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"We
never have
been told
that it is
OK to wait
until marriage
to have sex," said
one teen
boy from
Chifubu High
School in
Ndola, Zambia.
His life
was changed
as he let
go of the
pressure
to be sexually
active in
a nation
where the
average age
of first
sexual activity
is twelve
and the life
expectancy
is 39 due
to a 16-22%
HIV/AIDS
prevalency.
Dannah Gresh,
one of the
America's
top best-selling
teen authors
with works
like And
the Bride
Wore White and Secret
Keeper,
took a team
of 29 students
and adults
to Africa
under her
mentoring
to fight
HIV/AIDS.
Veiw our photo album by clicking on the photos below for a larger veiw.
It all started
in 2003 when
Dannah was asked
to write a government
school abstinence
curriculum to
reduce the prevalance
of HIV/AIDS in
Zambia. Over
100,000 children
and teens in
this country
will be educated
using the curriculum.
Just one thing
was slowing the
Zambians down—funding.
"Though
the initiative
is Zambian
based, we saw
very quickly
that a lack
of capital
was a problem," says
Dannah whose
curriculum
has been used
with 25,000
students to
date. "The
unemployment
rate is eighty
percent, making
even the money
to hire a taxi
to get to the
schools too
much."
Dannah and her
husband, Bob,
founder of Grace
Prep High School,
decided to invite
students from
the school to
help. The Greshes
explained to
the students
that "all" they
needed to do
was raise some
individual funds,
get some large
grants and fly
to Africa, but
grant requests
were quickly
rejected. That's
when the task
became "God-sized." The
students hearts
were committed
by then and over
$120,000 was
raised within
a year mostly
in denominations
of 10's and $20's
and $50's from
about two thousand
private donors.
With the funds
collected, twenty-nine
team members
set out for Zambia
to build a piggery/fishery
that would fund
the educational
work there. In
addition to starting
the farm, the
students presented
abstinence and
secondary virginity
as options to
over 4,000 Zambian
youth in their
government schools.
Zambian teens aren't the only ones who
learned during the 13 day trip.
"Only
18% of the
world lives
like we do," recalls
13-year old
Amber Devlin
after seeing
the extreme
poverty. The
change from
the term "third
world nation" to "majority
world nation" better
represents
the 82% world
poverty.
"Anything
you see on
TV about children
in majority
world countries
starving, is
nothing like
seeing them
in real life," expresses
Meagan Wilkinson,
a Grace Prep
junior. "I
was surprised
at what I felt.
When I was
standing in
the compound,
I just felt
out of place,
like a pompous
American who
thinks I’m
making a difference,
but they made
the difference
in me."
The Pure Freedom
ministry will
continue to mentor
the Zambian-based
abstinence education
team and will
look for God-sized
ways to support
them. Our goals
include reaching
100,000 Zambian
students, completing
the farm to add
30,000 bream
fingerlings (fish)
and breeding
our first few
piglets to have
a capacity of
50 pigs available
to sell at a
time. The resources
of sales will
be used to fund
abstinence education
including expenses
of the organization
managing the
curriculum and
payment to our
facilitators
so they can feed
their families. Future
projects may
include more
trips, so watch
our website for
details. Be sure
to buy and Zambian-made
necklace at any
of our Pure Freedom
events or as
an add-on to
your order on
the web book
store. Every
penny of your
donation of $5
or more goes
directly to this
work in Zambia.
|

Several of the
Grace Prep students
felt like the difference
included receiving
a life calling
to missions.

"I
found my calling," writes Grace
Prep senior Briana
Ragan to Dannah. "I
remember one night
you telling us
that if we feel
the desire to
cry, it may not
be out of pity
or pain, but
it's from the Holy
Spirit, and every
time I think
of Zambia and
the impact that
we made (and
I am confident
we only
saw the surface
of it) those
tears from the
Holy Spirit come
flowing. When
I speak about
the trip, the
people, the culture
and our impact-
I feel that "Burning".
I know it's my
calling because
when I think
about the trip
I have an emotion
that begins in
my stomach and
crawls up my
throat and just come
bursting out
of my eyes. I
finally know
that this is
where I Am Called
to be. I don't
know when, or
where exactly,
or to do what,
but it's so amazing
to know that
you don't have
to know the details of
all that because
God will put
you where He
wants you to
be, as long as
you let Him and
listen. I am so
excited because
on one hand I
know what I'm
called to do,
but on the other,
it's a complete
leap of
faith because
I have no idea
where or when
He will call
me, but I will
go!"
"One
of our seniors,
Amy Munn,
felt like
it was her
life calling
to teach
elementary
school in
Zambia one
day," says
Bob Gresh. "Another
of our seniors,
Yuri Ramondelli,
hopes to
be a successful
businessman
who infuses
capital into
projects
like the
one he saw
in Zambia.
That's what
it's all
about. Grace
Prep's 40
points of
Grace states,
'We believe
in God-sized
tasks.' This
was one of
ours." |