Thursday, September 05, 2019

The Gift of Clean Drinking Water

The village of Beaumont, Haiti now has access to clean drinking water.  No more going to the river, well or spring.  Beaumont is located high in the mountains in the middle of the southern peninsula.  It's a bustling village and since it is on the main Cayes to Jeremie road across the mountains, it is frequently where buses and other travelers stop for a meal, to get supplies or gas up before continuing on their way.  As with the majority of villages, getting clean drinking water has always been a challenge.

Hope Church of Springfield, Illinois is the C3 partner church to Beaumont Baptist Church.  Together they have been working to minister to the community.  The leadership of Beaumont Baptist felt that providing clean drinking water would make a significant difference.  Hope Church committed to financing the project.  It took two years for RMI to work out the many details, but the water system was dedicated this summer when Hope Church visited their C3 partner.

It is a business managed by a committee made up of some people from the church and as well as town leaders.  It is open to everyone and people come with their 5-gallon jugs or buckets or whatever they have to fill and pay a small price per gallon.  There is also a machine that fills small, single-serving bags with water which are then sold by street vendors. 

It comes from a spring which is pumped into large holding tanks.  It's then purified via reverse osmosis and, as a result, is clean to drink.  A water company from Port-au-Prince installed the system.  Part of the profit from the sales goes to support the church and the Hope for Kidz Program.  It has already been a huge blessing not only to the church and its neighbors but to many communities in the area who can now purchase locally sourced water. 

Having clean drinking water will greatly reduce the water-borne illnesses that they have had to deal with.  This project is indeed a life-changing gift.  




Sunday, August 04, 2019

The Life of a Missionary

You will hear us use the phrase “packing a container” in context of sending a missionary family to the field.  So what exactly happens when we pack a container?  The family going has to pack their household belongings very securely, with most items in plastic bins that have been zip-tied shut and the furniture bubble wrapped and well protected.  Everything has to be numbered and inventoried because a complete manifest must be submitted to customs as it leaves the US and enters Haiti.  They have to send everything that they’ll need to set up house and for each person in the family for several years.  Besides clothes, furniture, appliances, tools, paint,  garden implements, there will be such things as laundry soap, toilet paper, non-perishable food items, etc.
 
They transport (UHaul!) everything to the RMI office in Ft. Myers, Florida where a 40 ft. sea container has been ordered and “dropped”, waiting to be loaded.  Needed equipment such as a pallet jack, forklift, packing blankets, rope, straps, pallets, etc. have been gathered.  Volunteers, RMI staff and the missionary family all work together to unload the UHaul and transfer everything to the container. 

The family’s items are loaded and packed tightly, often up to the ceiling, which takes up about half of the container.  Loaded next are supplies for RMI’s missionaries and many ministries.  For example, in the Starkey’s container, we were able to send 46 pillows and 8 sets of sheets, a freezer to keep food and make ice for teams, kitchen supplies, bulk toilet paper and paper towels, 3 types of fans, 2 large capacity coffee pots, and other supplies for the Zanglais Ministry Center. 

The men also loaded 36 tires, lumber for various projects, 3 motorcycles and 2 four-wheelers (one for the Starkeys) to provide additional transportation so vehicles don’t have to be used, 8 heavy-duty cots and 4 camp chairs for use in receiving teams, roof sealant for the Nunemaker’s concrete home, a microwave, and a 3 ton and 4 ton floor jack for the garage.  Several C3 Partner churches sent items to their Haitian partner churches, too.  As you can tell, it’s an unusual mix of things and each container is different, depending on the needs of the Haiti field at the time.

Loading the container usually takes 2-3 days.  Working in the container under the hot Florida sun is like laboring in a sauna, so we provide a lot of ice water and cooling breaks in the office air conditioning.  Packing it well is like putting together a giant, life-sized 1000 piece puzzle.  In addition, one has to keep in mind that the really heavy things have to be put on the bottom and lighter and fragile things on the top.  Each motorcycle has to be strapped down and you have to think of how to protect things if the load shifts (Remember, it will be trucked to Miami, lifted onto a container ship, travel overseas to the port of Port-au-Prince, off-loaded onto a cab then travel on pothole-filled roads and even some unpaved road sections to RMI’s facilities at Cayes!). 

It is a labor of love for the ministry and hopefully, in about 8 weeks, it’ll arrive in Cayes and the Starkeys and everyone else will have their items.

