Showing posts with label Volunteers in Mission. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Volunteers in Mission. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 9, 2025

Welcome Sara Shaver – New Disaster Response /Volunteers in Mission Coordinator

Matthew Shineman, Director of Communications

The Susquehanna Conference is delighted to welcome Rev. Sara Shaver as our new Disaster Response/Volunteers in Mission (VIM) Coordinator.

Sara brings with her a wealth of experience in ministry and a heart for serving as the hands and feet of Jesus in practical, meaningful ways. Born in Los Alamos, NM, Sara grew up in a Methodist family — her great-grandfather was a Methodist pastor. Her father worked as a chemist in Los Alamos before taking a position in Oak Ridge, TN, and her mother was a World War II war bride. Sara jokes that she doesn’t consider herself “southern” because she’s lived all over the country, moving almost every four years of her life.

With a background in education, Sara first earned a degree in special education before being drawn into church ministry. When the Director of Christian Education at her church moved away, Sara was invited to apply. That open door eventually led her to pursue an M.Div. at Candler School of Theology. She was ordained in the South Alabama Conference, where she went on to serve seven congregations, one church in our conference (Camp Hill, PA) and later as a District Superintendent. After officially retiring on June 30, Sara felt God calling her to continue ministry in a new way.

Having lived through hurricanes, tornadoes, and flooding in South Alabama, Sara brings firsthand experience of the urgent need for disaster response. “This is a way to be the hands of helping that the community needs,” she shares. “Much of my work as a DS and pastor was administrative. Now, I’m excited for the chance to be more hands-on and see the fruits of the labor.”

Sara prefers to think of them not as “mission trips” but as mission journeys — opportunities that deepen faith as much as they provide help to others. Her favorite scripture is Romans 8:28, reminding her that God can make good of all things.

When asked what wisdom she would share with the Conference, Sara reflected: “Remember that David didn’t put on Saul’s armor. God has created you to be what he wants you to be.”

Outside of ministry, Sara is a hiker who stays grounded through daily devotions and walking. She’s an “extroverted introvert” who enjoys coffee over tea, is a morning person, and loves ’80s and ’90s pop music. Her favorite book is “To Kill a Mockingbird”, her favorite season is fall, and she imagines Sandra Bullock playing her if a movie were ever made about her life. Recent travels took her to England (her favorite place so far), and she hopes to visit Alaska and Greece one day.

Sara brings a unique perspective to the Susquehanna Conference, having served in multiple contexts and seen many different ways of doing ministry. “I love the challenge, and I love to learn,” she says. Her first priority will be to get organized and build strong foundations for this vital ministry of connection and response.

Please join us in warmly welcoming Rev. Sara Shaver to her new role as VIM/Disaster Response Coordinator.

Sara can be contacted via email at drm@susumc.org or by calling 717-766-7441 x3402.

 



Thursday, July 10, 2025

Immigration Immersion Journey 2025

Humane Borders, an organization dedicated to placing jugs of water out in the desert, speaks to our group about their work. 

In a powerful journey of witness and learning, six pilgrims from the Susquehanna and Upper New York Conferences of the United Methodist Church traveled to Tucson, Arizona, for an immigration immersion seminar designed to deepen understanding of the realities faced by migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border. Over the course of five days, the group engaged with humanitarian organizations, faith leaders, community leaders and individuals directly involved in the immigration system. What they encountered was not just a political issue—it was a profound humanitarian crisis that calls for moral leadership and moral courage, particularly from the Church of Jesus Christ…and even more specifically, United Methodists in Central and Northeastern Pennsylvania as well as Upper New York.  

The immersion seminar, originally coordinated through Michelle Schwartzman, the Susquehanna Conference’s former VIM director, offered participants a firsthand look at the complex layers of migration. From visiting desert aid stations with Humane Borders to touring migrant shelters such as Casa Misericordia in Nogales, Mexico and the Pima County Medical Examiner’s office, the group listened to stories of hardship, hope, and survival. They met with advocacy organizations like Border Community Alliance, Salvavision and Arizona Justice for our Neighbors, whose work on the ground sheds light on the perilous journey migrants face and the legal and systemic obstacles they endure upon arrival.

Casa de la Misericordia in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico is an organization that houses migrants as they await their asylum hearing, something very much under threat as a result of recent US immigration policy.  

One member of the group recounted a sobering visit to a courtroom where migrants—some fleeing violence and persecution—were processed in rapid succession, possibly without adequate legal representation and certainly, under current U.S. policy, without a chance to apply for asylum.   “It felt like a conveyor belt of despair,” they said. “These are human beings, not case numbers. The system treats them as disposable.”

