3ABN Today

Go Make A Difference

Three Angels Broadcasting Network

Program transcript

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Series Code: TDY

Program Code: TDY200044A


00:02 I want to spend my life
00:08 Mending broken people
00:12 I want to spend my life
00:19 Removing pain
00:24 Lord, let my word
00:30 Heal a heart that hurts
00:34 I want to spend my life
00:40 Mending broken people
00:46 I want to spend my life
00:51 Mending broken people
01:08 Hello, friends, and welcome to 3ABN Today.
01:12 We are so excited about today's program.
01:14 And, of course, as always,
01:16 we're excited that you have taken time
01:17 out of your busy day to join us
01:19 for this very special hour.
01:22 Again, we thank you always for your love,
01:24 your prayers and support of 3ABN Ministry
01:26 because again without you,
01:28 this gospel could not go around the world.
01:30 And we are commissioned to take the good news of Jesus
01:33 to all the parts of the world.
01:34 And so thank you today
01:36 for taking your time to be with us.
01:37 We have, as I said,
01:38 a very, very special program today,
01:40 a story of evangelism,
01:43 a story of education, a story of transformation.
01:47 And, of course, we're talking about a program
01:49 that I guess could be summed up as, as I'm told,
01:51 you're looking at my notes,
01:53 which is actually pretty cool here.
01:54 The topic could be entitled, "Go M.A.D" Go M.A.D, of course,
02:00 in a good way.
02:02 Of course, that's an acronym
02:03 that simply means Go Make A Difference.
02:05 And that's exactly what we're talking about today
02:07 on how you can make a difference.
02:10 And I have some very, very special guests
02:12 that's going to explain
02:13 how we can all make a difference.
02:15 We have William and Nancy Mac, how are you guys doing?
02:18 Doing good. Praise the Lord.
02:20 And William and Nancy Mack are here to tell us today
02:23 about a very, very special ministry,
02:26 a ministry that is certainly making a difference
02:29 in many people's lives.
02:30 And so, William and Nancy, why don't you
02:34 before we go dive deep into our main topic,
02:37 which is Adventist Child India,
02:40 and we're going to talk a little bit more
02:41 in just a moment about exactly what Adventist Child India is.
02:45 There may be someone new
02:46 and they don't know who William and Nancy are.
02:49 And I think you guys have been here before,
02:51 you said it was a few years ago, right?
02:52 Yeah, few years back, yes. Okay.
02:54 And so why don't you tell us a little bit about who you are,
02:56 where you come from,
02:57 a little bit of your background?
02:59 Introduce yourselves to us?
03:00 All right. Okay. I'll start then.
03:02 Yes, my parents,
03:03 I've been an Adventist all my life.
03:05 My parents worked in the school system.
03:07 And I grew up in California, lived up and down California,
03:10 and ended up in Maryland at the end,
03:13 but I went to La Sierra College.
03:14 And in college, I became a student missionary
03:18 between my junior and senior year
03:20 and spent a year in Zambia, Africa.
03:22 And that's what opened,
03:23 I was 20 turned 21 during that time,
03:25 that's what opened my eyes
03:27 to what's happening in the world.
03:28 And that, you know, United States
03:30 is maybe not just the focus of everything
03:32 or the center of it,
03:34 there's lots of other things going on.
03:35 And that got me interested in. Wow. Praise the Lord.
03:37 So you've spent the majority of your life as a missionary
03:41 working abroad, right?
03:42 Okay.
03:44 No, the last seven years we have now since 2013.
03:45 Oh, last seven years. Okay, okay.
03:46 Before that was a student missionary
03:48 for one full year in Zambia.
03:49 Okay, that's awesome.
03:51 And finished my schooling,
03:52 and then I worked for the church a little bit
03:53 in different ways.
03:55 And now for the seven years
03:56 as Adventist Child India which is,
03:57 which you'll learn about.
03:59 Absolutely.
04:00 And, Nancy, tell us a little bit
04:02 about your background, where you're from?
04:03 Well, if that's a little hard to explain.
04:05 I was born and raised in India.
04:08 I'm a third-generation worker in India.
04:12 And I've traveled everywhere in India,
04:16 as well as being here in California
04:18 living as a teenager, Montana for high school,
04:21 Forest Lake Academy for my junior senior year.
04:24 And then marrying Bill and living in Maryland.
04:28 Now we've moved to Tennessee.
04:30 So that's about,
04:32 well, I've been everywhere on the world.
04:35 I have, like I said, been born in India,
04:37 I have siblings, and we were all born there,
04:41 including my father, born in 1922 in India.
04:46 So we have about 100 and some years of work in India
04:50 that we've been there and doing God's work.
04:52 That's amazing.
04:53 Praise the Lord. Praise the Lord.
04:55 India, and that's what
04:56 we're going to be talking about today.
04:57 How you're going to be sharing with us
04:59 the blessing of how we can help you guys
05:03 do the evangelistic work that you're doing in India.
05:05 And, of course, we're talking about
05:07 their ministry, ministry they're helping with
05:09 and that they are involved with.
05:11 In fact, William, you're, I see here,
05:12 you're the director of Adventist Child India.
05:15 And, Nancy, you were the assistant director.
05:17 So tell us a little bit about why you're here, of course,
05:20 and that is Adventist Child India.
05:22 So inform us a little bit about
05:24 what is Adventist Child India and a little bit of the history
05:27 and how it got started?
05:28 Okay. There is a picture...
05:30 I can start on that. Okay. Yeah.
05:32 So there is a picture I believe you brought with.
05:34 And this is explained to us
05:35 if we can get that picture up really quickly of Dorothy,
05:39 I believe it is, right?
05:40 I believe you were telling me her name is Dorothy.
05:42 Yes.
05:43 You go and tell about your relationship
05:45 and then I'll tell about.
05:47 Mrs. Dorothy Watts is not really Mrs. Watts to me,
05:51 she is Aunt Dorothy.
05:52 I knew her as a child,
05:54 and she and I have the same love for animals.
05:57 Dorothy had a python, she had a monkey.
06:02 And I thought that was a coolest thing
06:04 because I've always thought that animals
06:06 were the wonderful thing to have around.
06:09 She was little concerned about our church,
06:12 because our children
06:13 were just sort of falling through the cracks.