Thursday, July 18, 2019

RMI President Honored

Romans 12:15 exhorts us to "rejoice with those who rejoice" and we want to rejoice with RMI President, Dan Shoemaker, who was honored as one of Southwest Florida's Power Influencer in June. 

The Cape Coral Community Foundation works to be the voice of nonprofit leaders in order to collaborate together to make a positive difference in the region through generosity and compassion.  At their annual Celebration of Nonprofit Power Influencers event that recognizes the CEO's of area nonprofits, Dan was among the 25 honorees. 

It was exciting to be recognized for his integrity and honesty and be able to network with other nonprofit CEO's who also work tirelessly to foster positive change in the Ft. Myers area.

Congratulations Dan!  Job well done!




The full newspaper article regarding the event can be found HERE.

Wednesday, June 05, 2019

Starkeys Are On The Move

Jim and April Starkey and their 3 kids, Isaac, Micaiah and Ezekiel are just 2 months away from leaving for the field.  They are continuing to work hard at raising the rest of their support.  While they still have 25% of their one-time funds to raise and $750 a month of their monthly needs, they are desperately needed on the field.  Thus, the RMI administration is stepping out in faith and are sending them to Haiti at the end of August, just 2 months away.  We are trusting God to supply the rest of their needs as they make their preparations.

One thing that is helping get their one-time financial needs down a bit is that RMI has bought the furniture, some household goods and a motorcycle from Rob Thompson, the outgoing Field Director.  Jim and April will be taking over the Thompson’s home on the mission center, so being able to buy these things will help the Starkeys get there sooner.

Currently, they are finishing many things...Jim’s job will be drawing to a close soon, the kids’ homeschool year is almost over, they are selling their home and some belongings,  sorting, packing and many other tasks.  It’s a flurry of activities as they make final doctor visits, come to the RMI office for pre-field training, transport their household belongings to the RMI office to pack into a sea container, say their last goodbyes - you get the idea!  There are quite a few details to take care of.

Jim and April’s first job description will be language acquisition.  Their language lessons will probably last for 3 months.  After that Jim will probably be working under Benson in the operations arena.  As she is able, April will be helping in the administration office, possibly with Hope for Kidz and church partnerships.  The details will be determined as they settle in and see where they fit the best.  The 2 older boys will start school soon after they arrive at the missionary kids school right there on the mission center.   They are excited about starting this new adventure.

How can you help them?

They need additional financial support!  Can you join their support team with a monthly commitment or a one-time donation?   You can donate online at www.rmibridge.org/financial-donations.

They need prayer support.  Their current requests are for the sale of their house, that the last of their funds will come in, that they will finish things up well (packing, etc) and for their transition to the next era of life as full-time missionaries.

You can find them on Facebook.  Look up “Jim Starkey”, “April Starkey” and “Praying the Starkeys to Haiti”  You can read more about them at their website,  www.rmibridge.org as well.

Thursday, May 30, 2019

Passing the Hat

During VBS last week at Loomis Evangelical Free Church, Loomis, NE, the kids literally passed the hat as they collected funds to build school benches for their C3 Partner Church's school.  They raised enough funds to build 4 benches.  That is enough to seat 25 students.  Way to go guys!!


We are in the middle of Hope for Kidz' annual campaign to renew sponsorships and find new ones for unsponsored kids.  Last school year there were 2660 kids sponsored and we are praying that 2880 will be able to be sponsored this year.

If you haven't renewed your sponsorship, now is the time!  And if you don't yet sponsor a child, don't delay in getting started.  These kids need your help to give them real hope for a better future.  You can go online HERE to start your sponsorship.


Friday, May 24, 2019

New Haiti Field Director Appointed

RMI is excited to announce the appointment of Benjamin Altema as RMI's Haiti Field Director.  Benjamin will be replacing Rob Thompson who is transitioning back to the US this summer.  For many years now, RMI has been developing multi-cultural leaders.  This is another important step in that process.  Benjamin has proven his leadership capability as he has worked his way up these last 12 years from starting out working with teams, to being in charge of RMI’s Haitian staff, to the Director of Haiti Field Operations and now to lead the entire field, both US missionary and Haitian staff.