Throughout the immersion journey, the participants were struck by the many injustices migrants face: dangerous border crossings in deadly desert conditions, family separations, prolonged detention, and the criminalization of those seeking a better life. Volunteers shared stories of finding water jugs slashed or shot in the desert—lifesaving supplies intentionally destroyed. Advocates spoke of migrants deported into unfamiliar and unsafe cities, often without resources or contacts.

Rev. Jason Schwartzman, a trip participant, commented “Immigration is not just a matter of national policy— or political preference.  It is a moral issue that demands compassion, justice, and urgent action.” The group emphasized that the Church cannot remain silent in the face of such suffering.

“The Gospel calls us to welcome the stranger, to protect the vulnerable, and to stand with the oppressed,” Schwartzman continued. “If we ignore this, we are ignoring Jesus Himself.”

The group hopes to be a voice of advocacy, education and truth within their own communities, urging churches to move beyond charity to justice—to not only provide aid, but to speak out against the systems that cause suffering. They hope their journey will inspire others in the Church and beyond to recognize immigration not as a political problem to be solved, but as a humanitarian crisis that demands our empathy, our advocacy, and our faith in action.

Friday, March 14, 2025

Staff Update

Our Susquehanna Conference Volunteer in Missions Coordinator Michelle Schwartzman, has accepted a position with the General Board of Global Ministries as the Northeast Jurisdiction Mission Engagement Liaison. Her last day as the Volunteers in Mission Coordinator was March 13.

Michelle has been a trained Volunteer in Mission for 8 years. As SUSUMC VIM Coordinator for the past 6 years, Michelle has passionately promoted and coordinated VIM efforts, including training leaders and participants, throughout SUSUMC and beyond and participated in more than 10 Mission Journeys (in addition to the many before she was trained.)

“I’m grateful for my time here, as I’ve received a lot of support and encouragement,” said Schwartzman. “With the experience here I’ve grown personally and professionally. I will miss my time working within the Susquehanna Conference.”

Thank you Michelle! We wish you all the best and pray for God’s continued work in and through you as you serve through mission engagement.



Tuesday, January 21, 2025

It’s not what you do, it’s who you serve!



Rev. Jason Schwartzman

For the past 17 years, I have been proud to lead a team to McCurdy Ministries Community Center in New Mexico. What started out as a one-off trip for a youth group in York has become one of my favorite weeks of the year. 

Last year, in collaboration with the Young People’s Ministry Council (YPMC) we brought 22 people (11 adults and 11 youth/young adults) from all over the Susquehanna Conference. The week quickly became one of their favorite weeks too. 

But what is it? What is so magical about McCurdy? Of course, we can talk about the breathtaking scenery that exists in Northern New Mexico. We can talk about the architecture of Santa Fe and the relentless charm of Taos. But that’s not what makes it our favorite week. It’s not our favorite week because of the projects we get to do either. Can anyone really say that they love to pull weeds in the unforgiving New Mexico sun at the start of the hottest month of the year? I doubt it. 


What makes it our favorite week is not what we do, it’s who we serve. McCurdy week is our favorite week because of the relentless mission that this place carries. We were fortunate enough to spend some time with Tiffany, the executive director of McCurdy Ministries. Her vision and passion for McCurdy is contagious! She sees possibilities and she articulates an irresistible vision for the valley. We couldn’t wait to be a tiny part of that incredible plan! We had a chance to spend some time with Manny on this trip. His talent is over-the-top. This man can do anything at all! But his talent is dwarfed by the size of his heart. We couldn’t wait to help Manny do everything he needed to do to make the campus look great. Why? Because we were all-in. And why were we all-in? Because of the passion that exists for this place, from those who work there. 

I have no doubt that the people who work at McCurdy are talented enough to make a lot more money somewhere else. They could be construction supervisors, or they could be the CEO of a fancy company. Instead, they give their lives to the mission…they pour out their professional lives to try to give others a fair shot. The way they live out their faith is more than inspiring. It is a practical example of John Wesley’s call to “Do good…in all the ways you can.” Their passion has ignited hearts for this place. It has taught us the valuable lesson: It’s not what you do, it’s who you serve. I am so proud to lead a team to McCurdy on behalf of Young People’s Ministry Council and in cooperation with Volunteers in Mission. They have the vision, we have the hands. 

I am so passionate about McCurdy that I would love to chat with anyone about leading a trip there! You can reach me by email at jschwartzman@susumc.org. I love this place! It has impacted my faith, my call, and my story. In God’s economy, we give and we give and we give and in the end we all have more. I can’t tell you how many times I have seen that truth in Espanola, New Mexico. 

