Learn Love Live 2010

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    THIRD QUARTER 2010

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    2/162 PARTNERS MAGAZINE / 3rd Quarter 2010

    Partners Magazine Third Quarter 2010

    Publisher Partners Relie & Development

    Our visiOn Free, ull lives or the children o Burma

    FOunders Steve & Oddny Gumaer

    COntributOrs Stuart & Ruth Corlett, Hosannah Valentine,Sonya Claase, Steve & Oddny Gumaer, Claire Gibbons, Sacha Olson.

    PhOtOs Stuart Corlett, Free Burma Rangers, Steve Gumaer,

    Chris Dolan, Brenden Allen, K'Chay.

    layOut and design Sacha Olson

    Printed in Thailand

    Partners Relie & Development 2010.

    Permission to reproduce any o the material ound in Partners

    magazines can be obtained at: [email protected]

    Partners Relie & Development is a registered charity in the USA,

    Canada, UK, Australia, Norway, New Zealand and Thailand

    Field OFFiCes Chiang Mai and Mae Sot, Thailand

    subsCriPtiOns For a ree subscription to Partners magazine and

    or inormation on how you can help us in our mission,

    please contact us:

    usa

    Partners Relie & Development

    PO Box 2066 Redlands,

    CA 92373, USA

    TELEPHONE +1 909 748 5810

    EMAIL [email protected]

    www.partnersworld.org

    Canada

    Partners Canada

    33130 Springbank Road

    Calgary, Alberta

    T3Z 2L9, Canada

    TELEPHONE +1 403 538 2870

    EMAIL [email protected]

    www.partnersworld.ca

    australia

    Partners Australia

    PO Box 13

    Alstonville NSW 2477

    Australia

    TELEPHONE +61 266 285 387

    EMAIL [email protected]

    www.partnersworld.org.au

    united KingdOM

    Partners Relie & Development UK

    PO Box 557

    Mexborough,

    S63 3EN

    TELEPHONE +44 01709 578904

    EMAIL [email protected]

    www.partnersworld.org.uk

    neW Zealand

    Partners NZ

    PO Box 40 284

    Upper Hutt 5018

    New Zealand

    TELEPHONE +64 (0) 27 587 2865EMAIL [email protected]

    www.partnersworld.org.nz

    rePrints Bulk reprints can be obtained directly rom PRAD as

    availability permits.

    Unless otherwise indicated, all scripture quotations are taken rom the

    Holy Bible: New International Version. NIV. Copyright 1973, 1978, 1984.

    Zondervan Publishing House.

    FrOnt COver Children playing at Mae Pa Dump

    PhOtOgraPher Brenden Allen

    "The Mae Pa Rubbish dump near Mae Sot, Thailand is home to many

    migrant Burmese amilies, seeking reuge and a better way o lie rom

    the one they have ed only a ew kilometres away in Burma. Families

    live atop the rubbish and try and carve out some sort o existence by

    scouring the trash or anything o value."

    SOMBAT

    FARM MANAGER

    Sombat is the most recent addition to the

    Development Team based in Chiang Mai. He is

    the Farm Manager and is an incredibly humble,

    servanthearted man who is oten the rst to

    oer assistance to others in the team.

    MARCI & BE SOE TOEKAREN HEALTH & DEVELOPMENT

    Marci Haigh, an experienced nurse rom the USA

    who has already spent six years working with Karen

    medical clinics and patients, is our new Karen

    Medical Projects Manager. Her antastic husband,

    Be Soe Toe, has joined our team as well to

    coordinate development projects. They have a

    beautiul eight month old baby girl called Nenana.

    SECRET SUPERHEROESSHAN & KAREN PROJECTS

    We have our new sta members who have joinedus in the last six months that cannot be named orpictured or security reasons. Two are working withShan Projects and two with Karen Projects.

    They risk their lives everyday to bring training andrelie inside Burma.

