Laymen Ministries

Vanuatu: Expansion

Three Angels Broadcasting Network

Program transcript

Participants: Jeff Reich

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Series Code: LM

Program Code: LM000127


00:53 On our last visit to Vanuatu in the spring of 2011,
00:56 the biggest change was the nearly completed
00:59 hangar house that had been under construction
01:01 for well over a year. When we were here in 2009
01:04 the construction site was still just a flat piece of dirt.
01:08 Now things are nearing completion.
01:10 And this actually is the end result of it right here
01:14 and it's turned into a very comfortable
01:16 accommodations for the family.
01:17 They have their own place now.
01:19 And we have a safe secure place for the airplane.
01:25 Having lived in Vanuatu for several years,
01:27 the Turnbull Family came to realize
01:28 they had several critical challenges.
01:30 They needed to solve in order to become
01:32 more efficient in their mission work.
01:34 They found that renting very small bungalows
01:36 and moving around made it difficult to organize
01:38 and keep track of all their medical equipment
01:40 and supplies as well as their own belongings.
01:43 Simply put, they needed a permanent place to live
01:46 with space to be more organized.
01:49 With the addition of the Maule airplane in 2007,
01:52 the project expanded to other islands.
01:55 There was the addition of more tools,
01:57 parts and equipment that were needed to service the airplane.
02:00 Fuel was also shipped from another island
02:03 and extra space was needed to store fuel drums on Gaua.
02:06 When severe tropical storms come,
02:09 the airplane needed to be protected.
02:11 Serving more islands also means more patients
02:14 and that in turn means more medical supplies were needed.
02:17 If patients were brought to Gaua for any kind of surgery,
02:20 then overnight accommodations were needed.
02:23 These and many other challenges could all be solved
02:25 with a larger permanent home
02:27 that also functioned as a hangar for the airplane.
02:30 And so in 2008, plans for a hangar home were made
02:34 and a small piece of land near the airstrip was purchased.
02:38 The laborious process of construction began.
02:40 Sand, rock and fresh water for mixing the concrete
02:43 was hauled many miles on the shoulders of these workers.
02:47 The labor was strenuous without machinery or vehicles.
02:50 Minimal tools were used.
02:52 Electricity for the power tools was scarce,
02:55 but the work continued forward.
02:57 Scotty, an Australian volunteer
02:59 came to Vanuatu in 2009 to oversee
03:01 the work on the foundation for the hangar house.
03:04 The concrete foundations were laid
03:06 that would support the steel trusses for the hangar.
03:09 Getting the trusses completed
03:10 was another challenge altogether.
03:12 Construction of the trusses took longer than expected.
03:15 Cyclone season was fast approaching
03:18 and the airplane needed to be protected.
03:20 When the trusses were completed,
03:22 Mark had difficulties getting a ship or to bring the trusses
03:25 to the island of Gaua.
03:27 Our second option was an extra trip this coming week,
03:30 but that's fallen through as well.
03:32 So now we're gonna have to go
03:33 and find another ship to do the job.
03:36 Because of their size they wouldn't fit on some ships
03:39 and frankly some of the shippers
03:40 just did not want to deal with the hassle.
03:43 Finally Mark was able to get the trusses to the Island of Gaua,
03:46 but the larger ship could not dock directly on dry land.
03:50 This meant the trusses and the aluminum siding
03:52 had to be carefully carried over the water
03:55 on the shower coral reefs,
03:56 while trying to prevent the corrosive salt water
03:59 from touching anything, the trusses were then lifted
04:02 and pulled in the place by a crew of men.
04:05 The siding and inner infrastructure was then added.
04:08 Today the hangar house is nearly finished.
04:10 It has proven to be a tremendous blessing
04:12 to the Turnbull Family and their mission work.
04:17 Doing a little maintenance on the plane, Marcos?
04:20 Yeah, just checking a wire that's loose on oil pressure.
04:25 I just explain to our friends about how the hangar house
04:28 came into being, I thought maybe I'd like to,
04:30 you know, show them around a little bit and telling them
04:31 I know the place is a little bit of a mess right now
04:34 because you're kind of still under construction a bit.
04:36 Yeah. What's happening down here?
04:38 Okay, well, as you said it's in a bit of mess,
04:40 but the bottom flow here is gonna be a cement slab
04:46 and we have a washing area here
04:48 that's where Naomi does her washing up.