Michelle Schwartzman
VIM Coordinator
vim@susumc.org


Tuesday, September 10, 2024

VIM Coordinator Speaking Availability

  

Hello! I’m Michelle Schwartzman and I’m the Conference Volunteers in Mission Coordinator. There are amazing things happening in our conference with missions. I’ve been told by Global Ministries that the Susquehanna Conference is known for being strong in Mission! What a nice complement to be known to be in service with others.

I wanted to get the word out that I’m available for speaking engagements. There are range of ways I can do this: 5-minute mission moments, Sunday school classes, mission teams, mission committees and so forth. I’m also available to preach based around the purpose and call of Volunteers in Mission (VIM). This can be for Mission Sundays or to fill in while your pastor is away.

A lot of our local churches don’t know the ins and outs of VIM, if your church is in mission locally (outside of church property), in Pennsylvania, and across the US, your team is eligible for and asked to receive our free insurance. I can also connect international teams to UMVIM Inc. for low-cost insurance. In addition to the insurance, I provide training for team leaders and team participants...it’s great for all to be on board and delegation is a wonderful thing. I provide resources for teams including useful team forms. I can help your team connect to a place to serve and help you gather additional team members. One of my favorite things is that I can help celebrate the mission. 

You can submit an article, and it is posted on our website, published in the LINK, and on the VIM Facebook page. It not only lets the conference in on celebrating you, but it also gives the conference ideas on serving. We are a connectional church, and I love hearing what our local churches are up to!

Please contact me for the speaking events, insurance, training, and connection. I’m looking forward to it!

Michelle Schwartzman
VIM Coordinator
vim@susumc.org



Wednesday, July 3, 2024

Urukundo Travel with a Purpose


Experience the Heart of Rwanda with Mama Arlene and Urukundo (transl. Love.)

Urukundo welcomes volunteers to an unforgettable journey where a real impact can be made in the lives of children with Mama Arlene and the dedicated Urukundo teachers and staff. While volunteering you can discover the rich cultural tapestry of Rwanda through exciting tours and adventures.

Why Choose Urukundo Travel with a Purpose?

1. Give Back and Make a Difference

Come to Urukundo to join forces and make a positive impact; to both contribute and learn. Come share your particular expertise. 

2. Gain a New Perspective

Immerse yourself in a new country and culture for a transformative experience. Your trip to Urukundo will allow you to see the world with fresh eyes and gain a deeper understanding of a different culture and way of life.

3. Meet New People 

Connect with the Urukundo faculty and staff, who are members of the local community, as you work together toward a common goal. Volunteers often form life-long friendships and connections, enriching their journey. 

4. Get Out of Your Comfort Zone

Step out of your comfort zone; discover a new sense of purpose and redefine your life. This challenging and rewarding opportunity is a chance for personal growth, discovering strengths and weaknesses, and shaping your purpose.

Accommodations

$50 USD donation per day per person covers lodging 3 meals a day, purified water, and Fiber-optic internet WiFi. This can be prepaid by sending a check to HMR or upon arrival. 

Guest House (2 options)

  • Private rooms with a double bed and a single in each room and private bath. 
  • Male and female dorms with baths for groups.
  • Residence
  • Three bedrooms are available with a choice of single occupancy or double occupancy. Both have a shared bath.

Urukundo Campus Volunteer Opportunities (examples)

  • Preschool and Primary School Teacher’s Assistant
  • Children’s Library
  • Music Program
  • Dental Clinic Project
  • Farm Animal Project
  • Staff and Community Daycare Program 
  • Vocational Sewing School 
  • Mama-Baby Outreach Project
  • All Faiths Community and Visitor Worship Center
  • Kitchen Project – Worker/Kitchen Aide or Nutrition Advisor
  • Sharing Your Expertise – Do you have a special ability, talent, hobby, or expertise? Let us know before you come, and we can help you determine how it might best be utilized.

We are here to answer your questions and inquiries to make your visit the very best. 

  • U.S. Contact: Patricia D. Brown, pdbrown@spiritworks.org, www.spiritworks.org
  • Rwandan Contact: Arlene D. Brown, brown.arlene30@gmail.com
  • European Contact: Louise Medland, lsmedland@gmail.com

Website: www.hopemadereal.org

Mama Arlene Brown (left) and Rev. Dr. Patricia D. Brown (right)

Urukundo: Hope Made Real in Rwanda Africa

 


By Michelle Schwartzman, VIM Coordinator

An exciting moment of celebration at the 2024 Susquehanna Annual Conference was the formal recognition of our mission in Rwanda, Africa; Hope Made Real/Urukundo (translated “Love”). 