Benjamin grew up in Aux Cayes near the mission center.  He and his family have been friends of RMI for many, many years.  His mother worked for RMI co-founders, Herb and Shirley Shoemaker, for 10 years while they served in Haiti, and eventually, years later, worked for RMI and Dan and Debbie Shoemaker for 25 years.  In his university years, he occasionally worked for RMI in various capacities.  He graduated from the American University of Cayes in 2006 with a degree in the Science of Agriculture and Environment.  In January of 2007 Benjamin joined the staff of RMI full-time.  He married his wife, Lucette, in 2010 and they have 4 boys, ages 8 (twins), 7 and 4.

Benson Joseph will take on the directorship of the new Department of Operations for RMI which includes most of the ministries, projects, and programs of RMI, as well as facilities and vehicles, something he has already been doing informally.  He will also continue his supervision of the Hope for Kidz Department.  His leadership in these areas has been and will continue to be crucial to the ongoing success of RMI.

Lee Nunemaker has taken on a new role as Member Care Coordinator for all of our Haiti field staff, both US and Haitian.  This new role fits his pastoral heart and caring spirit.  He will be ministering into their lives through discipleship, mentoring, and spiritual care.  Lee will also continue in his role as Director of the C3 Partnerships.  His engagement with our C3 partners have been a big part of their ongoing success in their partnerships and the impact they are having together in their Haitian communities. 

Pray for these leaders as they continue to move RMI forward on the ground in Haiti.  The ministry of RMI is having a great impact all across south Haiti and just continues to grow.  Pray for wisdom, understanding, vision, and unity as they transition into this new leadership structure.

Thursday, May 16, 2019

Meet Tessa Andrews, RMI's Newest Missionary


Tessa is a Florida native who grew up in the church with her mom and grandmother who are both Christians.  She has 2 stepsisters.  She had the opportunity to go on a mission trip with her church to Cite Lumiere in 2017.  Haiti and the ministries there really grabbed her heart and she found it very difficult to leave.  She heard of the need for teachers at the missionary kid school, located at Cite Lumiere and felt that God was calling her to teach at the school.  

Tessa shared, "...before I told anyone that I was praying about moving here, I had a moment where I was awestruck. My mama was cooking and came around to where I was sitting. She simply looked at me and said, 'if you ever wanted to move to Haiti I’d be okay with it.'  It was one of the times during my journey here that really just solidified that Haiti is where God wanted me."

She has lived in Haiti since August 2018. She is going into her second year of teaching early elementary students at Cite Lumiere Christian School.  Each year is different, based on the need...how many students there are in which grades.  When she is not teaching, she enjoys sharing her passion for ballet by teaching a class to missionary children. 

She'll officially be an RMI missionary at the end of May and shared, "I would love to participate in other RMI ministries when I am available to do so and as RMI needs me. I am very interested in the Hope for Kidz ministry in particular. I am very excited to be joining RMI, I love the missions focus on relationships with the Haitian church."

June, July and part of August will find her in her home area in north Florida working on raising her support.  If you would like to be a part of her very important ministry to missionary families, please go HERE to donateShe would also appreciate your prayers as she prepares for the new school year.

Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Heart Connections Made and Funds Raised


Sometimes making an impact can start with the youngest ones around us. That’s exactly what happened with the elementary students at Southwest Florida Christian Academy (SFCA) a ministry of McGregor Baptist Church (MBC) in Ft. Myers, FL.  [McGregor Baptist is one of the newest C3 partner churches.]  Each year SFCA organizes a 5-day emphasis on Christian Missions around the world. 

In February 2019, SFCA selected the Christian school at Cote-de-Fer Baptist Church (CDF) (McGregor's C3 partner church) in Haiti for this year's missions partner. During the week-long daily missions chapel, the SFCA elementary students learned about the school and nearly 300 students at CDF and how they are part of the Sister Church partnership.

Daily missions chapel with a life-size replica of
 a Haitian school room.
The SFCA students recognized the physical and spiritual needs of the same age students in Haiti.  Students learned that the students at CDF have a Hot Lunch Program available through sponsorships.  While this is a great blessing, students are required to bring their own bowl and spoon for lunch.  Having a dedicated bowl and a spoon is more of a luxury item, as most use what they can, such as a lid to a container or part of a pencil box as a bowl.  In recognizing this and other physical needs, the SFCA students and their families collected funds to purchase stainless steel bowls and spoons for each student at CDF. 