04:50 Over here we're hoping to have some kind of a workshop area
04:55 because we've always got stuff that we need to--
04:57 for maintenance purposes, even maintenance on the aircraft
05:01 so that side is gonna be built-in.
05:03 We're actually gonna leave a section here.
05:06 This will be--we've used this already as an evangelistic hall
05:10 and we wanted to retain that capability
05:13 so we're gonna have a place here
05:15 where we can have a screen up here
05:17 and in here people will-- We can have church services
05:22 or whatever if there is a need for a large group of people.
05:25 As you look up there you can see we've got a kind of like
05:28 an amphitheatre type situation here,
05:30 where people can go out on the grass
05:32 so we can have a lot of people here.
05:34 So that's another aspect of it or watching videos,
05:37 showing Christian videos.
05:41 This will be good for that.
05:42 So this will be maintenance area.
05:44 We're gonna build some roofing here
05:47 and we're gonna extend our area up the back here
05:49 so we got a bit more space, more rooms.
05:52 Round the back here, we're gonna build--
05:55 We're actually in the process now planning stages
05:58 to build a health facility right here.
06:00 It's a pretty tight fit in this little patch of ground here.
06:04 This is where we gonna have our health facility
06:06 so we can deal with some surgery,
06:09 some emergency surgery, mostly minor surgery
06:12 and some of the big cases that we bring in
06:14 from outer islands or transfer for evacuation,
06:18 with a couple of inpatient rooms
06:20 in case we have people overnight, for example,
06:22 or delivery cases, etcetera.
06:25 So let me take you upstairs
06:27 and we'll have a look at what's upstairs.
06:30 It is the big home for us.
06:33 From our point of view it feels big.
06:35 It's good because we can have plenty of visitors that way.
06:37 Here we have like a big breezeway.
06:39 This is like a veranda which helps us
06:42 when it's raining, we have hurricanes here,
06:45 we have lot of heavy tropical downpours
06:47 and so sometimes washing is bit of crisis,
06:51 so that's why we've got washing lines here.
06:53 And we got big open space here
06:54 which sort of overflow area if there is a lot of people
06:58 like to fly and build group who came to stay with us.
07:01 And upstairs we have storage space.
07:04 We've got nice big open space up there in the attic area.
07:08 So if you come in here we'll have just a--let now,
07:11 let me go through the building itself,
07:12 but this is going to be a kitchen area and living area.
07:16 This is a bedroom which is serving as a kitchen
07:20 and here's Naomi, she is working in the kitchen
07:22 and she is gonna lead us through a bit more.
07:25 Oh, hi.
07:26 Welcome to the temporary kitchen.
07:30 Yeah, as Mark was just saying soon this will become
07:32 a bedroom, but for the moment, it's serving as a kitchen.
07:34 And do you want to take a look at my oven over here?
07:38 This is my oven for baking bread or pizzas or whatever
07:41 we need to bake and it's three burner stove.
07:46 I don't have a kitchen sink as yet, but it's coming.
07:49 I think it'll be installed in the next few weeks.
07:52 Okay, this will serve at here as a kitchen,
07:56 dining, family area. Nice big open space.
07:59 And we're looking forward to getting that whole finish stuff
08:03 in the next couple of months hopefully.
08:05 We got another bedroom in here.
08:06 This is where our daughter Kay sleeps at the moment
08:10 when she is at home.
08:11 Okay, then this is my office and work area here.
08:15 Still working on a lot of things here as marking school books
08:18 and doing that sort of stuff so that's my little corner.
08:22 And then in here is Mark's office.
08:26 And this is where all the communication takes place
08:29 in here with tele radio and emails
08:33 and all that sort of things happens in this little room.
08:36 Okay, now the next room in here is bedroom for the moment.
08:41 We still haven't quite moved in properly yet.
08:44 We're still living out of suitcases,
08:45 but we shall be getting some shelving
08:48 and hanging space soon for the clothes to be hung up
08:51 and get things a little more organized
08:53 as we get more shelving put in.
08:56 We've got couple of girls that are staying with us
09:00 because they live faraway,
09:01 their families are quite a long distance,
09:03 it's a long way for them to walk to school each day,
09:05 so they're sleeping here.
09:08 They go home for a break when the school holidays
09:11 or sometimes on the weekend.