The approved resolution acknowledges the humanitarian work of Arlene D. Brown, lovingly known as “Mama Arlene”, a lay member of St. Johns UMC, Williamsport. Her ministry began by providing a home for girls, caring for their well-being and education. 

Today, the expanding Urukundo Learning Center campus holds over 1200 students, a Community Daycare, Sewing Technical Center, Dental Clinic, Mama-Baby Outreach, Community Worship Center, and Guest House. Urukundo is the largest employer of Rwandan people in the region. See the work for yourself at www.hopemadereal.org.

As your Volunteers in Mission Coordinator, I urge you to consider traveling to Urukundo and see the difference they’re making (see page 11 for more information.) Work with their staff and Mama Arlene (now in her 90’s.) Also, keep an eye out for a Susquehanna Conference- wide mission journey opportunity in 2025.

Tuesday, February 27, 2024

Your Church Mission Team is a Volunteers in Mission Team

Attention Churches! 

Did you know that your church mission or outreach team is a Volunteers in Mission team?

Any of our local church mission teams that are sent out in our neighborhoods, our state, our country, and all over the world are considered Volunteers in Mission (VIM). 

An exciting benefit of our connection between our local church teams and the Susquehanna Conference VIM is that Susquehanna Conference VIM provides supplemental accident insurance FREE of charge to our teams serving domestically. We contract with AIG through the Northeast Jurisdiction United Methodist VIM to offer you a medical and accident insurance policy with $50,000 coverage for Domestic teams.

In order to receive this insurance for your domestic journey you simply submit a Team Roster. Simply complete the form and hit the submit button. Your form will be processed, and you will receive notification of your insurance from Susquehanna Conference VIM. Please be sure to submit the roster two weeks prior to your mission unless prior arrangements have been made.

For international journeys, we ask that teams register with the Team Roster and purchase low-cost supplemental insurance from UMVIM-NEJ.

For more information on the domestic AND international insurance go to https://www.umvim.org/nej-insurance.

Another benefit of the Susquehanna Conference Volunteers in Mission is that we love to celebrate you and your mission partnerships. Articles of VIM teams can be found here in the LINK, on the VIM website, and our Volunteers in Mission Facebook page.

The Volunteers in Mission Conference Coordinator, Michelle Schwartzman, provides VIM training. VIM Training prepares us to have a positive impact in mission whether it is a few hours, days, or weeks, local, national, or global. It is open to those who have led teams and those who have never been on a mission trip. Taking this training does not require you to lead a trip but equips you for service. Topics covered include Best Practices, Cultural Awareness, Health & Safety, Team Orientation, Useful Forms, Insurance, and Fundraising.

For questions about resources for our Susquehanna Conference Teams, please contact Michelle Schwartzman, VIM Coordinator: vim@susumc.org. Also, contact Michelle to set up a VIM training that’s convenient for you.


Michelle Schwartzman

VIM Coordinator
vim@susumc.org
Web: www.susmb.org/vim/
Facebook

Wednesday, January 10, 2024

VIM: Being the Hands and Feet of Jesus


By Darlene Thomas

Shiremanstown United Methodist Church (SUMC) just celebrated seven years of their HANDS & FEET ministry. Over these seven years, we have completed over 300 projects and served over 100 households in the surrounding area. 

Hands and Feet volunteers are comprised of not just members of SUMC but include youth and adults from several area churches. They meet monthly on a designated Saturday and form teams comprised of adults and youth to serve the community. The workday starts with a hot breakfast for the volunteers, followed by a worship service to help us focus on why God has called us into missions. 

The projects are identified through various referral sources and each site is assessed for viability prior to the workday by our Sites Manager. Materials, tools and supplies are organized ahead of time, so each team is ready for work at the beginning of the day. Each team has a lead who is experienced in the Hands & Feet procedures. Various leadership team members visit the sites throughout the day to ensure the teams have what they need and do any trouble shooting needed. We undertake projects such as: painting, yard work, repair, clean up/organization, small construction, etc.

We feel the work is important; however, we know God calls to each of these homes for a purpose that sometimes isn’t visible to the human eye. We trust God has us there for a reason! Building relationships with the people we serve is part of what God calls us to do. We invite them to share lunch with us and have a devotional during that time. This is a wonderful time of fellowship for the team and the neighbor they serve.


If your church is within the local community of SUMC, we invite you to join us on an upcoming Saturday. Adults and youth are welcome!

If you know of someone who could use our help, and they are within approx. 20-30 minutes drive of SUMC, please contact us. We would love to show God’s love to these neighbors.