06:16 And so in 2005, she started the program
06:19 Adventist Child India
06:20 to help raise our children in a school
06:23 where they could get English media school,
06:25 and also be able to learn and grow and be healthier,
06:30 be able to have place, safe place to sleep,
06:33 three meals a day, and get their uniform
06:35 and their books and get educated
06:37 so that they could bring themselves up
06:39 as well as their family.
06:41 Wow.
06:42 And so Dorothy in her connection
06:44 with Adventist, she's the founder I'm guessing.
06:46 She's the founder of the Seventh-day,
06:47 I mean, the Adventist Child India.
06:49 Adventist Child India. Yes.
06:51 The reason was that
06:52 there were a lot of baptisms in India
06:53 in the early 2000s.
06:55 And these children are from the poorest of homes,
06:59 literally in villages that would never get educated,
07:02 and they're barefoot in short pants,
07:04 and it's warm, most of India,
07:07 and this is where the children are coming from,
07:08 they speak in their local language.
07:10 So in schools, they can learn English
07:13 and get educated
07:14 and just get out of the poverty level
07:16 instead of the day laborers, that's their parents background
07:19 this is what they are coming from,
07:21 they're uneducated, then,
07:22 so the children can get educated
07:24 and have a much better future.
07:27 So this is, this is, you know, the foundation of the program
07:30 and what we're about that
07:31 so they're already from Adventist programs,
07:33 no one's being converted,
07:35 no one is changing, forced to do anything.
07:37 These are already Adventist children
07:39 that we're helping to get educated.
07:40 Absolutely.
07:41 So tell me a little bit
07:43 how you guys get involved in this?
07:44 Because you've been involved now for about,
07:45 what, seven years?
07:47 And so how did you become involved
07:48 with Adventist Child India?
07:50 Well, it started out in 2008, when I decided I wanted to go
07:54 and do humanitarian service in India,
07:55 because I'd been born and raised there.
07:57 So I started going back and my husband
07:59 was kind enough to keep my business floating
08:02 while I was gone six weeks to eight weeks,
08:04 and I would go and I would spend time
08:07 with the children.
08:08 If I saw children that didn't have uniforms,
08:10 I get them.
08:11 If they didn't have shoes, I'd buy shoes for them.
08:14 If a lady who had become a widowed had no income,
08:17 I get a cow for her, or goats, or sewing machine, something
08:21 and it wasn't like a lot of money being put out.
08:23 But it was a really 1% at the time.
08:25 That's all I could do,
08:27 and it wasn't a lot of money going out.
08:29 And so, I started going and there was a gentleman
08:31 that knew me as a child there
08:33 and saw what I was doing in India
08:35 and sent an email out
08:37 and asking for somebody to come and help with
08:40 the Adventist Child India program
08:42 because they had no director at the time.
08:44 And I was like, nah, I can't do that by myself.
08:47 I need my husband with me. So...
08:50 So you were living in India just I heard?
08:51 No, I was just going back and forth
08:53 doing humanitarian service during this summer.
08:55 Okay, so you were in the US at this time?
08:57 Yes.
08:58 And then you guys were together,
08:59 obviously and so.
09:01 Okay, so now you, you've decided you wanted,
09:02 you didn't think it was for you?
09:04 No, I just said, "No, I can't do that."
09:06 And they kept writing the emails to us.
09:08 And I finally showed them an email to Bill and I says,
09:11 "Bill, I don't know what to do."
09:14 They keep writing these letters asking for me to come.
09:16 And I said, "I'm not going by myself."
09:18 And he was looking at the letter and he says,
09:20 "You know what?
09:21 I think I know this person."
09:23 And I go, "Huh, how do you know this person?"
09:25 He says, "I think I worked with her
09:26 when I was in Africa, as a student missionary."
09:30 Small world, huh?
09:31 And that was the case, so they remembered me.
09:34 So then we both got involved in it.
09:35 So they called us at midnight, our time in the US
09:38 and talked to us for 45 minutes,
09:40 and that's when we thought well,
09:42 maybe we can do it.
09:43 But I was still not sure
09:45 because I had been born and raised in India.
09:46 I knew the culture. I knew the lifestyle.
09:48 I wasn't sure Bill would be able to enjoy that.
09:51 So I cut my program short in the summer
09:54 and he came and visited with me and we traveled to India.
09:57 And after the two weeks he was there,
09:58 I said, "So what do you think?"
10:00 He said, "I think I can do it."
10:01 And we've been there ever since.
10:02 Wow, that's amazing.
10:04 You speak about the culture,
10:06 you knew the culture growing up.
10:08 I have to ask this question because I can imagine
10:10 there's probably someone at home right now
10:13 that's just intrigued or curious, interested in
10:16 what is the major differences between living in the US,
10:19 the culture of Western American culture
10:21 versus that of India?
10:23 What are the conditions like, what is it like living in India
10:26 versus living in the United States?
10:29 I was just thinking this morning,
10:31 turning on the tap at the sink.
10:33 Oh, really.
10:34 There's hot water right away,
10:35 because, of course, we have sinks in India,
10:37 but it's cold water then.
10:38 To get hot water, there's what's called a geezer.
10:41 And that's turned on for, you know,
10:43 10 minutes to get the water warmed up,
10:44 and then you can take a shower, otherwise,
10:46 you could take a cold shower,
10:47 but that's not what you want to do.
10:49 It's pretty cold.
10:51 So even that kind of a difference then
10:52 but it's very interesting.
10:56 And I call it the land of contrasts.
10:58 I mean, you have, you know,
11:00 sometimes you might see a blue tarp tent
11:03 in an open field where someone's living
11:05 and right next to it is a big condominium,
11:07 high rise type thing.
11:08 You know, you can see someone on the street on a bicycle
11:13 and right next to it's a Porsche car.
11:16 You can smell good smells from flowers
11:18 or someone cooking
11:20 and then you have a sewer smell.
11:22 You know, I mean, you know, open sewer type thing.
11:24 So it's just up and down, always interesting,
11:27 never boring, that is for sure.
11:28 And the roads are never like we have in the US
11:30 where you have just cars, okay, or motorcycles,
11:34 whatever transportation
11:36 you have there the Brahman bulls,
11:39 you have the rickshaws,
11:41 you have the bicycles, you have the motorcycles,
11:42 you have the buses, you have the trucks,
11:44 you have people and sometimes you say yourself
11:48 how in the world do they not kill each other?
11:51 But somehow they have this unorganized...
11:56 I call it organized chaos.
11:57 There you go, organized chaos.
11:59 It's, you're right. It's amazing.
