Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Jesus, hope for the refugees!

Dear friends,

“I am a refugee and I received help, now I want to help the children that had to flee”. Malik talks with great enthusiastic gestures. He opens his arms wide to show how many children he would like to help. He was a student at the Technical University in Qaraqosh, a city in Iraq with a big Christian population, before he became a refugee. “God changed my life and gave it a new direction. My dream is now to start a school, here in the camp, where the truth of God can flow as a river, saving and healing…”


Internally displaced

Malik was one of the students in the seminar we gave last month. It was our third trip to Iraq this year. Just like all our other 24 students, Malik was an IDP (Internally Displaced Person)—someone who had to flee from his home, but stayed within the borders of his own country.

200,000 Christians had to flee

In Iraq there are now about 3 million internally displaced people, who had to escape from the shocking brutality of the Islamic State (ISIS), including more than 200,000 Christians. Most of these Christians lived in the province of Nineveh and escaped to the province of Kurdistan, the most northern part of Iraq, when Mosul, the capital of Nineveh and its surrounding towns and villages, were captured by ISIS. This is the same Nineveh where Jonah was sent in Biblical times to announce the word of the Lord.

Teaching about child development and trauma counseling

Our students were all currently living in Erbil, the capital of the province of Kurdistan, in four different camps. All of them had already started childcare and informal education programs for the kids in those camps. Most of them didn´t have a background in education, but had to interrupt their schooling in other areas like medicine, law, architecture or engineering. They were so happy and thankful for the lectures we gave them on child development, as well as how to help children deal with the trauma they had suffered. They participated with great dedication.


Inside a camp (adapted empty building) for Christians

Our lecture hall was on the fifth floor of a big unfinished apartment building. The local church had transformed the raw concrete structure, with financial help from abroad, into a space where 150 displaced Christian families could live. On the first to fourth floors, they had used plastic panels to create one living room / bedroom for each family. At the end of each hallway were sets of showers and toilets and a shared kitchen facility. They have already been living there for a year. Everything was kept spotless clean by the families themselves. And on the fifth floor was a big hall for all kinds of meetings, like church services, weddings, funerals, and now for our seminar. It was an ideal place, because after the week of lectures, the students were able to put what they had learned into practice by inviting all the kids between 6 and 12 years old living in the building (or camp as they call it). It was a fantastic morning as we divided over 80 kids into small groups for each student to lead.



We are all unique, and God loves us all!

"But for you, sunrise! The sun of righteousness will dawn on those who honor my name, healing radiating from its wings." wrote one of our students the promise from Malachi 4 in his book

“Jesus came!”

Hani, one of our students, told us with tears in his eyes how his small group had gone. The students were taking the children through a little booklet designed to help kids with their traumas. It was translated into Arabic. Hani had a group of four boys between the ages of 10-13 at his table. He saw that the boy next to him had written a name on the page where children are asked who they lost during the conflict. And then the boy started to cry quietly.

“Do you want to talk about it?” asked Hani, as he leaned over to the boy.

The boy nodded, “Yes… it was my father who was beheaded…” he whispered with a broken voice.

Hani felt shocked. His own brother also had been killed by ISIS when he had to flee from Mosul, and Hani still thought about it every day. He still had great difficulty dealing with that loss. How would he be able to help this young teenager deal with the loss of his father? But suddenly he remembered the lecture from class the week before. He didn´t have to be strong for the boy. Even when he was still in pain himself, the Lord Jesus could comfort both him and the boy in their weakness and pain!

“Shall we pray together?” asked Hani, grabbing the boy’s hand. He felt a bit insecure, as he had never done anything like that before. “Yes”, the boy nodded, he would really like that.

“And Jesus came!” Hani told us with shining eyes. “We felt very sad and surrounded by darkness, but suddenly the light broke through and it felt as if Jesus took our burdens literally on himself, and we experienced a very deep peace!”

Goose bumps

Wonderful! I felt goose bumps all over when I heard Hani tell this story. This is exactly the reason why we have made these dangerous trips. Seeing all the needs around me, I had felt so small. Lord what can I do to help these people? We are only here for such a short time.

But this was the answer! Yes, it was true—we could only stay for 2 short weeks. But God used the lectures to give the refugees hope. And hope was in short supply there.

