Archive for January, 2010

Tyler, TX  January 13, 2010:  YWAM MercyWorks is responding to the worst earthquake to strike Haiti since 1770.  MercyWorks has several ER doctors who have already indicated their readiness and availability to go.  Their initial job is to immediately take care of people affected by the 7.0 earthquake, then over time transition to primary care.  Our plan is to send waves of teams to the area to sustain ongoing restoration efforts.  The first MercyWorks team is tentatively scheduled to depart tomorrow, and will focus on providing medicines, food and help with rebuilding efforts.

The response effort will be immensely challenging.  The earthquake occurred 45 minutes before the sun set and due to the loss of electricity, people were in total darkness.  Phone service was lost, keeping people from getting in touch with family and friends.  Dozens of aftershocks measuring up to 5.9 kept people awake throughout the night.  Even before the earthquake, there was little to no emergency services in Haiti.  Most of the people survive on less than $2 per day.  Haiti’s envoy to the US described the earthquake as a “catastrophe” and says the damage from the earthquake could run into billions of dollars.

Henry Bahn, a visiting official from the US Department of Agriculture reported just minutes after the earthquake of seeing houses that had tumbled into a ravine.  He went on to say “Everybody is just totally, totally freaked out and shaken” and described the sky as “just grey with dust.”

We have heard from Terry Snow, our YWAM Haiti national director several times since Tuesday evening’s earthquake.  All the YWAMers in St. Marc and Gonaives are accounted for and buildings received only relatively minor damage so the YWAMers are in a good position to assist in short-term relief as well as long-term response efforts.

Earlier this morning, Snow reported “We were up early to see the video footage and pictures of the Presidential Palace destroyed and so many other buildings.  Communications are still down so we have sent our own assessment team into Port-au-Prince to see the true nature of the devastation and how we can respond.  Haiti has no infrastructure, much less a crisis management team.”

Haiti’s President Rene Preval told the media “Parliament has collapsed.  The tax office has collapsed.  Schools have collapsed.  Hospitals have collapsed.  There are a lot of schools that have a lot of dead people in them.”

The international Red Cross estimates a third of Haiti’s nine million people may need emergency aid and said Haiti’s disaster relief teams are “completely overwhelmed.”  Many people are still trapped in the rubble from the killer quake.  The United Nations reports Port-au-Prince’s main airport is “fully operational”, however roads are filled with rubble and debris and the artery connecting the airport to the city is blocked.  If aid cannot travel over the airport road to Port-au-Prince, it may be rerouted through the Dominican Republic.

Governments and global companies are responding with pledges of financial aid as well as human resources such as rubble-clearing specialists, rescue units of engineers and medics, firefighters, etc.

After hurricane Katrina, which so devastated the Gulf Coast in 2005, the people most impacted came to realize it was not government or corporate aid that made the biggest difference, but rather the body of Christ responding in a multi-year commitment long after the cameras and world’s attention shifted elsewhere.

I invite you to be a part of the YWAM MercyWorks response to this devastating loss of life and property by joining a response team and/or by making a generous financial donation.  Your gift will help with the procurement of medicines, food and assisting in the reconstruction and rebuilding efforts.

We will also be needing medical personnel to assist with this effort as well as other volunteers.  We will need grief counselors and construction crews in the days and weeks ahead.  Please contact us if you can go.  Lastly please keep these precious people in your prayers.

MercyWorks brings hope and lasting change to people afflicted by war, famine, extreme poverty and natural disaster.  Now is the time for the body of Christ to rise up and demonstrate our commitment to the suffering poor.

Because of His mercy,

Debbie LascellesFounder, MercyWorks



Katrina and I are not certain how we as a family will team up with our campus’s efforts to ring hope to haiti. please pray with us.

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So I went sleep in November, and I woke up in January! This past month was a whirl wind.

Katrina and I have been running 237 mph. We left our thanksgiving visit to Wichita early to spend two and half weeks serving our good friends Will & Tanya Dew while they were in the hospital recovering from a critical ATV accident. We returned to Tyler just in time to start packing our things in our home. We have lived in a sweet little Mobile home on the campus for the past three and half years. As of January 1st all of the mobile homes are required to be moved off the YWAM campus. So we have been faced with two options to sell, or to buy land and move it. We feel we are suppose to sell our home. So we started packing the house and putting everything in a storage unit. We also put the home on the market. We are waiting for it to sell, then we will head back to Kansas to rest and recharge our batteries for a couple of weeks.

This January and February Katrina and I will spend traveling the West coast. We will be speaking at churches, and following up on some of our relationships. We both have a heart to see missionaries launched into the urban cities of the United States. So will be focusing our time on the road sharing about Urban missions, and missional living as a lifestyle not an event. To say the least we are very excited! March 28th we will be moving (this is a short-term move) to New Orleans Louisiana to pioneer an Urban Discipleship Training school with our friend and a hero in the faith Brad Stanley (Director of YWAM Chicago.)

Check out the web link:
Http://ywamtyler.org/index.php/training/dts/udts.html

Thank you for all of your prayers, and financial support over the past 5 years. We grateful to invest together with you into the great commission. Blessings and happy new year!

Rodger & Katrina

Urban FACTS:

1 million people move to the cities of the world each week.
170 foreign move into Chicago each day.
Last 10 years 600k immigrants have moved into Chicago.
300k from 10/40 nations (who is there to meet them?)

13% of USA population is foreign born

Different language natively spoken in public schools:
Chicago 110
Dallas 107
Houston 109
The same dynamic is happening in developing nations.

Will & Tanya in the Hospitalour home (we will miss you)the road to ks