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Series Code: TDYL

Program Code: TDYL230023A


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00:04 >> I want to.
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00:21 >> Me too.
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00:33 >> 2,
00:41 the game.
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00:46 I want to stand.
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01:06 >> Hello and welcome to our Thursday Night Life program.
01:09 I'm Joe Moore County and we always love to spend these 2
01:12 hours with you.
01:13 >> We get to showcase ministries or testimonies.
01:16 Hear what God is doing around the world. Thank you so much
01:20 for being part of our 3ABN, family. Now that we love you
01:24 and that we pray for you. We have another their family
01:28 with us here tonight. This is the Evans family with child
01:32 Impact International. Before I introduce them on July 30,
01:37 this is just in a couple weeks. It is the World Day against
01:41 human trafficking. That's right. And that entire day
01:45 dedicated to raising awareness of the incredible
01:51 I need that there is in this world to rescue people.
01:56 Operation Child Rescue is a part of child impact
02:00 international and here at 3 B and we believe in the Ministry
02:03 of Child Impact, we believe in what they're doing around the
02:07 world to rescue people and to prevent this from happening in
02:11 the first place. So I'm excited about this program. I want to
02:14 give a disclaimer. There are some sensitive topics will be
02:19 discussing this evening. So if you have young children
02:22 in the home, maybe have them occupied with something else
02:26 comes. This topic of trafficking is a sensitive
02:29 topic, but it's unneeded topic because it needs to be
02:32 addressed. I really believe that child impact is the
02:35 foremost organization within the 7th Day Adventist Church,
02:39 specifically dealing with this issue of human trafficking.
02:43 So we have with us Doctor Thom Evans, who is the C e o of
02:48 child impact International Doctor. Tom, we're just so
02:50 delighted to have you here tonight.
02:51 >> Thank you. And thank you for raising awareness of this
02:54 important topic.
02:55 >> Absolutely. We're going to use your family and then we'll
02:57 talk just a little bit about this sitting next to is your
02:59 beautiful wife. I think this is the very first time aren't that
03:03 you have been on a 3ABN program. You are a sponsor and
03:08 a donor with child impact International. Clyde, you're
03:10 here. Thank you so much. So glad to be here and sitting
03:14 at the end of the table. Here is Andrea, one of your
03:17 children. Andrea Evans is an ambassador for child Impact
03:21 International. And how old are you, Andrea? I'm 17 years old.
03:24 And what sort of stuff do you like to do? I really like
03:27 music. Yeah. What type of music I like.
03:30 >> Play the piano playing the bass playing guitar. So a lot
03:33 of praise music.
03:34 >> Yeah, that's wonderful. Very exciting. Maybe someday.
03:38 We'll get to hear some. Yeah like that. So doctor, Tom,
03:41 talk to us. Why is this such a huge need I human trafficking?
03:46 >> Well, first of all, the surprising statistic is that
03:50 52 million people are caught up in human trafficking, which
03:54 would be really modern day slavery. And that's the most
03:57 individuals ever at any time in history. There is late. So this
04:02 is a massive issue and probably the most troubling statistic is
04:06 that once an individual's taken in human trafficking, only one
04:10 out of 100 ever escape.
04:12 So I think the topic itself is important. And I often hear
04:16 people say
04:17 it's so good to be aware of what we're trying to do,
04:21 a child impact this move awareness from awareness to
04:24 action yet to actually do something that's, you know,
04:28 it's interesting to be aware, but what difference will that
04:30 really make? How many of us will actually see somebody
04:33 trafficked and stop it? For example, it's possible because
04:36 it happens, but mostly it's an underground crime that we
04:39 usually don't see happening. And so I think it's very
04:42 important to move awareness to action. And that's what we're
04:45 trying to do with child impact.
04:46 >> Absolutely. What would be give me a definition of
04:50 trafficking? Is that sex trafficking or what encompasses
04:54 traffic?
04:55 >> Sex trafficking probably is the largest of financial side
04:59 of because the girls are sold over multiple times a day and
05:03 over and over and over again. Very different than even drugs
05:06 drugs so wants and it's gone right. But these girls that are
05:09 trafficked and boys as well get sold over and over multiple
05:14 times daily. And so that's a sex trafficking side of things.
05:17 But they're larger numbers that are actually labor trafficked.
05:21 Okay. And so that also is a major issue involves children.
05:24 One of our newest projects in Pakistan is actually working
05:28 with the brick kilns where Lesage a man his wife needs
05:32 some kind of a surgery. He's no way to get the money. So it
05:35 goes to the owner of the brick kiln
05:37 gets a loan and that owner make sure that he will never be able
05:42 to pay that loan off. And so then the wife becomes abused
05:46 and the children also become enslaved.
05:49 And so this will be going for years and years and years.
05:51 So we're forced to go to work. Yes, it's it's indentured
05:54 servant servant. And so it's it's really slavery because
05:57 there's no way out. And so we've become paying the debt
06:00 for some of those individuals, especially those with children
06:03 so that they can find freedom and we give them a home to live
06:06 in and food to take care of them. So this is another type
06:09 of trafficking as well.
06:12 >> It's heartbreaking. 52 Million. 52, what countries
06:16 would be the most involved.
06:18 >> 70% of sex trafficking takes place in Asia. And so that's
06:23 that's a huge portion of it. We work in Africa lot. And of
06:27 course, there's a lot happening there.
06:29 The tragedy is that a lot of this is funded from the United
06:33 States. Yeah. So that's really a lot of United States
06:36 involvement yet. Trafficking happens here as well. For
06:40 example, the city of Chicago or approximately 14,000 girls
06:45 disappear every year
06:46 from the city of Chicago, the city of Chicago here in the
06:49 United States just just up the road here. Yes, so that's a
06:53 major issue there. We have a small project in South Chicago
06:56 that we're working with.
06:57 But, yeah, it's it's a challenge here as well. But the
07:00 numbers aren't as large.
07:04 For me. The real difficulty looking at this is the driving
07:07 force for human trafficking and developing countries is
07:11 poverty. Yeah. And so there's no way that the perpetrators
07:16 prey on the financial needs or even just hunger, right?
07:21 The family's experience and they give them false promises
07:25 that end up landing in human trafficking.
