Here are some facts : In the Philippines, there are three different categories of street children: children on the streets, children of the streets and completely abandoned children. Children on the streets are those who work on the street but do not live there. They make up about 70%-75% of the street children in the Philippines. Although some of them have stopped school altogether and work full-time in the streets, many still go to school and work long hours before or after their classes. At the end of each working day, they return home. Children of the street on the other hand are those who live and work on the streets. They make up 25%-30% of the street children in the Philippines. This group of children sees the streets as their home and from where they seek income, food and shelter. They recreate a sort of family among their companions. They may have some family connections but they regard these ties as bad and rarely visit their families. Completely abandoned and neglected children are those who are entirely on their own for physical and psychological survival. They make up about 5%-10% of the street children in the Philippines. They are the true children of the streets. [There are 1.5 million street children. DSWD estimates that this number increases annually by 6,365. Of the 1.5 million street children, 60,000 are prostituted (ECPAT 1996). Research studies conducted in schools show that for every 3 Filipino children, one child experiences abuse (Manila Bulletin, 11 February 1996). It is estimated there are 75,000 street children in Metro Manila alone More than 1/3 of the more than 42,000 barangays in the country could not offer the required six years of elementary education. Sixty percent of the children drop out of school when they reach the second grade (PDI, 18 May 1997). Sixty-one towns in the country do not have a high school. It is estimated that there are about five million child laborers in the country (UNICEF 1995). Drugs The most common substances are inhalants, like solvent/rugby and cough syrups, followed by marijuana and shabu. many street children take more drugs more than once, some as often as a daily intake of solvent/rugby. Health Problems Generally, street children are thin, untidy, and undernourished, hardly equipped to survive the hazards of everyday living and working on the streets. Some of the hazards they face include sickness, physical injuries from vehicular accidents, street fights, harassment from both extortionists and police, sexual exploitation by pedophiles and pimps, exposure to substance abuse and sexually transmitted diseases. Prison Street Children as young as 10 years old are often imprisoned under the Vagrancy Act, ending up in the same cells as adult prisoners, including young girls with male adults. They are often sexually and physically abused by prisoners and guards and are forced to clean out the toilets and cells. They are prone to catch TB from sleeping on damp floors and being in close confinement with sick adults. They often do not have their own imprisonment recorded Turn to Next page 4 Why do we do . . . .from page 3 Child Prostitution Child prostitutes are used by both foreign sex tourists and pedophiles as well as local people. Many Street Children are lured into prostitution as a means of surviving, others work in order to earn money for their families. A variety of different factors contribute to the commercial sexual exploitation of children in the Philippines HIV/AIDS and STIs There is no HIV testing for children in the Philippines but18% of the Street Children contract sexually transmitted infections (STIs). With these facts on hand, we can clearly see that the streets become a natural habitat for future criminals and a miller for social outcasts. Without lifting a finger, they are naturally groomed and trained into becoming a menace and a destruction to the society, to the family they were supposed to belong and to their own personal lives. This is where the evil acts at work at its best. We do what we do primarily because of two reasons, among others:: 1. Obedience to God’s word. Psalm 82: 4 “Rescue the weak and the needy, deliver them from the hands of the wicked.”. Luke 10:2 “ The harvest is plentiful but the workers are few”. 2. Love and compassion for children. I encourage you to support and partner with Shepherd of the Hills and get to see children streaming with joy as we decisively reach out for their welfare. Let us make a decision to move out from our seat of beliefs, opinions and convictions and transform them into life changing acts of compassion. That is where the difference is. That’s what Jesus did. A presentation at Shoemart Baguio by Shepherd of the Hills Praise Team 5 Cycle of Child Abandoned, Abused & Streetlife Have own family only to be aban- Abandon Ment abused, orphaned Become a Social problem, unproductive destructive Converge in the streets/ elsewhere Commit petty/ bigger crime Vulnerable to substance alcohol, sexual abuse, gambling Acquire distorted values, unhealthy Influenced by exploits pimps, gamblers, 6 TRAINING FUTURE LEADERS Focused on preparing our children for independent living, our Home for Teens in Baguio City is structured around education, discipleship, and the life skills needed to give a child the chance to grow into a well-adjusted, confident, and successful adult. As of March 2007, Shepherd has been blessed to move our family into a much larger house off Kennon Road in Camp 7 than our original two-room home in