Tag Archive - fairweather

GiveBack: A New Web-Presence for Arise Ministries…

Earlier in the year, I wrote an article about the ministry of Jack Fairweather in the Philippines.  Jack is establishing an orphanage outside of Manila for kids that are literally living alone on the street.  Since that time, I’ve stayed in contact with Jack and donated some branding, design and social media consultation to Arise Ministries and I’d like to share the results with you…

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This is the header image from the new Arise website… The little blond girl in the photo is Jack’s daughter… I encourage you to follow the link and read about the work that Jack and his wife, Tammy, are doing with these street kids.

WOP will be partnering with Arise Ministries to help these kids by continually promoting their ministry.  This is not a paid endorsement… I just really believe in the work that they do and their heart to serve…

Joy-Joy

Jack tells me that one of the big challenges of helping orphans in the Philippines is redefining the term “orphan.” In the US, there are only a handful of actual orphans and the vast majority are cared for by relatives, foster parents, or relatively well-funded children’s homes.

In the Philippines, it is a very different story. There are unusually high adult mortality rates from opportunistic diseases like tuberculosis, which are virtually unheard of in the US. When you combine this with the trappings of extreme poverty like drug-use and crime, you get a situation that overwhelms the normal government and non-profit systems that exist to handle traditional “orphans”.

This is Joy-Joy, age 7

This is Joy-Joy, age 7

This is Joy-Joy, she’s 7 and she’s not a traditional “orphan”…

Joy-joy’s mother is a drug-addict who drifts around Manilla, picking pockets to support her habit.  She has 9 brothers and sisters who are scattered all over town. For the first few years of her life, he lived with her father, but now he has been in jail for several years.

So, Joy-Joy drifts too.

There’s not any family or foster-care program for her to go to and the overwhelmed government agency that is tasked with the care of these kids is little more than a kennel… A couple that abuses crystal-meth lets her sleep on their floor…

She has worms and lice and is malnourished… She has never been to school…

Joy-Joy needs a sponsor. For $40/month, you can provide food, clothing, a home with caring parents, school supplies and medical care. 

If you are interested in supporting the ministry of LifeChange Philippines to these kids through prayer or financial means, you can contact Jack Fairweather via email or by phone at (720)384-5820.

Raffy…

When I talked to Jack Fairweather last week, I asked him about the kids that he and his wife, Tammy, are serving in the Philippines.

Twenty minutes into the interview, I start feeling like we need to change course… We’ve talked a lot about “people living in poverty” and “street kids” but I know that Jack spent four months building relationships with them… He has stories…

All missionaries have stories…

So I ask Jack to tell me about 2 of the street kids that he works with. I give him a numerical limit because I know how missionaries are with their stories… And I haven’t had lunch yet.

Raffy, age 6

Raffy, age 6

He begins without hesitating. I want to tell you about Raffy… He’s the first child that we took in and he’s sort of the “poster child” for us right now… There are tens of thousands of kids in the same predicament as Raffy…

Jack goes on to recount the night he met Raffy. He was out in Manilla with a Filipino friend, riding around in a taxi and trying to identify kids who had no parents. They stopped in a place where there was a group of homeless people standing around and began asking questions. Soon, a woman introduced them to Raffy.

Raffy had been living on the streets alone for months… 6 years old and only 20 lbs. His mother had died of tuberculosis and his father was in jail.

So, Jack identified him to be involved with a missions group that was coming in March.

During the 2 weeks that the team from Colorado ministered alongside Jack, he continued to build a relationship with Raffy. It became more and more difficult to leave the little boy on the street at night.

But because Jack and Tammy knew that they were coming back to the US for several month in May, they planned on NOT taking in any kids until they returned to set up a permanent home there.

Finally, Jack’s heart couldn’t do it anymore. One night, when we were taking him back to sleep on the street, I just knew in my spirit that I couldn’t leave him there… Jack asked one of the ladies standing around about how Raffy got food at night and she told him that most nights, Raffy cried himself to sleep, alone and hungry…

Raffy lives with Jack and Tammy now.

At the doctor’s office, Raffy was diagnosed with malnutrition, worms, lice and tuberculosis. He had a 104 degree fever and perforated eardrums with seeping infections in both ears. Raffy had never been to school and had severely delayed language development.

Jack tells me that today, Raffy is gaining weight, he’s taking medication that will clear up his tuberculosis and he’s enrolled in school. I happen to also know that Jack personally visited with Raffy’s father in prison.

Remind you of anythimg?