12:01 I have a friend who was in who did missionary work.
12:05 I guess it would be called a missionary work in India.
12:07 This was years ago.
12:09 But he brought back a video showing me what it's like,
12:13 the chaos of the driving on the roads
12:16 and what it's like,
12:17 and I'll never forget this particular video footage
12:19 and people just there's like,
12:21 no, no one follows any particular,
12:23 just vehicles crisscrossing paths,
12:26 the whole horn just going crazy.
12:28 And I think he had mentioned
12:30 he's like, Yeah, I was told that,
12:31 you know, you really haven't driven
12:33 until you've driven in India.
12:34 And in this particular video,
12:36 I was watching, he's driving down the road,
12:37 and there's a cow just in the middle of the road.
12:39 And people are just kind of going
12:40 and waving around.
12:42 So I get what you're saying there as far as
12:43 what I saw in that video
12:45 that he had taken of his experience in India.
12:46 So that's different.
12:48 In India, the horns are probably people
12:50 don't like the horns when you first go there.
12:52 But they conversation, I'm here, I'm going by,
12:56 they constantly are communicating
12:58 with their horns.
13:00 And so it's not really that much of a chaos,
13:03 it's more, they know what they're doing.
13:06 And to us, it doesn't look like it but to them,
13:08 they know what's happening,
13:10 they're not worried, they're not upset.
13:11 Another quick point is, as far as the food goes,
13:14 there are no cans, there are no boxes,
13:16 this is all fresh.
13:18 So you go out a few times a week
13:19 to like an open-air market and buy your food.
13:22 And, you know, have it prepared that way.
13:24 But, you know, the dirt from the field
13:26 is on the food and you have to wash it first
13:27 and all that kind of thing.
13:29 So again, just some interesting differences.
13:30 That's amazing.
13:32 That's an amazing contrast between
13:33 what we have here and there.
13:34 But the amazing thing also in India that I like,
13:37 most people in India are very kind,
13:42 they're very giving.
13:45 You're not a stranger.
13:46 You know, when you walk down the street, if you say hello,
13:49 they'll say hello back.
13:50 They'll ask you how you're doing
13:51 when you're in the shops.
13:53 They're always there wanting to help you
13:55 so the kindness is there and they love kids.
13:58 I have never seen an adult in India
14:02 or very rarely seen them be disrespectful to a kid.
14:05 And that to me is a really neat thing
14:07 because I love children.
14:08 So... Praise the Lord.
14:09 Praise the Lord.
14:11 So you guys are the director,
14:15 assistant director of Adventist Child India.
14:18 So if someone were to come
14:19 and they were to just spend time
14:20 with you for a day, what is it that you do
14:22 from day to day for Adventist Child India
14:24 as far as your responsibilities and all that?
14:27 Good question then.
14:28 We have an office
14:29 at the Southern Asia Division campus
14:31 which is in Hosur, India
14:33 where it's about an hour train ride
14:34 south of Bangalore.
14:36 And that's where the campus is at.
14:38 And there's big offices, you know, again,
14:40 this is a division campus
14:41 and our Adventist Child India offices are there.
14:44 We have four workers that work with us,
14:46 and we have desks and computers
14:48 and what we because we do not have an office
14:51 in the US,
14:52 this is all run out of India then,
14:54 your money ends up going through
14:55 the General Conference
14:56 so you can get a tax credit then but all the,
15:00 you know, communication is done through email usually.
15:06 So we're on that a lot,
15:07 of course we communicate with the schools
15:10 and we're trying to, you know,
15:11 there's different people at your school
15:14 that help with the program.
15:15 And so we're in touch with them,
15:16 and they help the kids.
15:18 So just the letters that are written
15:20 and money that subsidies are sent out,
15:22 you know, that kind of stuff and everything.
15:24 Our staff have certain jobs that they do some,
15:27 one is, she pays all the bills and make sure
15:31 all our children's education fine, you know,
15:33 financial part is taken care of,
15:36 then we have another man
15:37 who is very much into dealing with the sponsors
15:40 and making sure they know who their children are,
15:42 and what's going on there.
15:44 And any changes happening, he is in charge of that.
15:47 Then we have another one that does
15:48 a lot of the videoing.
15:50 And a lot of the paying of the subsidies that go out,
15:54 he makes sure that's gone out.
15:56 We also have another gentleman that make sure all the letters
15:59 and all of the kids write letters
16:02 are all there to their sponsors,
16:06 they also give out, he gives out the newsletter.
16:08 He makes sure that their grades are sent to the sponsors,
16:13 their new pictures are sent to the sponsors.
16:15 He make sure that
16:16 their Christmas cards get sent out.
16:19 So there's a lot going on in our office.
16:22 Plus, on top of that,
16:23 Bill and I do a lot of traveling,
16:24 We get to visit all the schools.
16:26 Oh, I can imagine. Right, yeah.
16:27 Because you were just telling me
16:29 just a few minutes ago about not just the traveling
16:31 that you do in India,
16:32 I'm guessing but also you know,
16:34 you guys come back I guess once a year here
16:35 to the US to travel and do what you do
16:39 to try to gain support for the ministry
16:41 and, man, that's powerful.
16:42 So it's a legitimate organization,
16:44 you guys are always busy.
16:46 And that's a powerful thing to hear that.
16:48 I'm just so excited to segue into this next portion
16:51 which is you guys kind of breaking down
16:53 and giving us an example of what it is
16:56 or many examples
16:57 of what it is Adventist Child India does
16:59 and how it has affected other people's lives.
17:02 So I know you brought, you brought some pictures,
17:04 you brought some video footage
17:06 and we're going to get to kind of a look into
17:08 what it is that Adventist Child India
17:10 has done to change these individual's lives.
17:12 So I don't know
17:14 if we want to get the pictures up now
17:15 unless there's something you want to...
17:17 Let's do the video first, okay, Bill.
17:18 Okay.
17:19 Okay, so we have a video of Gabriel
17:21 if we can get that up now.
17:22 This video is about one of the individuals
17:25 whom Adventist Child India has transformed
17:28 and affected his life in a major way.
17:29 So let's try to get that video up.
17:34 Lord, we ask you to continue to bless Gabriel and help him
17:37 to have a safe travel, safe travel overseas Lord,
17:40 we ask these things in Your holy name, amen.
17:44 Amen.
17:45 Thank you, aunty, for praying for me.
17:47 All right. I'm honored.