Baguio. The move has allowed us to expand on several of our programs and plan for further improvements that would have once seemed unattainable. We have a separate school room on the 2nd floor where the children study and take lessons, as well as a large veranda at which additional classes are held using mobile blackboards. Now we are able to separate teens into different classes depending on their level of performance and comprehension, thereby accommodating the students’ distinctive learning styles and practice the best suited learning approaches for these. Recently, 20 of our teens took the February A&E (Acceleration and Enhancement) exam coordinated by ALS (Alternative Learning/Livelihood Section) of the Department of Education. The results of this exam will determine our teens’ placement in the public school system: whether they qualify to enroll in university or in high school. Our other teens continue to use the School of Tomorrow’s home-school system of student-directed learning, similar to the one our young children use in Zambales. In addition, these teens have separate classes with teacher-directed learning according to their level of proficiency. Those homeschooled teens who have since reached a certain proficiency will progress into A&E preparatory classes for the next year’s exam. Besides exposing our young adults to a formal curriculum, they have been involved in environmental education classes and have participated in community cleanups within our own neighborhood and the Camp 7 barangay youth council. Shepherd teens also caroled in our barangay and town to celebrate the past Christmas season. On December 7th, we performed at SM Baguio for hundreds of people, and our violinists performed at Heritage Hotel in Manila December 16th through the 20th. This new year moves Shepherd Baguio towards developing our practical skills education program in coordination with ALS. To enhance this project, the Foundation is planning for more on-site training equipment and facilities including a carpentry corner and a kitchen fitted with an industrial oven to train our teens in baking. We would be grateful to any who share in this vision to help us provide our teens with the tools to realize this. Our large kitchen space allows the teens practice of their culinary skills which is especially important for a family as large as ours! More exciting news for our teens involves the creation of 3 new bands to foster the musical talent of our youth and their ability for outreach. At present, we are working to expand our discipleship to more children at nearby schools and our community. Shepherd is looking for more instruments to gift our teens to pursue their passions and continue spreading the word of God. We are truly blessed and look forward to doing great things in this new year. 7 Raising the Standards on Child Care Caty Harris US Peace Corp Volunteer We go to great extents to provide a nurturing atmosphere for our young children. Recently, we have begun two caregiver training series, facilitated by the Acting Director and also head social worker, Maricon Pulga, and U.S. Peace Corps Volunteer, Caty Harris. The first workshop is an eight module (multiple workshops per-module) series on effective parenting provided by DSWD in order to teach the caregivers basic parenting skills (such as hygiene, stress management, financial management, etc). During this same time, the caregivers are also receiving various teambuilding activities, confidence-building opportunities, and group sessions to provide a forum to express their concerns. We feel that we have made large strides in the past few years to better the lives of the children at Shepherd of the Hills. Our constant goal is to develop highly competent and academically equipped children, who can in turn give back to the Philippines. Shepherd Zambales is currently working on two large scale projects. The first is a library and resource room (or cognitive development center). The center is developed especially for children ages 2-12. The library is divided into six color coded reading levels for Caregivers at Zambales during their caregiving training fiction, and color coded non-fiction. We would like to add a television and VCR (as we have many educational video donations) and a small sound system to play calming instrumentals. The resource center includes puzzles, blocks, puppets, sand table, and rial. In addition we have added a library for the staff and a resource center (library) for the teachers. The second large scale project is an environmental awareness project. We did an initial environment education day (geared towards four groups: 2-5 years; 6-9; 10-12; and staff). We talked about what happens when you dispose of your trash improperly (throwing on ground, burying, burning) and how it effects everyone. Then we implemented a recycling and composting program. Each house sells glass, metal and plastic to junk shops and composts their compostable trash. The remainder (such as food/shampoo sachets) is being used for art projects The second workshop is a twelve week series on behavior improvement. Each week the caregivers learn a new strategy, and are given an implementation schedule. Through weekly sessions and activities, the caregivers are learning how to eliminate difficult behaviors, while nurturing the growth and development of the children. We go to great extents to provide a nurturing Atmosphere for our young children 8 OUTREACHES TEENS OUTREACH AND DISCIPLESHIP Loakan High