07:28 >> Yeah, that makes sense. So tonight we're going to talk
07:30 about this topic and talk about how we can go from awareness to
07:34 action, how you can become involved in helping child
07:38 impacting operation Child Rescue will talk about some of
07:41 the projects that they're involved in specifically a
07:44 project in the NBA. Every beside farm is that. But first,
07:47 we just want to talk to the Evans family. So talk to us
07:50 about arwady. Tell us about your kids and then you all were
07:53 involved in some adoption. Want to talk about that?
07:56 >> Yes, well, we have 4 kids. I have 2 biological kids in the
08:03 adopt a to place.
08:05 Our younger sign passed away with leukemia almost 3 months
08:11 ago.
08:13 So that was a hard
08:16 time in our lives.
08:17 But we love our kids and they are 1917, in 15
08:25 Lucas, Andrea, in the new they they're amazing kids. They're
08:29 amazing. Boy, stay love life. They love school. I know you
08:33 know me and I love my voice.
08:35 >> And that we're expecting to girls, not biologically.
08:41 >> So before we get to the girls back to on threes and I'm
08:46 the son who passed away, he was one of the ones you adopted.
08:48 Yes, all right. So talk about the adoption process with those
08:51 2 boys and then we'll talk a bit about on and we have a
08:54 photo to go. Good. Yeah.
08:57 >> So this photo is at the airport. Was this the first
09:02 visit Mar or maybe the second one?
09:06 And I think that one is the second one because we have the
09:09 backpacks that we got the haha. So these are the 2 boys,
09:13 Daniel and on trees where they from. They are from the country
09:16 of Latvia. Not many people have been there. It's on the border
09:20 with Russia. And so the boys speaks both Russian and let fan
09:25 but are when we went and picked them up at the airport because
09:28 we're hosting them. I know we weren't obligated to adopt them
09:31 yet. Who says this is on trees? Yeah. So when we pick them up
09:37 at the airport, they were a little nervous. But and Reese
09:40 is a little different.
09:42 >> Yes, we weren't expecting him to be different. I am so
09:46 lively. Yeah. So so so lively it. We expected. I think I
09:51 expected Daniel, the older want to be more composed and the
09:55 injuries a little bit more afraid because he was the
09:58 youngest and Wednesday up way around. Haha and uses very
10:03 excited. He had a balloon with him
10:06 and you win around hitting everybody in the head with
10:08 that. But I ling in laughing in in hitting everybody is just
10:13 having the time time of his life. How old was he then?
10:16 Wife 5? Yes, but he's brother Daniel was wholly negative
10:22 Froese candidate. Yeah, curled up on the floor in the airport
10:26 and we wondered how everybody else is leaving with their
10:29 children that they're hosting and we wonder how are we going
10:32 to get this point home? Yes. And so that he was so scared.
10:36 Yeah, which can you can imagine the 7 year-old different
10:40 language. They didn't speak English and another with the
10:44 family and that they never seen before and they're going to go
10:48 to their house and state. I can not imagine letting my 7
10:52 year-old or 5 year-old to go to a stranger. So in a different
10:56 way. Yeah. So in this be a terrifying. It was exciting.
10:59 I'm sure for them too, learned that the you know, you want to
11:04 go in the strip in must have been very exciting. But I'm I
11:08 think was it they realized
11:11 we know what was happening. It got to be a little.
11:15 >> But they relax was the men are dogs. And yes, it was the
11:19 dogs along and are home. It was like is total
11:22 transformation. I believe in Jesus. Relax. The haha. Relax
11:27 yet. But the dogs I believe in therapy and the cold air p word
11:32 because we saw we almost you can almost see them heal in
11:36 front of your eyes as they interact with the animals.
11:40 >> And they were in love with the now you all have children.
11:43 So what brought you to adopt more? Some people say, well,
11:47 you adopt if you can't have kids but you all have kids and
11:50 you chose to adopt.
11:52 Yeah. Why would that be?
11:54 >> When Martin were dating, she made a statement that I think
11:56 scare the other guys away. She says she want to have 2
12:01 kids.
12:02 >> Haha. Wow. Haha. I didn't believe her experience, right?
12:08 Yeah.
12:09 >> I didn't believe it could possibly be true, but she was
12:12 not intending that those would all come biologically right.
12:15 So, you know, we you know, that was not an issue for us being
12:19 able to have children. But what was an issue for us is making a
12:24 difference for kids who don't have family. Yeah, and that's
12:27 what really that conviction that are had. And I've been
12:32 involved in ministry to kids before all those years,
12:36 pastors. Well, but that passion really became contagious for me
12:42 as well.
12:43 And so we basically found out about a program I marred wanted
12:49 opt for a long time. And so we had our boys and it was kind of
12:53 a possibility this time. And we met somebody who is
12:56 hosting a young lady, a girl from other countries, Latvia,
13:01 my wife is always wanted to do what? What is how does this
13:05 work? What's this about?
13:07 And she said, well, this is a program. It's called Project
13:10 One. 43. Okay. I think we have the Web site that we can give p
13:13 one 43 dot org, OK?
13:16 And so it's a tremendous a program for hosting children
13:21 where they come to your home as a cultural trip. There's no
13:24 obligation have to adopt them,
13:26 but they are available to be adopted. And so they ask you to
13:30 advocate if you don't choose to adopt, you can advocate for
13:33 them with your friends and family and so on.
13:34 >> So you have the pressure line. All I'd they're coming
13:37 here and have to adopt is just did some ice Syrians for them
13:40 to experience. You can fall in love with them other than and
13:44 that happened.
13:45 >> Right away with the sport, of course. But they told us
13:48 about this program and then air all the kids that come over and
13:51 it's not huge numbers. But all the kids that come over have a
13:54 shop around shop or oh, that looks after that moment that
13:57 can speak their language check in with the families. They sold
14:00 the shop or own needs a place to stay still the summer.
14:03 Would you be open to having the chaperone in your home? So that
14:07 became reduction and she was a young adult and still is our
14:10 friend to this day. But the next winter hosting, we were
14:15 ready. We were all in and that's when we met them.
14:19 >> And what did you think, Andrea?
14:21 >> I love that. Yeah. Having more subways, right? A lot more
14:25 fun. Playing outside. Kicking a soccer ball. Yeah.
14:29 >> Yeah. Oh, that's awesome. So you didn't adopt them then
14:32 right? Then there's a long process, a process. I do want
14:36 to share one story because
14:41 >> for these kids to grow up in an orphanage and it's rough and
14:44 tough and life is very different than, you know,
14:48 growing up in the home.