    MAUREENUSA NATIONAL DIRECTOR

    Maureen Beighey has been part o the Partnersamily or some time and is now in a new role asNational Director o Partners Relie & Development,USA. She's been actively involved with Partners'work since 2006, ater meeting and alling in lovewith the beautiul people o Burma.

    NIT NOYHOUSEKEEPER

    Nit Noy is a Thai Karen rom Chiang Rai provinceand is a relative o two o our other sta. Shehas a beautiul rock star son called Guitar who isone and a hal years old. She always has a smileon her ace as she keeps the ofce clean andhelps with projects.

    NEW STAFFWELCOME TO THE FAMILY

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    This smmer my wie and I, along with or three daghters

    and Bob Marley, or energetic labradoodle climbed a

    montain in Songdar, Norway. From the top o this peak,which oerlooked Lster Fjord, we were srronded by

    majestic beaty and elt close to the athor o loe. As we

    hiked, I reected on loe and its demands.

    What is the power o loe? What is it that makes loe

    isible and nstoppable? Some may say it is sentiment and

    others, prayer. I beliee it is neither. Sentiment is needed

    and prayer is essential to the mechanics o loe, bt once

    the closet o prayer is closed, how is loe eshed ot? How

    will people in London, Ackland, Sydney, Birmingham,

    Melborne, and Christchrch nderstand loe's grip

    today? How will the people o Brma nderstand that loe

    cannot be stolen by a dictatorship?

    Jess oercame eil with good, bt it reqired hisdeath. Now that's powerl loe: a person gies their lie so

    that others may lie. This is the complete opposite o how

    General Than Shwe and his 500,000 soldiers rle Brma.

    The might they wield is reckless and absie.

    Yo will see some examples o that powerl loe in

    this magazine. Start Corlett writes abot or work with

    Shan people to make loe real; the determined actions

    that bring hope and lie to thosands o lnerable people.

    Read his article and deotion on Habakkk. It will bless

    yo. St helps me see what the power o loe is all abot.

    Or team gies 150% to bring edcation and capacity

    to the children o Brma. Read Sonya's article on how their

    tenacity and commitment to make God's loe isible hasreslted in more than 80,000 children, een kids on the rn

    and in hiding rom the regime, haing the chance to learn

    maths, reading and science in Karen State.

    Grace International School is jst one good example

    o the hndreds o people who make what we do possible.

    The money the stdents raised meant that loe had a gas

    tank, a pair o shoes and a representatie. We eatred the

    article abot their eent or yor encoragement.

    As we at Partners work to bring Christ and His loe

    to the hills o Karen State, the montains o Shan State

    and into the plains o Brma's millions, we depend on or

    partnership with yo.

    I remember this eeryday whether I am in the jngle,in Thailand or on a montain in Norway. As yo trn these

    pages, celebrate with s His powerl loe. Celebrate the

    act that the people o Brma hae seen the light o loe

    and will eer be changed by it.

    STEvE GuMAER

    CEO, Partners Relie & Deelopment

    "PowER wITHoUT lovE Is REcklEss AnD AbUsIvE, AnD lovE wITHoUT

    PowER Is sEnTImEnTAl AnD AnAEmIc." - mARTIn lUTHER kIng, JR.

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    Good Lie Club storyby Hosannah Valentine

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    Tho Htoo is 11 years old but looks like hesnine; small and thin but bright-eyed. Hes insecond grade. I interviewed him becausehis house had been burned down twomonths beore and I wanted to hear hisstory in his own words. One week ater thisinterview, his amily packed and ran again asthe Burma Army again sent patrols towardhis village.

    Dah Wah is 19 and is in rst grade. Both o her

    parents died o ever when she was ve years old. She

    lived with her aunt and uncle in a village that oten

    had to run rom Burma Army attacks, sometimes

    as many as 10 times a year. The rest o her time

    was spent helping her amily nd ood. She had

    no time or school. Now she lives in her townshipheadquarters and the Karen National Union KNU

    supports her schooling.