17:49 I'm honored to go there. Yes, okay.
17:53 Well, you stay safe.
17:56 Stay safe and let us know as much as you can okay.
18:00 God bless. Yes, aunty.
18:02 Okay. God bless.
18:03 Bye-bye. Bye-bye.
18:06 Bye-bye.
20:12 Can't believe a young man of age 20 is so excited
20:15 about going to another place
20:17 where he has very little contact
20:19 with Christianity,
20:21 but he will be with the tribal village
20:23 and the chief has invited him to come there.
20:26 And he's going to teach the children
20:27 how to read and write,
20:29 he's going to play games with them.
20:32 And he is going to have an experience.
20:35 I can't believe, I wish I was him
20:37 instead of me right now,
20:38 if I can take it before the Lord
20:40 and do that for the Lord.
20:44 I had the privilege of visiting Gabriel
20:47 when he was at the village.
20:50 Coming from the city, you know, you have all your comforts,
20:53 you travel, your houses,
20:56 good roads, fast food joints and things like that.
21:00 But out there is bare necessities.
21:03 These people live on, you know, live off the land.
21:08 They hunt, they go through the forest,
21:14 plucking whatever they can eat to sustain themselves.
21:18 And the fact that two young kids
21:21 are doing this for Jesus is pretty inspiring.
22:45 Wow, that's amazing to see how, obviously,
22:49 Adventist Child India has made a positive difference
22:52 in this young man's life.
22:54 You said his name was Gabriel.
22:55 So tell us a little bit about Gabriel?
22:57 Go ahead.
22:58 Gabriel, I met when he was in 10th standard,
23:01 10th grade at Riverside Adventist Academy.
23:05 I was really impressed with him.
23:07 He seemed to be happy all the time.
23:10 He was willing to lead out in song services
23:12 and pray and worship.
23:14 And it was just so interesting how he just was on fire for God
23:20 even in 10th grade or 10th standard.
23:22 And so I approached him one day and I said,
23:24 "Hey, Gabriel, how about you going to college
23:27 and get an education?"
23:29 He goes, "Oh, I would love to.
23:30 I don't have money."
23:32 I said, "Don't worry about it.
23:33 We'll figure that out." So he's okay.
23:36 "But I need to ask my mom first."
23:39 So I said, "Okay, you do that and you get back with me.
23:40 Here's my phone number, call me."
23:42 So, few weeks later,
23:44 he says, calls me, he says, "Aunty, I'm sorry.
23:47 But mommy says no, I need to come home and work."
23:51 They have a farm
23:53 and she couldn't do it on her own.
23:54 She doesn't have a husband.
23:55 So I said, "Okay, well,
23:57 if anything ever changes, let me know."
23:59 So he's okay.
24:00 Well, a couple months later,
24:01 I get a phone call again from Gabriel.
24:03 Gabriel says, "Aunty,
24:05 can I still go to college if I can?
24:07 You know, my mom says I can."
24:09 I said of course.
24:10 And without asking the director,
24:13 I decided to go ahead
24:15 and say yes, without permission.
24:17 And I said, "We'll figure it out.
24:18 Yes, we'll talk to your sponsor and see if she'd be willing,"
24:21 and she was and so he's been in college.
24:23 But before he went to college, he called me again.
24:26 He says, "Aunty, I really, really had a feeling
24:31 that I need to go to this place that's in the jungles.
24:33 It's a long, two or three-hour trek up
24:36 into the mountains, there's no roads,
24:38 there's just the pathway.
24:40 And I just feel I need to go.
24:41 I said, he says, "Can you say tell me can I go?"
24:44 I said, "No, no, no, no, don't ask me.
24:48 What do you feel you're supposed to be doing?"
24:51 He says, "I think I should go." I says, "Then go."
24:54 So he went up.
24:55 And what was so amazing about this young man,
24:57 you know, we as Christians sometimes think that
25:00 we need to just preach and be in the faces of people
25:05 and treat them like we are better than
25:07 they are or whatever.
25:09 And it's not the right way to approach many people,
25:11 I don't think and he didn't either.
25:13 So he went up there and some of the things
25:15 he did that I was really inspired with.
25:17 He would see a lady who was an older lady
25:20 who was having to go
25:21 a couple of miles down the road,
25:23 a hill to get fresh water.
25:24 And he would say, "Aunty, let me do it."
25:26 And he would go and get her the water
25:28 and bring it back daily for her.
25:30 And then there was another couple
25:31 that their homes was falling apart,
25:33 their bamboo, he went and got new bamboo,
25:35 cut it down, refit, you know, fix their home.
25:38 So it was almost like brand new.
25:39 And then also with the gardening,
25:42 he would go out there and help till the soil
25:44 and help plant the produce that they needed.
25:49 And every time he would do that they would go, why?
25:52 Why are you doing this?
25:53 Because you're not even from our village, why?
25:56 "My God told me to."
25:58 Well, at the very end of his stay there
26:01 for a couple of weeks, the chief came and he said,
26:04 "I don't know why you're doing any of this.
26:06 However, we are loving the fact
26:09 that you're willing to help my village
26:12 and my people.
26:13 So why don't you come and start living with us
26:16 and we'll fix it,
26:18 we'll build a little hut for you.
26:19 You can stay in the hut, you can be here,
26:21 you can take care of us,
26:22 we'll get to know you, you'll get to know us."
26:24 He said, "I'd love to but I have to get permission."
26:28 So he said, "Okay, go get the permission."
26:30 So he comes down the hill, calls me and says,
26:33 "Aunty, this is what's happening.
26:35 They've asked me to come and stay there with them.
26:37 What do you think?"
26:38 And again, I says, "Gabriel, it's not what I think,
26:42 it's what you feel that you should be doing."
26:45 And he says, "Well, I think I should go."
26:46 But I says, "Well then go."
26:48 He said, "But Aunty, I don't have the finances.
26:49 I don't have the money to go and live there."
26:52 I says, well, again,
26:54 without permission from my dear husband,
26:56 who's the director, I says, "No problem.
26:57 We'll figure it out.
26:59 We'll sponsor you, we'll sponsor you."
27:01 So but I said, "From you,
27:03 I need a list of everything you're going to need.
27:06 And I need when you get it all sent to me,
27:09 I will send you the money.
27:10 And when you buy all the stuff that you need,
27:12 you will take photos and send it to me."
27:15 "Okay, I can do that.
27:16 So he sent me the list. We sent him the money.