14:50 And so some things probably there's not an awareness of
14:53 what's appropriate. What's not appropriate? Well, with the
14:56 injuries
14:58 my mom was this was our second time hosting. That was during
15:01 the summer. My mom sitting out the first days come back
15:04 and he was so exciting. Never want to go back to Latvia.
15:07 He wanted to stay in. We wish you could have done that.
15:09 But that's not how it works. And so he first day right back.
15:13 And my mom said, you know, this lawn chair in the yard in the
15:15 backyard, taking in the sun
15:18 and all of a sudden she jumps out.
15:21 And so there's something warm on my back.
15:23 And we saw and Reese laughing and realize that he hadn't
15:27 changed. You've got p** on her back.
15:29 >> Forgettable.
15:36 >> So we remember that. And at his memorial, we share that
15:40 story because it illustrates just and resource was an
15:44 adventure.
15:45 >> Yeah, always an adventure and he's a little boy, of
15:47 course, with them and rise has yet to train, I think and the
15:51 time.
15:53 >> Yeah, 6 and a half or so. We have another photo where we
15:55 went to see them in Latvia, OK? So that would be a fun 1,
15:58 0, so this is in Latvia and Reese's. The smaller one there
16:02 with Mara and then Daniels on my shoulders there on this
16:06 trip. We went to a zip line, hold tarzan's, OK? And of
16:11 course, something has to happen with Audrey's ha. He gets stuck
16:15 in the middle of the zip line. Oh, and this was a long one and
16:19 he doesn't know what to do. So one of our friends have does
16:23 it to him and slow down in time and then retreat from it.
16:26 But there's always an adventure with andries and
16:29 >> Rays. Oh, yeah, very brains. You know, there's a little
16:35 the resistance to just go when you haven't gone before.
16:39 Especially is a little kid in you is very careful but
16:42 injuries.
16:44 >> It's like, oh, this is how it works. Those 2 and a live
16:48 band.
16:49 >> Yeah. Yeah. Did you know anything about their past why
16:53 they were orphaned or do they not disclose any of that?
16:56 >> Once you start the adoption process, yes, that's the slow.
17:00 So the markets are a little bit about what we know.
17:03 >> Well, he entries and then you are brothers. They have the
17:08 same same mom, OK, defend debts and mom
17:14 have them very young. And she was almost like an orphan
17:19 herself or her mom, I think died when she was 10.
17:24 And we know her dad had a troubled life and got married
17:27 again. So she grew up in own her own and just doing whatever
17:31 she wanted to do in. So she got pregnant, a had a baby and she
17:37 always loved her boys very much. But kind of like a
17:41 interact cousin, you know, the less somebody did it
17:44 is able to take care of them. And so was a teenage mom.
17:50 Yes, yes, and she was given out of chances to keep the boys,
17:56 but it
17:57 yes, she's very mature. She's she loves them, but she has no
18:02 ability to take care of them.
18:04 >> We just learned recently from the adoption attorney in
18:09 Latvia that
18:11 the police ended up showing up to the home because they found
18:16 2 boys in conditions that were not suitable for children to be
18:20 raised in. And basically, Daniel
18:23 has been the protector of our trees that she grew up anybody
18:29 mess with and Reese they had been with and he packed a
18:32 powerful punch. I mean, I'm not he wasn't so happy. Go lucky
18:37 because he had the responsibility of taking.
18:39 Yeah, they're very mature, young man. And he relates very
18:44 well with adults. And so he loves kids. He loves you.
18:49 He would take care of babies. And we we have one picture.
18:52 I think the video where he's eating with one hand and
18:54 feeding a baby with a bottle. In the other hand, when your
18:56 mask. Yes. So he was he was always is the protector.
19:01 Yeah.
19:02 >> Yes, yes. So when did they officially come over here?
19:04 When did you actually adopt them officially? How long ago
19:07 was that?
19:08 >> Not too long ago. So is finalized actually in November
19:12 and last year, November, last year, we did not even know at
19:16 the time that and Reece passed away that he legally no longer
19:20 had his last name last name that he's now legal name in
19:24 Latvia was Evans. And so we didn't know that we're trying
19:27 to they're trying to see if they could get that change for
19:29 us because we're still waiting for that. The oath ceremony
19:33 here in the U.S.. So we're still waiting for that for
19:35 Daniel, you are everything. But the options finalized is
19:38 just now to get a passport and some of those other things.
19:42 >> But the being home with us both couple years, yes, and
19:46 July full-time a couple years. 21 plus all those visits in our
19:50 home and that the yeah, they've been very much part of our
19:53 lives for a long time. Yes, and with the Internet, we were able
19:57 to communicate with them all the time. Also. So
20:00 >> we've known does voices. There are 5, 7, really when did
20:04 Andrea skits on Greece gets sick?
20:08 >> I was of what, 2, 3, years ago.
20:11 >> Yes, well, he hit. That was we went through the adoption
20:16 process the first time and it didn't work out
20:20 2 more years. And after those 2 more years, we started the
20:23 process again after and it takes about 2 years. The
20:27 process for them to come home to the first year. He got sick.
20:33 >> So he was 11 years old and we discovered it kind of
20:37 accidently. I'm just video calls. We look at your license
20:41 here, gun.
20:43 I said Maher, I think he's sick. I think something's going
20:46 on. And it wasn't something where they would necessarily
20:50 reveal that to us. So we made the request. Could you check
20:55 and see if there's anything going on with this health with
20:57 being chemo? Was that wise here? Yeah, OK? And so she came
21:00 back and said that, yes. And they said they've never had
21:03 a case with such a sick child. I'm getting adopted
21:08 with this agency has happened in the past that, yeah, this
21:12 was this was a unusual circumstance for them. So we
21:16 adopted. We went to pick them up a couple years ago. It was
21:21 in June so that over 2 years ago now
21:24 and he was supposed to be in remission, but that was
21:28 according to laugh and standards.
21:31 He really was not in remission, according to U.S. standards.
21:33 We didn't know that until later. It's later area much
21:37 later. So we ended up having 2 relapses. He had
21:40 several months of a good life when you dream of being part of
21:44 a family where he was active in pain free. But then this pain
21:48 started coming. And there we are. This is hello. Everybody
21:53 is yes from the left. We've got Andrea that tomorrow and on
21:57 juries
21:59 and Lucas and then myself and then my mom and then Daniel,
22:04 including my mom because she was there for us big time
22:08 during a soaking Roger. Yeah, she came and lived in our home
22:12 help take boys to school and back we yeah, we made a
22:16 commitment that we're going to try for the other 3 boys to
22:19 give them as normal of a life as possible. Cause came is
22:23 along can be a very long journey and are staying with
22:26 Andries full-time. That was that became her full-time
22:30 focus. I lived in hospitals
22:33 for a while. What was it like?