Hopeless

Most Christians had to flee their homes over a year ago. For many it wasn´t even the first time they had to leave everything behind and start anew. But this time they felt so hopeless. They felt betrayed by the army that hadn´t protected them against ISIS, but had quietly withdrawn during the night, leaving them to cope for themselves. They would like to make a fresh start, but who can guarantee them protection here? No one! They don´t believe the promises of the government anymore and feel very vulnerable.

They all want to go to Europe

According to the leaders of the local Christian churches, all of the more than 200,000 internally displaced Christians would prefer to flee to Europe (these are only the Christians--there are also 2.5 million Muslim refugees in other camps). But they have not gone yet because they still have family members in areas occupied by ISIS, or they simply don´t have money to pay those who smuggle people. If they had any money or valuables when they fled from Nineveh, most was taken from them at ISIS checkpoints on the way out. Most who have made it to Europe were the richer refugees who had some sort of luck. Those remaining are still waiting for their chance.

Refugees in the West

Of course we follow the news about the refugees from Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan who arrive in western countries. We think it is wonderful to hear about Christians in Holland and other countries who volunteer to help or even open their own homes. Isn´t that what Jesus meant in Matthew 25 when he said: “I was a stranger and you took me in… I assure you, if you did this for one of the least of my brothers, you did it unto me.”

Workbook for children

We have some great, practical materials available in English and Arabic for all who want to help children overcome their traumas. It is a workbook for children and a facilitator’s guide, written by some very experienced specialists in relief work. It is very easy to use and apply. Maybe you would like to use these at a centre for refugees or even in your church. You can send us a request by email: jlukasse@gmail.com, and we´ll be happy to send it to you in PDF, so you can print them up yourselves.



Building faith

We are so thankful we could make these trips to help build the faith of the Christian refugees, who now in turn can start helping traumatized children. Thank you for your prayers and support during these trips.

At the end of the program, all the children received a beautiful Bible



Children in need in Rio de Janeiro, a whole different world

During the coming months we´ll be busy with preparations for the big training program focusing on Children at Risk in Rio de Janeiro. It is a whole different world, but when we see how 10-11 year-old children walk around armed, “employed” by the big drug gangs, or notice the young girls who sell their bodies on the beautiful beaches, we are so aware of the great need. Jesus wants to provide an answer for these children through his church. We are looking forward to training a big group of young people during the first 8 months of 2016. But that will be the subject of our next newsletter!

We wish you all many blessings in the coming holiday season, where God’s love will be central. And, of course, many blessings for the New Year too!

Prayer points
  • More than 50% of all the refugees are children. Pray that someone will listen to them and pray with them. Give thanks with us for the students we were able to train in the camps.
  • Pray for our brothers and sisters who, during their escape, often lost most of their possessions or worse—one or more of their family members. Thank God for the small local churches in Kurdistan that make such a big effort to house the 200,000 internally displaced Christians.
  • Pray for the refugees who decide to make the dangerous trip to Europe. Pray for the Christians in Europe and other rich countries—that they will not fear the refugees from whatever background, but will listen to and obey what God wants them to do for all these people in need. 
  • We are hearing more and more stories about people who search for the truth and find Jesus. The numbers are running into the millions. Pray that churches will be open to these new believers and Christians will be ready to embrace and disciple them.

Monday, August 10, 2015

How to invest most efficiently, in helping the children in need in Rio?

Dear friends,

Almost every day we receive e-mails or messages on Facebook asking for more information about the eight-month training program: a Discipleship Training School (DTS) and a Children at Risk School (C@R) that we are planning for 2016 in Rio de Janeiro.
 

2016 sounds like a long way off, but in reality it will be upon us in just a few more months. We are offering this training program together with the local YWAM bases. It is for (young) people who want to dedicate their lives to God and who desire to know His heart for the lost and for children at risk. The whole program will be presented in two languages (Portuguese and English).

Investing in Rio de Janeiro

For us the program is an investment in the city of Rio and we hope that through our students, many children at risk from the streets, slums and the red light district will be reached with the love of God and practical assistance.
 

At the end of October we plan to go there for a couple of weeks for some staff training. From our house in Belo Horizonte, it’s “only” a seven-hour drive. During this visit, we also hope to be able to rent an apartment for us, close to the church in the center of Rio where the students will be staying. I am already searching the internet, but haven’t found anything yet… In the beginning of January we hope to move there for eight months. We are very excited about this!