27:20 I got the pictures, and you wouldn't believe it.
27:22 I thought this boy would have bought himself a mat,
27:25 I thought he would be buying himself a stove
27:27 and maybe a propane can to take for gas for the stove.
27:32 Nope. He had a whiteboard.
27:35 He had pencils and pens, he had paper to write with.
27:39 He had books to read from.
27:41 And I called him and says, "Gabriel, why all this?
27:44 Why not things that you would need?"
27:46 He goes, "No, no, that's not my mission."
27:48 I go, "What is?"
27:49 He says, "These people need to learn
27:51 to read and write so that they are educated."
27:54 So he went there,
27:55 and he was there for five months
27:57 living there before he went to college.
27:58 And you saw the video when I was praying for him.
28:02 And you saw some of the pictures
28:04 that was on the video about how he lived.
28:06 And you can see there's no mat, he's not sleeping on a mat.
28:09 And he lived there and when he walked away,
28:13 there were a lot of people that came to God from that.
28:16 Praise God.
28:17 We were told that the children
28:18 there have never picked up a pen or pencil.
28:20 So this is the first time for them.
28:22 And so he taught them the alphabet
28:23 and that kind of thing.
28:24 And he reported to me on Sunday mornings.
28:27 There was no phone connection.
28:29 But he found that if he climbed at least 20 feet up
28:32 into one of the tallest trees
28:34 that he could talk with me and it was crackly and it was,
28:37 you know, not good reception,
28:39 but he could at least do it then.
28:40 And one particular time,
28:41 I could hear a lot of extra background noises,
28:44 a big storm is coming.
28:45 And it's lightning and starting to rain
28:48 and I got to get out of this tree and stuff.
28:49 So you know, it's just kind of unusual.
28:52 You know, in this day and age,
28:53 this is how you still have to communicate
28:54 in some remote places of the world, you know.
28:57 Wow, I got to plug this in here.
28:59 Some people were to hear
29:00 this young man's experience and say,
29:02 "This young man has gone mad."
29:06 And that's exactly
29:07 what we're talking about during this.
29:09 If you're just now joining us,
29:10 we're talking about how you can Go M.A.D.
29:12 Okay, this is an acronym means something positive,
29:15 of course, it means go make a difference.
29:16 And in this case,
29:18 Gabriel is indeed making a difference
29:20 all because of the positive influence
29:22 from Adventist Child India,
29:25 which is what we're here talking about.
29:26 If you're tuning in right now for the first time
29:28 we're talking with William and Nancy Mack on,
29:32 they're the director and assistant director
29:35 of Adventist Child India.
29:37 And you guys are telling us
29:38 how much of a difference Adventist Child India
29:41 has made in these young people's lives.
29:43 And I understand you brought some pictures,
29:46 and you have many more stories to tell us.
29:48 We're going to try to fit those in because to me,
29:50 this is, this is what it's about.
29:52 This is the gospel.
29:53 As you're sitting here
29:54 and telling the story about Gabriel,
29:56 my mind is going to Matthew 25,
29:59 those latter verses where, where it's talking about,
30:02 you know, going into the prisons
30:04 and being with those in prison,
30:05 going in and clothing those who need clothing,
30:07 feeding those who need fed,
30:08 ministering to those people's needs that need that,
30:11 and what does Jesus say to each and every one of them,
30:13 "When you've done this to the least of these,
30:15 you've done this to Me."
30:16 And this is what ultimately the gospel is all about.
30:19 We are as Jesus did to mix and mingle
30:21 and meet the needs of others.
30:23 And that's exactly what Adventist Child India
30:25 is doing in the lives of these wonderful people,
30:27 these young people
30:29 who are probably going to grow up
30:30 more than likely,
30:32 and they're going to be the ones
30:33 to take the gospel to the rest of the world
30:35 before Jesus comes and this is just,
30:38 it's exciting, it's powerful.
30:39 So you brought some pictures,
30:41 you want to look at those pictures right now?
30:43 So let's see if we can get the pictures up here.
30:44 Before we tell the story, I just like to say one thing,
30:47 you know, when we talk about doing,
30:48 the Adventist Child India program
30:51 is helping children.
30:53 I'd like to reverse that.
30:54 I think that it has helped Bill and I become closer together.
30:59 It has made us feel privileged to be able to take care
31:02 of these children and love them and treat them like our own.
31:06 I have three names.
31:07 I am Mrs. Mack, and Nancy Aunty, or Grandma.
31:12 So I have the three or four different age groups,
31:16 they all call me different things.
31:17 And I am thrilled. I'm thrilled to be that way.
31:19 And I'm glad that I've been able to help
31:21 with the Adventist Child India program.
31:22 Amen.
31:24 I heard someone once told me years ago,
31:25 and it's always stuck with me
31:27 that you can never seek true happiness
31:29 until you're serving someone else,
31:30 until you're serving others the way Jesus served.
31:32 Amen.
31:33 And I can see, I can sense that from you guys,
31:35 as you're telling the stories.
31:36 You know, we had a little bit of time
31:38 to sit with each other
31:39 and talk about some of these things
31:40 and other things before, before this program
31:43 and I could just sense the love of God
31:44 in your hearts and minds.
31:46 Obviously, you have, I just praise the Lord
31:48 that you have sacrificed your time
31:50 and your efforts to be over in a third world country India.
31:55 Most people would never find themselves in a situation
31:57 like that unless they were just, you know,
31:58 vacationing or going on some kind of tour.
32:01 But you guys have given your lives to this,
32:03 and I praise God for your efforts.
32:04 Thank you so much.
32:06 So we're going to continue on here,
32:07 we have some exciting pictures to show here.
32:09 So let's pull up this first picture here.
32:11 And you can kind of explain to us
32:13 on each one of these what's happening.
32:14 This is one of our girls that is on the right-hand side,
32:19 she's wearing the blue salwar kameez top
32:22 and her mom and dad and sister.
32:25 Now they are day laborers, her parents are day laborers.
32:29 What does that mean?
32:31 Which means that they work daily
32:32 for a tea plantation and they only get daily wages.
32:36 So if they have the work,
32:38 they work, if they don't have the work,
32:40 they don't work.
32:41 No benefits. This is just day to day living.
32:44 And so she is our third year,
32:47 she's finished her third year of nursing now.
32:50 And she went to Ottapalam Nursing School.
32:55 And her name is Gracelin.
33:00 And Gracelin is the most cheerful, happy,
33:04 loving girl I've met in a long time.