22:37 >> It was hard. It was very hard is sad. You know,
22:40 injuries. Tough little boy, you know. But he went through a lot
22:44 of pain.
22:46 A lot of
22:48 frustration because he wanted to go home. Yeah, says he was 5
22:52 years old. He didn't want to go back to Lafayette. He wanted to
22:55 stay with us. He always wants to stay with us. So in the
22:59 hospital all the time, all he could say is I want to go home.
23:03 I want to go home and then you would see his, you know,
23:07 brothers would come and go people visit or video calls and
23:12 he wanted to go home. He wanted to go home. That's all we want
23:15 is to go home. So it's hard. Yeah, and it's a painful
23:18 process. You know, chemo is difficult to gain all the you
23:22 know, we had a couple infections in had to have a
23:25 minor surgery and this infection in. So it was hard.
23:29 It was very difficult for him
23:31 and it a D and he had a bone marrow transplant that and and
23:37 that is a tough journey for those that have gone through.
23:40 It
23:41 is a very, very tough journey for the that the person who is
23:45 sick in the person who's taking care of them. Very, very a lot
23:50 of pain. Enormous. Yeah, all the time
23:56 all the time. I want to say.
23:59 >> For those that used to be go Morrow transplants to thank
24:03 you. Yes, thank. Thank you for making that commitment. It's
24:07 not an easy process to donate your bone morrow.
24:11 And so we were so grateful for that. And the other thing that
24:16 was a bit of America, we had a
24:19 insurance catastrophe in terms of how do we deal with this
24:25 caused product yet? How do we do this without going bankrupt,
24:29 which we would have to because we were going to make sure that
24:33 he got every possible care.
24:36 So what happened is because they were not legally adopted.
24:41 Laffey is a very unique country and that they let you bring the
24:44 boys home before the adoption is finalized, OK? So here he
24:49 was already home with us. And because of that, you can't
24:52 get any kind of insurance from the government
24:55 and the help, you know, help with. Yeah, there's no help for
24:59 anything. Insurers won't take this teen. Yeah, right. So with
25:04 with my with insurance we have as a family, this is a
25:07 preexisting condition rising around that the U.S. so he fell
25:10 through the cracks everywhere. And so I will tell you, our
25:15 pastor Pastor Jerry Arnold do Community Church. He went to
25:19 bat for us and he got to hold the hospital, talked with
25:23 administrators. I have never been a pastor and I never
25:27 received this kind of pastoral care was like, wow. And to the
25:31 very end he was there with us in the hospital. This is the
25:35 funeral home you need to contact. This is where this is
25:37 the graveyard. This is, you know, where you get a
25:40 headstone. I mean, he just everything. But he was able to
25:43 get a letter from us or for us from charity care.
25:47 >> At the hospital that covered all of our bills, including the
25:52 and he was trips that we end up with a couple ambulance trips.
25:55 He had a seizure at home and there were all sorts of things
25:59 that happened. We did have a few medication bills that we
26:02 covered initially. But in terms of time to time in the
26:05 hospital, it was coming.
26:07 >> What a good big bill was a gift. But we did have a lot of
26:12 expenses. Yeah. There's a lot of traveling back and forth to
26:14 Nashville and haute. How there were many expense and the
26:18 medicine I'm one hospital would cover the other, wouldn't that?
26:23 So they were
26:25 while he was outside the hospital. We had to pay for a
26:28 lot of things. But we did get help. We
26:32 had a friend that knew the boys also help to pay some bills
26:37 that we had in hand. So
26:40 it was yeah.
26:42 >> I think sometimes you get good getting to that somehow
26:44 we're going to survive. We don't know if there's any any
26:47 path ruined
26:49 and that financial burden can be very heavy. Yeah.
26:52 >> Pressler for your pastor and going to offer you an absolute
26:55 you have a couple of pitchers. Is that right of Andrea?
26:58 Some possible? Yes, we can show those.
27:02 So this before he passed
27:05 not long.
27:06 Not long with this one because into baited him.
27:10 >> July had an experience when they moved him to pediatric
27:16 ICU.
27:18 I was at my work and are called and said they're they're moving
27:22 in and I'm like what was going on.
27:25 That was a move from the cancer area of the hospital to this
27:31 location because of
27:32 some issues that we're developing.
27:35 And I just was in this
27:37 state of mind driving to the hospital. Mike, this is not
27:40 looking good.
27:42 And I see one sign beside the highway, a billboard
27:47 that somebody paid for that simply said Trust Jesus.
27:51 But no, I can't right now. Yeah, I that's not what I need
27:55 to hear right now. I don't need to hear trust Jesus right now.
27:58 My kids dying. Yeah.
28:00 I need to hear that, you know, somehow is going to be hilsum.
28:03 But some other some hope here. I'm not ready to hear this.
28:08 I discovered is that journey went on and on that. That was
28:11 exactly
28:13 the message that I need it
28:15 that somehow through all of this food and this journey that
28:20 I had to be law and that we all had to go,
28:26 I'm thankful that somebody paid for that billboard in that
28:30 my eyes just went right to that. It was only billboard
28:32 even saw going to the hospital.
28:36 You know, really things went downhill from there.
28:40 We we came to the point where the doctors,
28:44 yeah, there's a room with us. A small room
28:48 youth pastor was their pastor meet was made in the dumps.
28:51 He was amazing through this as well.
28:54 He was there with us and they said
28:57 we're going to induce a coma because there's just nothing
29:03 more really that we can do. Now
29:07 the lead doctors was always hopeful and he was still trying
29:10 to see me something. And Morris, the social worker who
29:13 ever seen someone come back when they've gone this far and
29:16 the social workers. No, no, we've never seen that. But the
29:18 the doctor was still holding on to hope. But yeah, we knew this
29:22 was it. We knew this is it. So I said, pastor new, let's go
29:26 get the brothers,
29:28 bring to the hospital, say goodbye this, that we might
29:30 have 2 hours.