Preparations for the Olympic Games

The upcoming Olympics are getting more and more attention in Brazilian newspapers, like: “The Olympic village is far from ready; the main bay for water sports is still very polluted; many slums are still unsafe, etc.” But there is also good news: many churches in Rio and around the country are preparing themselves for outreach during the Olympics. During the 2014 World Cup, lots of churches and young people really enjoyed the intense weeks of evangelism and outreach. Individuals and groups are already contacting us, wanting to be part of this exciting event.
 

Many practical opportunities in the “Marvelous City”

We are very happy with the church building that was offered to us for the eight-month training program. We only need to adapt some toilets and showers. The rooms normally used for Sunday school classes will be transformed into student dorms. The nice thing about living in the center of Rio is that the teachings from morning classes can be put into practice in the afternoons—doing outreach in the slums, working with children and teenagers, going to the red light district to have times of intercession and to reach out to those trapped in sexual exploitation. And of course, during the Olympics, the students will spend even more time in all kinds of strategic activities, in what the people themselves call the “Cidade Maravilhoso”: The Marvelous City.

Johan and I really think that Rio is the most beautiful city in the world, but that is based only on the cities we have visited to date. So it’s a little bit subjective. :)
 

What is our goal in all of this?

We hope that our students will learn how to the hear the voice of the Lord, to know His will for their lives, and to share His love with the people around them and especially with children in need--children who would never be able to achieve the purpose God has for their lives without the help of God’s loving people.

Some young people who apply for the eight-month program will come for a gap year, while others plan to stay on staff for a longer period in Rio, at another YWAM base in Brazil or somewhere else in the world. There are more than 12,000 YWAM bases around the world, so there are plenty of choices and opportunities!
 

Hurry with your application

We still have room available, so if you want to apply or know some young people who would love to come, it is still possible. However, time is getting short, as the visa process itself can take several months to finalize. Please take a look at the website: http://jlukasse.wix.com/ywam-rio-2016 or email Johan: johan@jocum.org.br

Belém

From now until our move to Rio, we will stay busy teaching and giving seminars about children at risk in some other cities. A church in Belém, a city in northern Brazil in the Amazon region, invited us to speak at a missions conference. This is surprising, because we don´t know anybody there. Some people from that church had read our book “A Cry from the Streets” and decided we should be the speakers at their next missions conference. Isn’t that wonderful?

Phuket -Thailand
After that conference we will be going to Phuket in Thailand, where a Dutch-Brazilian family, ex-staff from our base in Belo Horizonte, is starting a ministry for children and adolescents in need. It is a city where many young girls are being forced into sexual exploitation. We are going to give a seminar for people in the local churches and also hope to explore the possibility of running a full three-month C@R school there in the near future to train more workers.

Kurdistan

On the way back to Brazil, we plan to stop in Kurdistan where we have been invited to give another seminar for refugees from Iraq. Just like last time, we plan to train a group of Christian refugees, in partnership with local churches. We aim to give them tools to help their own traumatized children as well as to reach out to the many children in the “child safe areas” run by UNICEF and Christian NGOs in and near refugee camps.

Considering all the conflicts and fighting in that region, we would like to ask you to pray for peace and protection there. Many of the refugees have been uprooted more than once. They had to leave everything behind and don’t know if they will ever be able to go back. They need to rebuild their lives from scratch. During the day, they are afraid for the safety of their families, sad about the possessions they lost during their escape, and even worse, terrified about the situation of friends and family they lost contact with. During the night, they have recurring nightmares. They need peace, love and hope. Would you please join us in praying for them?

Our own offspring

Our kids are doing fine. Davi is totally used to his Uri stoma, and his kidney function continues stable at about 50%. Dilma loves her beautiful new little apartment. We see Pieter, Melissa and their kids almost every day on WhatsApp J. In July we went to stay for a week with our daughter Johanneke. She and Jonathan and their three little girls are really enjoying their work at the YWAM base in the small city of Pira in the south of Brazil, about 11 hours’ drive from Belo Horizonte. It´s wonderful to see how they enjoy their new ministries, but also a bit difficult for us, since they are no longer our neighbors as they were before… Also Michele, Romeu and their two kids, who normally live in our downstairs apartment, aren´t at home right now. They are in Indonesia, on outreach for their DTS. So it is very quiet here at home! Luckily they are coming back at the end of August. We are very eager to hear all their stories.

Getting old? Who? Us? Of course not!