If your church is outside of our designated radius and you are interested in starting up a similar ministry, we would be happy to share our processes to help you build a similar ministry in your area.


We look forward to being in service with your church in whatever capacity God has planned! There is plenty of need in this hurting world. Won’t you partner with us to serve others and share God’s love??

For more information, contact: Darlene Thomas, Director Hands & Feet at gabrielt0303@gmail.com or call Shiremanstown UMC at 717-737-6621.

This ministry is a certified Volunteers in Mission (VIM) ministry recognized by the Susquehanna Conference. Leadership positions of the ministry participated in VIM training several years ago and we report our monthly workday information to the conference for record keeping.

VIM Immigration Immersion Journey

Painting of a Humane Borders water station by Janet Gyekis, VIM Immigration Immersion Journey participant.

Michelle Schwartzman, SUSUMC VIM Coordinator

The impact of a mission journey is diverse. Impact can be providing a ramp for a new wheelchair user. It can be listening to someone who lost their home in a flood. It can be the feeling we get when we are able to help someone. It can be learning about immigration. It can be providing dental work. It is experiential. 

Missio Dei, “the mission of God”, is at the center of our theology. We are called to be a community, called to be one. It’s not a stagnant, one-time event but it is moving. We continue to relate, continue to learn, and continue to live the message with the community. This community and this desire to give and love one another is where work camps and mission trips often start. It’s where UMVIM (United Methodist Volunteers in Mission) was born. 

In UMVIM we now say “Mission Journey” instead of “Mission Trip” because it’s not just about the week-long trip or project, it’s part of the Missio Dei, it’s moving and a continual part of our life, not a one-time event.

Western culture is goal-oriented, stereotypically. That makes it hard for us as individuals, for our churches, for our society to not have a specific task or project to complete. When I began promoting the VIM Immigration Immersion Journey I was asked repeatedly, but “what will you DO while you’re there?” The participants of the journey even expressed that churches asked the same or the participants themselves were asking the same. The answer was that this was an educational journey. We would travel to Arizona and Mexico and meet with different organizations to learn about their experience and work with immigration. We would learn to be advocates for immigrants and put that into practice when we got back.

Six other women joined me for the Journey in September. Since we’ve been back, they each have continued this journey; speaking at their churches, to local civic organizations, to boards and writing articles. They’ve raised funds and signed petitions. I hope that you’ve read our Director of Communications’ article in the November 2023 LINK issue. It gives an account of the different organizations we visited and the dire need for more advocates. Please take a few minutes to read it if you haven’t. 

Consequently, the “DOing”, the task that is in question, comes after the actual trip to Arizona/Mexico and lasts a lifetime. Our “DOing” is what Jesus calls us to do. When Jesus talks about the Good Samaritan, at the end, he says that the neighbor was the one who showed mercy and that we should go and do the same.

The Mexico/USA border wall in Arizona and a child’s sweatshirt by the border wall.
What story does this garment hold?

Dotsy Baiza, VIM Journey participant writes in her church newsletter, “We also assisted 60 women with small children, who had been picked up and immediately sent back over the border. A shelter, La Casa de la Esperanza in Sasabe, Mexico is run by volunteers who give the immigrants food, water, and a shower before they must return to Mexico. This was so heart-wrenching, after all they had been through. The Inn of Southern Arizona, a shelter run by a UMC offers beds, food, water, and clothing. The Inn helps immigrants connect with their sponsor, provides transport to the airport, bus, etc. I met a young mother with a 2-year-old son. For 30 days, she walked to the Mexican border from Guatemala. With a small child. How intolerable her life must have been to even consider the journey.”

This is a complex issue but we must not lose sight of what is at the core: humanity. When we talk about “Issues”, we often label to the point of dehumanizing people. That cannot be what Jesus is asking us to do. Studying the Good Samaritan, we learn that the others that pass him by are following policy or practices that they are holding above the suffering of a human. In our journey, we can listen to the experiences of immigrants and to the experiences of those working with them. We can tell the story, and fight for mercy to be shown. To learn more about the organizations we met with you can see them in the November LINK or contact me. 

What we experienced (saw, smelled, tasted, felt, learned) in Arizona and Mexico was heavy. It was a lot to take in; one, just because we visited so many different organizations and two, for the gravity of it all. Returning home, it took some time to process it all. When we have experiences like this with Mission Journeys, it’s important to take time for this. It might be playing with your children, going on a hike, reading a fun book, laughing with friends, getting sucked into a TV series, or cuddling with your pets or all the above. The seven of us that went on this journey are spread throughout Pennsylvania and we talked about this through email after we got back. We also will meet on Zoom to catch up in February. We will talk about how our journey reflects us doing justice, loving mercy, and walking humbly with our God (paraphrased Micah 6:8).

