I knew that their one room garage home was small.
Oppressive. Dark. Full of outside persecution, unfriendliness, and distress.
Inside was hardly a shelter. Yet, it was all they had for 3 awfully long years.
3 years of not enough room to even walk about. 3 years of inhumane living
conditions. Could we call this a refugee?
Hardly. They called it a prison.
But aren’t refugees supposed to find refuge?
Could hand outs from the UN create refuge? Or food baskets?
Or food vouchers? Or random donations of clothes and various pieces of broken
old furniture equal refuge? Certainly, all these things helped. However, at the
end of the day safety in shelter is necessary to move beyond bare survival.
Two months ago, the three ladies that lived in this “home”
were brave enough to trust me to start making cards. At first, I think they
just thought it was a fun craft, but when they began to understand that this
could be a livelihood for them, their eagerness to sew matched their need.
Unbelievably, 96 cards later, they moved. They now have a full-size
bathroom with a bathtub, a kitchen, a bedroom, a large living room, a vast
window, a garden area, and a place to dry laundry. More importantly they are
much safer. No longer are men threatening them. No longer are they filled with
fear to open that literal heavy metal door. A prison door. Now they can move beyond survival. Today they
have a place of refuge.
Released from prison, is what they declare. I cannot
describe the joy and deep satisfaction of handing hope to people. It warms my coldest
moments. It motivates my lowest days. It inspires me to want to add more
refugees that need releasing from whatever prison that holds them.
| The garage door that made up one of the "prison" walls. |
Last week we added another woman refugee to the Threads of
Hope team. This time from Iraq. She is an exceptionally talented crafter and
full of joy despite her trials and losses. I have a feeling that she will add
elements to this project that are inspirational. Hopefully, this project will
bless her beyond what we can even imagine.
Threads of Hope is beginning to take shape and form. We now
have a logo and are building our social media platform. We are growing and
learning with it as we try to navigate taking a simple idea and turning it into
small micro industries. I am a nurse. Not a businesswoman. My neighbor who is
helping me, is a physical therapist. Yet here we are. On a quest. To tell their
stories. To deliver hope. To set them free.
It is liberating. As liberating as opening a prison door.
Please continue to journey with me and see.



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