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Lighting the Path- Swazi Journal

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TLC Ohio Auction Inspires Young & Old to Get Involved

 

The Luke Commission auction & dinner in Cedarville, Ohio, may become a pre-Thanksgiving tradition that sparks students and adults alike to consider the poor in southern Africa. 
 
Consider - and then do something. That's what happened earlier this month, said Mark Kordic, Director of Advancement for TLC. 
 
Dr. Harry and Echo (PAC) VanderWal recently returned from Swaziland where they direct mobile clinics. This year more than 20,000 patients were treated out in the bush. Those patients all were told of Jesus' love for them. 
 
"You could hear a pin drop when Harry and Echo spoke," Kordic said. "The more than 200 people in attendance were taking it all in and very motivated to get involved themselves." 
 
An 11-minute DVD answered questions about what a typical day in the bush was like. 
 
A photo of trailers packed with medicines, eyeglasses, Bibles, wheelchairs, clothes for orphans, and medical supplies caught the audience's attention, particularly. The reason? Those trailers need vehicles to pull them. 
 
"We can't leave tens of thousands of people waiting," noted Kordic, speaking of the Swazis who are waiting for the VanderWals to return in Swaziland in January and resume the mobile clinics. 
 
Kordic was encouraged by the financial response of folks living in a state hard-hit by economic woes. Some $10,500 was raised for vehicles at the November 7 auction. 
 
"I know people gave sacrificially," he said. "We thank everyone who donated." 
 
That brings the total donated for vehicles to $30,500. Three Swazi-road-worthy vehicles that can pull thousands of pounds and transport a couple dozen people will cost $100,000. 
 
Kordic is touched by the younger people's firm desire to fight the HIV/AIDS pandemic in Swaziland that is claiming the lives of a whole generation about their age. 
 
"Recent grads and current students don't just want to talk. They want to do something," explained Kordic. "Harry and Echo suggested real ways they can work locally, right now." 
 
More than 25 churches and institutions were represented at dinner/auction. Two Nigerian musicians played five instruments throughout the evening capturing another culture and giving folks a taste of Africa. 
 
Those in attendance lingered around the art work donated for the silent auction, Kordic noted. "The photographs from Swaziland framed in African wood showed beautiful, humble people." 
 
He continued: "The more we can put ourselves in their sandals – if they have sandals – the better we'll understand true human suffering and extend ourselves." 
 
The live and silent auction brought in another $12,000 for The Luke Commission. 
 
"This annual event kicks off a year-long opportunity for relationships to develop and for participants to share the message and get involved," Kordic explained. "We look forward to watching God move in The Luke Commission next year." 
 
Please note: A similar Idaho gala called "Christmas for Africa" will be held Dec. 6 at 5:30 p.m. in Sandpoint, Idaho, at the Events Center on Euclid Avenue. Harry and Echo and the boys will be there. Tickets are on sale for $25 at www.lukecommission.org. 
 
Love in Jesus, Janet Tuinstra for Harry and Echo and the boys


Mark and Paula Kordic of Cedarville, labor
in God's vineyard in Ohio, spearheading projects for The Luke Commission.

 
Dr. Harry VanderWal takes listeners to the African bush as he speaks at the November, 2009, dinner/auction at Cedarville University.



Auctioneer Bart Sheridan often offers his services to TLC, benefiting the needy 8,000 miles away.
 
Bill and Shelley Schlueter (center) drove from Missouri to be with their daughter Tiffany (right), a 2009 Cedarville nursing grad, at the recent Ohio dinner/auction. Tiffany has worked with the VanderWals for two summers in Swaziland and continues to volunteer her time here.



Grandpa Harry VanderWal Sr. shows his grandsons how to video tape memorable events at the 2nd annual TLC Ohio auction.
 
Paul and Marilyn Carlson join the VanderWals. Dr. Carlson, Director of Strategic Planning and past Associate Dean of the Wright State University Boonshoft School of Medicine (Harry's alma mater), has witnessed TLC bush clinics firsthand.



In Swazi garb, Luke VanderWal waits to sing with his brothers at the Ohio auction.
 
