Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Out There with the Beams -- August 2011


What a great, but chaotic, summer here in Bolivia.  We have recently hosted four volunteer teams in a row, and have another one from coming in a couple of weeks—and we love every hectic minute of it.  Many of you know we had planned on traveling to the U.S. this summer, but because of residency visa issues here in Bolivia, we have had to stay put for the time being.  We did make a quick, one week, trip to Kentucky to complete some paperwork for Vanessa and Luciana’s U.S. residency and citizenship applications.  I won’t bore you with the inane details, but please keep our immigration challenges, on both continents, in your prayers. 
Just a short note—and plea—concerning our financial needs.  First, thank you to everyone who has faithfully supported us throughout the years.  We wouldn’t be here without your prayer and financial support.  We know economic times are tough in recent years.  I think because of this we have lost a few faithful supporters and our donations are now below the level that we need to continue serving in Bolivia.  We love serving in Bolivia and don’t want to have to leave this ministry.  If you feel God’s leading, we would love to have new partners supporting us monthly.  It is easy to get started, just click on the big donate button up in the corner.  Now on to more interesting news. 

The Ruth and Noemi Transition House for Girls (from Vanessa)
The Ruth and Noemi House is doing well.  I don’t remember if I mentioned this previously, but the Centro de Vida (Pregnancy Crisis Center) that we work closely with has practically closed its doors because of financial shortfalls.  They have only kept one staff person and she has moved her counseling office into the Transition House.  So, as you can imagine,  with that has come some change.  We used to have capacity for six girls but now we only have capacity for four.  Although until not very long ago we had five girls and three babies!!  Two babies were recently born, praise the Lord! He is so full of mercy.  These babies almost didn’t make it, but now they have been born! One of them was given for adoption to a very sweet Christian family.  What a huge sacrifice of love this was for the mom though.  As I watched as this young girl held her beautiful baby girl for the last time and then gave her away to her new mom, I just praised God for his provision in my own life, allowing me to keep my little baby girl (who is now sixteen, can you believe it?).  The other baby has now gone home with his mom and grandma who came to the house and took them on good terms. 
We are grateful at Ruth and Noemi to have the privilege of serving God in the restoration of relationships.  All of our girls have huge problems—emotional, spiritual, financial, etc., yet I can see God’s incredible love as He has brought them to Ruth and Noemi and they are safe, at least for now.  It is a battle talking to them about God and trying to make them understand His unconditional love when all they have seen is the very opposite from people who were nearest to them.  Despite that, two of our girls have recently received Jesus in their heart!  I just want to say a huge THANK YOU to all of you that somehow have helped us in this battle, support comes in so many ways, not just money!  You have listened and obeyed and believe me I know obeying is not easy. 
Personally,  I am learning to hang all the problems from work on the imaginary hanger outside the house.  I just give it all to Jesus, with those exact words, and when I come in, even if there are toys everywhere and a mountain of dishes on the sink, life is wonderful.

News from Agua Yaku—a water well drilling ministry (from Danny)
Agua Yaku continues to expand in scale and scope, drilling lots of water wells throughout Bolivia.  We recently sent a team to drill a well in the department of Oruro, high on the altiplano of Bolivia.  We have now drilled wells in five of the nine departments of Bolivia.  Our primary focus continues to be in the Guarani Indian communities in the Izozog region south of Santa Cruz.  We have had great success there both drilling wells and working in evangelization with local pastors and churches. 
Soon we will begin a partnership with a sister Christian organization that is doing river ministry in the Beni department.  More than 400,000 people live on the rivers in eastern Bolivia.  The only way in or out of their rural communities is by river boat.   There are almost no clean water wells in these communities.  Agua Yaku has the perfect, simple and transportable, technology to drill wells and provide access to clean water in these rural communities.   Visit our website (www.aguayaku.org) and download our recently completed manual on how to drill using the Baptist method.  We hope many organizations and communities around the world can use this manual to begin inexpensively drilling their own water wells.  

Expanding into new ministries:  As you can see from the photos, we have been experimenting with a new building technique that will allow us to build, and teach others how to build, strong inexpensive houses in impoverished areas.  As it is in many parts of the world, affordable housing is a great need in Bolivia.  We ran across this building technique, called “earth bag building” or more formally, the “flexible-form rammed earth” technique on the internet and thought we would experiment with it a bit to see if we could incorporate it into our ministries here in Bolivia.  The current project you see in the photos is a house/office we are building in Pailon (an hour outside of Santa Cruz) on the property of the Casa Mariposa, a transition house for Mennonite women and children escaping oppressive situations in their colonies.  If you are interested in learning more about this building method visit: www.earthbagbuilding.com for a quick primer on the topic.  