SFCA student helps prepare a packet of food just like the
kids at the Cote de Fer school get for lunch every day.
The SFCA students had a special chance to connect with the students in a fun and interactive way.  Through the help of RMI and Feed My Starving Children, SFCA provided a package of the nutritious MannaPack™ meals that are part of the Hot Lunch  Program that RMI offers.  Students and their families were encouraged to prepare these yummy rice packets at home and include it as part of a family meal.  Families and students were able to continue the conversation about the students in Haiti during meals and family devotion times.  Parents posted on social media the excitement of the students to eat the same meal as the students in Haiti.  One mother commented that her son wanted to have some of the rice included in his lunch so he could have rice for lunch just like the other boys and girls when they have lunch.  This was a special and tangible way to make a heart connection.

In addition to the bowls and spoons, enough funds were raised to purchase chalkboards for each classroom, school supply kits, water filters, and some additional food boxes. In fact, the SFCA students raised over $6,000 to help the students at CDF with educational and physical needs. It was clear that God had provided the means to help meet these needs. At the same time, SFCA students were able to share and demonstrate the love of God for the students and staff at the CDF school. The students in Haiti know that God has not forgotten them.

The Gospel message is for everyone. This includes addressing both physical and spiritual needs to those around us. SFCA students were challenged to “dive in” and share the Gospel message of Jesus Christ and to be part of missions wherever they are. SFCA strives to equip its students' as godly leaders and engage cultures around the world. These students showed that no matter the age, sharing the hope of Jesus Christ can impact an impact for eternity.

The bowls and spoons arrive in Cote de Fer 




Tuesday, April 02, 2019

Providing Hope

Do you have one of these in your hands?  If not, you are missing a blessing!  This is a profile of a child in RMI’s Hope for Kidz Child Sponsorship Program.  “Providing Hope Today for Haiti’s Tomorrow” is not just a cute slogan for Hope for Kidz.  It is the very foundation for the program. Through sponsorship, needy children are able to get a quality education that will utterly transform their lives.  To grow into successful adulthood, they need to be able to read, write, do math, and understand the world around them.  To do this from a Christian context makes the potential for success even greater.

Our classrooms in Haiti are filled with students dreaming of their future—hopes of being a doctor, teacher, nurse, mechanic, chef, business leader, lawyer, and entrepreneurs.  They will be Haiti’s next leaders.  A quality education opens the doors to these kinds of opportunities - the kinds of opportunities that can transform a nation from the inside out.

By investing in a child’s education through Hope for Kidz, you’re helping provide a Christ-centered foundation and supporting their hopes and dreams to change their country.

Your sponsorship provides:

  • Christian education
  • Annual de-worming and prevention education
  • School supplies, uniform and shoes
  • Access to an emergency medical fund
  • Hot Lunch Program (in some areas)
  • Chance to write to their sponsor
  • Chance to meet sponsor if the sponsor goes to Haiti on an RMI team


For only $32 a month (or $384 a year), you can sponsor a child.  To facilitate this, you can go to          www.RMIbridge.org or call RMI directly.  Monthly recurring donations can be set up or donations can be received over the phone. 

If you are already a sponsor, this is the time to renew your sponsorship.  Continue that relationship you have with your child!

Wednesday, March 27, 2019

Thank you!!


On behalf of your brothers and sisters in Haiti, we want to thank you for your prayers for them these past weeks as they have gone through some turbulent times.  We are also thankful that so many of you were able to help provide cases of food to those who are in need during these days.  Your concern and love for your C3 Partner churches, your sponsored children and the Haitian people, in general, has been amazing and heartwarming.   
We are happy to say that at present, the roads are open, and things are returning to normal.  Teams are coming and going.  The RMI staff are busy with their usual activities of making school visits, taking kids pictures, receiving and caring for the teams, delivering the food, and much more.  We are excited to see things moving and ministry happening.
Please continue to pray for Haiti and your Sister Church for continued peace and quiet for the country.  This is critical, not just for RMI, but for all the various organizations working in Haiti to be able to bring help and hope to the country.  

Thanks again for your prayers, love, and care. 



Monday, March 04, 2019

Haiti Update: Food is Deperately Needed, Missionaries Return and Teams Resume

Food aid is desperately needed now in Haiti!   People are hungry and you can help!  Haiti has been in the news quite a bit the last several weeks.  There have been demonstrations and unrest all over the country.  The people are tired of the rampant corruption that led to a severe shortage of fuel as well as a meteoric rise in the cost of basic food and staples.  They want a change in the government and relief in the cost of living.  The result was that everything in the country ground to a halt ... no vehicles on the roads, and stores, businesses and schools closed.  The country was in lockdown for several weeks.  People were afraid and unable to leave their homes to take their goods to market and to shop for food for their families.

