Our team gathered recently for a two-day retreat to update our strategic plan.  One of the questions we were trying to answer is what we should do in Costa Rica and smaller communities in Guatemala where we have been sending student immersion teams but do not have other elements of our model in place there.  

One of our board members suggested a rule of thumb that I’d like to share with you.  As we go forward, we are thinking that when we commit to working with a community, we should do so only if we have:

  1. a local team of people in place to lead and guide the work
  2. a scholarship program for children there, and
  3. at least one other element of our model in place, which could be any of the following:
  • Capital improvements (new housing, classrooms or medical clinics)

  • Clean water solutions

  • Food and nutrition support, as well as other help with basic needs

  • Medical missions

  • Parent empowerment programs (adult literacy, workers’ coops, or similar training)

  • Student immersion trips

  • Youth sports

This recommendation speaks to the value that we place on people leading the work locally, as well as the power of education and scholarships to help people out of poverty.  It also gives those leaders and students the opportunity to incorporate at least one, if not more, of the other needed elements of our model in.

If we commit to this principle, it means that we are either going to have to increase our efforts in some places or to thoughtfully transition out.  Many of those who travelled with us to Chinautla, Esquintla and Costa Rica receive this email. I’d be interested in hearing your thoughts. And for those who have questions or thoughts about this, I’d welcome your communication too.  Please reply to this email to let me know what you think. 

Lester’s Words

By Mike Tenbusch | November 04, 2022 Yesterday, I ran my third IntSam Global 5K in as many weeks.  This time it was with our scholars in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, along with a powerful team of new friends from Grace Community Church in Detroit.  While recovering after...

Samaritans for Life

By Mike Tenbusch | October 21, 2022 When we lined up to run the Great IntSam 5K in San Pedro Sula last week, I knew I could take at least half of the 40 or so kids lined up around me.  Sure, it felt like 110 degrees, but they had to run in the same heat too.  I had...

Going for It!

By Mike Tenbusch | October 07, 2022 When she was a young girl, Yessenia was forced by the conditions surrounding her to work in the garbage dump in El Ocotillo, outside San Pedro Sula, Honduras, to pull out as much plastic and cardboard as she could from the teeming...