We apologize for the recent scarceness of ministry updates.  That is either a sign of our laziness or busyness.  I would like to think it is the latter.  In any event, we promise to do better.  Thank you so much for your prayers and financial support.  Please write to us, or better yet, come for a visit to Bolivia.

Blessings,
Danny and Vanessa

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Out There with the Beams -- April 2011


Dear Family and Friends,

Greetings from way down south.  Thanks for all of your notes, prayers, and support of our ministries in Santa Cruz, Bolivia.  As we mentioned in our last update, we were planning on traveling to the U.S. for the summer break.  The key word is “were.”  Sadly, the paperwork for our Bolivian residency visas is progressing more slowly than expected.  If we attempt to travel in June, we would have to abandon our current application and would lose thousands of dollars in the process. So for the time being we will have to stay in Bolivia at least through June.  Pray for our Bolivian papers, as well as Vanessa’s application for citizenship in the U.S.  After so many years of immigration problems in the U.S., Bolivia, and Peru, we feel a bit like a family without a country.  

Agua Yaku Update:  We are gearing up for several volunteer teams who will be helping us drill water wells in several Guarani communities in the Isosog area of Santa Cruz.  A Canadian church team will be drilling with us next week, and then a team from Texas will arrive mid-June.  We have already drilled approximately 25 wells in three communities in the Isosog area and have at least that many more lined up in neighboring communities.  We are so thankful to have found a local Baptist pastor, Victor, who speaks Guarani and Spanish and is helping us spread the word about our project and set up the work.  We drilled a well for Victor and his family with a team from Kentucky last fall.  Since then he has become an expert well driller and indispensible partner to Agua Yaku in this area.  There has been a tremendous response to the Christian films we have been showing in the communities.  We often set up a laptop and projector (powered by a small gasoline generator) in the evenings and project movies on the side of churches or schools.  There is no electricity in these communities so a movie is quite an attraction with sometimes hundreds of people turning out to watch.  These gatherings are a great evangelistic opportunity to share the gospel. 
Agua Yaku is also recently beginning to partner with a fellow missionary in Cochabamba, with whom we will soon begin a well drilling project deep in the jungles of Beni and Cochabamba.  We will be working in villages that would normally require days and days of travel overland and by river boat; however, via a small airplane we can arrive within an hour or so from Cochabamba.  We will try to cut down the size and weight of our drilling equipment and pipes so they will fit in the airplane.  We hope that this experiment works out so we can bring fresh clean water to people in places that a big truck drilling rig could never travel.  

Ruth and Noemi Transition House Update:  Continue pray for Loly, the previous director of the transition house, who is having triplets!  She will have to remain in the hospital until the babies are born at the end of May.  Also, please keep praying for decision making; we think we have found a new person to replace Loly.   This time we have hired a person full time since now we have five resident girls—with three babies and one more on the way—and we are soon expecting the arrival of one more girl from Tarija ( a city in the mountains).  Our jewelry business is still progressing. The new girls are now learning to make things from the girls that were previously here.  God continues to teach us that the only way to receive healing for those who have been abused is to draw near to God and be repentant, to receive a spirit of courage, and leave behind the spirit of victims.  This is all only possible through the Holy Spirit’s work in our hearts.  Please pray that as our girls learn basic life skills they will also learn who God is and who they are in His eyes.     
It is so encouraging to know that you all are back home praying for us and supporting our ministries here in Bolivia.  We could not be here doing this work without partners like you.  If you have been reading our updates for a while and have been considering sending in some support, please click on the donate button and follow the links to the appropriate information.  Join us in our calling to share Christ’s love with the people of Bolivia.

Sincerely,
Danny

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Out There with the Beams -- March 2011


Dear Friends and family,

Hello! This is Vanessa writing to you now.  I cannot believe March has already come and gone.  We had a great Christmas and New Year time with my family and friends in Peru whom we hadn’t visited for seven years.  I love my beautiful family and country and miss them a lot.
Nathaniel came here and went to Peru with us, so that was a very special treat.  Also Luciana turned 16!!  Can you believe it?