09:12 So we're really thankful that we've got space to do this now.
09:15 We haven't been able to do this for the last five years
09:17 of our time here in Vanuatu, we never had enough space
09:20 when visitors came like even Jeff and Mike when they came,
09:24 we had to borrow accommodation
09:26 from other people, so we really blessed that now
09:29 we have space for people to come and stay
09:31 and be hospitable towards them
09:34 which is a great blessing for us.
09:35 And we hope it will be used more in the future
09:38 as other people come and volunteer
09:40 and come to help the project here in Vanuatu.
09:44 We hope you've enjoyed going on a little tour with us
09:46 to see what the Lord's been doing here in Vanuatu.
09:49 Yeah, thanks for joining us.
09:51 And we just want to say thank you to the many people
09:53 who have been involved in this building project
09:55 and they've helped with funding, helped in different ways
09:58 for the actual building process,
09:59 some have come long way to help us.
10:02 And this building is already proven to be a great blessing.
10:06 It's now like an operating base for our service.
10:09 We're gonna have the health facility outside
10:12 and so that we'll enhance it further.
10:15 And we are confident that God
10:17 has great plans for this project.
10:19 Thank you for supporting the project
10:21 those of you who've been involved
10:22 and just please pray for us
10:24 because there's a lot of work before us.
10:26 Often times, people write and ask me
10:29 why the Turnbull Family chose to live on Gaua
10:31 when there is an active volcano on the island.
10:34 I sat down with Mark and asked him
10:35 to answer that very question.
10:38 Yeah, Vanuatu is very close to the New Hebrides Trench
10:45 which is one of the boundaries of the earth plates, right?
10:51 And so there are a lot of earthquakes here.
10:54 It's actually one of the most active areas
10:57 for earthquakes in the world.
11:00 On top of that, we have volcanoes here.
11:03 And this particular island has very potentially
11:07 very dangerous volcano
11:08 because it's sitting underneath a big lake
11:12 and so water plus fire make steam
11:15 and so steam is extremely powerful.
11:17 Anybody who studied the steam engine knows that.
11:20 It could explode and blow the island to pieces.
11:25 So and then with earthquakes
11:27 you have the possibility of tsunamis
11:29 and this is already located in the place
11:32 that's got a lot of cyclones,
11:34 you know, coming through hurricanes.
11:35 So there's a lot of natural disasters taking place
11:39 or potentially taking place in this area at any one moment,
11:42 so it is a dangerous place to live.
11:46 Gaua out of all the islands in the banks
11:48 is the most dangerous in terms of the volcano.
11:51 Now the last time, it irrupted which was at the end of 2009.
11:57 We were certainly questioning why we're based on Gaua.
12:00 Something that we've got used to,
12:03 we can see the volcano up over the hill there
12:06 and it just smokes away
12:08 and all we can say is if it does get very dangerous here
12:12 then we just pray that God will open our eyes to the situation
12:15 and we'll just move on before we get affected by it,
12:19 but there are a lot of people living here
12:22 and all of them are in the same predicament as we are.
12:27 We believe it was providential that we came here
12:29 and God let us here and we believe
12:32 that God is quite willing and capable of leading us away
12:39 from here if there is gonna be some danger
12:41 involved in being here.
12:43 I'd rather be at the hands of nature
12:47 because God controls nature and God can stop that earthquake
12:51 or He can stop that volcano from erupting.
12:54 I'd rather be in the hands of nature
12:55 than be in the hands of man.
12:58 But in terms of the aircraft, Gaua is definitely
13:02 the best place to be because Gaua
13:05 is the gateway to the northern part of Vanuatu.
13:10 It's the first stop when you're going north from Santo
13:13 which is a refilling base and our shopping area,
13:16 you know, that's where we get supplies from.
13:19 And so going north, Gaua is first stop.
13:24 Gaua is simply relocated,
13:26 relative to the unreached islands to the north
13:28 and the more developed islands to the south.
13:30 This puts Gaua in a key location for easier
13:33 and faster access to the unreached islands
13:36 especially in emergencies.
13:38 There are currently finished airstrips
13:40 on the Islands of Gaua, Lo, Vanua Lava and Mota.
13:44 In the last year, three new airstrips
13:46 have been completed on the Islands of Tegua,
13:49 Mere Lava and Mota Lava.