Funny fact: For quite some time now, when we are teaching, we look at the students and think, “Hmm, they are the ages of our own kids!” When they ask us how long we have been in Brazil (since 1984), this is usually longer than they have been alive--most of our staff and students were born in the nineties! J

But currently we see that most students are even younger than our kids. Does that mean we are getting old? Not yet! One of the students for the eight-month program in Rio next year is the grandchild of my sister. In Dutch she would call us old-uncle and -auntie. In Portuguese, she would call us grand-uncle and –auntie; in English it would be great-uncle and –aunt. The Portuguese and English sound a little better somehow! J
 

Thankful

We are so thankful for our good health and the ability to do many different things. God is so good to us! We are also grateful for our friends and family who stand with us and support us in many different ways. Together we are able to continue this work, so that many children in need are being reached by the love of our Heavenly Father.

We wish you all God’s richest blessings!

Johan and Jeannette Lukasse


Prayer points:
  • Pray for the students who are preparing to participate in the program in Rio de Janeiro--especially for the foreign students to get their visas in time. Praise God for the church building that we are allowed to use for this program.
  • Pray for the seminars we are planning for Belém, Phuket and Kurdistan. For safe travels and for the local people who will receive the training, that they´ll be a great blessing as they reach out to the children in need. Thank the Lord for all the faithful workers in those places.
  • Pray for the refugees from Syria and Iraq--that they will experience God’s love for them. Thank God for the many local churches that are hosting hundreds of families. 



Friday, July 10, 2015

Help needed to find the right students for YWAM Rio 2016!

In 2016, the year of the Olympic games, when the eyes of the whole world will be directed towards Rio, we are planning together with the different YWAM bases in Rio, to offer an 8 month training program, consisting of a DTS (Discipleship Training School) and a Children at Risk (C@R) school (both in English and Portuguese).

We need help
The first applications are already coming in, but we need help with the promotion of this very special opportunity. We would like to see 80 to 100 students come to participate in this training program.
Do you know any young people who would love to come to Rio for 8 months and do a DTS and C@R school? Maybe you have someone in your family or church who would love to take a gap year, and come to Rio de Janeiro?



We have a website with all the information and application forms: http://jlukasse.wix.com/ywam-rio-2016, but you can also tell them to contact us through our Facebook – Johan Jeannette Lukasse, or email - johan@jocum.org.br Please could you help us to find the right participants?
Miracle: Free housing for 80 people in Rio de Janeiro.
The planning for this program started already two years ago, but we were struggling to find an adequate location for the training. We wanted a place close to the city center, close to the favela Borel (where YWAM runs a big successful community center), and still reasonably close to the beach! But, where could we find such a place during the Olympic year?

Last month one of the missionaries from YWAM reported a miracle: A big church offered the use of an empty building next to the church. It has a big auditorium, a kitchen, and various rooms that can serve as dorms. It is exactly what we were looking for, and only 20 minutes by metro train to the beach. All we have to pay for is the cost of water and electricity. This will help immensely to keep the costs of the program low. Isn´t this great?

The price of "YWAM Rio 2016, eight months that will change your life", is now in Brazilian Reais (R$) :
• R$ 200.00 Registration Fee. (About US$65.00)
• R$ 6,000.00 Costs of both lecture phases of DTS and CER school, including room and board. (About US$1,920.00)
• R$ 1,000.00 basic expenses of food and transportation during the two months of evangelistic outreach. (About US$320.00)
Total R$ 7,200.00 (About US$2,300.00)
That means the total for the 8 months YWAM Rio 2016 program will cost only US$2.300,00
(Price calculated on 03-07-2015 with currency rate of RS1= US$0,32 The price may vary according to the currency rate.)


A visa application for Brazil can take a couple of months, so young people outside of Brazil need to quickly get in contact with us. (johan@jocum.org.br)

Please help us with the promotion of this great opportunity in Rio in 2016!

Monday, June 8, 2015

What do the Amazon rain forest, Iraq and Rio de Janeiro have in common? A Children at Risk School!

Today we woke up to the sound of screaming monkeys! This is because we are currently in the Amazon rain forest where we are teaching in a Children at Risk school. We are at the YWAM base in Porto Velho, capital of the state of Rondonia in Brazil. The YWAM property is a beautiful piece of land, located on the bank of a major river called Madeira and surrounded by a jungle. Almost everyone lives in wooden houses built on high poles. Various brightly colored birds live in the trees, and every day we eat delicious exotic fruits. The monkeys however, are not as well behaved as those in our local zoo. Yesterday they used the clothesline as a public toilet. Unfortunately, many clean clothes had just been hung out to dry there….