33:06 And she is so, so funny about her she jokes
33:09 and she loves to be, she's a jokester.
33:11 And so, when I found out her history,
33:13 it really surprised me
33:14 because I thought she'd be depressed
33:16 and down and up, you know, not happy,
33:18 and she comes from a family
33:20 where her father is an alcoholic.
33:22 And what happens to these people,
33:23 it becomes a home brewed alcohol
33:27 and they get addicted to it and they can't get away from it
33:29 even when they turn
33:32 to try to be a different lifestyle.
33:34 The mother works very hard.
33:36 And she was really,
33:37 really concerned about her children
33:39 because in this area,
33:41 women are used in many ways.
33:46 And they are abused mentally, spiritually and sexually.
33:51 And her mother was so concerned when they became Adventists
33:55 that she decided that
33:57 she needed to send her daughter away
33:58 to a boarding school.
34:00 And she happened to get into
34:01 the Adventist Child India program.
34:03 So now she's almost through with her nursing,
34:05 in a year's time, she'll be working as a nurse,
34:09 and her sister's also in school now.
34:11 So their parents live in up in the north,
34:14 up in a tribal area.
34:15 West Bengal. West Bengal,
34:17 up in the northeast part of India.
34:18 So that's Gracelin.
34:20 And the next picture would be I believe, this is Giri.
34:24 Now he has a very long name and I can never say it.
34:27 Venkata Giri.
34:28 There we go. Venkata Giri.
34:30 And I can never say it so I just call him Giri.
34:33 Now Giri has become a son to me.
34:35 Giri and I are on the phone
34:37 at least every other week
34:39 even while I'm here in the States
34:40 and he is stressing out right now.
34:42 So guys, please pray for him.
34:44 He has taken his exams.
34:45 He took one exam on the 28th of this month,
34:48 and he's taking his final today,
34:50 it's first On the 30th.
34:52 Thirtieth. Okay.
34:53 So he is definitely stressing,
34:55 and he's getting his last exams done for
34:57 and he will also be a nurse.
35:00 So he comes from a background
35:03 where if you send the pictures on,
35:04 if I think Giri has a few more pictures.
35:07 This is his sister,
35:08 she's in the second year of nursing now,
35:10 and her name...
35:12 Sirisha. Sirisha.
35:13 And this is how they wash their dishes.
35:15 They don't have a dishwasher or a sink.
35:18 She is a young lady that is Giri's sister,
35:23 and they have a sponsor, that is in her 80s, I believe.
35:28 And she's still sponsoring these two children
35:30 to get through nursing.
35:31 And we're so excited.
35:33 Now, he comes from a background
35:34 where his home is really a very, very poor home.
35:38 You'll see hopefully in the next picture,
35:40 where it's made out of brick,
35:42 but they don't have the cement, they have the dirt.
35:46 And every time the monsoon hits,
35:48 it washes the dirt out.
35:50 They don't have a bathroom, they have to go out
35:53 into the fields, they don't have a sink,
35:55 they all are in one room,
35:56 probably, I would say 8 by 10, 8 by 12.
36:00 That's their house,
36:01 where they sleep and they live in.
36:03 And how many people lives there?
36:04 And there's four of them that live in this place.
36:05 Four in this one little space. Wow.
36:07 Brother, sister and parents.
36:08 Again, the father is an alcoholic,
36:10 can't get rid of the alcohol, his mother has had issues
36:13 because she's been carrying such heavy, heavy loads
36:17 in her day laboring in her work,
36:19 that her back is beginning to deteriorate.
36:22 And Giri, of course, is very, very upset about it.
36:26 He can't even, he hasn't been able to go home
36:28 because of the lockdown from the COVID-19.
36:31 So he's in Kerala, and they're up in...
36:34 Many states away.
36:36 Many states away in Andhra Pradesh.
36:38 So he's worrying about his mom and his sister and his dad.
36:41 But I says, "Hang in there.
36:43 Once you get through your nursing,
36:45 you can get a job,
36:47 and you'll be able to help take care of your family."
36:49 So that's Giri. That's amazing.
36:51 Praise the Lord.
36:53 Making a difference in people's lives.
36:54 And this young man is going to go on
36:56 going to become a nurse
36:57 and who knows how many more people
36:59 he's going to affect with the influence
37:01 that you guys have taught him.
37:02 That's powerful.
37:03 We had tried to tell each of our children
37:05 that are going through the nursing program
37:07 or any of our programs.
37:08 When you have a moment, take time for a person,
37:11 give them the feeling that they're loved,
37:13 and that they mean something and that they are worthy,
37:17 they're not useless.
37:18 And that's what Giri does.
37:20 He is an amazing young man when it comes to that.
37:22 Praise the Lord.
37:23 All right, I think we have another picture maybe that.
37:26 Okay, so who is this?
37:28 This is a Rotom Reang and again,
37:31 the northeast part of India,
37:33 but he's brand new to our program.
37:35 He is now just going to be
37:37 into 11th standard, he finished up in 10th.
37:40 And he was baptized just about a year ago.
37:43 He grew up as a Baptist,
37:45 and went to one of the schools up
37:48 in the northeast in Tripura, and got interested
37:53 and was baptized about one year ago,
37:55 but he lives way out in the jungle type of thing.
37:58 And literally no phone, you know,
38:01 obviously no internet connection,
38:02 all of that.
38:03 So it takes about one day to get a message.
38:05 So the principle even to contact
38:06 his parents would, would contact someone else
38:08 who walked over to his village and you know,
38:10 got the message, then it would come back,
38:12 took him one day to go back and forth.
38:14 So he is now going to be a math teacher.
38:17 And so he has two more years left
38:19 11th and 12th, we'll sponsor him
38:21 and then he's going to be sponsored by
38:23 one of the local schools
38:24 and he'll be a math teacher for, you know,
38:26 again in the Adventist school system then.
38:28 So they have very big shortage
38:31 of math teachers for some reason.
38:32 And science. He's going to help that way.
38:34 So in this case, this young man and the others,
38:35 they're all from,
38:37 they all went to Adventist school?
38:38 They all went to Adventist,
38:40 they were they were sponsored by Adventist Child India.
38:41 Right, okay.
38:42 But him in particular,
38:44 just the last two years 9th and 10th,
38:45 he was in a government school before that.
38:48 And then just 9th and 10th
38:49 he went to the Adventist school there.