13:51 There are plans for potential airstrips in the northwest
13:54 in the Vanua Lava, Hiw and Merig
13:57 which is just east of Gaua.
14:00 The next most pressing need for an airstrip is in Wasaga
14:03 which is on the southern tip of Vanua Lava.
14:06 They have a large population there
14:07 that could be reached for Christ.
14:10 And the school was started on Mere Lava
14:12 and few more are being planned for Mota and Toga Island.
14:15 When the Turnbulls move to Vanuatu in 2006.
14:19 Our objective was to reach
14:20 the undeveloped islands to the north.
14:23 As you can see progress is being made
14:25 and God is blessing our efforts.
14:27 One such blessing is the incredible story
14:30 on how an airstrip was recently finished on Mere Lava
14:33 in one of the most difficult to reach islands
14:36 in Northern Vanuatu.
14:39 The main thing is Jesus said
14:41 go and He said teach and heal
14:44 and help the people, minister to the needs of the people,
14:48 demonstrate God's love and then see what God does
14:52 and see how God can open up the doors
14:54 and that's exactly what's happening.
14:57 We have a lot of contact with Mere Lava
15:00 because Gaua contains a lot of Mere Lavaian people.
15:04 There are a lot of Mere Lavaians who moved
15:06 from Mere Lava to this island.
15:08 Mere Lava is like that.
15:10 It's a very tough island to live on.
15:11 And there are lot of the family ties across one of the two,
15:14 this Island of Mere Lava
15:16 which is 30 miles southeast of here.
15:18 And I have plans for school, but it's being very challenging.
15:21 Getting across to Mere Lava especially during about
15:24 nine months of the year when we have strong southeast winds.
15:28 It's a real challenge to go there by boat.
15:31 On one occasion, we took eight hours
15:32 to go this 30 nautical miles arriving there in the dark.
15:37 So the idea of using the aircraft was an obvious
15:41 alternative to think of, accept for the fact
15:43 that Mere Lava is really literally like that.
15:46 It's a very rich deep island.
15:48 And so one of my main objectives
15:51 when going there was to checkout the little peninsula.
15:55 There is a little flat peninsula
15:57 which goes out into the ocean of the northeast end
16:00 and that little tip there--
16:03 There's been a lot of talk about putting an airstrip
16:06 there for many years since, I think 30 years ago.
16:11 When we looked at that place it look like a machinery job,
16:14 it look like it was gonna be very difficult to do.
16:18 The one area that's has potential for an airstrip
16:21 is kind of curved, it's not really straight.
16:24 There is a lot of volcanic, various big stones in that area.
16:28 Most of this area you're hard pressed finding soil,
16:31 it's just gravelly stuff.
16:33 It's on a peninsula and the wind kind of rips across
16:36 the top of it.
16:37 Unfortunately at that time, I didn't know
16:39 how much was involved in making an airstrip.
16:42 This is new to me.
16:43 If I'd learn I think I would've,
16:46 I would've abandoned the idea.
16:49 And I got a GPS and I marked 200 meters.
16:52 And I said, "Well, if we're gonna start with 200 meters,
16:56 I wish telling them we could possibly
16:57 put an airstrip in here."
17:01 We can get in and out.
17:03 I think it's good. I think it's excellent.
17:06 I think the hillside is just right,
17:09 the up slopes and the down slopes are in the perfect place.
17:12 And I think it'll use about third of it
17:14 once you get a hand along how to fly in and out of here.
17:19 They just got right into it.
17:20 The people there have a very willing spirit,
17:24 a very active spirit
17:26 and they started clearing the ground with ropes.
17:29 We flew over the top and when we threw it down
17:32 a big shipping rope, a big thick rope
17:35 and they've used that ever since to pull
17:37 some of the big stones our the way.
17:39 We gave them a crowbar
17:42 and they used that to dig holes in the ground.
17:45 Some of these stones were so big that to get rid of them
17:47 they actually had to dig holes in the ground
17:50 and then push the stones into them and bury them,
17:52 that was the only way to deal with them.
17:54 Right here all these stones here were on this area,
17:59 it was very similar to what we see here.
18:02 That's what they worked with here
18:04 and it wasn't a flat area, it was very bumpy
18:08 and there were hills and they've had to extend it
18:10 in all directions to make an airstrip,
18:13 all of these done by hand.