During our stay some Indians were baptized in a small lake close by. 
The YWAM base’s main ministry focus is to help the different Indian tribes and the many small communities located along the riverbanks in the region. Now there is also the Children at Risk School to train missionaries to reach out to the many children in these communities who are often at risk because of abuse, neglect, and the lack of education. Upon finishing the school, the graduates will have more understanding and resources on how to help the children to know their heavenly Father, trust Him, obey Him, and receive His healing touch.

Lots of trips
Since we arrived back in Brazil at the end of April, we have already been teaching in several different schools working to train more YWAM staff. In the coming months we have a whole string of trips scheduled to teach in different schools, seminars, and conferences inside Brazil. Normally when I arrive at home, I put away our old well-used red travel toiletry bag, and I organize all our soaps and shampoos on the shelves in the bathroom. However, in the coming months, we´ll be on the road so much that I have not even bothered to empty it. There it hangs in the bathroom ready for the next trip, which is coming up shortly.


The “Children at Risk Seminar” in North Iraq
Let me tell you about the month of April, when we were still in Holland and Iraq. Ever since we visited the province of Kurdistan in North Iraq in February of this year, many doors opened. We went to Kurdistan to see if we could be of any help by giving training to Christian refugees, so that they would be able to help their own children and the kids in their community deal with the traumas they suffered from having to escape conflict and war. This was quite new for us, because although we had done similar things in Brazil, India, Haiti, and several countries of Africa, we had never really worked in the Middle East.


Together with a local team, we decided to go back in April and run a Children at Risk seminar for two weeks. The local team members did all the preparations through the interested local churches. Those local churches are hosting hundreds of refugee families on church premises and in unfinished buildings.

Johan teaching in Kudustan.
When Johan went back to Kurdistan in April, they had recruited a group of 22 students who enthusiastically participated in the seminar. Lectures started early each day and went until late afternoon. During these two weeks, the students also had four periods of practically applying what they had learned with a group of refugee children. This was done in a Unicef tent beside a local church, which functioned as a safe place for the children to play and learn. Some very able translators helped to translate the lectures and had beforehand prepared all the handouts and booklets in Arabic. The material looked great, and all the children received a little workbook explaining how to have hope for themselves and their country. Our students helped them to work through the workbook and to talk about some of the traumatic things they had experienced. It ended up being a very successful time.

Student working with the children from the refugees.

With games and maps of Iraq, the kids tell about the travels they made, fleeing with their families from terror.
“Please, would you come back for another seminar?”

“Can you give the same seminar in other locations, so more people can be trained?”

“Could you also teach in the evenings, so another group of people could participate?”

It was good to receive such positive feedback, but it´s also difficult to see how big the need really is.

A teenager made this drawing of what she had seen: girls being captured and taken away to become sex slaves...


“Lord have mercy”
As Johan, the local team, and myself prayed about it, we felt we should plan to go again to Kurdistan at the end of this year. Of course, such a decision needs to be continuously evaluated and lifted up in prayer in order to see if it will really be possible. Every day we read about more fighting and conflict in the region. Just last week another 100,000 people had to flee because of the war. Things can change so fast, but at the same time, there are so many opportunities. People hunger to know a God of love who can truly be a source of comfort to them.

And what better thing could you give to these refugees than the opportunity to know God better, have a personal relationship with Him, and to help them teach their children to deal with much pain and trauma? There is nothing better really!

Please, would you pray for safety and stability for the refugees, their children, the local Christians, and for us as we travel there again?


Moving to Rio de Janeiro
In the midst of all these travels, we are also busy preparing to move to Rio de Janeiro for eight months in 2016. Yes Rio, with its breathtaking nature, white sandy beaches, and coastline dotted with tropical islands. Rio truly has idyllic scenery for postcards and paintings.

However, Rio is also a city with over 800 slum communities, the so-called “favelas.” In some of the favelas, the old drug gangs have been removed and a police force is present there to keep the peace. While in other communities, the drug gangs remain in charge. In both types of favelas there are still many problems with crime. Drug related killings account for 50% of the deaths among teenagers, with boys running 12 times higher at-risk of being killed than girls.