The result of this lockdown is that there is a desperate need for food aid.  Simply put, they are hungry.  This is a humanitarian crisis that you can actively help alleviate.     The need is NOW.

A $20 donation would send a case of food (each one contains 216 fortified and nutritious meals) to a needy family.  That’s enough for a hot meal a day for a family of 6 for a month!  Please don’t delay.  Take advantage of this tangible help in a very real crisis.  This $20 a box sale price runs through March 31, 2019.

You can give boxes to a needy family, or specify your Sister Church or your sponsored Hope for Kidz child’s family.

Thankfully, things are calming down and getting back to normal.  Our RMI missionaries, who left 2 weeks ago out of precaution, have returned and the RMI Haiti office is back up and running.  The roads are clear and there should not be any problems getting the food where it needs to go.
Go online to www.rmibridge.org and click on the “Donate Now” button and follow the prompts.



Additional Update:  Missionaries Have Returned and Teams are Resuming


Our normal team schedule will resume on March 15.

Several teams had to be canceled in February and early March due to the political unrest, but with the return of calm, we feel confident in resuming our team schedule beginning with the March 15 teams.  Be assured that safety is our main consideration for our teams.  

If you are on a team scheduled for March 15 or after, plan on coming and keep in touch with your team leader to get the latest update.  As always, you are welcome to call the RMI office at 239-368-8390 to speak with our staff for an update.

Thursday, February 21, 2019

Pray for Haiti


Haiti is still in turmoil. The causes are many and there are no quick or easy solutions. RMI has had to cancel several teams and our Haiti office has been closed for 10 days. Our missionaries and staff have been safe and have had good supplies of food and water. However, as things have escalated, Saturday morning the US embassy strongly encouraged all US citizens to leave the country as soon as possible. The safety of our missionaries is paramount as well as enabling them to carry out their ministries effectively. At this point, our ministry is paralyzed and the missionaries have been on lockdown in their homes for more than a week.

The decision was made Saturday to evacuate all RMI missionaries as soon as possible. This was accomplished yesterday when Missionary Flights International flew in a DC 3 to the Cayes airport and picked up our missionaries plus several other agencies' missionaries and flew them to the Port-au-Prince airport. [The road to the capital has been blocked by dozens of barricades.] All of them were able to get on commercial airlines to the US and are now safely home. This decision wasn't made lightly - but it was needed not only for the missionaries but to relieve our Haitian leadership from the responsibility of caring for them in a time of crisis.

We will remain in constant contact with our Haitian leadership to continue to assess the situation and, hopefully, the missionaries can head back and teams can resume soon.

Our hearts break for our Haitian brothers and sisters and this dear country. Their hardships are compounded by this crisis. Pray for peace and stability to return to Haiti quickly!

[Continue to follow our Facebook page to get the most up-to-date information.]

Wednesday, February 06, 2019

Val Marie Paper

In 2016, Valerie Woerner committed to tithe 10% of the sales from their company, Val Marie Paper, an internet company that designs and produces various kinds of personal prayer journals, to RMI to feed school children through the Hope for Kidz Hot Lunch Program. God has honored that commitment and in the last three years Val Marie Paper has been able to give over $82,000 to feed 760 school kids each school day as well as help with some school projects. Each journal that is purchased provides meals for 6 kids.

These meals will probably be the only meal they receive all day. Kids who are well nourished learn better. They are not preoccupied with being hungry. They are able to stay awake in class, concentrate on their lessons and thus are able to receive better grades. They are healthier and have more energy.  Being healthier also boosts their immune system resulting in less illnesses and better attendance in school. The meals are chicken flavored rice-based (a staple of a typical Haitian diet) and are packed with the vitamins, protein, and minerals needed for optimal nutrition. In short, having these meals are life changing!

Valerie is not shy about sharing her giving vision, stating, “It’s not worth having a business if giving isn’t built into it. It shouldn’t be something that is just focused on yourself. We should be able to use our resources and steward them the way God is calling us to. It’s our daily obedience to Him.”