At the Ruth and Noemi things are going great.  But I am really sad to announce that our director Loly is having to quit after March since she is expecting triplets and she is considered high risk.  I am really sad to see her go, please pray for her and her family, for provision and good health. She has been very efficient and loving and also has been key to starting the jewellery and T-shirt business at the house.  We need your help with prayer so that the Lord will provide someone else to work at the house who loves Him and loves the girls as well. This letter is full of prayer requests.  We need prayer as well for all our girls, we have four right now.  Two of them have babies, one little boy and a little girl who was born two weeks ago, she is precious!  Another girl who is new and pregnant is struggling and has said she wants to leave.  And then we have our only one student who does not have any babies and has finished culinary school and has started to work at  a restaurant.  All of them need sanity and miracles for their lives.  Such  as the miracle of forgiveness, provision and families for when they leave the Transition House.
Sometimes I get depressed and overwhelmed thinking about the girls and their lives but Jesus reminds me that they are his and not mine.  Please remember to pray for Marizabel and her health, she’s been struggling with several issues and allergies.
I would like to tell you and at the same time praise the Lord for all our volunteers, without them and their hard work it would be impossible to keep sanity.  Our newest volunteer is Liz, she came from Canada and has been a real asset to the house.  She is very caring and hardworking and super easy going.  She makes beautiful jewellery too!  I just wish I could keep her.  Oh ya, the best part is that she does not speak Spanish.  Oh the things God can do that we don’t even imagine!I don’t remember if  I have mentioned this or not but Loly, Marizabel, Angelica,  and I are training to become counsellors. Our class, called Biblical Counselling, has been hard but at the  same time I have received a lot of healing through the class.  I don’t particularly see myself as a counsellor but we definitely need the skills with the girls so I can be a means of healing for the Lord.

On a personal note, we really need prayer for paperwork in general.  I went to the US last month to renew my U.S. residency and to apply for U.S. citizenship.   So pray that the citizenship is granted quickly and without any problems.  Tonight we are all traveling by bus to Salta, Argentina for a couple of days so we can begin again to apply for residency visas in Bolivia.  It is an overnight 18 hour bus ride from Santa Cruz to Salta.  Fun!

This summer we will go to the US to share with some of you guys about our ministries.  If you would like us to come speak in your church or to your small group, please let us know and we will put you on our schedule. 

Blessings,
Vanessa

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Out There with the Beams -- October 2010


Dear Family and Friends,

As you can see, our newsletter has a new look.  We have made it even easier contribute to our ministry.  To make a onetime donation or set up a monthly contribution, simply click on the “donate”  button to the right and follow the instructions.  It can’t get much easier!  We also want thank all of our long-time prayer partners and contributors.  We would not be in Bolivia working in these ministries without your partnership and support.  Thanks!  Equally, if your are tired of hearing from us, just click on the link at the bottom of the email to opt out of our monthly newsletter.  If you would like further information or would like to see pictures and videos of our work, there are also buttons linking you to our blogs and websites. 

Several weeks ago we hosted a mission team from our home church, Crossroads Christian Church, in Lexington, Kentucky.  Six men and three women came to help out with our ministries here in Santa Cruz.  As is always the case, we had a great week working hard and  laughing together.  We love to share our lives and work with folks from back home.  Let us know if you would like to put a volunteer team together.  We will make space for  you on the calendar and put you to work. 

Ruth and Noemi Transition House for Girls

The three ladies from Crossroads worked with Vanessa, teaching the girls in residence how to make jewellery.  Three of the four girls now living in the house are either pregnant or have babies and they need skills they can use to earn money while they stay at home taking care of their babies.  The jewellery the girls learned to make is absolutely beautiful and should sell really well both in Bolivia and in the North America.   The Crossroads team took some samples back with them and we hope to begin selling them soon.  Let us know if you would like to sell some in your church or community group.  Part of the profits will go toward paying for the on-going costs of  the Ruth and Noemi Transition House and part will go directly to the girls.  We will also begin selling the jewellery locally in artisan markets here in Santa Cruz.  Vanessa and her team are making good progress with the girls.  Continue to remember the girls and their babies in prayer: Juanita, Estrella (baby David), Licaria (baby Josue), and Andreina (expecting).

