World Megazine Sophia Lee - Posted 04/01/2019 https://world.wng.org/2019/04/helpers_without_bylines?fbclid=IwAR39t92sCIc0S3br890ovNr0uWH-eZE8aScWNBkvI9xYUn6YL84TpOgCXHA Sometimes reporting can be lonely work, especially when you’re a print journalist with no companion other than a notebook. Just look at the byline. How many names do you see on there?
But any journalist’s work is only as good as the help he or she finds along the way, and finding that help takes a bit of luck, or in my perspective, God’s providence. Those people who help us journalists—whether it’s through connecting us with sources, feeding us story ideas, or even just listening to us ramble and rant about our latest stories—don’t share the bylines. But they are still there, guiding and inspiring and encouraging the writer behind the words. God has blessed me with many such helpers in my six years as a full-time journalist, and I’d like to introduce you to the most recent two, Stan Lee and his wife Blanca. Stan and Blanca are missionaries in Tijuana, a Mexican border city near San Diego. They’re in their 60s (both are coy about sharing their exact age) and are founders of Relevant to Cross Ministries, which cooperates with Mexican and U.S. churches to minister to the homeless, deportees, and migrants in Tijuana. Stan is a former CPA who was born in South Korea but lived in Argentina, New York, and New Jersey. Blanca used to serve Youth With A Mission and was born and raised in Mexico City. They met about three years ago in Tijuana and still act like honeymooners, holding hands often and doing everything together. Stan originally moved to Tijuana to enjoy his retirement in an affordable city. But he saw that the harvest was plentiful, and soon, just as he was about to snuggle into a comfortable life, he felt God calling him to ministry. Now Stan works part time as a CPA again to fund his ministry work. After all, Jesus promised His yoke would be easy and His burden would be light, but never did He say Christians would be released from all yokes and burdens. And so Stan and Blanca plod on in their ministry, carrying the burden of missions and discipleship. When I began reporting on the migrant crisis at the southern border, I had no idea where to start—or rather, with whom to start. I didn’t know anyone in Tijuana, and I didn’t speak Spanish (shame on me, after four years of Spanish classes in high school). The first time I visited Tijuana, I brought a Mexican American friend who taught me how to cross the border by foot and who interpreted for me. The second time, the pastor I was supposed to meet never showed up, and I ended up waiting for three hours in a hilly part of town that I later learned was occupied by a drug lord. On my third trip, I met Stan and Blanca through an old church connection and—jackpot!—they’ve been my Tijuana-based colleagues ever since. I heard Stan before I met him and Blanca. He was yelling on his phone and waving energetically at me from the other side of the road. When he saw the busy street, he bounded across the road to make sure I didn’t try to cross it by myself, then yelled over at his wife to wait for him before weaving back through the traffic, opening up a path for me like Moses parting the sea. That’s Stan, the gentleman. He takes care of his wife the same way, lending her his hand as she climbs out of the car, offering an arm as she walks down the hill, translating our conversation for her in Spanish so she isn’t left out. I observed him as a helper in other settings, too. Wherever we went, Stan never forgot his primary mission. He always looked for opportunities to evangelize and invite people to a church fellowship: He recruited an Uber driver to help him transport furniture for his ministry. He invited a deportee and his friend to Bible classes. He invited a Honduran migrant family to church. In the time I’ve gotten to know him, I’ve noticed that Stan doesn’t try to take charge but rather connects people he meets to local churches. He may come up with a ministry idea, such as creating churches for the Central American migrant groups who arrived in caravans to Tijuana, but he then takes a step back so local church leaders can take the lead. He seems to embrace his role as a helper and a bridge, not the main star. Stan … may come up with a ministry idea, such as creating churches for the Central American migrant groups who arrived in caravans to Tijuana, but he then takes a step back so local church leaders can take the lead. Over my next four reporting trips to Tijuana, Stan and Blanca were almost always by my side, leading me up and down steep canyons, introducing me to local pastors, and laboring to interpret all my persistent questions and my interviewees’ responses. Blanca speaks little English, so my communication with her has been limited to very basic Spanish phrases, along with the sharing of smiles and pictures of her children and grandchildren. But Stan’s first language is Korean, so he and I mostly converse in Korean, occasionally switching back and forth between Korean and English. Poor Stan. Interpreting is hard work, especially when you’re trilingual and you’ve got too many languages caroming in your head. Sometimes he gets the languages confused: Once he accidentally spoke Korean to a Haitian pastor and then turned to speak Spanish to me. Another time he spoke English to a Honduran asylum-seeker without realizing it and then patiently waited for the blank-faced man to respond. “Um, you’re speaking English, not Spanish,” I reminded him. He let out a cry: “Argh! Sophia is really putting me to work!” Ah well, I never promised that helping me would be easy. I asked Stan and Blanca to sacrifice their time and have given them little but headaches in return. Yet though their names are not on the byline, without them, there would have been no story. So here’s to our helpers with no bylines.