“For I was hungry and you fed me, I was thirsty and you gave me a drink. I was a stranger and you took me in. Naked and you clothed me, sick and you cared for me, in prison and you visited me.”
                                                                                        -Jesus, Matthew 25:35-36, The Bible

Raffy has a sponsor. An American family here in Colorado sponsors him at a cost of $40/month. Raffy will get food, clothing, a home with caring parents, school supplies and medical care.

Tomorrow, we’ll feature Jack’s story about Joy-Joy, a little girl with a similar story.

If you are interested in supporting Jack’s ministry to these kids through prayer or financial means, you can contact him via email or by phone at (720)384-5820.

Arise Mission Video

John Prichard was kind enough to provide us with this pre-release video of his short film featuring missionary Jack Fairweather. Read our interview with John and Jack here.

Interview with John Prichard & Jack Fairweather…

Student filmmaker, John Prichard, with missionary, Jack Fairweather. John spent his spring break shooting footage for a short film about Jack's ministry to street kids in the Philippines.

Student filmmaker, John Prichard, with missionary, Jack Fairweather. John spent his senior spring break shooting footage for a short film about Jack's ministry to street kids in the Philippines.

You don’t have to be around Jack Fairweather long to get a sense of his calling… Like most missionaries, he can’t help but tell you the stories.

John Prichard has a air of anticipation surrounding him… Starting college at the University of Colorado (Denver, not Boulder, he’s quick to point out) this fall dominates the landscape in his life.

I finally hooked up with the two of them today at the offices of LifeChange International, an organization that provides accountability and guidance to missionaries on four continents, and the conversation that we had was challenging, inspiring and engaging. 

Jack got back from a four-month visit to the Philippines in May, to attend his graduation from Denver Seminary and begin raising support for a permanent mission there.  He has a vision for building an entire community, 100 orphaned children and 57 impoverished families just to start, to provide these kids who live on the street with shelter, food, clothing, medical care and education, to help families without the means to care for their kids with housing and a means to become self-supporting. As he talks about it, I can’t help but get excited about the possibilities.

Jack started working with people in poverty while he was a student minister in Omaha, NE. Sensing that this was something God wanted them to pursue, he and his wife, Tammy,  trained to be medics and went to the Philippines to serve people in poverty there. He tells us about an evening that he observed several young kids laying out their cardboard beds on the streets and thought, This can’t be right, in the Kingdom of God, this just can’t be right.  

Kids in the Philippines end up on the street because their parents die, are unable to care for them or get duped to sell them into human trafficking scams.  The child-welfare system is overwhelmed and even with other charitable organizations operating in the country, tens-of-thousands of children under the age of 12 have no homes, no family and no food to eat.

John is wearing a t-shirt that says, Give blood, play rugby, and that makes me smile. I happen to know that he plays rugby and has had his share of bumps and scrapes. He’s good-looking, athletic and smart.  He articulates his ideas well and I have to continually remind myself that he just graduated from high school. I ask him why he wanted to spend his senior spring break with some of the poorest kids on the planet instead of being on the beach with the hotties. His response amazes me, Outreach is the most important thing that Christians can do, he explains, And I wanted to make the film to bring back some of the emotions of serving the poor that people here can’t even imagine.

John has built homes for the poor in Mexico as well and describes the conditions there:  In Juarez, there are families that live in holes… literal holes in the ground.  And as poor as they seem to us, these kids in the Philippines would seem poor to someone from Juarez… These kids in the Philippines don’t even have a hole to sleep in.  Seeing the conditions in the Philippines, has changed him and given him purpose.  He wants to work internationally as a filmmaker and bring attention to the conditions that exist in developing nations and challenge people to take action to help.

Jack hopes that John’s film will bring awareness to the plight of the poor and kindle a passion to serve the poor among Christians… to give a voice to the poor and to help Christians see God’s heart for those living in poverty. John wants the film to engage people emotionally and help them see that they can and should be active in making a difference in the lives of the poor.

I ask Jack about the kids and he’s ready with stories. When they went back in January, their plan was to study logistics, do some work with a clinic and NOT take-in any kids; but by the time they came home in May, they had 7 kids living with them. A Filipino friend is taking care of them while Jack and Tammy are here in the states. He talks about a little boy named Raffy, and gets a far-away look. Tammy and I will be his caregivers when we go back, he says… I suppose some things are too close to his heart to delegate…

On Monday, we’re going to share Jack’s stories about Raffy and a little girl named Joy-joy and how you can become involved in this ministry …

You can make a tax-deductible donation to Jack’s ministry through LifeChange by clicking here.

Want to see the pre-release version of John’s film? We’ll post the link later today…