Agua Yaku – A Water Well Drilling Project

I took the men from the Crossroads team with me out to Isosog, a new area where we are just beginning to work.  Isosog is still in the department of Santa Cruz, but in the province of Charagua near the border with Paraguay—a seven hour drive through rough scrub brush country where there are dozens of Guarani Indian communities along the Parapeti river.  The Parapeti is actually a dry sandy beach most of the year, but near the river bed we are able to drill water wells relatively easily. 

People living in these communities have traditionally gotten drinking water from shallow hand dug wells, called norias in Spanish.  Norias are almost always contaminated from human and animal waste seeping into the shallow water table.  Most communities now have at least one deep well that was drilled by the government.  Some communities even have water towers and water distribution networks.  However, in community after community people say they receive water sporadically if at all from the distribution system because the local water coop does not have the money to buy diesel to operate the pumps.  The majority of people walk long distances from their houses to the few wells with hand-operated manual pumps.  Every morning and evening you can see columns of women and children waiting in line at wells, filling their containers, and lugging the heavy buckets and jugs back home so they can cook, wash clothes, bathe, and give water to their animals. 

Agua Yaku uses a simple inexpensive drilling technique which now makes it possible for each family to have their own well.  With the Crossroads team we drilled two wells in Yapiroa, a Guarani community of about 1500 people.  While we were there church leaders compiled a list of the several dozen most urgently needed wells in the community: including schools, health posts, churches, wells centered around groups of houses, and isolated farms.  We promised to come back as soon as we finish up a few other ongoing projects in other areas.  Before we left Yapiroa word of our project reached the ears of other community leaders. Several leaders visited our project site to see how we were working.  We promised to expand our project and to come drill wells in their communities as soon as possible.  After a quick survey on Google Earth, we found dozens of communities in this area that also need clean easily accessible water.  This week, we sent an Agua Yaku team back to Yapiroa and we will—with any luck—be drilling several wells a week, but (insert plea for financial support), we cannot continue too much longer as a project unless we receive more donations soon.  If you like the work we are doing and have been thinking about supporting Agua Yaku, NOW IS THE TIME!  Your donation will make a huge impact on the daily lives of these people living in this harsh dry environment.  It costs about $500 to drill a well and install the casing, a filter, and a hand pump. Perhaps your family, church, or small group would like to sponsor one, or perhaps a dozen, wells in Bolivia. 

 Danny and Vanessa Beams

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

1200 New Species Discovered in the Amazon in the Last Decade

Check out this article discussing the amazing number of new species of plants, animals, and birds they have discovered in the Amazon in the past decade. I love traveling in the rain forest and seeing so many cool plants and animals. I recently got several bird books so I can identify the birds I see along the rivers.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Vogel family traveling from Alaska to the southern end of Argentina

We met John and Nancy Vogel and their boys as they passed through Santa Cruz on a three year bicycle journey from Prudhoe Bay, Alaska to Ushuaia, Argentina.  They have been on the road for over two years, home schooling their 12-year-old twin boys along the way.   They are getting a good bit of national and international press during their journey.  When the trip is completed their boys will be the youngest to have ever completed this 18,000 mile journey.  The day I met them, they were even being interviewed on Good Morning America.  We invited them over for a family meal and then later in the week they spent several nights in our Agua Yaku guest house.  On Monday morning I accompanied them by bicycle out of town as they continued to make their way south toward Argentina.  It was a lot of fun hearing their stories from the road.  Surprisingly, or maybe not, they have had very few problems with robberies or violence on their trip.  They even rode straight through Colombia without problems.  I've always wanted to make a trip like this and really admire their courage and adventurous spirit.  Maybe someday (if I can convince Vanessa to give it a try).  You can follow the Vogel's on their blog at: www.familyonbikes.org.