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The Christian Post Jan 23, 2019_ By Stan Lee, Voices Contributors https://www.christianpost.com/voice/haitian-migrants-success-story-inspires-plans-mexican-side-border.html?fbclid=IwAR1k-H62KLIl0tXI5-dqB1QKm4m7LPJMM_puwBIzvhDj7efLvptCJKLbHoA Today, while migrants continue to caravan from Central America and arrive at the US border with Mexico, their stories often painted in various shades of gloom, a different kind of picture emerged in Tijuana a couple of years ago.
As someone who lives and works in ministry on the border between San Diego and Tijuana, I’ve witnessed a “caravan” success story while working with the Haitian migrants who arrived to the same spot two years ago. At that time, some 15,000 Haitian migrants who had moved to Brazil in search of work traveled north, mostly by land, winding up at the American border crossings that lead to Southern California. Some of those migrants were allowed to enter the US, however, another 5,000 decided to stay on the Mexican side in Baja, making Tijuana home. It now seems like a distant memory that the Haitians moved out of the temporary refugee shelters relatively quickly to live in their own houses. Ask many residents or careful observers in Baja about the Haitians now living in Tijuana and you’ll find that there is a general consensus that they have achieved full integration into everyday living and enjoy gainful activities, whether working in stores or factories, or managing their own small businesses. The Haitian success story in Baja includes not only a people group holding the exterior trappings of a place to live and work, but more importantly, the blessing of a spiritual home. With the help of local pastors and ministry leaders, church doors were opened to their own Haitian congregations in Tijuana. There are more than four prominent Haitian churches or groups in the area with many more smaller groups and fellowships. The largest church has nearly 200 members and is still growing. Last December, this very same congregation along with others had a joint crusade event for three evenings in the First Baptist Church located in downtown Tijuana. Everyone was invited, including believers and non-believers, and Mexican-born neighbors of all socio-economic backgrounds. During the conclusion of the outreach, the Haitians celebrated the “harvest” by hosting a dinner of abundant Haitian delicacies as well as an amazing gift-exchange. That celebration again confirmed our observations that Baja had become a second home for the Haitian migrants. Initially, the phenomenon was inconceivable for everyone on both sides of the border: Haitian refugees and local Baja people coexisting. However, Christians within Mexico helped "build a church" instead of partaking solely in humanitarian efforts. How did the Haitians transform from refugees who wandered for five long years through various South American countries after a tragic earthquake devastated their country to productive citizens of Baja? Besides being a resourceful lot, a number of them sought God for help. Each Sunday morning the Haitians attend a worship service in their own church. On Thursday evenings, there’s a prayer service. Their prayers are ones of gratitude and prayers to be used by God. In March, ten or more pastors and leaders of the First Baptist Church/Haitian Congregation in downtown Tijuana are starting a 3-year, evening classes program at Gloria Seminary, also in Tijuana, where students will be ordained as ministers upon graduating. Can you see how God’s preparation for this part of Mexico is being played out? Maybe it’s part of God’s plan for Haitians to be evangelizing Mexicans. "As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts ( NIV - Isaiah 55:9). God’s ways are eternally and immensely higher than ours and His plan for the Central American migrants, while concealed to us now, will be revealed in His timing. Earlier this month, a group of local pastors who were joined by American and Korean pastors and ministry workers, held a roundtable discussion in the tiny town of La Mision in Baja, one hour south of Tijuana. The 15 of us prayed for God’s will and guidance and at the end of two days of meetings, a plan of action was created: let’s use whatever resources God has and will provide and help the Central Americans plant their own churches. Our goal is to have churches planted before July (2019). This Saturday (1/26/19), we will be holding a prayer and strategies meeting at El Chaparral Border Church http://elchaparralchurch.weebly.com/ located only steps from the border. At this first public meeting, we plan to actively search for interested leaders among the migrants. We want people that come from the Central American migrant community in Tijuana to be their own leaders. Within a 6-month period, our initiative should be one that is owned by the migrants themselves. We will continue to provide mentorship and intercessory prayer. Very soon, we’d like to see our first Christian Central American leader. |
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