29:32 And so I called ahead to the school and put the boys out and
29:35 they want to spill. And what was that like 100?
29:39 It was scary.
29:41 >> Yeah, I remember just I was working on a project for
29:44 friends at school and then it's like you have to go now right
29:47 to administrator there at school.
29:49 And I was I was like what's going on? What's wrong or
29:52 remember walking out school and I see the
29:56 mice out of school teacher there
29:58 ready to drive us to the hospital. And I was like what's
30:00 going on? And yeah, it's it's just scary.
30:06 >> I just want to say I'm so sorry for Yasser. Thank you.
30:10 When you are, it's at this painful at any age, whether
30:14 it's a parent or grandparent,
30:16 us past a house but to lose your kids about that,
30:22 the worst loss. There is some so
30:24 very sorry.
30:26 Thank you. Thank you.
30:29 And our one encourage you at home.
30:31 Our 3 D and family
30:33 to pray for the Evans family right now for just a few months
30:36 after the loss of their precious and so lift them up
30:40 and others who are walking through similar valleys of the
30:44 shadow. Maybe your going through a time right now and
30:47 are in that dark place having later came to rest.
30:52 Is there any advice you on the spot? So any advice you would
30:55 give for someone watching for that, right? You know it.
30:59 >> The way that makes sense to me and it's different for every
31:02 person and that's why giving somebody advice.
31:06 Okay. Maybe that's all I can tell you what worked for me,
31:08 OK? But work for me is it's very clear that we're in a
31:12 battle.
31:14 There's a great controversy. We know that and there are
31:18 casualties along the way.
31:20 And sometimes those casualties happen sooner rather than
31:23 later.
31:24 And what I like to say is that Andrea Sloss a battle, but he
31:28 didn't lose the war.
31:30 That's good.
31:34 He loved Jesus. I mean, there's no question.
31:38 >> Yes, him again. Yes, yeah. The reunion.
31:42 Boy, it's a big heart that did love Jesus. Incredible offer
31:46 Jesus in for people. You know, he was in the hospital,
31:48 sometimes seen so much pain,
31:51 just laying there poor thing and somebody would call and
31:54 say, how are you in the you know, I'm no. He would ask how
31:59 the person is. Do you know I have yeah. He wants to know how
32:03 they're doing this or have a cold to sit down. I'm going to
32:05 pray for you. He prayed for everybody, you know. And then
32:10 after the hangup mum, let's pray for them. Henri for
32:13 praying. Mom remembered to pray for so and so.
32:17 >> One was yeah. What's meaningful stories to me.
32:19 I saw it live down in Marseille when more than I did. But
32:23 the nurses would come in and he would make a half a heart with
32:27 yeah. And he would want them to complete it in. He was.
32:31 >> Full cords everywhere. There was something holding it.
32:34 He could hardly move.
32:36 >> You know, make the heart and they were coming finished the
32:38 heart. And he would tell him all the things. So here it just
32:42 isn't there yet. And we had a nurse who was shopping her day
32:45 off just to spend time with andries and at the funeral
32:48 doctors to nurses said that.
32:50 >> Yeah, yeah. They were amazing in those sometimes
32:53 people have such bad experiences with people in
32:56 hospital
32:57 and it's a mixed, you know, we dealing with people, people
33:00 have different personalities. But
33:02 we were very blast with all the people
33:06 that cared for injuries in the hospital. We know
33:11 and doctors that were absolutely amazing in with
33:14 broken worked in the doctor's yeah, they're like, wow,
33:18 this really touched that. They must see this all the
33:19 time. But
33:21 something about Andreas just touch their work yet. Many of
33:24 them came to the yeah.
33:27 A memorial. Yeah. Yeah. So it was tough.
33:31 We have any more pictures of foundry served. That was I I
33:34 think that's it. Thank you.
33:38 Hundreds and thousands. So those are wonderful to look
33:41 back.
33:43 >> I I want to stop this now. And then we transition for
33:46 world trafficking day and child impact. You all just got back
33:48 from Gambia. We want to talk about this, but let's just stop
33:51 and have a word of prayer. Yes, thank you. Holy father.
33:54 We just come before you in the name of Jesus
33:57 here, the God of all comfort.
33:59 If a cop who says he knows God loves us
34:03 in the midst of this world of fan that we live in
34:07 this world of sickness and suffering and death. And yet
34:10 there is hope because your commute, it can. And right now
34:14 I just lifted up
34:15 Doctor, Tom.
34:17 >> And Mara, Andrea, Daniel and
34:21 looks like this.
34:23 We are just wrap your arms around
34:26 the Evans family right now in a very special way, Lord, we lift
34:30 up those right now who are dealing with loss, those who
34:33 are
34:35 walking through the valley of the shadow of to as we pray for
34:37 your com, I want to pay for your peace when we pray for
34:41 your healing
34:43 and father, for whatever reason, healing is not in the
34:46 plan. We pray that you would walk with them. Truth from me,
34:51 we thank you for that promise.
34:54 And we hold on that and more. We pray for those who are
34:57 trafficked or transition now talking about those who are
35:01 rescued from trafficking in those who are still in flight
35:06 and God, we pray for those who are alone and without hope
35:09 facing death or sexual abuse on a daily basis as early as 10
35:16 feet.
35:18 We just want you to come in and we want in the midst of what
35:23 goes on in this world.
35:24 We want to do our part
35:27 to join hands with ministries like challenge. I think so.
35:32 [MUSIC]
35:35 Those rescues, those free those who are enslaved in and try to
35:40 bring them. And so father, we thank you.
35:44 It's that time we have opportunities to 2 a man in the
35:48 S and the precious and holy name. But he's a name.
35:53 >> So talk to us about your trip. You just came back from
35:56 Riverside Farm Institute. Is that right?
35:58 >> Yes, an anchor, another school as well, OK, have that
36:01 we support and Zambia. Yeah, just about that. Well, this was
36:05 the first time to be able to take my family. So that's
36:08 exciting. And or older adopted boy, Daniel all went as well.
36:13 So that was super exciting.
36:16 And we started by visiting our project at Riverside Farm.
36:20 We sponsor hundreds of kids to go to school there literally.
36:24 And but we have a special new project is our largest rescue
36:27 project. And this came about as Craig there from Riverside Farm
36:33 mentioned to us that girls on the border of Zambia and
36:36 Zimbabwe are being trafficked truck. There's truck stops
36:40 there, truckers coming in and they solicit underage girls
36:44 into prostitution.