Valerie and Tyler Woerner
She has built giving as a part of the DNA of her business. Valerie developed unique, quality prayer journals (www.valmariepaper.com) after she became pregnant with her first child. She realized that she’d only be able to get through it if she prayed quite a bit, but she couldn’t get her thoughts organized. At the time she owned a wedding invitation company and the printer, who printed the invitations, told her that he could print something for her to make it easier, but she’d have to order at least 50. By the time she got a design put together and all the pages the way she wanted and had her first prayer journal printed, it was 2 weeks before her daughter was born. She realized that it made sense that if she struggled with prayer then there were probably other people who struggled in the same way. She shared it with her previous clientele, brides, friends, and family and sold about 100. That first shipment was shipped out 2 weeks after her daughter was born. The orders for the prayer journals kept coming as more people found out about them. It was such a novel, unique idea at the time and people really responded to it. Val Marie Paper was born and has grown exponentially in the last 4 or so years.

She had been giving to a different charity each month but as the business grew, she felt like she could make a bigger impact by giving to a charity that she knew personally and trusted. That is when she turned to RMI, an organization that Valerie had intimate, long-term knowledge of and trusted. RMI is a ministry that had been a part of Valerie’s life since she was a little girl. Her church, Trinity Bible Church (Lafayette, LA), has been partnering with RMI for decades. Her family has sponsored lots of kids over the years and she and her husband, Tyler, have continued this in their own family.  Valerie’s mom, dad, and sister have all visited their Sister Church in Picot, Haiti on mission trips. You can read more about her giving commitment at www.valmariepaper.com/about/giving-fund. Valerie and Tyler hope to visit Haiti soon to see the Hot Lunch Program in action and meet their sponsored children.
What Valerie has done is so inspiring and challenging!

The idea of giving a percentage of sales or profits to support a particular charity is a growing phenomena and businesses are finding it’s a blessing on multiple fronts as it stretches your faith and expands your borders. Have you built charitable giving into the DNA of your company or business? How about consolidating your giving into one place so that you can make a bigger impact? RMI is a ministry that has boots on the ground that you know and trust.

Help us make a bigger impact in Southern Haiti.  What can your business do?

Wednesday, January 16, 2019

Creative Fundraising

Have you run out of ways to raise funds for your mission projects?  Looking for creative, unique, fun (and legal!) ways to raise those funds?  Take this example from a long-time member of a C3 partner church.  He shared on his Facebook page:

“Many of you know that I have been involved in a ministry in Haiti for the past 30+ years. My church has established a Sister Church relationship with a small church in southern Haiti. Two years ago Hurricane Matthew (a Category 5 storm) struck Haiti and caused catastrophic damage. It was followed two months later by another major storm which caused more flooding and damage. Several churches and schools in villages near our Sister Church were completely destroyed. To raise funds to help with the construction of these destroyed churches in Haiti, I decided to try to sell my postage stamp collection which was gathering dust in my office. I had collected stamps as a teenager and still had two of my albums containing thousands of stamps. In addition, I inherited 18 albums of stamps from my mother-in-law who was an avid collector. I learned that the best way to do this would be to join the local Stamp Club and put batches of stamps up for sale in the auctions that they hold twice a month. In order to do that I had to identify each stamp by its special number and provide its “Scott catalog value”.

Every stamp in the world has a number and these are published in a series of 10+ volumes representing every country of the world. These Scott catalogs are in my local Public Library to use and are updated each year along with the current value of each stamp which can change from time to time. It’s a lot of time-consuming work, but I have enjoyed renewing my interest in stamps. So far I have sold over $3,300 worth of stamps! In the process, I’ve come across some interesting stamps. For example, many countries including the U.S. issue stamps which commemorate other stamps. These are called “stamps on stamps”. One example is the 8-cent stamp issued in 1972 which pictures and commemorates the 5-cent 1847 Ben Franklin stamp, the very first U.S. stamp! I have another stamp from Hungary which is a stamp of a stamp of a stamp!


If any of you have a stamp album and would like to donate it to the cause, please let me know by sending a message. I’ll process the stamps and sell them and use the funds to help rebuild destroyed schools and churches in Haiti.”

What a labor of love!  We appreciate his heart for Haiti and his willingness to use his resources in a unique way to benefit the churches in Haiti.  His efforts have spurred some of his friends to donate their stamp collections to him for cataloging and selling. 

We’d love to share other creative ways to fundraise!  Let us know what you are doing – it may help others come up with their own ideas.