18:14 What you were witnessing now
18:15 is exactly how this airstrip was made.
18:18 Men, women and children all contributed each caring
18:22 what they could.
18:23 Large rocks were laid down and stacked several feet high.
18:27 And smaller rocks and the sand
18:28 were laid on top to smooth out the surface.
18:31 This process continued for more than two years,
18:34 but when the airstrip was nearing completion,
18:37 a problem came up that brought all construction
18:39 to a halt and left the future of the airstrip in question.
18:43 We encountered a little bit of a few issues
18:47 where a gentleman who claimed to own the coconuts in that area
18:50 that already had been cut down by the local people there.
18:54 This man tried to take advantage of the situation
18:57 and started to claim that he was an actual
19:00 an owner of these of the land and the coconuts.
19:04 On top of that, they used a leaf
19:07 which is used tickle to Namele leaf
19:10 to trying and stop the work that people--
19:13 If they put a Namele leaf on something,
19:16 it stops any progress from going forward
19:19 until the chiefs have settled the issues.
19:21 Namele leaf is representative of like a spiritual
19:24 curse on anybody who go and go against the Namele leaf.
19:29 The Namele leaf is seen on the Vanuatu flag
19:31 as a symbol of peace.
19:33 When a Namele leaf is placed on the property of a business,
19:36 for example, it brings that business to a halt
19:39 and no employees will enter the premises
19:41 until the dispute is settled.
19:42 In this case, a Namele leaf was cut from the jungle
19:45 and placed on the airstrip under the cover of darkness
19:48 to halt its construction.
19:50 When this happens, only a chief has the authority
19:53 to remove the leaf without being subject
19:54 to the curse that leaf could bring.
19:57 The leaf was reported and eventually was taken down
20:00 just in time for Dr. Mark and veteran Maule pilot,
20:03 Jeremy Ainsworth to do the first test landing on Mere Lava.
20:09 On August 17th of 2010,
20:12 the 30 year dream of the natives of Mere Lava
20:14 became a reality when the wheels of the Maule airplane
20:17 touched down on the island.
20:32 Mike on the ground at Mere Lava little more active.
20:35 We ended up landing on,
20:36 it's a 160 meter patch of airstrip.
20:40 Jeremy is an excellent pilot.
20:42 And so we landed there and when we arrive,
20:45 the permanent chief of the island was there to welcome us
20:47 with huge crowd of people.
20:49 And we had a big celebration
20:52 for the opening of the airstrip.
21:03 And so anyway we came back to Gaua
21:05 and immediately I received a call from the troublemaker
21:11 who is questioning me about
21:14 whether I landed on Mere Lava or not
21:16 and I told him, "We just landed on Mere Lava."
21:18 And then he told me that
21:22 he insisted that we never go there,
21:25 I mean, not supposed to go there that,
21:27 he hadn't given approval for me to go and land there.
21:30 After Jeremy left, I went over the airstrip again
21:34 and although I didn't land, I did come close to the ground
21:39 and I dropped some more tools for the people
21:41 and then when I got back he called me again
21:45 and this time he threatened me again
21:47 and he said he was gonna burn the aircraft
21:51 and that he will destroy everything that we're doing.
21:55 And so I didn't know what to do.
22:01 I have to admit I was very, very concerned
22:03 because I had no intention of getting involved
22:06 in any kind of a battle with this man.
22:08 I was trying to help him, I was trying
22:10 to show respect to the chiefs
22:13 and to their authorities, the local authorities.
22:17 At this point we also produced DVD of the landing
22:21 and this DVD is just very poorly edited DVD.
22:26 It was nothing fancy at all, but it had a bit of music to it,
22:31 background music and it showed the landing
22:33 and a takeoff by Jeremy and hanging a flowers
22:36 and the celebration and everybody being happy.
22:38 And so this DVD without any words
22:41 it was just a message in visual with some music
22:46 and the music was about faith and we should trust in God.
22:50 And so this video just because this is Mere Lava,
22:54 you got to understand Mere Lava
22:55 airstrip has been talked about for years and some of said,
23:00 some of the old people in Mere Lava said
23:02 they didn't want to die
23:03 until they saw an aircraft land on Mere Lava.
23:05 It's some thing that been longing for years.
23:07 People have come all the way to Gaua
23:09 just to watch a plane land here.
23:10 Because on Mere Lava, they don't see planes,
23:13 they don't know what planes look like.
