Family chain supports orphans |
Written by Jeremy Burns |
Tuesday, 24 December 2013 11:58 AM America/New_York |
Thanksgiving sales to fund Haiti building project Family Christian Stores and the chain’s customers raised $278,673 Thanksgiving weekend to help build a new neonatal orphanage in Haiti through Family’s Haiti Challenge program. “Just look at what our customers did,” said Family Christian President and CEO Cliff Bartow. “Their generosity and desire to do good are inspiring. Together we can now look forward to seeing these resources used by our God to rescue the lives of some of Haiti’s most vulnerable as He sees this project all the way through to completion.” The monies raised through the challenge will be used to begin building the orphanage in partnership with God’s Littlest Angels, a ministry that has been serving the children of Haiti since 1994. In Haiti, one in five children die before the age of 5. Sixty percent of those do not reach their first birthday. Haiti also has the highest rate of maternal deaths in the Western Hemisphere, the chain reported. “The situation for Haitian preemies—and particularly orphaned preemies—is especially dire,” said Dixie Bickel, co-founder of God’s Littlest Angels. “But God continues to amaze us with how He provides for the children we serve.” “We are grateful to Family Christian and its wonderful customers for their incredible generosity,” Bickel added. “Lives will be saved because of it.” “Together, Family Christian, its customers and my reader friends used this past Thanksgiving weekend to send a message: Orphans matter,” said No. 1 New York Times best-selling author Karen Kingsbury, ambassador for The Haiti Challenge. Groundbreaking for the orphanage will happen in February. Family Christian will continue its efforts to cover the entire $500,000 cost of the building project by inviting customers to donate directly to the orphanage online at www.FamilyChristian.com/Haiti. When complete, the facility will be able to serve more than 75 babies at a time. Once children are nursed to good health, they will transition back to their birth family or to an adoptive family. To date, 100% of the orphans in the program have found a home with “forever families.” |