Friday, January 04, 2019

Ministry Impact Report 2018

man saved at Ducis Sunday morningThe elderly gentleman dressed in his best clothes that morning.  He started walking early because he knew it’d take a while to get there.  Once he arrived, he made sure to get a good seat near the front.  They said that there was a group from the United States visiting the church that week and he really wanted to hear what they had to say.  He listened carefully to what the guest speaker shared.  He’d heard the pastor of the church say much the same thing, but that morning he felt God speaking to him, telling him that it was time to make the decision.  After the service he pressed his way forward to speak to the pastor.  Today was the day.  God was calling him to accept Christ as his Savior.  The visiting team from Bartlett, IL was thrilled to pray with him and to know that God had used their team to bring this man to salvation.  This kind of ministry is what we are so excited about.  RMI’s ministry makes a real impact in people’s lives. 

Here is our Ministry Impact Report for 2018.

C3 Partnerships
RMI Haitian Staff facilitated 32 team trips
482 water filters were distributed improving the health of  those families and their neighbors
424 goats were distributed to provide sources of income for those families
350 solar lights
7 churches built
2 homes built
86 church and school benches built
584 Bibles and songbooks given out
3 motorcycles for pastors delivered
533 people came to Haiti through teams, internships and others visits
3 new C3 partnerships were begun (giving us a total of 34 active partnerships)

Hope for Kidz & School Education
2,651 children are now sponsored through Hope for Kidz
7,587 children received a daily hot lunch
3 Hot Lunch Program storage rooms built
10 each of school filing cabinets and blackboards given and installed
9 children received emergency medical assistance
23 teacher’s desks and chairs given out
7 school rooms built
16,886 children’s health were improved through the Hope for Kidz De-worming Program

Haiti Operations Team
Processed 12 food containers (which is 14,760 boxes of food - each one of which were handled at least 3 times, or 3,188,160 meals)
1 new Haitian employee
Reconstruction done on 9 churches
Maintained 12 vehicles and 15 motorcycles to keep the ministry up and running
Acquired 2 “new-to-us” vehicles to augment our aging fleet

RMI USA
1 new missionary, Dawn Shoemaker, arrived on the field
1 appointee family, Jim and April Starkey, are continuing to raise their support, hoping to go in 2019
The Speel family reached their “go-to-Haiti” minimum funds raised, for which we praise the Lord.  They are stopping off at the International Office in Ft. Myers to work for a year to allow time for Jeff’s back to heal. 

Loomis building fences 2018We are so thankful for the special men and women of God that work faithfully every day.  Some work behind the scenes, some of them are more visible, but they all work hard and with joy.  The RMI Haiti office is always a busy, buzzing hive of activity with people coming and going - there are always multiple kinds of ministry happening!  And you help make it possible with your financial and prayer support.  Thank you!  The Lord’s work is being done because of you.

Tuesday, December 04, 2018

Ready or Not

rear view transformedReady or not, 2019 is coming.  Most car side mirrors have a warning printed on the mirror that says “objects in mirror are closer than they appear”.  And at this time of year, it can be said that 2019 is closer than it appears.

This is the time of year that many people are considering where they want to make their end-of-year donations.

Please consider RMI as you think of your where to make your gifts.  Your generous donations will impact southern Haiti by helping with such things as:

* Evangelism

* Child Education

* Feeding Programs

* Water Filters

* Goats

* Church Planting

* National Staff Salaries

Each of these are significant needs that could use your help.  With RMI, you can have the assurance that your gift will be used the way you intended and that it will go directly to those in need.

All donations are tax deductible.  Don’t wait until the last day to act!  It is easy – just go HERE, or call 239-368-8390.

Monday, November 26, 2018

#GivingTuesday

giving tuesday google 1280 x 720Giving Tuesday is tomorrow!

What? Giving Tuesday is a global day of giving.

Why? Celebrated on the Tuesday following Thanksgiving and the widely recognized shopping events Black Friday and Cyber Monday, Giving Tuesday kicks off the charitable season, when many focus on their holiday and end-of-year giving.

Who? RMI has a wide variety of giving opportunities…our Christmas campaign includes beds for widows, goats, bicycles, soccer balls, boxes of food and classroom supplies. RMI is also urgently needing gifts for Haiti field staff salaries. RMI operations needs funding to keep the many ministries going and the Starkey family, who are desperately needed on the field immediately, are raising their funds to go as soon as possible.

When you give through RMI you are guaranteed that your gift will be used as you intended it – financial accountability.

When you give through RMI you can know that your gift will have a direct impact on lives in Haiti – transforming lives.