23:14 And so there was a lot of excitement
23:17 when the news was up that a plane had landed on Mere Lava.
23:20 And so this DVD just went like hotcakes,
23:23 it went allover the country
23:25 and they put it on the national television network,
23:28 it was on the local radio stations,
23:31 it was in the newspaper.
23:32 This DVD went-- It was in hot demand.
23:36 We were producing multiple copies, sending it everywhere
23:40 and the affect of this DVD was dramatic.
23:43 And I learn through that experience the power of media.
23:48 The power of a simple very poorly edited DVD
23:52 what it can do in a situation like that.
23:58 At this point in time,
23:59 I received the letter from a lawyer
24:02 and the troublemaker have got hold of
24:04 one of the best lawyers in the country
24:07 and the lawyer wrote to me and he was gonna take me to court
24:10 unless I pay $10,000 for some coconuts
24:16 that belong to the guy who is claiming to own them.
24:19 And so now I was-- It was like
24:23 I was half really in a state of doubt
24:26 and perplexity and discouragement,
24:29 but at the same time a lot of people were telling me
24:31 not to be discouraged, not to take any notice of this guy
24:34 just to keep it going in faith.
24:35 So I was in two minds, I have to admit.
24:38 And so anyway what happened was this DVD came out
24:43 and it really made a difficult for this man.
24:45 So just so happen there was a political conference on Gaua
24:48 and a lot of the chiefs came from Mere Lava.
24:50 When they came here, they had a gathering of the chiefs
24:52 and one of them was appointed to set up a letter
24:56 to respond to the lawyer who'd been challenging me.
25:00 And this letter it was an extremely powerful defense
25:05 on my behalf these chiefs were backing me up
25:08 completely on what I had done.
25:09 And they wrote a second letter later,
25:12 I requested another letter in which
25:14 I wanted absolute clear request from the chiefs
25:19 to come and land at Mere Lava.
25:21 So I had to resort to a lot of public measures
25:25 to in order to get this sort of the permission
25:29 to go and land there before I actually landed myself.
25:33 And so this whole thing was just like,
25:35 it was a big social battle and there was a lot of--
25:39 There was so much involved in it
25:42 and it was a real victory when finally earlier this year
25:48 I ended up landing myself at Mere Lava
25:50 when they had completed about 250 meters on the airstrip.
25:55 And so now we're flying in there regularly.
25:59 As I look back all I can say
26:01 is the whole experience bonded me more to them
26:04 then it could've in any other way.
26:06 So I believe that God actually allow this to happen.
26:09 The latest part of the story is that Chief Willy
26:12 who is the main chief of big stone
26:14 where the airstrip is,
26:15 he is the main chief in that area.
26:18 He decided that he wanted to adopt me as his son.
26:23 So we're going through this experience,
26:25 I've ended up getting--
26:26 I was given a staff which represents
26:29 that he adopted me as his son.
26:32 So he is now my father.
26:34 He is now my adopted father on Mere Lava Island.
26:37 He is the main chief of this whole area. Chief Willy.
26:46 Last year I was wondering
26:48 if they were gonna deport me from Vanuatu,
26:50 but this year I have the legal basis
26:53 to become a new Vanuatu citizen.
26:57 So everything has turned upside down.
26:59 As I look back to the time
27:01 when we walked on that area that is now the airstrip
27:05 I question how I could've seen the possibility of an airstrip
27:08 at that place because it's still to this day
27:12 it's a very tough place to put an airstrip
27:14 It's the shortest, the roughest, the bumpiest,
27:17 the most crooked, the most narrow airstrip in Vanuatu.
27:21 That airstrip has so much significance to the people
27:27 when we first landed with Jeremy,
27:29 there was people crying because of what
27:31 they saw the plane landed and we were kissed by old men
27:37 and young ladies, old ladies everyone
27:40 that we were just welcome so keenly.
27:43 And so all I can say is that God knows what He is doing,
27:45 that whole experience taught me faith
27:47 and helped me to understand that God is in control.
27:49 Now I feel a little bit,
27:52 a little bit more courageous about attempting big things
27:55 because of what we've been through.
28:15 If you would like to support this project
28:18 or find out more about the mission work in Vanuatu,
28:21 please contact our office
28:22 or visit us online at www.lmn.org.


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Revised 2014-12-17