Sch. Baguio City We began visiting the local high school, Loakan HS, to perform praise songs and enhance our discipleship program with the students there, a school of over 800. Our teens offered to share their talents of playing musical instruments with these students, and invited them over to our house for free lessons on the weekend. Meeting with other youth groups from local churches and Christian schools is another step further in our discipleship that we have taken, worshipping with other teens as well as inviting Christian foreign students to our home to praise with and learn from. Our barangay’s youth council (SK) is another group with whom we have started to work closely; we will continue to nurture this relationship as a learning experience and extension of our roles as disciples of the Lord. REACH out to Children and Adults Brgy. Pundaquit & Sn. Miguel Zambales Serving for the past 25 years, Shepherd of the Hills is continually reaching out to a growing population in various Barangays. in the province of Zambales. Currently, 300 undernourished and poorly cared children are being served and ministered to. 300 undernourished and poorly cared children are being served and ministered to. 9 Tintin Bersola Babao: An Ambassador for Children’s Welfare Meet the newest member of our family, Ms. Tintin Bersola Babao, a popular newscaster and TV host. Tintin has expressed her willingness to be a Shepherd of the Hills’ official endorser and partner with the Foundation. As such, Ms. Babao is an example of an Ambassador for Children’s Welfare due to her growing passion and efforts to help Filipino children at risk. She has actively fund-raised for the Foundation through various activities including promoting and selling books of which she authored. Above photo: Daniel San Jose, a nursing graduate from the Home with Tintin. Center: SOTH Band during the launching. Below: Tin-tin with SOTH family at Glorietta. 10 US AMBASSADOR KRISTIE KENNEY VISITS SHEPHERD OF THE HILLS Baguio Executive Directors Nathan and Ruth Mejica with US Ambassador Kenney U.S Ambassador Kristie Kenney recently visited Shepherd of the Hills (SOTH) a student center for teenagers (orphanage) at Camp 7, Baguio City. Ambassador Kenney mingled with the teens and the staff and watched them dance, sing, and play instruments. The diplomat distributed tokens of appreciation to the children. 11 This February, head staff from our Manila and Zambales Homes traveled to our Teen center in Baguio City to join local staff for Shepherd of the Hills’ first joint strategic planning meeting and fellowship event. In January, each of the Homes individually conducted their own strategic planning meetings, diagnosing problems and forming solutions, along with charting out their individual centers’ course for the new year. These preparations ranged from changes and/or continuation of current projects, to adaptation and addition of new ones that staff and children found necessary. However as February drew along, SOTH found itself gathered altogether in the mountains of Benguet for a much larger scale meeting that focused not on the individual centers but on the Foundation as a whole: all three Shepherd Homes working together as one and therefore, at the peak of our strength. Each center gave a report on the past years affairs and plans for their individual locations. Afterwards, Director Nathaniel Mejica showed a presentation that combined all 3 Homes specific strategic plans into one that moved the Foundation forward as a whole. This presentation covered aspects such as: more efficient communication in between centers and directorial persons; increase in educational support to our children; report and development of further livelihood projects to help individual sustainability of each center; current trainings of staff and in what areas future trainings are needed; and, further ways to aid the Foundation in becoming more effective and well-organized such as developing an online group forum for staff to present news, issues, and updates on their centers for each Home to see and in which to be informed. Following Saturday’s meeting, staff proceeded to join in a worship ceremony to show our fellowship with one another, our mission as staff of the Foundation, and God. The next day, the Mejica’s took staff and children around the city for the annual Flower Festival (Panagbenga) which is the yearly, much anticipated celebration comprised of parades, live musical shows and artistic demonstrations, food and various vendor booths, and of course, presentation of millions of flowers in the float parade! As some of the staff had not yet met, this gave everyone the chance to greet each other and become fast friends over the dance and music of the parade’s magnificent marching bands. This Summer is fast approaching with the school system on break from April to May: two months of freedom for students, yet here at our Baguio Home we hope to fill it with fun and outside education rather than boredom. As of now, nine of our teens will be enrolled in a local music school in town for advanced violin, advanced guitar, advanced voice and beginner piano. Our four bands will continue to practice and develop as well as give free music lessons to local teenagers as part of our discipleship program. At the end of April, our teens will travel to Zambales to take part in a camp with the younger children there, and in early May, our teens will host their own camp here in Baguio for those friends they have met during