36:46 And so we had an initial group of we had. We had indicated
36:51 that we would support 25 girls initially and to go to rent a
36:55 dormitory
36:56 and to begin going to school at Riverside Farm and immediately
37:00 request came. Can you take 35 and then a request? Can you
37:03 take one more? She can pass exam, but she went on to study
37:06 them and can she take her as well? So we took 36 girls.
37:09 And so that became the initial group.
37:12 But last year around the world for human trafficking.
37:16 >> The funds came in. It was through a program on 3ABN the
37:20 Yahoo and and help to fund that project. So we were able to see
37:26 the dormitory roof on now. It's just getting finished out
37:30 to begin the school year, which starts in January there.
37:32 But we will rescue 100 girls lowered. We were concerned.
37:39 Yes, no. Thank you so much for making that possible. Now
37:42 thing.
37:44 >> The expense to get the dorm built and all of that has as
37:46 taken place. And all 36 girls are sponsored by by sponsors
37:52 through child impact, but the cost to rescue and operate this
37:57 program is much higher than a regular sponsorship program.
38:01 So there's a shortfall there. So part of our concern was how
38:04 do we find 100 girls on annual basis and they live there?
38:10 They live there. How do we fund that? So all of them will be
38:13 sponsor, but we top that fund up with Operation Child Rescue.
38:17 And so when someone donates operation child Rescue, they're
38:20 helping these rescue girls be able to go to school. So we
38:24 were able to meet them for the first time. And oh, my
38:27 goodness, we have some photos of that. But that's coming
38:29 after another story. So, yeah.
38:32 >> Before we jump to the store, I just want to say if you want
38:34 to sponsor, will do the throughout this program.
38:37 But if you want to sponsor and help those girls there in
38:40 Zambia at Riverside Farm Institute, you can gift
38:44 operation Child Rescue it, call the Child Impact Donald Dot
38:48 Org. So just go on their website right now. Child Impact
38:52 Dot Org. And you can just click on Operation Child Rescue can
38:56 sponsor. That means that your funds will go specifically to
39:00 help those kids who are being trafficked.
39:02 >> It's right on or they can call can they called on sir?
39:05 And what's the phone number for the 423-910-0667. Yeah.
39:11 >> That's 423-9100. 6, 6, 7, we believe in the Ministry of
39:18 Child Impact. We believe in what they are doing to help
39:21 rescue. So go to your story. Haha.
39:23 >> Well, I thought maybe we start with the beginning of the
39:25 trip was quite exciting. I mean, we did go out to trend
39:29 where these girls are trafficked in women went to a
39:31 couple homes to visit, but
39:33 on Sabbath, we took a long trip to a village and I have a
39:37 couple photos. This is that island in the cut for the
39:40 river.
39:42 >> There we are really, you know, this is me with Daniel.
39:44 And this is actually motorized. There's a motor on it. So you
39:47 have to paddle, thankfully, and there's our own Andrea together
39:51 heat. But let's just take a look at this. That will stop
39:54 with that picture. But let's let's look at this picture.
39:56 This is an island in the middle of a river o and the population
40:01 here is about.
40:02 >> 200, there are 2 buildings to public buildings on the
40:07 island. Can you guess what they might have don't to public
40:11 buildings.
40:12 >> One is the 7th that Mister. And so one day church was
40:17 built. Ah, he's so long.
40:19 >> The lady whose church funded the one-day church, she was on
40:22 this trip with us and this is her first time to see it.
40:25 So that was exciting. The second institution or public
40:28 building is a bar haven't avenues to church in the bar.
40:32 So we want we want to put them out of business. Yes. So
40:36 anyway, about 200 people there. And I think we've got a couple
40:39 other photos.
40:41 Yeah, this is how they survive really is catching fish and the
40:45 fish. They catch are very small. So they drive these fish
40:48 in the sun and then they eat them or I think the trade them
40:52 for May's probably because they they have maize in their diet
40:55 as well, which is ground up corn. So anyway, they don't
40:59 have a lot of resources on this island. And sanitation is a
41:03 disaster. I mean, because the water table so high people just
41:07 go on the ground. And so, yeah, why it's a real challenge,
41:12 too. But it was an amazing experience. I next picture I
41:15 think is Andrea actually
41:18 oh, yeah, they had a little game there. Those playing with
41:21 the with the marbles and sticks. Oh, yeah. A lot of fun.
41:25 >> Hundreds actually very good at it. But what's amazing is
41:31 you're creating the game really on a nothing. Yes, I mean,
41:33 I really just with a we have to have all this fancy stuff to
41:36 have a good game. But you just creating a just simple thing.
41:39 Yeah.
41:40 >> And this is the most remote place I've ever been to because
41:42 we took a
41:44 four-wheel-drive ride in a 4 wheel to get out. And I would
41:48 say over an hour that was on gravel, bumpy slowdown
41:53 where worst taken around all over the place was. So finally,
41:57 we get to this mud puddle. Well, this mud puddle becomes
42:00 as a stream and it goes through these recalled foods, flats and
42:05 believe and it basically is a path through like a marsh like
42:10 a swamp. Wow can. Yeah, it's very beautiful. But we were on
42:15 the boat with the motorized boat for about 2 hours before
42:18 we got actually to this village we passed removed. Yeah,
42:21 past one other small one that is similar but much smaller
42:26 and the children in this village have not had one day of
42:30 education and the entire life.
42:32 All right. So that or sees a challenge and how many people
42:36 in that village? 212, 200? Yeah.
42:39 So our goal is we're exploring right now. The possibility of
42:43 starting the school there in the church building when need
42:46 to set up housing for some teachers to come
42:50 and we'll have to help with some kind of sanitation
42:53 project. Yeah, but Joe, I will show you how challenging a
42:57 poverty is. This story is one the most unusual I've heard,
43:01 but they're on this island. They had found a teacher who
43:04 would go there was and teacher
43:08 every evening. He was proposition to sleep with the
43:11 lady on the island, really. And there was a strategy behind
43:15 this, which was that we're told it blew me away. The husband
43:18 would have their wife go and propositioned him so that if
43:22 you slept with him, they could find him so they can make some
43:25 money.
43:26 So he this pressure just kept up and said, look, I can't stay
43:29 here.