I’m looking to lead this journey again for our Conference in the future. If you’re interested, please reach out. Once plans are in place I will advertise.


Michelle Schwartzman
VIM Coordinator

vim@susumc.org
www.susmb.org/vim/
Facebook

Thursday, November 16, 2023

First UMC Hershey VIM Team at Red Bird Mission


By Jenny Greene

Red Bird Mission in Beverly, Kentucky, was founded in 1921 in the southeastern corner of the mountains of Kentucky. Its story is one of deep faith in God, and continues today to serve those less fortunate in the abandoned coal mining areas of the Appalachians.

Red Bird Mission offers health care, education through their Christian school, and many other outreaches to seniors and disabled. The work camp program enlists volunteers to maintain mission facilities, and includes community home repair and improvement. 

First UMC of Hershey sent Volunteers In Mission Jeff Black, Colleen and Rick Heffner, Jill and Mike Bandy, Vicki and Joe Peters, and Jenny and Wallace Greene to serve. They rebuilt a rotten kitchen floor from ground up, dug a French drain, did some roof work for a couple who had fostered 38 high school girls in their lives. This couple certainly had an incredible testimony of their faith. The team also helped to make and install gutters for an elderly woman. 

www.firstumchershey.org

www.redbirdky.org




Michelle Schwartzman
VIM Coordinator
vim@susumc.org


UM ARMY Transformed Trucksville Area

Trucksville UMC

By Darlene Thomas

GOD @ WORK: TRANSFORMED was the theme for this year’s U.M. ARMY (United in Mission: Action Reach-out Mission by Youth) summer mission weeks. U.M. ARMY is a national youth mission organization that offers youth mission opportunities across the United States each summer. 

Several Susquehanna Conference churches were involved in this mission organization this past summer. The mission week was hosted by Trucksville UMC. Three churches from our conference participated in the week: Trucksville UMC, New Creation Community Church (Dover), and Shiremanstown UMC. In addition, two churches from Connecticut and one church from Missouri traveled to Northern Pennsylvania to join us. 

Shiremanstown UMC

Armed with hammers, paint brushes, yard rakes and other tools, this group of 60 youth and adults served the greater Trucksville area, helping both individual families as well as local social service organizations. We truly felt GOD @ WORK through everything we did and we were TRANSFORMED through our work and our relationships. 

In addition to the work we undertook, we also worshiped together each morning and evening; enjoyed wonderful food prepared by the awesome kitchen team; had lots of fun with games; had an end-of-week picnic; visited a local dairy farm where we got yummy ice cream; and strengthened our walk with God through lunch devotions and a prayer journey. The highlight of the week was our Community Celebration Dinner where we invite the neighbors we served to a dinner and program to celebrate the projects we completed and all the lives that were touched in this mission.

New Creation Community Church, Dover

GREAT NEWS!! U.M. ARMY is coming back to Trucksville in 2024, the week of July 7, and we would love to have more churches from the Susquehanna Conference join us. Check out the U.M. ARMY Northeast on Facebook or our website umarmy.org/regions/northeast for more information. You can also contact Gina Grubbs at ginagrubbs@umarmy.org or Darlene Thomas at gabrielt0303@gmail.com to discuss the possibility of your group joining us. 

Please prayerfully consider joining us to help us continue to TRANSFORM the Trucksville community! 


Michelle Schwartzman
VIM Coordinator
vim@susumc.org

Communications Ministry: Immigration Immersion Journey

Welcome to the House of Hope Community Center for Immigrant Care

By Liz Lennox, 
Director of Communications SUSUMC & WPAUMC

In mid September, a group of seven from the Susquehanna and Western PA Conferences traveled to Tuscon, Arizona for an educational mission journey to learn more about immigration and the organizations that provide support at the border. As a communicator, I joined the team to document every step of the way and share our experiences when we returned. Having done this sort of thing before, most notably in 2019 as part of a disaster response team in Puerto Rico, I thought I was prepared - I had a vision of what I would share and how I would share it. The reality was very different from what I initially expected and I was unprepared for what I would learn and see and experience. 

It’s been a full month since our return and I can confidently say that writing about this journey has been the most difficult assignment I’ve ever tackled. I’ve spent more time than I care to admit staring at a blank Word document, watching the cursor blink as I attempted to neatly package into my 750 word allotment everything that needs to be said about this emotionally taxing yet life-changing week. There are countless stories to tell and an endless amount of vital information that MUST be told. 