Pictures from the Ruth and Noemi Transition House for Girls

Ruth and Noemi Transition House board members, spouses and staff
Marizabel (house coordinator), Loly (director), and Vanessa (board president)

Juanita
Licaria and Josue Bernabe

Andreina is due in a several months


Estrella and David

Monday, September 13, 2010

Out There with the Beams – August 2010

Dear Friends and Family,

How are you? We hope and pray all of you are doing great and enjoying God's peace and blessings. Recently God has shown me, Vanessa, how He really is in control. It drives me crazy, by the way, when I feel I am not in control, which is 90% of the time here in Santa Cruz. We recently welcomed a new baby into the Ruth and Noemi Transition House. Licaria gave birth Josue Bernabe, a healthy baby boy—our second baby in the last month. How great it is to see that these babies, who came so close to being aborted, now carry Biblical names! God is awesome! I had been so worried about medical care for the mothers and babies. Because the Transition House does not have a large enough budget for medical care, we are using a free government program. I have heard rather depressing stories about impersonal nature of the government program, but when I went to see our girl who was in labor I was happily surprised to see a brand new little hospital, very clean and nice. When I asked Licaria how she liked her doctor she said, "She is very young and sweet." As I left the hospital I was thanking Jesus for providing in all ways for this girl who desperately needs Him.

We have been hosting four girls for a while now, our youngest Dear Elizabeth,girl is 16 and pregnant. The Lord has also sent us a new director and two new volunteers, so things are running pretty smoothly. I have had more time to work on getting the manual ready, which is coming along great and soon we will have a new logo. I am learning so much. I used to just freak out and worry desperately about these girls (I still do sometimes), but now I try to go through the steps and remind myself and my staff things we have recently learned from the directors of Safe Haven in Texas. Our first task is to share the gospel with these girls, and it is not our place to judge them! I am very fast at deciding what is wrong with people but now I really have to look inside me and look again and try to figure out what I can do to help them, and not what they can do so I will approve of them.

There are two of our girls I am especially worried about. They both have families but their families are the reason they are at the house. Their moms don't want them, and both moms have both chosen their husbands over their daughters. Please pray that the Lord will give these girls a new and wonderful support system for when they have to leave the Transition House. This week I will be starting with my counselling class again. This will be the second year. Please pray for extra strength and energy.

A quick update on Agua Yaku: We have two team out drilling right now. One in the area of San Lorenzo de Moxos and another one in a farming community about four hours from Santa Cruz. We have had a number of interested visitors and teams come down to Bolivia this year to see the well drilling in action. We so appreciate all the visits and support we have received, but we are still way under-funded for the year. We would love to expand our staff and the scope of our work. Please pray for our work and witness in rural communities around Bolivia and help us raise for operational funds so we can continue the work we have begun.

As for our family everyone is doing great. Isaiah is already having a wonderful school year. His teacher said he is the best reader in the class!! Luciana is growing up too quickly and she is really beautiful inside and out. Nathaniel is in his first year of college in Durango, Colorado and he also seems to be doing great so far. We have been enjoying our little veggie garden in the back yard (lots of fun) and we love watching movies and eating the pop corn that our daddy makes.

Here are some praises: Good health care for the moms and babies in the Transition House, Warren and Jackie's precious new baby Norah, new director and volunteers at the transition house, Isaiah's new teacher, God protecting Nathaniel in the woods in Colorado and Lucy's sweet spirit.

Here are some prayer requests: Nathaniel receiving enough financial help from his school for his room and board, all the girls from the transition house—their relationship with Jesus, and for healing both sand physically, the transition house manual and all other paperwork, protection for our kids—and also their relationship with Jesus, new best friend for Lucy (I mean, in Santa Cruz), Crossroads team coming on September 24th, more financial support for the Agua Yaku water well drilling project.

Thank you for doing missions with us. You are loved and thought of a lot! Please let us know how we can also pray for you. And do come and see us soon.

Love,

Danny and Vanessa Beams

EFCCM missionaries in Bolivia

www.beamsclan.blogspot.com

www.aguayaku.org

www.pbase.com/beamsclan

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

A few pictures from the BPF well drilling mission team working in San Lorenzo de Moxos

Flying from Santa Cruz to San Lorenzo de Moxos

Going up river to Villa Hermosa

Breaking camp after the first night on the river

Patiently waiting for clean water

Carrying water from the swamp to begin drilling

Setting up the drill rig

Rowing till your arms drop off

Clean cool water from the well

Pirana fishing in the late afternoon

Completed well

Friendly neighbor

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Out There with the Beams – July 2010

