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Threads of Hope





When we were thinking about moving to Lebanon, the dream of working with the refugees began to take root in my heart. Honestly, I have only been able to fullfill this dream in scattered moments. Yet despite how small these encounters are they move me beyond words. My refugee friend's stories are filled with much more than running from a war and a displaced people. So much more. They include family members killed by ISIS, rape, beautiful homes taken away and I don't even begin to know the sum of the pain. Add to that the poverty, discrimination, and the lack of hope they find here.


I am left to ask, how do you impower the poor among you?


This is a question that has been grappled with by powerful vast organizations, world leaders, everything in-between, and by me. Perhaps by you also?

It is one thing to hand out the fish.  It is another to provide the fishing gear and the know-how. Which would you rather have? Personally, I like being in control. The later choice would give me a significant amount of additional choices. I could control when I was going to try to fish, and for how long each day, and until I obtained the amount of fish I wanted. Waiting for the hand-out would leave me completely dependent, unsure, and without control or ability to chose anything.

This summer, my sister-in-law, messaged me with an idea of refugees embroidering cards. She then linked me to many different images and patterns. They were gorgeous. Later she dropped off a large package of numerous bright colors of embroidery thread from a family friend who had died.

Not having a stitch of sewing talent in me (pun fully intended), I quivered a bit at the idea of launching this, but finally after procrastinating for well over a month I had a go at the first embroidery card as an “example”.  To my surprise, it was kind of fun. Then my neighbor, and Arabic tutor, decided to do one. She added beads to hers and caught the vision and excitement. 

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