    These are two o the nearly 3,000 students

    rom over 50 schools who came to Good Lie Club

    programs in northern Karen State in December and

    January. Out o 54 schools, three were high schools

    and 10 were middle schools. 41 o the schools were

    primary schools. This means in 41 villages out o

    54, children have no option or school ater primary

    school or at least no options that dont require them

    to leave their amilies and move to a dierent village.

    This means that or most children in Karen State

    education stops ater 5th grade. And school, such as it

    is, is interrupted by Burma Army attacks, by untreated

    illness, by hunger and the struggle to nd ood. This

    is not just education at risk this is a peoples hope or

    the uture at risk.

    And loss seems imminent.

    When amilies are hiding, living under makeshit

    shelters in the jungle, rationing out the little ood they

    are able to carry and hoping the marauding soldiers

    will turn back beore its gone; when teachers are

    trying to decide whether to attempt to have class inthe jungle or wait until they have a classroom and

    maybe a routine with no guarantee that will happen;

    when the people are locked into the binding struggle

    or immediate survival; when children too young to

    ully understand lie already bear the burden o death

    this is when hope can be lost.

    It is into this situation, precisely this situation

    when things are at their worst, that the Free Burma

    Rangers and Good Lie Club come. They bring help

    in the orm o medicine and ood and additional

    security rom oncoming attacks. They bring gits

    rom people around the world, accompanied by

    messages rom those people o support and prayerand encouragement. They bring a childrens program

    o singing, games, health teaching and the message

    that God oers reedom rom ear and can redeem

    any circumstance. They give the children a chance to

    be children again, or a day at least.

    The Good Lie Club counsellors volunteer

    because they love children. Free Burma Rangers FBR

    teams are volunteers who love and want to serve their

    people. And so seeds o love are planted, during each

    mission and in each program, seeds whose ower is

    hope and yield is reedom.

    The thie comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I

    came that they may hae lie, and hae it abndantly.John 10:10 (ESv)

    Hosannah Valentine is a Free Burma Ranger, a re ghter

    and a deender o reedom. She helps lead the Good Lie Club

    program and trainings in tough places across Burma.

    Partners Relie & Development helps und and train relie team members or the Good Lie Club program in

    partnership with the Free Burma Rangers. The ollowing words describe what the program looks like on the ground.

    Eery year the Good Lie Clb isits Tha Dah Der illage, in Mthraw District, or a big program

    beore it heads o to the rest o its mission. Children rom Tee M Der, Dah Oh Der and Daw Kah To Bawillages also come. These illages are all 23 hors rom a major Brma Army camp and hae to ee rom

    attacks nearly eery year. They hae always been able to retrn to their homes and they welcome the

    FBR teams and participate whole-heartedly in the Good Lie Clb.

    One child who came was Naw Noe, now a stdent at New Generation School, a high school in

    Mthraw District. This year Naw Noe and 13 o her 10th grade classmates accompanied the Good Lie

    Clb or seeral weeks o the GLC school tor. They helped lead singing, perormed dramas and became

    part o the team. Like Naw Noe, they all had stories o rnning away rom attacking Brma Army soldier

    instability and losing parents or siblings. Like her, they were all determined to come back and help their

    people. Good Lie Clb had come ll-circle, and those children who had once been participants were

    now leading.

    THADAHDERvILLAGE.

    InJuly2010thisillagew

    asattackedandburnedbytheSPDC.

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    I am reminded o a Shan girl who was raped by Burma soldiers at 12 years old ater having seen her amily

    and riends burned alive, only hours previously.

    It's easy to eel depressed. God this is just too much. The stories become overwhelming and we cry

    out, God, you dont seem to be here. Where are you?

    And God sure takes his time. it seems.

    There are thousands o people inside Burma and outside who daily pray or reedom in that country.

    There are aithul men and women who risk their lives to serve God and people in that country. But,

    decades later, no change seems to be on the horizon. It eels rustrating.