Dear Friends and family,

"I thank my God every time I remember you. In all my prayers for all of you, I always pray with joy because of your partnership in the gospel from the first day until now, being confident of this, that he who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus." (Philippians 1:3-6) Paul says it better than I ever could, but we really do appreciate your partnership and your prayers for our ministry here in Bolivia. We also appreciate your visits. It is so much fun to host teams who participate directly in our ministry and share their personal faith with people in Bolivia. Last month Vanessa shared about the great work that the Brazos Pointe Fellowship team did renovating the Ruth and Noemi Transition House. The other half of the Brazos Pointe team went with me and our Agua Yaku staff to drill a well in a remote Yuracare community in the Beni department. It was our first foray into this department to drill water wells. Logistically, it is difficult to get into this area, but the need for clean water is so great we cannot ignore it. We drove our drilling equipment in several days before the team (16 hours overland) and then flew the BPF team to San Lorenzo de Moxos in two small chartered planes. From there it was an eight hour canoe ride upriver to the village of Villa Hermosa. The river was full of crocodiles, fresh water dolphins, and thousands of birds, making the trip anything but dull. The community has eight families and a small elementary school for the children. The Yuracare are hunters, fishermen, and farmers. While they earn almost no money from their farming activities, they subsist pretty well from hunting and fishing in the forest. They do not, however, have access to clean water or medical care when they get sick. During the last rainy season their village flooded and they lost all of their planted crops. They even spent several weeks sitting on top of furniture inside their flooded homes or in trees waiting for the water to recede. They have never had a water well, but instead drinking water directly from the dirty brown river or from the swamp that surrounds their community. It took Agua Yaku and the Brazos Pointe team only two days to dig a 100 foot deep well and install a hand pump. The water came out cool and clear. The families immediately began filling every container they could with water. The kids splashed and played in the water while the women washed clothes. After the well was completed we even had time to go fishing for piranha.

One of the best outcomes from the trip were the contacts we made with other communities in the area. After seeing the clean water in Villa Hermosa, other communities in the area wanted clean water too. The first week in July Carlos and Fernando, Agua Yaku staff, made their way back to San Lorenzo and then upriver to Villa Hermosa. From there, they hiked eight hours overland to two other communities called Nueva Natividad and Santa Rosa. These communities are on a river that has dried up during the dry season and the only way in is by foot or horseback. Village members carried the drilling equipment on their shoulders (including 100 lb sacks of bentonite-drilling clay) for the full eight hour hike. While Carlos and Fernando were drilling the wells a cold front passed through Bolivia (it is our winter) and the temperature dropped into the 30s for over a week. This is unusually cold for Bolivia. This extreme cold snap actually killed most of the fish in these tropical rivers. The rivers became a carpet of dead floating rotting fish. We saw news reports that many children were becoming sick after drinking water from the rivers with the rotting fish. It will take several years for the population of fish in these rivers to recover. While we cannot do anything too quickly to resolve the problems, we will continue to drill as many wells as we can so that people in these rural communities will have access to clean well water year round. Carlos is heading back in to San Lorenzo these week to drill more wells. Pray for Carlos and for a local missionary, Natividad, who has been working in this area for decades. We want to bring clean water and share the gospel message with everyone that we can.

We have also recently had a second Agua Yaku team drilling a well in a Mennonite community about three hours from Santa Cruz. We are drilling this well for a family who is holding Bible studies in their home in direct resistance to colony leadership which forbids colony members from reading the Bible or their own or holding Bible studies outside the "official" church. This family of new believers is being ostracized by the colony and has even been denied access to water. While Mennonite colonies in Bolivia have an outward appearance of "Christianity," they are more truly a pseudo-Christian sect operating under quite strange and oppressive rules. Four EFCCM missionary families are working in the Mennonite colonies, sharing the true gospel message of Christ and encouraging change within the colonies. We hope that Agua Yaku can provide much needed water for Mennonite families and will be another way that the gospel can be shared in the colonies in a non-threatening way. Neto and Eric have been heading up this project. Both are Brazilian Christians who came to Bolivia to work in missions. Neto has been working with Agua Yaku for about a year now and has become a quite competent well driller. Eric, a mechanical engineer by training, recently moved to Bolivia to complete a course with YWAM (Youth with a Mission). His professional background will prove quite helpful as we strive to improve our well drilling technology. We hope to bring him on full-time with Agua Yaku as soon as possible. We have also had the help of several Trinity International church members on this Mennonite well. A special thanks to you guys for getting muddy with us.

A quick update on the Ruth and Noemi Transition House for Girls: We now have four girls in the house. Three of them are pregnant and came to us through referrals from the Centro de Vida Crisis Pregnancy Center. The first baby was born last week and two more will be soon to follow. Pray for these girls and their babies. They may have a lot of spiritual, emotional, and financial obstacles to overcome, but nothing is impossible in the strength of our Lord.