Youth with a Mission has been working in some of these communities for over 30 years, and has seen remarkable results.

In 2016, the year of the Olympic games, when the eyes of the whole world will be directed towards Rio, we are planning together with the different YWAM bases in Rio, to offer an 8 month training program, consisting of a DTS (Discipleship Training School) and a Children at Risk (C@R) school (both in English and Portuguese).


Miracle: Free housing for 80 people in Rio de Janeiro.
The planning for this program started already two years ago, but we were struggling to find an adequate location for the training. We wanted a place close to the city center, close to the favela Borel (where YWAM runs a big successful community center), and still reasonably close to the beach! But, where could we find such a place during the Olympic year?

Last month one of the missionaries from YWAM reported a miracle: A big church offered the use of an empty building next to the church. It has a big auditorium, a kitchen, and various rooms that can serve as dorms. It is exactly what we were looking for, and only 20 minutes by metro train to the beach. All we have to pay for is the cost of water and electricity. This will help immensely to keep the costs of the program low. Isn´t this great?


The first applications are already coming in, but we need help with the promotion of this very special opportunity. We would like to see 80 to 100 students come to participate in this training program.

Do you know any young people who would love to come to Rio for 8 months and do a DTS and C@R school? We have a website with all the information and application forms: http://jlukasse.wix.com/ywam-rio-2016, but you can also tell them to contact us through our blog, facebook, or email. Please could you help us to find the right participants?

Various newsletters
For a few years now, we have written only a personal newsletter. Other missionaries at YWAM Belo Horizonte now write the base newsletter, which has news about the houses and projects. Some of you only receive our personal news, while others receive both newsletters. If you would like to change this and receive less or more news, please write me at jlukasse@gmail.com. I will make changes according to your indication.

Prayer Points
Pray for the refugees from Syria and Iraq, for protection in the new place where they now live, and that they may know God deeply and personally: His love, comfort, forgiveness and grace. We thank God for the doors opening to teach them, so that the children in the refugee camps will receive help.

Pray for protection for Christians in the Middle East, the local churches and local teams, and also for us as we make long trips. We praise and thank God for the great things He is doing in these countries.

Pray for the training program in Rio de Janeiro in 2016, that God will send us the right students. We thank God for the wonderful building we will be using during the training.

Thank you very much for your prayers for us, for your faithful financial gifts, and encouraging emails. We are grateful for the friends we have in you!

God's richest blessings to you!

Thursday, February 26, 2015

How can we help the refugee children of Syria and Iraq?

“We were all in panic as I sat with my crying children in a taxi, fleeing the city, while a transport of the militants of the IS passed us on the other side of the road, firing their guns in the air, moving into the city” a young woman from Kurdistan told me. “We made it save out of the city as the taxi raced as fast as possible, but we still have nightmares” she added.

She is only 28 years old, she could be my daughter. Her son of 7 is playing in the room, but her little daughter of 4 hides behind her. She is wearing a beautiful long blue robe with glitters and looks at me curiously and expectantly. There are not that many foreigners here. Did we come to help?

Children at Risk school in Iraq?

We have indeed come to see if we somehow can help the children of the refugees. Those children have witnessed terrible things, have felt the fear of having to flee, and have been traumatized by all they have experienced during their escape.

When we were praying for the children in Syria in Iraq a while ago, we were reminded of the Children at Risk (C@R) School we were able to give in Haiti, ten months after the earthquake where over 300,000 people died.

We had a group of 39 Christian young men and women from 30 different churches, which mostly were living in tents after the earthquake, and couldn´t go to university because they were destroyed together with many houses.

We were able to give those young Haitian students a course to train them as child care workers and counsellors in order to equip for the work with the children in their own refugee camps. We still maintain contact with some of them and hear wonderful stories about the many children they are able to help.
Picture of our Haitian students in dec 2010, during their graduation.
We wondered if something like this would be possible for the children in Syria and Iraq. Would Christian young people that had to flee, and as they are waiting for things to be resolved, be available and willing to do such a training for Children at Risk, in order to be able to help the children around them? Wouldn´t it be great if the kids in the camps could be helped and counselled by Christians who themselves went through similar traumas and can really understand them, much better then we western Christians ever could?