their outreach. We will intensify our IT and keyboard training for our teens in these next two months, especially for those students who will be enrolled in the public school system as a way to prepare them for their future studies. Along with this, ALS, in coordination with the Department of Education, will provide us with a mobile teacher to train our students in such alternative livelihoods as soapmaking, reflexology, and cosmetology. Our environmental education classes and community clean-ups will continue too as well as additional art classes and community physical activities and events such as our barangay’s Sportsfest. Over the next two months, our Baguio teachers will be reevaluating the teens’ home-school program and enrichment classes’ curriculum to better prepare for students’ progress and success in the next friends over the dance and music of the parade’s magnificent marching bands. This strategic planning was not only a chance to get to know one another and strengthen our support for Shepherd, but a way to inform each Home of the others’ doings and work toward a common goal. Director Mejica hopes to make this cooperative meeting a regular quarterly occurrence to ensure productive development of the organization and to provide a supportive place to hear from part of its foundation: the staff and children. school year, including incorporating use of our new projector into lessons as well as the availability of our new computers. Baguio staff will also be undergoing teacher training in the beginning of March under various topics such as IT and advanced computer skills, alternative teaching methods, various approaches to different learning styles, and effective classroom management. All in all we have a busy schedule but are flexible for any suggestions - contact us here in Baguio or our director Nathaniel Mejica if you would like to help our teens have a fun and special summer. We look forward to reporting our future accomplishments and activities in the next issue so until then, God bless and summer greetings from Baguio! Meet shepherd’s Partners The CORD that Binds Since the late 1970’s up to the present, Christian Outreach Relief and Development (CORD) has been Shepherd of the Hills’ long time partner in providing financial, spiritual and moral support to further our work among destitute children. With an unwavering commitment, CORD afforded Shepherd of the Hills its base for working with children in the Philippines. But beyond Shepherd of the Hills, CORD’s primary mission is “Conflict Transforma tion.” They are a humanitarian organization working with dis placed people and communities affected by Michael Godfrey violent conflicts worldwide. Their goal is the regeneration and sustainable, peaceful development of these communities and civil society weakened by violent conflict. CORD is working to help rebuild roads, bridges and provide tools to repair schools. The organization’s current Director, Michael Godfrey, succeeded former Director Martin Lee, whom God had used mightily to build the foundations of child welfare work in the Philippines for the past 25 years. May the Lord continue bless CORD. Uncle Tony and Auntie Amelia Davies took time to serve evening mealsto the teens at SOTH during a short visit at its facility in Baguio City. Earlier, both visited SOTH Zambales. Tony has been responsible for helping the Home through arranging the kind giving of friends, clients and employees at Windes and McClaughry Corp. every end of the year. Many thanks to all. (Above photo:Left standing: Ruth, Tony , Amelia Seated: Teens from Baguio city) 12 Meet shepherd’s Partners Shoes That Move Lives Anthony and Charles Smith, CEO and COO respectively, of the company Shoezone, visited Shepherd of the Hills last year. Both brothers and their father, Michael, are passionate in helping children while supporting additional worthwhile endeavors. While the men are successful in the business world, their aspirations to aid needy children led them to establish the Shoezone Trust. Shoezone has supported the Foundation since 2004 and is committed to helping Filipino children find hope and a better place and way to live. The Smiths are continuing a long relationship with the Foundations that began in the 1980s when their parents, Michael and Anne Smith, adopted a beautiful young girl from the Foundation. Charles and Anthony with toddlers at Shepherd Quezon City. Anthony Smith with staff at Shepherd Zambales 13 Meet shepherd’s Partners Pastor Bernard Marquez of Victory Christian Fellowship together with his family and friends, paid a short visit to SOTH Baguio last Dec. 2007. Pastor Bernard shared words of encouragement to inspire the teens to gain wisdom, knowledge and become successful as they mature in life. Pastor Marquez is a pastor of Victory Christian Fellowship (VCF), a christian movement that has churches all over the Philippines and missions work all over the world. VCF has been a partner with SOTH by providing financial support to the home, spiritual guidance & nourishment as well as leadership training to its staff through its ENLI program. Victory Christian Fellowship is headed by Senior Pastor Joey Bonifacio ( The fort) and Ferdie Cabiling (Galleria) and was founded by Ptr. Steve Murrell , President of Every Nation Leadership Institute. We give thanks for the leadership of VCF. Top photo: Pastor Bernard with family and SOTH teens. Center: Pastor Bernard doing exhortation. Right: Pastor Nuel with Baby Boaz and Ruth at the baby dedication held in VCF Galleria in the file photo. 