The ride goes on
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Michele Marr
On Tuesday, Sept. 11, Chet Fouche of Calvary Chapel Huntington Beach,
like so many sponsors of last weekend’s scheduled events and wondered if
the show should go on or be postponed. By Saturday, the shock and
mourning in the wake of the Tuesday’s numbing terrorist attack on our
nation would still be incalculable.The church’s inaugural outreach for
the children of Romania Bike-A-Thon and 5K Walk was meant to be an event
of celebration and hope.
But how?
On Sept. 15, 75 of the 100 registered participants showed up to bike
or walk at Edison Community Park. Money is still coming in and the funds
raised by the event are still being counted.
Fouche rides with the 25-member Team Jesus, a group of cycling
enthusiasts from Calvary Chapel. Each year they ride in the Multiple
Sclerosis 150 Bay to Bay Tour. That gave him the idea for the bike-a-thon
and Walk.
“It was a good day,” Fouche said. “We were there to comfort one
another and to raise money for an important mission, too. It’s a start
and next year we will do it again.”
The goal is to raise enough money to develop a 20-acre site outside
Bucharest, Romania to serve as a camp, retreat center, orphanage, a
school and a Bible college for the orphaned and abandoned children in
Romania.
Most of the children are from broken and abandoned homes. Most lack
proper identification and stand little hope of getting it. Without
identification they cannot work.On the streets they are prey for pimps
and pedophiles. The police despise and harass them. They are seen as less
than human. For Romania they are not a priority.
“In the winter it’s snowing. It is freezing and kids are coming up
through holes, literally holes in the ground, by the dozens,” recalled
Trisha Daniels. “They’re in T-shirts and bare feet. They are all high
from the glue or the paint they are huffing.”
Huffing is the great escape for these sewer children. It is the eraser
for their physical and emotional pain.
“You can’t imagine what these kids have been through,” Daniels said.
“These tough girls, they have been raped. They have been beaten. They are
so unloved. So unwanted.”Bob and Teresa Keenan live in Romania and lead
the mission work. They have five children and are adopting a boy, Costin.
Others have followed: Carrie Ritter and Elizabeth Silagi, who met and
married Adrian, her husband, in Romania. Angela and Brent Slusher are
planning to join them with their family of three children Shawn, 11,
Brittany, 7 and Autumn, 2.
For all of those involved, their goals are the same. They want to
establish an ongoing network for these kids, a ministry that will give
them the hope and the skills that it takes to get them of the streets,
out of the orphanages and into families and meaningful lives. They want
to bring them the love of God.The Romania Children Outreach helps
abandoned street children get off the streets, it provides summer camps
for orphaned children and provides support and encouragement to families
struggling to support their children in their homes. For more
information, go to o7 https://www.kampromania.org.f7
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