38:51 And now he will continue on again for 11th and 12th
38:53 but a different school.
38:54 So these young men and women
38:56 through the sponsorship of Adventist Child India
38:58 are being given wonderful opportunity
39:00 of being able to go to an Adventist school
39:03 and get not just an academic education,
39:05 but they're also learning the Gospel of Jesus,
39:07 which is just powerful.
39:09 And then, of course, they're going on
39:10 to as an adults to be nurses
39:13 and whatever it is that teachers and again,
39:16 I mean, we're sending these people out
39:17 in the field to again go make a difference.
39:19 And that's just...
39:20 What's really, really good about our program,
39:22 all of our schools are English media.
39:25 So even if they get only through
39:27 12th standard, they still are able to get jobs
39:30 because they speak English and India has become a very...
39:35 Basically everybody speaks English now.
39:38 So they can get jobs in different places
39:40 like the IT sectors or they can get job at bank
39:45 or they can get a job in a store.
39:48 And instead of only making $1 a day,
39:51 they can make a little bit more than that.
39:53 And so we are really happy
39:55 even if they don't get to go to college.
39:56 Now we have about 35 children that are in college right now.
39:59 So we are blessed because there's sponsors,
40:01 only because of the sponsors.
40:03 Absolutely.
40:04 Because if they didn't do it,
40:06 we wouldn't have the money to do it.
40:07 And that's essentially
40:08 what we're talking about is the fact that
40:10 people like you at home,
40:12 who make that financial contribution
40:15 of some kind to help donate to ministries like this,
40:18 Adventist Child India,
40:19 because of that there's going to be
40:21 so many lives transformed for the better,
40:24 for the good and for the foregoing
40:26 or the ongoing movement of the gospel to the world.
40:28 And I know that we're going to reach that time
40:31 where we're going to be on that sea of glass,
40:32 and Jesus is going to point to that multitude
40:34 and say, all of those people are here
40:36 because of Adventist Child India.
40:38 And so we're going to tell everyone
40:39 in just a few moments of how you can help
40:41 and how you can contribute to this powerful ministry.
40:44 But I think we have a couple more pictures,
40:45 a few more pictures,
40:47 and you guys can kind of summarize
40:49 or tell us the story.
40:50 So here let's look at another picture here.
40:52 And you can tell us the story of this young man.
40:55 This is Salim, and he has a brother,
40:58 Sameer, Sameer.
41:01 And they live up in the Punjab.
41:02 And this is Sameer? Okay. This is Sameer.
41:04 And their father is a farmer, and he raises cows
41:08 and he is able to sell the milk so that they can have the curd
41:13 and the buttermilk and the paneer.
41:15 And people can make it because they do that at home.
41:18 So they're doing really well.
41:20 The kids are in school, they have learned very quickly
41:23 how to speak English, their grades are amazing.
41:25 The villagers are so excited
41:27 to see these kids come up in life,
41:29 that they want their children to go
41:31 and be in the school also.
41:32 So we are blessed that
41:33 these boys are sharing their love for Jesus that way.
41:36 Praise the Lord. And praise the Lord.
41:37 And, of course, we have a few more pictures here.
41:40 I like seeing these pictures.
41:42 So who is this young man here? This is Kima.
41:44 And he has been working for about a year now.
41:47 He went to Spicer College, and he is working
41:51 for a outside company right now.
41:54 And he is doing the IT job business right now.
41:59 And did his master's in commerce
42:00 then to work for the church.
42:02 Yeah, he wants to come back and work for the church.
42:04 But he also has a background where he was an orphan.
42:07 And he has been able to go through
42:09 the Adventist Child India program
42:10 and do really well.
42:12 Wow. Praise the Lord.
42:13 And I think we have one last picture here of,
42:16 is it Ibha, I think?
42:19 Yes, Ibha is the young girl right in the middle.
42:21 And she is working right now
42:23 in the Adventist Hospital in Pune, India,
42:26 and doing really well
42:28 but her background's a little sad.
42:30 What happened with her is her mom
42:33 was trying to take care of her by herself
42:35 and couldn't do it.
42:36 So she decided to commit suicide
42:39 and she's gone.
42:41 And she tried to take Ibha with her
42:42 but Ibha did not die
42:45 and the villagers heard her cries
42:47 and came and found her and took her
42:49 to her grandmother's
42:50 and she stayed with her grandmother
42:52 for probably I would say for about four years.
42:55 And in that time, her mother,
42:59 I mean, her grandmother was doing okay,
43:02 except at the very end, she got really sick.
43:04 And she had to take care of her grandmother
43:07 at a very young age.
43:09 But when they were on a bus traveling one day,
43:11 they had a horrible accident.
43:13 The bus, many people died, her grandmother died.
43:17 And she came away though without a scratch.
43:20 She was, I believe her angels watched over her.
43:25 Of course.
43:26 And she was then sent to her a distant relative
43:29 and she stayed in their home.
43:31 They clothed her, they took care of her
43:32 but she became more of a maid than anything.
43:35 And so after a while she was around 12 years old
43:38 when she decided somebody came
43:40 and asked her if she'd like to go to school,
43:42 in a boarding school and she chose to go,
43:44 and she's been in a boarding school
43:45 all her life since then
43:47 and got her education as a nurse four years.
43:51 And she's working and doing an amazing job
43:54 and we are so happy,
43:56 she was able to come out of her poverty
43:57 from nothing to something.
43:58 Wow. That is powerful.
44:00 It's powerful to hear these stories,
44:02 and how this incredible ministry
44:05 has impacted these people's lives.
44:07 These are children of God, my friends.
44:09 We're talking about God's people
44:10 living during this time for the purpose
44:13 of taking the gospel to the world.
44:15 And obviously God
44:16 is using Adventist Child India to do that.
44:19 I think we have one more video we want to show
44:22 and I think this is kind of a summary video
44:23 of some of these people that we've talked about
44:26 from where they started and where they have ended up.
44:29 So here it is.
44:31 Behind every child lies a story.
44:35 Every tear shed chronicles their suffering, poverty,
44:39 hunger, and pain.
44:42 Yet in the face of overwhelming odds,
44:46 their courage, integrity and strength of character
44:49 inspires us to Go M.A.D.
45:00 Gracelin was forced
45:02 to leave her home at a very young age.
45:04 It was her only means of survival.
45:07 Her alcoholic father,
45:08 who would only drink away his income
45:10 while growls of hungry stomachs
45:12 pushed her mother to labor all hours
45:14 to earn a meager income.