43:31 So we want to ask for it for funds. Yes, the desperate for
43:35 money. They, you know, when they don't have rights, people
43:38 resort a very desperate situation. So our hope is that
43:41 we can send a couple or at least a couple of individuals
43:45 out and that just, you know, the there's a culture that
43:49 needs to change that way because the help is wanted,
43:52 but it can be sabotaged either. Correct. So, anyway, we want to
43:56 approach things the right way and see if we can really help
43:58 move this forward.
44:00 >> What was it, Mara? And Andrea was your first time in
44:02 Zambia's. All right. Yes, so tell me what your experience
44:05 was like.
44:06 >> Yeah, it is. It's a beautiful my out just the
44:11 wildlife there. And what I noticed is that are excellent
44:16 at singing. Remember at Riverside Farms to the leaders
44:20 there.
44:22 Yeah, you mention is like I don't know is and being who
44:24 can't sing. Yeah. So they all sing hateful. Yeah. Beautiful
44:28 at choir music. Seen Jesus praise. Music is a lot of fun.
44:34 Also their fruit. It's amazing. It's not, you know, process
44:39 like American. Once I opened up a I think they call naci
44:43 switches like a Mandarin orange. Oh, my it's you know,
44:46 Chelsea. It's yeah, incredible. Yeah.
44:49 >> We don't have anything case that that good in terms of the
44:51 Orange family. Haha, I think we ate 5 or 6 in a row. You know
44:57 most it was. It was amazing. It was amazing.
45:00 >> Yeah. Did you get to spend a lot of time with the kids?
45:03 I saw you play the game with the yeah. Yeah. I'm getting to
45:06 know the yeah.
45:09 What about FEMA?
45:11 Any deal must be overwhelming.
45:13 >> It is very overwhelming. So the first few days outages
45:17 recount and cry just being in the bus and seeing the kids.
45:21 I mean, they're happy. You know, I up there's nothing
45:24 wrong with having a simple life. You know, in many ways is
45:28 very healthy. You know, if you're not abused, right,
45:31 if you're not hungry in you sick and you have care, it's
45:37 not so bad. But the thing is that they they're hungry.
45:41 They're sick in their use, Yemen and CBS in it. And you
45:45 don't know. We don't you know, you see a kid in the street.
45:48 They're selling things in the streets will be, you know,
45:51 in our car in their little kids selling stuffing. We stopped
45:55 one time.
45:57 >> That was incredible. That wasn't the most joyful
45:58 experiences that I've had it.
46:01 >> Yes, it was amazing. It was very fine. So we stopped and
46:04 they were Sally. There's this little fruit. Yeah, they so
46:08 what is it is a little awful city slice our apple iPhone
46:12 tiny the size of a cherry. So yeah. So they put in little
46:16 bags and they will sell in the street.
46:19 >> For like watching, which is what? 25 cents.
46:23 >> Yeah. About that. Yeah. Quarter.
46:26 So so they're like I don't know 6 kids there and they're
46:29 selling in. We stopped and called the move. If it will buy
46:32 everything you have about it.
46:34 >> The kids are so so weeks.
46:37 >> I did it. They were like 200 quite yet. All the bags.
46:42 Yeah, yeah. I know. We're just, you know.
46:45 >> Gave them some money more than what they were asking for
46:49 8. But they were so excited. And I just remember is retaking
46:52 off this little girl.
46:54 >> Just looking at the event in just jumping up and down,
46:57 jumping up and down thing, you know, and making faces. And
47:01 >> you can see that she was so so so happy that it was
47:05 unbelievable. That was very touching. Yeah. Then the a cry
47:08 that in the sense that,
47:10 you know, it's like I can't believe it in and it was
47:14 amazing.
47:15 >> Maher became very popular because she brought some some
47:19 goodies from Costco, huh? And little bags. And so
47:23 everywhere we went, she was it would hand these out rounded by
47:28 kids and shifts in just 1, 1, Haha. But that was that was
47:33 very special one.
47:34 >> And it was it was fun. It was fun to Zambia. People
47:38 are very welcoming you. They're very kind. They're very giving
47:41 in. They smile. And, you know, people I'm paying and they're
47:45 laughing and they're happy. They're very positive and very
47:49 good people.
47:50 >> I think we have one more picture of the island and that
47:54 is a picture of the church
47:56 and I was able to prepare their. Yeah. Yeah. So there's a
48:00 lot of people that church. So yeah, the packed in. Yeah.
48:04 The kids. So that was exciting to be able to to share with
48:08 them and they speak English. Yeah, OK? So you don't. He's
48:11 not your translator. That's what I was 12. He was
48:13 translating, but it's it can be minimal and English. But,
48:17 you know, you can communicate very well in English across
48:20 India. Yes.
48:21 >> So you got to see the girls that the 100 girls that are
48:24 there and being.
48:25 >> Well, the first 36. Okay. Yeah. So that's that's
48:29 that we can share a story that with this next, OK? So we we
48:32 went to this border town where the truck stops are at and
48:35 where the girls get traffic. So let's maybe show this
48:38 picture of are and who is that right?
48:41 >> Sarah, Sarah, kind of like you are. Yeah. We liked each
48:46 other a lot everywhere. Marwin and service. There should
48:51 conduct a full smile. Come get her hug. Beautiful girl.
48:54 Yeah. So let's assure next photo is Sarah's home.
48:58 It may be a little hard for what that's not the whole but
49:03 the front yards. But behind and behind that is to is to home.
49:07 Yes, is the front yard. All those tires are nest for
49:10 pigeons.
49:12 Yeah. And so that patients just come there to this location and
49:16 they have baby pigeons there. And so they're hatched there
49:20 and how the family surviving is selling 2 pigeons for.
49:25 >> 50 kwacha says the Pigeon Hatchery real. Yeah, yeah.
49:29 I mean, really? Yes. Growing and then there.
49:32 >> So we're just selling them. So a pair of pigeons, a $2.50.
49:36 And so this is her family. That's a livelihood. Yes,
49:39 so are more women to the home. Well, the other something else
49:44 that happened shared a moment, but more went into the home.
49:48 It wasn't I and Andrea got to go inside the home
49:52 and Sarah started to cry and then her mother started to cry.
49:58 >> I think they're, you know, that their lives are very,
50:00 very hard to know. I'm Sarah had a very tough life. And
50:09 and I think they're embarrassed. You know, they
50:13 when people come to see in
50:16 in the need is so great. You know, it's it, yes.