This project I’ve embarked on cannot be neatly packaged and should not be. The truth of what is happening at our southern border is not tidy or easy to digest. The truth is, the situation is complex and messy and heart-breaking. The narrative perpetuated by the media is full of disinformation and exaggerations, enhanced with dehumanizing language and rhetoric meant to scare and polarize. What we saw and what we experienced shattered all the preconceived notions we arrived with, and it is our duty and responsibility to tell our story and the story of those we encountered.

Immigration Immersion Journey participants (l-r) Sandra Matoushaya, Michelle Schwartzman, Liz Lennox, Dotsy Miles Baiza, Corinner Dyer, Lisa Mitchell, and Janet Gyekis at the Sonora Desert Museum in Tucson, Arizona. 

This reflection will give you an overview of our week-long journey as an introduction to a more in-depth chronicle of what we experienced and how we felt. This will be done through a multi-part blog series which will include written testimony, photos, and videos. But for the time being, allow me to share a brief synopsis of our week in Tuscon, Arizona.

The first day of our journey began in St. Francis at the Foothills United Methodist Church. This church is well-known for its dedication to social justice and many of the members have dedicated themselves to caring for migrants. One notable member is Scott Morris, the individual who diligently planned our activities and experiences alongside our Volunteers In Mission coordinator, Michelle Schwartzman. Worship was uplifting and inspirational, and the call for justice was prevalent throughout the entire worship experience. We then spent a very hot afternoon at the Sonoran Desert Museum, which introduced us to the beautiful but unforgiving environment that many migrants travel through out of desperation and in search of a better future. 

The following days were spent visiting the various organizations working tirelessly to care for migrants through all stages of their journey. Our first stop was at The Inn, a shelter for migrants that began in the basement of a local United Methodist Church. Now its own 501C3, The Inn works with the county to provide rooms in a re-purposed hotel for migrants who have been processed by immigration and are ready to travel to be with their sponsors all over the United States. Generally they stay at this shelter for 24-48 hours and have a safe place to rest, eat, shower, and prepare for the last stages of their journey. We also visited the United Methodist Church that continues to support the organization with clothing and volunteers. 

A difficult truth that we confronted was the loss of human life because of a broken immigration system and decades of poor policies implemented by the US government. A representative from the Colibrí Center for Human Rights met with us to explain how immigration has been handled and why these policies have contributed to increasing numbers of migrant deaths in the desert. The main mission of this organization is to help identify through DNA testing the migrants who have been found deceased in order to restore their humanity and give their loved ones closure. We also joined a larger group to meet with the Pima County medical examiner who shared a more scientific, yet no less devastating presentation about the high numbers of migrants who are found dead and the circumstances that caused their deaths.

We crossed the border by foot into Nogales, Mexico and spent an entire day with guides from the Community Border Alliance who introduced us to the border town. We visited Casa de la Misericordia, a long-term shelter for asylum seekers that allows families to stay together and provides schooling for the children. The process to obtain asylum is extremely confusing and difficult to navigate, so migrants staying here are given support and guidance through the long and tedious process. 

Another day, we had the opportunity to meet with the director of Arizona Justice for our Neighbors, which is a United Methodist supported immigration ministry that provides free or low-cost legal services to people going through the immigration process. We also met with volunteers who visit detainees in Eloy Detention Center and build connections with those who are detained. We spent one evening with a presenter from the Sierra Club who shared the negative impact the recently built border wall has had on the environment.

Our last full day was the most memorable but also the most heartbreaking. On the way to see the border wall near Sasabe with Tuscon Samaritans, we had stopped to check on a water tank in the desert. Our guide, Gail, received a call asking for immediate assistance at a community center over the border. Casa de la Esperanza was preparing to receive over 100 migrants who had been deported and would be stopping at the center to receive food and water and clothing. When we arrived, our group did what we could to support those who ran the shelter by buying toilet paper, helping record names, and washing dishes.

We quickly realized that the majority of those deported were women and children. I will never forget the scenes from those hours we spent there. A young woman clutching her infant while she cried… another mother repeating, “Estoy tan cansada, estoy tan cansada,” which translates to “I am so tired”... members of the local cartel circling the streets, waiting to pick up and “help” all these vulnerable people. 

The emotional toll of this experience weighs heavy on my mind and my soul and while I can only speak for myself, I suspect my fellow travelers feel the same. Throughout the week, it became abundantly clear that our current immigration policies dehumanize and criminalize migrants while making it nearly impossible for those who are escaping violence and poverty and oppression to immigrate legally to the United States. It is our responsibility as followers of Jesus Christ to do what we can to advocate and care for those suffering at our border, rather than turn a blind eye. 