Echo VanderWal, a physician's assistant with experience in surgery, tells stories about their patients in Swaziland, who had little hope until Jesus touched them through The Luke Commission.



This one-of-kind African-framed Swazi photo is just one of the items auctioned recently in Ohio.
 
Little brother Zion (right) and his big brother Jacob VanderWal are part of the program whenever and wherever Harry and Echo speak.



Medical school student Joe Rettig, who spent this summer with TLC in Africa, and his wife Amanda now work on this side of the world to help Swaziland's poor and sick. They're pictured here with the VanderWal family at the recent Ohio auction.
   

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Past Entries 

TLC – Stuck on 3rd Base, but Heading for Home

TLC Stories of Deliverance Start and End at the Cross

The Luke Commission Hits the Road – Once Again

Swazi Team Awaits Expectantly & Joyfully

2010 Vehicle Fund Update

So What about Swaziland? - Jake, Luke, Zeb, Zion

Faces Shine Forth in Idaho Gala Crowd

TLC Ohio Auction Inspires Young & Old to Get Involved

Students Serving in Swaziland Speak Out

TLC Spitting-Snake Week, Plus Three.

Wheels are Turning at Luke Commission Clinics

Alumni Spotlight: Echo VanderWal '00

Jesus' Sacrificial Love Seen in Mothers' Lives Here

On the Road Again with The Luke Commission

Swazi Leaders Review The Luke Commission

TLC Team Members Light the Path from Here to Swaziland

Laborers Here Produce for Swazis There

The VanderWal Boys Tell All!

TLC Makes-Do in Swaziland, While God Crafts the Outcome

AIDS Portion of TLC Bush Clinics Grows with Assistance from Afar

Seeing Beyond Statistics to the Heart of the Matter

Visiting the Sick in Swaziland - It's Like Anywhere Else and It's Not Like Anywhere Else

The Luke Commission Adds Surgeries and Chickens to Their Menagerie

Travel Journal: You are There - Experience a Luke Commission Clinic Firsthand - Manzini, Swaziland

Travel Journal: Too Much Work to Leave... Harry and Echo from Swaziland

Travel Journal: Amid Medical Clinics, Kids Receive Operation Christmas Child Boxes

Travel Journal: The AIDS Battle Brings Out the Best and the Worst

Travel Journal: Faith Like a Grain of Mustard Seed Grows

Travel Journal: The Luke Commission... It's a Puzzle with So Many Pieces

Travel Journal: Miracles Abound Amid the Clutches of AID

Travel Journal: Swaziland as Viewed through Children's Eyes

Travel Journal: The Gift of Sight Given Outwardly and Inwardly

Travel Journal: Running Swazi Pharmacies out of Medicine Turns to Blessing in Disguise

Travel Journal: One by One, the Young Come with Full-Blown AIDS

Travel Journal: A Boy, A Bus, A Spider... And Hope In The Midst

Travel Journal: When that white bald-headed doctor sings...

Travel Journal: From security lapses to sugared engines welcome VanderWals to Swaziland

Travel Journal: Humbled and Thrilled, the VanderWals Return to Africa

Ministry Update - Dear Luke Commission Friends

Ministry Update - Dear Ones in the U.S. and Canada

Travel Journal - Dear Luke Commission supporters

Travel Journal - Dear Ones across the continents

Travel Journal - Here's another update from Swaziland

Travel Journal - Greetings from The Luke Commission

Travel Journal - Dear Ones back Home

Travel Journal - Sawubona from Swaziland

Travel Journal - We look forward to these updates

Travel Journal - Dear Ones who love the Swazis

Travel Journal - Greetings from Swaziland!

TLC NEWSFLASH!!! (Issue 2)

TLC NEWSFLASH!!! (Issue 1)

Travel Journal - Greetings from Swaziland

Travel Journal - Dear Ones

Travel Journal - Dear Ones back home

Travel Journal - Greetings from Swaziland on a Wednesday morning in early spring

 

"I want to thank The Luke Commission for giving me a second chance in life. When you found me in the bush I was like the man who had leprosy in Mark 1:40-42 and you healed me." 

Lwazi Lishaba

13 year old who was about to lose his leg because of a postsurgical infection.

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