Family update: Vanessa and Luciana just returned from a quick trip to Kentucky—a necessary trip to maintain their resident status in the U.S., but also a great chance to visit with Nathaniel and other friends at home. We will be trying to complete Vanessa's and Luciana's U.S. citizenship this year, so please be praying that all goes smoothly with this. It is a bit complicated because we spend the majority of our time out of the U.S. Nathaniel will stay in the U.S. this year. In a couple of weeks he will be moving to Durango, Colorado where he will be a freshmen at Fort Lewis College. He will be studying sustainable agriculture and will be a member of the cycling team (which consistently wins the U.S. colligate national championship). Tomorrow, Luciana begins tenth grade and Isaiah third grade at the Santa Cruz Christian Learning Center. Pray for all three of our kids as they begin to find their place in this world and strive to grow in their faith.

Thanks so much for your commitment in partnering with us in this work in Bolivia. We covet your thoughts and prayers. Please feel free to contact us with specific questions about how you can help. We always need new financial partners. We would love to expand our reach those in need.

Blessings,
Danny and Vanessa Beams
EFCCM missionaries in Bolivia

www.beamsclan.blogspot.com
www.aguayaku.org
www.pbase.com/beamsclan

Thursday, July 01, 2010

Out There with the Beams – June 2010

Beloved and missed friends and family,

Wow, this has been a busy and crazy summer so far and there is more to come.
Maybe we should start by praising the Lord for his Love, Provision and Patience. He has kept us safe, well fed, alive and for the most part content!

I am still discovering who Jesus is and how He relates to me. Sometimes He is my daddy and sometimes when I really need a hug He is the wind!

I have recently read a book about prayer where the event of the cross is describe as a series of encounters and breaking ups! Encounters between God's love and justice, between good and evil, between life and death, between the desire of the devil to take us away and the reaction of a loving powerful God, encounters between human and divine! The main break-up is the one between us and the forces of evil, between us and the darkness that can sometimes drive our lives! I loved it! It helps me to see my God in a new refreshing way! His power accomplished so many things with one amazing event! I also learned that Jesus represents us in front of His Father as well as He represents his Father to us. When we pray, intercede we are being introduced to the Father by Jesus whom we belong to. I am more aware now of the power of prayer and the team work between us, Jesus and the Father! I am saying all of this because I am also 100% convinced that nothing will change here or anywhere without prayer. There is a huge load in my heart to pray for the girls from the transition house and other children and young adults who lack the faith to allow change in their lives.

Last month we had a team from Brazos Pointe Fellowship- Texas, who came and completely renovated the transition house! It is so beautiful now. The walls are bright and clean, we have colorful new curtains and the bedrooms are happy and neat! These guys worked so hard, it makes me dizzy to remember that week! We also had a training for the staff and volunteers in which we learned about how to better structure our rules and our partnership to the Centro de Vida (Pregnancy Crisis Center) The training was held by a wonderful lady from a house similar to ours called Safe Have in Lake Jackson-Texas all throughout the week this lady kept on saying: " Different people, same problems!" So please, make us one of your prayer requests, both the Ruth and Noemi Transition House and Safe Haven!

I really loved the day that we just prayed for all the girls that have gone through the house, and then we prayed for the house itself, we went into each room and it was so wonderful to hear all these voices at the same time, there were words like: Father, friendships, safety, laughter, I mean I just caught some of them, but I know God heard them all!

Since the team left we got one new girl and two more have come to see the house and are still thinking about it!

On a more personal note, Saturday was my birthday, I turned 36 and Danny's birthday is tomorrow! Praise God for life! I am thankful for mine, I am thankful for my beautiful family, for my loving husband and for the awesome opportunity to serve God.

Please remember that you guys are also part of this ministry and that you are serving hand in hand with us, as you pray for us and those we serve, as you support us financially, as you come and visit and work with us. God is using you as well!

We love you very much!