As I mentioned before, this article only scratches the surface of what we experienced and learned on our educational mission journey to Tuscon. In the coming weeks, I will delve more fully into the organizations we met with and share personal testimonies from the other participants, while examining the contributing factors to this crisis and dispelling some of the pervasive myths about migrants. Stay tuned.


Wednesday, September 27, 2023

Carlisle VIM Journeys to Dresden, TN


By Eric Sands

This year, Carlisle UMC resumed its mission work which had been on pause since February 2020. The following month, COVID-19 closed down businesses, schools and churches throughout the United States and the world. Little did we know it would be three years before we would again head back out to serve as Jesus commanded. Natural disasters continued to occur, but with the virus presenting variant after variant, few churches felt that the circumstances allowed for safe participation.

In February and June of 2023, our church ventured back into the mission field heading into Western Tennessee and Kentucky to assist with the local Volunteers in Mission/UMCOR to work on homes damaged by the December 2021 “Mayfield” tornadoes. After three years of waiting to get back into the field, we believe we were blessed as much as, or more than, the families we served. 

On the way, we worshiped with Brentwood UMC in Brentwood, Tennessee. Worshiping with a different group of Christians was a powerful experience. We found that we heard and felt more of the worship experience. Often, when we worship in our home church, we sit in the same seats, talk to the same people, sing familiar songs, and listen to a familiar pastor’s voice. Worshiping differently with our mission team gave us comfort in being amongst friends and allowed us to both experience God in different ways and better appreciate our own church.

 

As we prepared for work each morning, team members used the time as an opportunity to connect on a deeper level with smaller groups of people. These interactions differed from our normal church activities because it continuously built day after day. Though this continued throughout the day, once we arrived at the work site(s), the focus shifted to the family(s) we served. 

Over the week, our team served three families repairing varying amounts and types of damage. We worked on putting the finishing touches on a house that had been completely destroyed, repaired damage to wiring, ceilings, and cleaned, sealed and painted two rooms and repaired water damage, holes in walls, and painted some more. 

 

The team was blessed to spend time with each of the owners in different ways. We found common interests, listened to stories of young and old, played with children and cheered them on as they showed off their roller blading/bike tricks, and we received notes of thanks and encouragement each day from one owner. As is often the case when we go out and help our neighbors, we are often the ones that learn and grow the most. We felt God working in their lives and ours. 






Photos courtesy of Eric Sands

Calvary Harrisburg Youth VIM Journey


By Lauren Bell, Calvary UMC Youth Group

In June, youth from Calvary UMC in Harrisburg went on a four-day woodsy retreat to Wesley Forest Camp and Retreat Center in Weikert, Pa. Previously, we would use trips to Wesley Forest as an escape from parents and school or as an opportunity to connect with nature, build friendships, and be closer to God. 

This past winter, Wesley Forest experienced a terrible storm which uprooted trees and left the camp in disarray. To ensure the safety of the summer campers and restore Wesley Forest to its former glory, we spent our retreat time helping to clean up and learning the importance of caring for the Earth.


Among the many jobs we completed were extensive yard work around Penns Creek Lodge, removing tree branches and other foliage from paths, and planting flowers around the entrance sign. We ensured that summer campers had clean facilities, like bathhouses and the craft cabin, and safe trails to explore the camp and experience the beauty of nature that surrounds them. 

We worked together on large projects helping build teamwork and strong connections with one another. When everyone relied on one another to accomplish a goal, friendship and understanding blossomed, and inside jokes abounded. 

All this hard work could not have been accomplished without the different skills found within each youth. From one’s knowledge of landscaping, to another’s understanding of gardening, as well as compassion, hard work, high energy, and an obsession with a leaf blower, job after job was completed beyond expectations. 

You may be wondering, “All this hard work seems exhausting and unfair for the kids”. Well, we found time to enjoy some fun, playing 9-square, spoons, gaga ball, and other games, as well as Bible study and, oh yeah, even a trip into town for ice cream! 


Every challenge, obstacle, or job was completed and overcome through hard work and determination from the youth and loving donations from friends, family, and other members of our church. The youth can honestly say that they had a blast and are looking forward to when they can do it all again. 

Calvary’s youth would like to thank Volunteers In Mission (VIM) for helping to organize the trip and the projects. And another thank you to the staff at Wesley Forest for hosting us. We’ll be back in the spring!


For more information about VIM and opportunities, contact

Michelle Schwartzman, VIM Coordinator
vim@susumc.org
Web: www.susmb.org/vim/
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