50:20 >> But how how girls end up in the situation where they end up
50:24 being trafficked where they need to be rescued is usually a
50:27 tragedy happens what the Mets won. One girl we met. Her
50:32 father is a fisherman and he walked 2 hours to fish which is
50:36 just hard to imagine. Absolutely. And he got one day
50:40 got attacked by a crocodile, literally attacked by a
50:42 crocodile and he pulled down his pants and showed us his
50:45 car's right. You can see. Yeah, crocodile with him.
50:48 Quite an incredible story. And what drive? Yeah, I thought
50:53 really. But I know he limps. There's nowhere. I got to fish,
50:56 right? He said I'm willing to do anything for work. The moms,
51:00 you know, cleans clothes for some people,
51:02 but it's not enough to survive. And so this is how girls and
51:06 their daughters and thus how girls in the in the situation
51:09 I'm in Sarah's case, we have a photo here of her brother.
51:13 Her brother is 44 years old and he actually was a truck driver
51:18 and the family depended on him. You measure 44, his parents or
51:23 her parents or older right course. And so he had a stroke
51:29 and is no longer. This is just a mobile. There is not able to
51:33 provide for the family more. So these are the kind of
51:35 circumstances were girls end up in trafficking. We do have one
51:39 more photo. This a positive one of the of the brother there and
51:42 that is receiving a God pod.
51:45 >> Thanks to all of us were radio, trace. The little are so
51:48 when the police have good access to that Christian 7th
51:53 avenues program and you can listen to. Yeah, wow. That's
51:57 incredible. But we brought you something from Zambia. Haha,
52:02 what's this?
52:04 This is something is a wrap. The dough put around their
52:07 waist. Yeah. Hey, make it? Yes. Yeah. Haha. You're
52:13 welcome. What's it called? I know. Haha, I don't remember
52:19 too many words and learn
52:22 yes. So they will.
52:23 >> But you know, they will have their skirts or whatever
52:27 clothes they have under.
52:28 But every lady will have a rep.
52:32 >> I they're very careful. They need to take covered.
52:37 Yeah. Yeah. So just be you know. Yeah. They're just close
52:42 their clean, Kara. Yeah. Haha. So item are going to give
52:49 a try to see if I can help you.
52:51 >> Let me show you on myself. First in the days are in the
52:55 back. So yes, so you just put around his almost like putting
52:59 a towel around your way that but so that when they teach
53:02 little kids to do it, though, say, you know, put your legs
53:05 apart because if you your legs are together in you do it.
53:09 Sometimes it's hard to watch. Haha part a little bit and the
53:15 special this side over here
53:18 and they will put this 1 million this side in fix this
53:23 side and then the fix the church e-mail. So we look nice
53:27 and then yeah, we'll see how we guess. Let's see you try to
53:32 thank you so much. So it's very simple. But it's you know that
53:38 from the NBA.
53:40 >> Special, OK? So put my car soon. It was tight as you can
53:47 not too. Yeah, it's it's.
53:49 >> However you want to do it. But they do hide both innings
53:53 and
53:55 >> and then they can hide that one too and bears. And yeah,
53:58 [MUSIC]
54:01 it was so quickly, you know, they had.
54:04 >> They not and various of taking it off. They take it off
54:06 and they put it back a little. But they're so good at it.
54:09 They just go like this. And it's time.
54:11 >> It's a yeah. So when we were in the village, sure, when
54:15 we're in this village there on the border of Zambia, Zimbabwe,
54:18 that's some shops are took the girls whose home is it OK to
54:23 them? And you bought one for each of the girls. So they're
54:27 so happy. I was very special because some of them are very
54:30 simple and not very expensive in some of them are nice here.
54:34 So and so they solve the nicer ones right there, like wow.
54:38 >> Now this is so beautiful. This is so beautiful. It was.
54:42 So there's like $5 for, you know, was so that ye. So they
54:48 got each got one there. But yours was $50.
54:52 >> Haha.
54:59 >> Maybe pay 7.15, but it. Yeah, it was very, very thank
55:04 you. I'll cherish that. Thank you very much. A day or so.
55:08 >> Do we have 36 girl sponsor there? We have 100 girls.
55:11 36, OK? But we need to have 100. Yes. And so this is the
55:15 challenge we face because the dorms built and theirs.
55:18 >> Parents that can pay that are wanting to send their kids
55:21 there. And we said that's not the purpose that we built the
55:24 storm for. And we've built the door for girls that have to be
55:27 rescued, right? And so we've taken a big leap of faith
55:31 saying we believe that donors will be generous enough
55:35 that we can be able to fully Philip the dorm with 100 girls
55:39 year after year. We don't want to start a project will stop
55:42 it, correct. We want to be able to seek children, you know,
55:46 girls graduate and have skills that they leave with to make a
55:50 living other ways. Right?
55:53 And so anyway, that's our hope that we can fill out the full
55:56 dorm with 100 girls starting in January.
55:58 >> That's wonderful. How much is that? A sponsor for one girl
56:01 for year?
56:03 >> So our normal sponsorship program we only have to we have
56:05 day students and their $32 a month and then we have boarding
56:09 stunts are 45. But the actual costs for these girls 135 a
56:13 month. Okay. So we still put them in our sponsorship program
56:16 at the 45 as we don't create confusion and have all these
56:20 different, OK, you know amount. So there's a short phone call
56:23 comes through Operation Child Rescue. Got it. Yeah.
56:27 >> So we want to courage were coming down to the end of the
56:28 first hour here. But we want to encourage you at home to get
56:31 involved in reaching out and helping those who can't help
56:35 themselves helping those who are disadvantaged or who are in
56:40 the midst of difficulty or are in the middle of being
56:43 trafficked right now. So you can go to child impact. Can
56:47 crew child impact Dot org and you just click on the button
56:52 that says Operation Child Rescue that will help to make
56:56 up the shortfall for the 100 girls that they can be there in
57:00 the school or the number is up 4 to 3, 910-0667. That number
57:09 again for child impact is 4 to 3, 910-0667. My husband,
57:16 Greg and I had the privilege of sponsoring 2 kids from
57:20 Ethiopia. You project there and what a tremendous blessing.
57:24 A little boy alone girl. They're 6, 7,
57:27 Keir, what a privilege to be able to know that you're having
57:32 a small impact in child impact in making an impact around the
57:36 world might encourage. You don't go anywhere. We have a
57:39 full second hour coming up in just a low
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Revised 2023-07-06