When? Giving Tuesday is tomorrow….but the needs are ongoing. The holidays and end-of-the-year is the perfect time to take advantage of the specials that we have available and to take care of your year-end tax-deductible contributions.

How? It’s easy, go to www.RMIbridge.org/financial-donations. Or call the RMI office at 239-368-8390.

Monday, November 19, 2018

Let’s Pray

More than a trite saying…”let’s pray” is a refrain that is heard often around RMI.  That’s because we have an unshakeable belief in the power of prayer.  We bathe most of what we do in prayer.  We pray together and individually in the US office for our ministry, for one another, for our missionaries and appointees, and for our supporters.  The Haiti field staff also prays together in their daily devotional meetings and are intentional in leading teams in prayer before they leave on their trip to their C3 partner churches, before work projects, medical clinics, youth, men, women, and children’s meetings, open air services and any other activity that the teams are undertaking.  There’s prayer at the end of their visit and prayer during the debriefing the last night before they leave.  McGregor

Prayers before a team hits the road to go to their Sister Church.McGregor 2 March 2014













Prayers before starting a youth meeting.

deacon prayer 2

Prayers by the deacons for the team members.

praying before an open air mtg. Bayou church

Prayers before an open air service.

wives and daughters of the men on Bayou team meet to pray for them

Prayers by wives and families that are back home for their men doing a construction project at their Sister Church.

 goodbye prayers 2016

Goodbye prayers and praise as a team leaves their C3 partner church.

There’s a lot accomplished as a result of prayer! 














Friday, November 02, 2018

Give From the Heart this Christmas

Christmas 2018 side 1We are pleased to invite you to share the Christmas Spirit with your Haitian brothers and sisters by sending gifts of love.  Here are some special opportunities:

Gift List
Soccer Balls - $35 each
Goats - $120 each       
Bicycles - $149 each       
Single bed for widow/disabled - $199 each
Classroom Writing Kit (*Chalk, pens, pencils) - $85 each
Classroom Chalk Board - $140 each
Teacher Desk & Chair - $270
Carton of Food - $30 each [see below for special pricing]

Ordering is simple—you can order online by visiting our website: www.RMIBridge.org and click on the Christmas Gift box. You can also place your order by mail or telephone. Toll free 877-764-5439 or 239-368-8390.


Thanksgiving Food Special Continues

2018 Food Drive Postcard Side 1The Thanksgiving special pricing is still valid.  We are offering a holiday special of our Food for Health cases of nutritious food.  Each case contains 216 meals – enough to feed a family of 6 for a month!

For 1-10 cases, the cost is $30 a case.
For 11-50 cases, the cost is $25 a case.
For 51+ cases, the cost is $20 a case.

To order online go to www.RMIbridge.org.  Or mail a check payable to RMI to 5475 Lee St., Suite 301, Lehigh Acres, FL  33971.  You may also call the RMI office to place your order at 877-764-5439.  This offer is valid through 12/31/18.

Tuesday, October 16, 2018

Asher’s Internship

creating a bathroom at the depot tunedWhen Asher Stillman went to Haiti with his church, Bethany Baptist Church, Myakka, FL, in 2017, he left with a burden to return to serve the Lord and help the RMI staff in any way he could.  He graduated from high school as a homeschooler and has already completed two years of college credits.  (He participated as a dual enrollment student while in HS.)  He comes from a large family of 10 and they are all very active in their church.  His parents encourage all of their kids to take some time after graduation and before moving on with life to serve the Lord in something like this internship.  He wanted to take some time to get away and be alone with God before having too much responsibility, making it hard to have this time to serve.  He is handy and loves to get his hands dirty as well as be involved in ministry, so he helped in installing a new bathroom for the RMI conference room, painting, food distribution, miscellaneous jobs around the office and depot, even troubleshooting the ice machine.  He assisted RMI missionary, Joslynn Stakes, teach physical education at the missionary children’s school on Thursdays and Fridays.  He will be leaving to serve in the Marines in January where he hopes to train as a firefighter.

IMG_0053His reaction to his month long internship? “I love it!  It’s an awesome experience getting to work alongside the Haitians and learn the language and culture while serving the Lord and doing his work.”

We have really appreciated his willingness to help and dig into every job he has been given, his can-do attitude, and his love for the Lord.  He’s been a real asset and joy to have!

If you, or someone you know, are interested in an internship with RMI, contact the RMI office at info@rmibridge.org.   We would love to give you an opportunity to serve the Lord!