    And it eels hopeless.

    The massive, technologically advanced Burma army against just a ew under-resourced ragtag

    groups in the hills protecting wounded and innocent civilians brutalised by attacks. The odds seemimpossible.

    In the book o Habakkuk there are three simple chapters.

    In Chapter One Habakkuk has a lot to complain about. Mostly things like Ive mentioned above.

    In Chapter Two God gives him an answer, and it's mostly to remind the prophet about Gods real character.

    He reminds the prophet that He is a God o JUSTICE. and that justice will come.

    In Chapter Three Habakkuk stops complaining. He reminds us o the awesomeness o God, the

    greatness and the beauty. and then he makes this amous statement: Though the g tree does not bud

    and there are no grapes on the vines, though the olive crop ails and the elds produce no ood, though

    Like many other people in history, Habakkuk the prophet observed massiveinjustice in the world. He asked God: Where are you when it hurts?

    What do you do when the rich rob the poor blind, when orphans are madeand destroyed, when the weak are taken advantage of? We all struggle withthis question. Te compassion in us drives us to give, work to change the worldand to pray.

    Te world is at times an incredibly nasty place.

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    there are no sheep in the pen and no cattle in the stalls, yet

    I will rejoice in the LORD, I will be joyul in God my Saviour.Habakkuk 3:17,18a

    It eels hopeul.

    I have glimpsed this attitude in the weakest o people,

    amongst reugees and internally displaced people rom

    Burma, even amongst those who we think are ar rom God

    and yet are somehow drawing close to him.

    Last year I witnessed three special examples o thisattitude amongst students training to be Community

    Health Care Workers in Buddhist Shan State.

    One man walked three months to reach the

    training and three months home again. He made a canoe

    rom a tree he cut down to cross the massive Salween river

    so he could reach the training and serve his people with

    health care in his village.

    One man had been a soldier since he was very

    young a child soldier. He worked through the struggles o

    his past to learn to heal people instead o kill them.

    One young woman, who had a university degree

    rom Burma, risked her identity and lie to be at our training

    so that she could care or people. She put this ahead oher own career and uture. This year she will be one o

    our senior trainers in the program. There were another 57

    students with stories like this.

    Heres a summary o their attitude:

    Though our rice supplies are stolen and our houses

    burned down, though our women are raped, and our

    parents murdered, though we have not a cent to our name,

    and struggle or ood and water. Yet we will hope.

    Heres the interesting twist:

    Many o these young people are beginning to respond

    to God their Saviour.Hope leads to hope.

    So, I wont get depressed, and I might even stop

    complaining. I will look to see God at work, to nd where he

    is working and to join in because I like what He does.

    Stuart Corlett, rom New Zealand, leads our programs in Shan State.

    He's a Dad, a phenomenal photographer, a uent Thai speaker and

    semi-proessional at executing hand brake turns in his black Honda.

    y stuart crett

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    NawHtooPaw*

    Naw Htoo Paw SCHooL tEaCHER IN KaREN StatE

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    give today to meetall the education needsfor one child for a year

    with your help, teachers like

    naw htoo paw and thechildren she teaches can

    have a new futurefor onechild$15 or10

    less than3%of children in Burma are able tocomplete education past elementary school level *

    Use the attached envelope and send your donation today.

    Or donate online:www. partnersworld.org.auwww.partnersworld.org.nz

    www.partnersworld.org.uk

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    Every parent wants their child to receive agood education; an education that prepares themor lie, love and happiness. Indeed, we hold this asa basic right that every person should be ableto enjoy.

    Imagine now that the world you live in is too uncertain, too

    dangerous or your child to go to school. What would you

    do? Educate them yoursel? Even i you have to spend your

    entire day bent over in a rice eld so you can eed the rest o

    your amily? Perhaps even send them to school somewheresaer?