We started praying for this: “Lord what you want us to do? We want to do what you tell us!” We were also worried to even go to the region considering all the awful stories about the cruelty of the IS. Would it be even a responsible attitude to go there? We started taking some careful steps, writing people who had been there, and contacting people who are actually there. We reserved a flight and asked God to give us a sure sign to confirm if we were to go which He gave us within days after we asked. He is so faithful!

Opportunities opening in Kurdistan

So in February we were able to visit Kurdistan in the North of Iraq. It was wonderful to see how many doors opened up: A high government official invited us to meet in his big office. He listened carefully to our proposal, “Yes that is what we need “, he affirmed. “If you train these young people for three months”, he suggested, “then we could actually employ them for the next 9 months, and give them a salary to work with the kids in the camps, so it would become a program of a year…”

Someone else offered: “We have a house with 6 big rooms and a van for 15 persons which you are welcome to use during the time of running the course”

“We can help paying for expenses”, yet another person offered.

Wonderful!! There are still a lot of details to come together, but right now we plan to go for two weeks in April to offer a short course as a sort of pilot program, to see how things could work. And if it looks favourable, then we plan to organize a full three months C@R school in September for Christian young people who are refugees themselves so they can have a practical and possible a job to work with kids in the camps. In such a way a lot of children could be helped.


Many things still need to be worked out. It is a great challenge to run a school there. Lots of things may still hinder this initiative. Please pray with us for this.

I am also busy writing a book with the teachings for the C@R school. With the different travels and the surgery of our son Davi last year I haven´t come as far as hoped, but I continue with fresh resolve!


Our children.

Since his surgery, Davi has improved a lot, for which we are so thankful to the Lord. During the Christmas holidays he and Dilma both stayed with us in our cabin here in Holland. We were quite busy with assembling furniture from the IKEA for Dilma´s new little home. It is very cozy and beautiful and she is so proud and thankful!

We are also enjoying spending extra time with our grandchildren that live in Holland. They have come and spend already a number of weekends with us. ”Staying with our grandparents is always like going to a party”, they say when they come. Just great!

Of course we miss the ones in Brazil a lot. But Michele and Romeu surprised us with their decision to come to Holland in April as a family to do a DTS (Discipleship training School), a five months Bible school with Youth with a Mission. They´ll do it in Heidebeek where we started our time in missions 35 years ago! Isn´t that wonderful?

So we´ll still see them here in Holland, because we´ll only return to Brazil the end of April. When we will get there, it may be a little quiet, because not only Michele and Romeu who lived in the apartment below us, won’t be there, but also Johanneke and Jonathan who lived next door to us, won´t be there, as they just moved to another YWAM base 500 miles further south in Brazil. Talking about empty nest…

Although that will be a bit hard to adjust, we´re of course very happy that they are seeking God´s will for their lives and seek to obey Him. What more would parents really desire? We are very proud of our children and very thankful for them and our children in law and grandchildren that God has granted us!

When we´ll arrive back in Brazil, there is already a full agenda waiting for us to teach in churches and YWAM schools. I´ll also continue to work on the new book, and we´ll continue the preparation for the possible school in Kurdistan. In 2016 we plan to give the same school in Rio de Janeiro around the time of the Olympic Games!

Rio de Janeiro

Who wouldn´t want to go to Rio, the most beautiful city in the world? From January to August we´ll offer there in 2016 a DTS, followed by a C@R school with lots of practical opportunities, like reaching out to the kids in the slums, or spending time with the street children on the beaches of Rio.



Are you free for those 8 months, or do you know someone who would want such an opportunity? Please click here for the website http://jlukasse.wix.com/ywam-rio-2016 to get more information. Pray and come!

Grateful

Dear ones, what a special group of family and friends we have in you! People who pray for us, help us practically with newsletters, data files, administration, meetings, who pray some more, encourage, treat us with food, time and pray even more... We are so thankful! May God reward you all.

We pray God´s blessings on you!

Love, Johan and Jeannette

Prayer points:

  • Please pray for the many refugee families from Syria and Iraq. For help, comfort and healing: Gods arms around them. 
  • Pray for the plans to conduct a seminar of two weeks in Kurdistan to train Christian young people in Child care and counselling. And also for the possibility of a 3 months school in September. Thank God for the opportunities that opened up so far.
  • Pray for the plans of an 8 month training program, with a Children at risk school included, during the Olympic year 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. Thank God for the YWAM team in Rio that is already doing lots of preparations.