Danny and Vanessa Beams

EFCCM missionaries in Bolivia

www.beamsclan.blogspot.com

www.aguayaku.org

www.pbase.com/beamsclan





Monday, June 07, 2010

Friday, June 04, 2010

Another Update on Nathaniel's trip to Europe

Nathaniel's trip to Europe with the U.S. National team didn't quite go as well he would have hoped. No doubt he had a great time getting to know his teammates and traveling a bit in Europe, but the hard crash in Belgium did not set him up well for the rest of his races. His road rash and the cuts on his hands became infected making it difficult to grip the handlebars and it seemed to cause his fitness to take a tumble. After the stage race in the Czech Republic, he and his did team did another three-day stage race in Germany. Nathaniel got caught up in a crash in the first road stage and his rear wheel was toast. After he finally got a wheel change he was not able to get back into the peloton and ended up finishing the stage in the broom wagon. Of course, because he did not finish, he wasn't able to go on to the next stage. And that was it. He never really got so show his talent in Europe. Hopefully, he will be able to recoup some fitness for the summer races in the U.S. He is doing a three-day stage race in the Red River Gorge in Kentucky this weekend, and then will be headed to the national championships in Bend, OR with several of his teammates.

Monday, May 31, 2010

Out There with the Beams – May 2010

It's hard to believe another school year has come and gone. As Isaiah and Luciana head into a much anticipated summer break, Vanessa and I are preparing for several volunteer teams that will be visiting Bolivia in June and July. Brazos Pointe Fellowship will be returning June 12th with a mission team that will help us both in the Ruth and Naomi Transition Home and in an Agua Yaku well drilling project. Vanessa will head up a team of seven men and women from Brazos Pointe who are coming to paint the transition home and also share their experiences working with a similar home for unwed in Texas. The transition home currently has two girls in residence, Juanita and Marina. Be praying for them and also that other young women who could benefit from this ministry will find their way through the doors. We have four empty beds waiting for new girls. It seems that after an initial interview so many girls are not willing to make a commitment to follow the house rules, and the counselling and discipleship classes that the program requires. It is a wonderful opportunity for young women to continue their education, further their spiritual development, and build a solid foundation of financial independence and emotional maturity, but because of an emotionally troubled past, so many choose the easy route of falling into the arms of the first boy who shows an interest.

Warren McCaig and I will be going with eight team members to drill a well in Villa Hermosa, a Yuracare village near San Lorenzo de Moxos in the department of Beni. We have been wanting to expand Agua Yaku into Beni for some time now, and this trip will give us a great way to kick it off. In an exploratory trip last week, Warren and I drove eight hours to Trinidad, the capital city of Beni, and then a further six hours to San Lorenzo do Moxos where we met Natividad, a Bolivian missionary who has been pastoring and starting new churches in rural communities for decades. He heard about our well drilling project and invited us to drill some much needed wells in the indigenous communities where he has been working. By night fall we were traveling up a crocodile infested jungle river in a dugout canoe. The only practical way to get into or out of Villa Hermosa is by boat. We hitched a ride with a neighboring farmer who was delivering emergency food relief supplies to Villa Hermosa. Earlier this year the river flooded and all the villages along its course lost their crops for the year. The World Food Program (WFP) is helping see them through the difficult months. The promised four hour journey soon turned into seven. We stopped on the shore and 1:00 AM and camped on the shore for the night before continuing another hour the following morning. I won't recount the entire journey here. Visit our Agua Yaku blog at: www.aguayaku.org for a more complete summary of the trip. I'm sure the team will have a great mission experience and will be helping bring clean water to a much needed area.

As we mentioned in a previous letter, Agua Yaku lost a major donor that had planned on funding new work teaching SODIS (Solar disinfection) of contaminated water. Thankfully several donors have visited our project recently and will be picking up some of the shortfall in our budget. We are moving ahead with the SODIS training as a component of our ministry. Several weeks ago we attempted to drill a well in an Ayoreo community near San Jose de Chiquitos. Unfortunately, the terrain is too rocky and we were not successful in drilling a well. We did however teach water disinfection using SODIS and will be following up with a rainwater catchment project in the community. Check out the Agua Yaku blog for a complete report.

Thanks so much to everyone who is partnering with us in our ministry here in Bolivia. We covet your prayers and your financial support. Please feel free to contact us if you have any questions about our ministry. If you are not already a supporter, we hope you will consider becoming one. Check out the "how to send donations" section below.

Blessings,
Danny

Danny and Vanessa Beams

EFCCM missionaries in Bolivia

www.beamsclan.blogspot.com

www.aguayaku.org

www.pbase.com/beamsclan