    For the Karen people o Burma, education is held in

    very high esteem. Many Karen parents make the difcult

    choice to send their children to schools in nearby towns and

    villages or even to reugee camps in neighbouring Thailand,

    oten braving many hardships and dangers. The decision to

    send their child away is not without tremendous emotional

    costs to both the child and the amily. Given the precarious

    nature o lie in their villages, parents know that there is no

    guarantee that they will ever be united again as a amily.

    The harsh truth is that or many internally displaced

    Karen children, education is a distant dream. The reality o

    a lie on the run and hiding in makeshit jungle camps hasrobbed them o an education and a quality o lie that most

    consider a basic right. Understandably, parents are desperate

    to give their children an education and a uture, even i it

    means never seeing them again.

    The problems dont stop when the child gets to

    school either. In Burma, the political, social and economic

    hardships endured by communities at the hands o the

    Burma Army have severely limited their capacity to support

    teachers, students and schools. Malnutrition, disease,

    security issues and general poverty all contribute to poor

    student perormance and attendance in school. Teachers

    have no time to grow their own ood due to their teachingresponsibilities and must depend on their communities

    or ood or money. When a community cannot support

    educators' basic needs, it becomes extremely difcult or

    teachers to remain in their positions, and the educational

    quality o lie or the entire community suers.

    Access to education is limited in conict areas,

    particularly or those children who want to study beyond

    the primary level. In most villages, whether temporary or

    established, there are no government-supported schools.

    But there is hope! What does exist is a network o more

    than 1,000 community-run schools across Karen State, Burma

    that includes six high schools. Many o these schools consist

    o little more than a ew bamboo benches under a tree.Rocks are used as writing boards, and books, pencils, paper

    are scarce to non-existent. The ew supplies available to

    these schools are requently lost or destroyed in Burma Army

    attacks. One o the last things any o us would pick up when

    eeing would be our school books.

    Our goal at Partners is to work collaboratively with the

    other organisations that are already working within the area

    o education in Karen State. In November 2005, the Karen

    Education Department KED, the Karen Teachers Working

    Group KTWG and Partners Relie & Development PRAD

    agreed to pool, coordinate and jointly distribute education

    assistance to the Karen State schools, orming KSEAG Karen

    State Education Assistance Group. The aim o KSEAG is toensure that all schools, teachers and students in Karen State

    receive the best possible education assistance in a systematic

    manner that is air to all involved.

    Together with others, Partners has successully worked

    as part o KSEAG to:

    Decrease the attrition rates o Karen State teachers

    resulting rom abject poverty.

    Enhance the mental, physical and social development

    o Karen students by providing school and health

    materials.

    EDUCATIONIN A WARZONEkAREn sTATE, bURmA

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    Increase the capacity o Karen State education

    leaders in the management o the Karen

    education system.

    There are currently 1,049schools,3,981teachers and more

    than 83,920students in Karen State. These numbers uctuate

    depending on current situations on the ground, but they give

    you a glimpse into the size and scope o this eort.

    At the beginning o this year 414,442notebooks, 279,652

    pens, 306,120pencils,987ootballs,13,440boxes o chalk,

    987Karen-English dictionaries,66,671vitamin kits, and much

    more were delivered to schools all across Karen State. Themajority o the 103,237kilograms o materials had to be

    carried on the backs o over 10,000 community volunteers

    who had to walk up to three weeks to return to their homes.

    At the end o each school year, KSEAG provides a

    subsidy or each teacher. In 2009, KSEAG gave each teacher

    a 2,500 THB (approx. $75 uSD). While this might seem like

    a small amount, it goes a long way towards ensuring the

    wellbeing and health o the teachers in these devastated areas.

    Karen State Education Assistance is the most

    comprehensive education support program in a conict zone,

    not just in Burma, but the world. The scale o this operation

    is massive and complex, especially due to the conict, but it

    works because o the tremendous level o local communitysupport, and because people all over the world are working

    together with communities to bring lie, love and hope to these

    precious children.

