Kids Club is one of the biggest parts of the ministry of
Sacred Road. It’s hard knowing that we
only reach two of the seven housing projects on the Yakama Reservation. There are also three just a short drive off
the Reservation. One of these housing
projects is the tiny fishing village of Celilo, Oregon. For a while, Mary Granberry has floated the
idea of doing a Kids Club at Celilo to get a bigger view and heart for Natives
elsewhere and see a few kids there that used to live in White Swan. It was a
long shot but we decided to give it a try last summer. Here’s what happened:
We pull the trigger and load up the interns and try and do a
Kids Club at Celilo. I have everything
loaded and we head out. On the two hour
drive, Mary tries to reach our contact, Moniqah, in the community several times
without any luck. We stop for lunch at a
park, mull our options, leave the interns to eat lunch, and a couple of us
drive ahead to Celilo to try and find Moniqah.
Mary, in an effort to preemptively dampen expectations, reminds us that summer
school might have just started and the kids might not be around. As we drive through the neighborhood, looking
for house number 21, we quickly realize there are only 17 homes. Now we’re
wandering around a neighborhood where we don’t know anybody and we’re
strangers. Most Native communities are very closed and apprehensive about
outsiders. I’m fearing that we’ve
colossally failed, but we stop at a random house because there’s a man sitting
outside. Chris Granberry talks to him,
and, it turns out, Moniqah lives across the street. Moniqah is home, her kids are home, and we’re
pumped!! We tell them we’ll be back in just a few minutes and have Kids Club.
When we get back to the park, we excitedly tell the interns what happened and
I’m standing there eating my sandwich, when Emily Maxfield says, “Is that
Jason?”
I turn around and see Jason, a boy from White Swan, who we
haven’t seen in a year! I’m excited to see him and we start talking while his
teenage cousins look on quizzically. While we’re talking, I find out that Jason
is here with his uncle and they’re looking for a hose and a tarp. Soon, his uncle shows up, and it turns out…he
knows Chris Granberry because Chris married he and his wife years ago. So, we’re all standing around talking and
reconnecting and it turns out they are with the Yakama Nation Youth Activities,
and they’re going to Celilo with a bouncy house, water slide, games, crafts,
and food. This is the one day of the year when they do this kind of thing! So
now, we’re even more pumped as we quickly agree to join forces and have a joint
Kids Club-Block Party.
We had a great couple of hours playing with the kids of
Celilo, basketball with teens, making crafts with old veterans, hearing stories
from elders, and being part of a party that totally surprised us. Several elders invited us back. It was a
glorious, amazing, blessed time. Heading into it, I was full of doubt and
unbelief. I thought no one would show. I thought it would be an awkward mess. I
thought we would be given the cold shoulder by an unfamiliar community, and a
Kids Club without previous connections would crash and burn. Little did I know what God had in mind that
day. And little do I know what He’s
doing each and every day as I doubt, waiver, and dither about.
2 comments:
Amazing . . . thanks for sharing, and for being there.
What a remarkable demonstration of the Providence of our Sovereign God! Thank you for making yourself available to Him for His vital purposes!I serve as Mission to North America Refugee and Immigrant Ministry Director, and will be leading a seminar on how crucial it is to train up the next gen of "unconventional" church leaders while still young. Love what you're doing!
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