14 Meet shepherd’s Partners Giving Chance to “Passengers”. NORTHWEST AIRLINES, Headed by Mr. Andy Roberts, Vice President for Operations, initiated to raise funds for the improvement of existing shelters and the initial construction of a new shelter project for Shepherd of the Hills, giving a chance to its’ newest “passengers”, orphaned and abandoned Filipino children, a better living conditions. The airlines also shipped food supplies to the Homes, donated by Feed My Starving Children, a Minnesota based organization. These donations benefited not only three orphanages but hundreds of needy children from poor neighboring barangays (villages) in the same region. Thank you so much. ( Left, NWA Legal officer Jojo Veneracion in red shirt and Gen. Manager, Todd Anderson while seated with children at shepherd Zambales in this file photo. Right: Jojo enjoying happy moments with the boys . Blaine Reyes and Maile Bryan of Kauai, Hawaii visited the SOTH in Baguio and distributed blankets, towels, mattresses, sporting games and other personal effects to the teens in this file photo. Both also visited the young children in SOTH Zambales where Maile got to mingle with the kids and did storytelling while Blaine played basketball with the young boys and scooped ice cream for every kids available. Bottom left photo: Nathan and Mr. Bryan, father of Maile. 15 Meet shepherd’s Partners NEW HOPE INT’L. CHRISTIAN CENTER Recently our friends at New Hope Church in Los Angeles, California visited all 3 Shepherd Homes at the end of their Medical Mission trip. On behalf of their church and community, Ruth Angeles and Jenny Yao presented our teens with 4 second hand computers, an Epson LCD projector , VCD player , and 3 printers along with several DVDs of Biblical stories and educational lessons. Shepherd would like to thank New Hope Church for their generosity and shared commitment in helping our children. These computers will be used for enhancement of class lessons, as well as to instruct children in typing and IT in order to better prepare them for the professional and business world. We have already developed and instigated a typing and computer curriculum to help the teens in this. Above photo:Pastor Ruth Angeles with older boys, Center photo: Jenny Lao and teens. Below : Wallie Tupal and godson, Gio of SOTH Zambales. Paige Muhling: Philippine Support Coordinator 16 Meet shepherd’s Partners Tim and Pam Beadell are the founders and Executive Directors of Missions Made Possible (MMP), a nonprofit organization that is committed to inspiring God’s people to participate in mission work. MMP has visited Shepherd Homes for the past 4 years, bringing along short-term mission teams to minister to the children and work on important projects vital in meeting the needs within the facilities. Special thanks to Dr. Mike Johnson, Uncle Carl and Linda Schwanbeck,, Tim and Nancy Beckwith, Phil Hagel, Bob and Judy Blake and Ashley Beadell for their continuing support. Top Left photo: Tim and Pam with teens during recognition day.Bottom left: Nathan and Tim performing water baptism and dedication to teens. Below: MMP team. Where We Are: Quezon City Office / Facility: 124 A. Luna Project 4 Quezon City Philippines (632) 4393644 Zambales Office / Facility: Terraville Village, Burgos San Antonio Zambales Philippines (047) 9134307 Baguio Office / Facility: 432 Purok Youngland Camp 7 Baguio City 17 Commitment Response If you wish to support the work of Shepherd of the Hills. Please send checks to: United States donors: Write check to: New Hope International Christian Center 10046 Maple St. Bellflower , CA 90706 or Missions Made Possible PO Box 003 Champlin, MN 55316 Write in the memo field: For Shepherd of the Hills All donations are tax deductible. Above entities are registered with 501-C-3 status. 18 Philippine donors: Write check to: Shepherd of the Hills Children’s Foundation or Deposit support to: Acct. Name: Shepherd of the Hills US$ Accnt. No.: 028210000315 Peso Acct. No.: 02800000462-8 Swift Code: 028210000412 pabiphmm Bank of Commerce, Cubao branch Quezon City , Philippines 1109 Call the office at: 4393694 and look for Geoffrey Roca, Admin. Secretary, for more information on how you can help. Visit: www.shepherdofthehills.org.ph Special thanks to the following persons/contributors/supporters/partners: Contour Visual, Mike and Paige Muhling, Denny & Claudia Debner, Venise Lewis, Mr. Mark Crea, Mr. Ang, Mr.Hector and Jackie Ang,. Jeanne Ang, Mr. Leo and Leila Caldito, Mr. Paul Bautista, Dave Quitoriano, Pastor & Mrs. Sonny Oaman, Pastor & Mrs. Manny Moleta, Nelfa B. Karen Aguilar, Boni De Jesus, Marisol Llenado, Barry and Mavis Cook, Joe & Espie,Gonzaga,, Wallie & John Tupal, Ptr. Eric & Ruth Angeles, Elizabeth Demarco, Dave Estes, Carol Hollen,Edward Echevarria, Rev. Graham Stones, Rev. John & Christine Hughes, Jaren & Rose Lapasaran, Steve & Liel Wills, Ralph Lampman, Mr. Troutman, Saby Chaterjee, Matt Kushell, , Didit Linden, Cheryl Robinson, Richarch Dickson, Rachael Butt, David Baines, Angie Archer, Riza Lozada, Lott Deleon, Deena Benson, Richard & Boots Layton, Jenny Aquino, Robert Nimchuck. Carol Martin, Michelle Harshbarger and to all who have made significant effort to help the children of SOTH. Shepherd of the Hills’ work and mission are faithfully supported by individuals, churches, companies, & Organizations, as well as in partnership with: Friends, Clients and Employees of: US Peace Corps Philippines