    By Sonya Claase

    Sonya Claase is a phenomenal leader, a passionate advocate or the

    Karen people and is the Director o Karen Projects and our Mae Sot ofce.

    She's also a busy mother and is married to a handsome Karen man who

    courageously serves his people.

    EACH DOTREPRESENTSONE SCHOOL &

    TOGETHER THEYREPRESENTTHE HOPE OF83,920 STUDENTSWHO ARE ABLETO LEARN.

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    Sports camps, art workshops, Christmas parties,Childrens Day celebrations and trips to the zoo.These are just some o the many un ways thatstudents rom Grace International School inChiang Mai, Northern Thailand have been bringinglove in action to children rom Burma over thepast three years.

    One special way that Grace students connect is through the

    Sports Department's Sports Leadership program. This program

    includes students organising and leading sports camps or

    underprivileged schools. For the past three years students have

    visited a migrant school at Phoppra near Mae Sot, that Partners

    helps und. Each year they have run sports camps and unactivities like ace painting, parachute games, water balloon

    catapulting, glow stick games, t-shirt painting and movies on

    a big screen. One year, 8,000 glow sticks were donated or use

    at one o the camps by an underground church in China by

    parents o students boarding at Grace!

    Matt Coe, the teacher o the 17 Grace Sports Leaders said,

    With no street lights, the giant game o capture-the-ag one night

    using 500 glow sticks was especially brilliant and the screeches o

    delight rom the children made it all the more special. On Sunday

    the Sports Leaders and the Karen children shared testimonies and

    worship in their church a very moving time or all.

    GRACE INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL

    STUDENTS MAKING A DIFFERENCE

    FOR CHILDREN FROM BURMA

    kids helping kids

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    Dylan Coe 12 years old wrote: When we give the kids

    a colouring page and some colours they treasure them like

    I would treasure an X-box or a computer. I have learned that

    there are people in the world who are not as ortunate as me

    and so we need to love them and help them.

    Pastor Peaceully the pastor at the migrant school

    shared with Matt Coe that he was particularly grateul or the

    way Matt and the Sports Leaders have mentored his senior

    students in leadership training over the course o their visits.

    He constantly marveled at the many and varied ways the

    oreign students ound to have enormous amounts o un

    with his students.

    Last year the Sports Leaders also ran a very successul

    sports camp in a Thai village close to the Thai-Burma border.This village is close to a Shan displaced persons camp where

    some o Partners' Shan work is based. The students were

    invited back several months later to run the Childrens Day

    celebrations or more than 300 children. The program they

    ran was so well received by the village and surrounding

    community that Partners now has greater access to the

    displaced Shan and are able to deliver more relie supplies,

    training equipment and trainers into the area than ever beore.

    At Grace International School graduation each year,

    it is common to hear the senior students speak o how

    ministering each year in a migrant village or Partners

    Children's Home is a highlight o their high school years.

    This year, one o the graduating students gave this advice:

    Dont waste time hanging out at the mall or doing

    random stu in your spare time. Instead, make the most o

    the great opportunities there are, to do things or others.

    They will be the great memories you will remember long

    ater you have let school.

    Ruth Corlett is a great mum to three Grace International School

    students and is also National Director o Partners Relie & Development

    in New Zealand. She is passionate about the children o Burma and

    loves that her kids are able to be involved too!

    by Ruth Corlett

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    DANIEL&KA

    THRYN

    K R I T S A N A

    & Y U T T A P O O M

    CONGRATULATIONS&FAR

    EWELL

    Loe has been in the air at Partners oer the past six months. Kritsana, the Mae Sot oce manager,

    married Yttapoom in her home illage in Northern Thailand in March. Most o the Thailand team were

    able to be there to help them celebrate their big day and hae the special priilege o enjoying the

    traditional Karen dress, ood and ceremony. Also congratlations to Kathryn Halley rom Partners Astralia

    and Daniel Charman rom Partners New Zealand, who married in Sydney, Astralia in Jly. A nmber o

    the Thailand team were also able to join with them on their special day. We want to wish Kritsana,

    Ytapoom, Kathryn and Daniel God's richest blessing oer their relationships as they set o on the exciting

    jorney o marriage.