45:19 Today, Gracelin is on the verge
45:22 of completing her final year in nursing.
45:26 Giri has a passion
45:27 for spreading the love of Jesus.
45:29 With no hope in sight,
45:30 he was sent to boarding school with a father and a mother
45:34 earning less than $1.50 a day,
45:36 the future look bleak.
45:39 At boarding school,
45:40 that ignited a spark for the love of Jesus.
45:43 Today, Giri is a final year student
45:45 eagerly awaiting his exams,
45:47 so he can begin spreading the love of Jesus.
45:52 Reang faced many problems to cope with the studies
45:55 at the boarding school he was in.
45:58 He did not do so well initially,
46:00 and he struggled through the year.
46:03 He too moved to boarding school as a means of survival.
46:08 He was so poor that he could not afford
46:10 to leave boarding school during the holidays.
46:13 His passing in first division
46:16 spread like wildfire in a small village,
46:19 and they wanted him
46:20 to be the instructor for their children.
46:23 Today, he is at boarding school pursuing his senior class
46:28 and plans to become a teacher
46:30 at the very school he studied at.
46:35 Salim and Sameer joined a boarding school
46:38 when they were very young.
46:40 Their father is a farmer
46:42 who was the eldest in his family,
46:44 and hence had to be the sole breadwinner
46:47 of the extended family.
46:49 Today because his children
46:51 were studying in a mission school,
46:53 their lives too began to change
46:55 and they began experiencing God's love
46:58 in wonderful ways.
47:01 Seeing the change in their lives,
47:03 the community too wants their children
47:05 to attend mission school.
47:09 Kima has always been a bright student.
47:12 His grades were excellent.
47:14 He was even awarded a medal by the President of India.
47:19 He lived all his life at boarding school,
47:21 as he was orphaned at a very young age.
47:25 He finished his bachelor's in Business Administration,
47:28 and wishes to pursue his master's in finance.
47:31 He is currently working
47:33 at Aviva Motor Insurance, WNS, Pune.
47:38 Ibha lost her mother when she was three years old.
47:42 She never did know her father.
47:44 She stayed with her grandmother for a while.
47:47 And when a horrific road accident
47:49 left her grandmother paralyzed,
47:51 Ibha took up the reins
47:53 and took care of her grandmother.
47:55 A short while later,
47:57 her grandmother also passed away,
47:59 and she had to go to an uncle's house to stay.
48:03 There, although provided with food and shelter,
48:06 she was treated as a maid.
48:09 She joined a boarding school when she was 12 years old,
48:12 and has been in boarding ever since.
48:15 Today, Ibha works as a nurse at Pune Adventist Hospital.
48:22 Adventist Child India sees that every dollar given
48:25 does make a difference.
48:27 Only 6% of your donation for child
48:30 is kept for overhead expenses,
48:32 which includes salaries, printing,
48:34 advertising, postal expenses,
48:37 a full 94% goes directly to a child.
48:41 No other aid agency in India functions
48:44 on less than 10%.
48:46 90% goes directly to your child,
48:50 while 4% is kept in a contingency fund,
48:53 if there arises a financial crisis.
48:56 ACI is the only aid agency
48:59 that has increased its subsidy to the schools
49:02 and have partnered with sponsors to cut back
49:04 on printing and postal costs.
49:12 So please join the ACI family, partner with us.
49:17 Help us go make a difference.
49:20 Go M.A.D.
49:27 Wow, praise the Lord.
49:28 Go M.A.D.
49:30 That's what it's all about, right?
49:32 We need to learn how to go make a difference.
49:34 And that's exactly
49:35 what Adventist Child India is doing.
49:37 They're making a difference in so many people's lives
49:41 and you know, I can't get that picture
49:43 out of my head.
49:44 I can just imagine that when we get to heaven,
49:47 we're going to see so many different people
49:48 who are there
49:50 because of the influence of our ministry.
49:51 And so I just want to take the last couple of minutes
49:53 we have in this particular segment
49:54 to just give you guys an opportunity.
49:56 There may be someone watching right now
49:58 that says, you know, I want to make a difference.
50:00 I want to be able to give.
50:02 How can they give?
50:03 There was a little segment on that ending portion
50:05 of that video but hearing it from you guys,
50:07 what is it that people can do to make a difference
50:10 for helping in this case Adventist Child India?
50:13 Okay.
50:15 I know that our organization is a little bit different.
50:18 We don't have an office in the US,
50:20 your money is routed through the General Conference.
50:22 So you have a tax receipt, but we're all based in India.
50:26 So really, you would communicate with us
50:29 with the Child Care email address,
50:32 so ChildCare @AdventistChildIndia.org
50:35 We do have a website, you know, www.AdventistChildIndia.org
50:39 that you can learn about us also.
50:41 But you definitely can make a big difference
50:45 and Go M.A.D among with us.
50:47 And it doesn't take much as you saw,
50:48 it's only $35 a month.
50:50 These children are in boarding school.
50:52 So they're getting fed and getting a good education.
50:56 And that's very low amount.
50:58 It costs a lot more here.
50:59 So I know that your money goes a long ways in India,
51:02 and it's 70 rupees per dollar.
51:04 So you just really can make that
51:07 big difference by only spending $35 a month.
51:11 And we really appreciate your help with that.
51:14 And you could also finish up.
51:16 I just have the two posters on the sides here
51:18 that you've been looking at.
51:19 I've started a fund that
51:21 I want to help our children be able to get medical care,
51:25 as well as hygiene care.
51:27 I don't want them to go into survival mode
51:29 and start doing things
51:30 that they're not supposed to do.
51:32 So this is a plead that if you can't do a sponsorship,
51:36 but maybe you can help by sending a donation
51:39 towards these two funds.
51:41 Absolutely, awesome.
51:42 So, at this moment, we're going to point you
51:45 toward this next screen which will tell you
51:47 exactly how you can help Adventist Child India.
51:54 For more information about supporting the Ministry
51:56 of Adventist Child India, please go to their website
52:00 at AdventistChildIndia.org.
52:03 That's AdventistChildIndia.org.
52:07 You may also email them
52:09 at ChildCare @AdventistChildIndia.org
52:12 Once again, that's
52:14 ChildCare @AdventistChildIndia.org
52:18 Please consider going to their website
52:19 and sponsoring a child.
52:21 Your support today can help build a child's future.


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Revised 2020-11-09