    The Partners amily was sad to see Spencer Kerrigan

    leae or team at the end o May. Since early 2008, we

    hae been blessed to hae Spencer as the National

    Director o Partners Relie & Deelopment uSA. His

    commitment to helping the people o Brma was so

    clearly shown throgh eery acet o his work. We will

    miss the constant stream o emails with hge ideas andexcitement, his passion or change in Brma, his prayerl

    encoragement and his skills at networking and inspiring

    Americans to connect with the sitation in Brma. With

    two little ones growing p qickly, Spencer has moed on

    to a new career that will allow him and his wie Lyssa

    to spend more time at home. We wish him eery sccess

    in this new adentre.

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    Jesus, you are the greatest teacher o all.

    You speak to us and teach us wisdom that only you can give. Thank you orleading us and guiding us. Thank you for teaching us.

    We pray or the children in Burma who are in such great need o teachers not only teachers,

    but schools and supplies too. And, not only that, but they need peace to study.

    Today we pray or the schools supported by Partners.

    We pray or the teachers who give sacricially o themselves to teach thousands o

    children, oten with little resources, education and security. Give them your peace and

    wisdom. Protect them from all harm.

    We pray or the students in the schools. The thousands o children who desire to learn and

    to reach their potential. They dont have the luxuries we have in our schools. A notebook

    and a pen may be all they have or supplies. Sometimes not even that. We pray that they will

    be able to learn and understand. We pray that you will keep them safe as they study.

    We pray or the Partners staf and villagers who risk a lot to bring supplies and

    salaries to the schools and to the teachers. Give them strength to carry on, and

    protect them on perilous journeys.

    We pray or all those that work on the logistics o keeping the schools running in Burma's warzones.

    We pray that you will keep the unds coming to continue the wonderul work with the schools

    in Burma. Help us do what we do with excellence and help us do more.

    Most of all we pray that there will be peace in Burma and that there will be a

    day when all children can go to school in their own communities, without fear.

    In Jesus' name, Amen.

    DIRECTOR'S

    DESKDear Friends,

    I hope yo will hae ond the articles throghot this

    magazine both challenging and inspiring. For so many who are

    in great need in Brma, Partners Relie & Deelopment really

    does oer the only real chance o hope. With Gods help, we

    are oten the frst to reach those who are in desperate need,

    proiding mch needed srial aid sch as ood, shelter,

    medicine and clothing.

    I know we oten say it, bt it remains tre that we can

    only achiee the things we do throgh the grace o God and

    the generosity o His people.

    I yor heart has been toched by the importance oedcating Brmas next generation, please do respond to or

    edcation projects appeal on pages 8-9.

    I wold also like to ask yo to consider giing a reglar

    monthly git to be distribted generally throghot or work,

    where the need is greatest.

    Haing a steady and reliable income is essential or s to

    achiee or ision o Free ll lies or the children o Brma.

    Reglar gits allow s to plan and bdget more eectiely

    and mean we can respond qickly and sccesslly with ital

    help where and when it is needed most. Also, when yo gie

    in this way or administration costs are ct, as payments are

    atomated throgh yor bank straight to ors.

    Yo can fnd ot all the inormation yo need abot

    setting p a reglar git on the response slip enclosed.

    With loe & in solidarity or the people o Brma,

    Sarah Armitage

    uK NATIONAL DIRECTOR

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    Partners Relie & Development Australia

    PO Box 13Alstonville NSW 2477

    [email protected]

    www.partnersworld.org.au

    Partners Relie & Development NZ

    PO Box 40 284Upper Hutt 5018

    [email protected]

    www.partnersworld.org.nz

    Partners Relie & Development UK

    PO Box 557Mexborough

    S63 3EN

    [email protected]

    www.partnersworld.org.uk