December Newsletter

I am happy to report that all is going extremely well at Casa Hogar La Familia. The children are busy decorating the casa for Christmas. We were blessed this year to receive two very nice donations to help the directors pay for the cost of decorations, gifts and special food for the Christmas Season.

Silvia communicated with me today and told me that with the change of the seasons some of the children have been sick, but nothing serious. With the exception of a few bad colds, all of the children and the staff are doing great.

Tomorrow, all of the children have been invited to travel to Ciudad Serdan to visit Alltech, the company there that has been so very generous with La Familia. Silvia says the children are extremely excited and happy to be going back to Serdan for the day.

More good news: Silvia’s Uncle Sergio has once again made a gift to the casa. On December 19, Uncle Sergio is paying for all of the children to visit Six Flags in Mexico City.

The directors thank all of those who have once again in 2019 supported the Casa Hogar with your donations, your visits with mission teams and most of all for your prayers. Everyone at the casa feels extremely blessed to have so many people in the United States who find the time and money to share with Casa Hogar La Familia.

On behalf of Embrace the Dream Foundation and the directors and staff at La Familia, we wish you all a joyous and blessed Christmas Season.

Bill Lee
Embrace the Dream Foundation, Inc.

Great News for La Familia Students

I received a telephone call from Pastor Nahum Gutierrez, our contact in Colima who oversees the students who are attending both the university there as well as one young man who is attending high school in Colima.

Jazmin Urbina — Jazmin is in her last year of nursing school. As a part of her on the job training, she has been assigned to work at a large hospital in Tlaxcala, the capitol of the State of Tlaxcala, only about an hour’s drive from the City of Puebla. She will be flying from Colima to Tlaxcala.

Maria Isabel — Isabel was the first girl I met when I made my first trip to La Familia in the year 2000. She has overcome a lot of adversity since then and is now a student studying accounting at the university in Colima. She is married to Gabriel and she is the mother of Josué.

Gabriel de Cortez — Gabriel is also a student at the university in Colima and is also studying accounting. Everyone keep their fingers crossed, because if Gabriel keeps up his current pace, he will graduate in December of 2019. Gabriel and Isabel are full-time volunteers at a Casa Hogar by the name of Casa Leonel in Colima.

Juan Carlos — Nahum has been an excellent mentor to Juan Carlos who had lost an interest in finishing high school in Quecholac. Juan Carlos moved to Colima for a change of scenery and to be near his sisters, Isabel and Jazmin. Juan Carlos is scheduled to graduate from high school in November.

Daniel — Daniel is the youngest son of Juan Francisco and Silvia. He began his university education in Colima this fall and has decided to major in International Business.

Our thanks to all of the donors who support the work Embrace the Dream is doing in Mexico. Thanks to each of you for your donations to this Christ-centered orphanage ministry because your donations to Embrace the Dream allow us to pay for 100% if the tuition, food and housing costs of any child who can gain admission to either the university or a technical school and maintain a C Average.

Embrace the Dream Foundation, Inc., PO Box 5558, Greenville, SC 29606
Federal Tax ID# 26-0680710
www.EmbraceTheDream.com

August Newsletter

Beginning on Tuesday, July 30, my brother in Christ, Robbie Hamilton and I flew to Houston to meet an nine-person mission team from Federated Church in Kingfisher, OK and travel with them to Casa Hogar La Familia to spend a week working with the staff and the children at this home for orphaned and abandoned children.

Our trip went like clockwork.  We flew to Mexico City, then took a two-hour bus trip to the CAPU bus station in the City of Puebla and there we changed buses and took a one-hour bus trip to our destination city of Tecamachalco, which is about a 30-minute drive to La Familia.

Our first evening was spent with the two directors, Juan Francisco and Silvia.  They met us at the Tecamachalco bus station and joined us for dinner at a delightful relatively new restaurant located just a few blocks from our hotel.  

The mission team from Federated Church was made up of both adults and  young people.  The adults were made up of a business owner and his wife, a veterinarian and his wife, and an operations manager at a local business. Two of our young people were students at Oklahoma State University and two were high school students. With Robbie and me, we made up an eleven-person mission team.

(Federated Church team along with some of the children and ladies from the church.)

The next day when we arrived at La Familia, all of the children came out to meet us since they were all out of school for their summer vacation. We were blown away by the amount of new work that had been done at the children’s home since our last visit in February of this year.

The perimeter wall had been extended to completely surround our two-acre piece of property.

Solar panels for the roof had been delivered, but not yet installed.

A mission team from Lighthouse Fellowship United Methodist Church in Fort Worth had worked at La Familia a few weeks before we arrived and had removed the wood posts that supported the old clothes lines and replaced them with steel posts, making them much sturdier than they had been in the past.

Two cows (a milk cow and her calf) had been donated to the home and they were already receiving fresh milk, making butter, yogurt and cheese.

(Silvia, one of our directors, with La Familia’s new milk cow.)

A small, but attractive new office had been built to give the directors a private place to process new children when they arrive.

We were all very impressed with the number of positive changes that had taken place at La Familia since we last visited. The big news was that eight new children had made La Familia their home since our last visit. It always amazes me how rapidly new children integrate into the home. The children of La Familia are extremely welcoming. (See photograph)

Our team’s project for the week was to first construct and second to install foam partitions to help soften the sounds the praise band generates at Sunday morning worship services as well as at the Thursday evening worship service. Without the insulated partitions, the music was uncomfortably loud for the members of the congregation who sat up front.

After taking careful measurements, we drove into Puebla where we shopped at a Home Depot store to purchase the tools we needed to complete our project. We purchased the wood for the wall panels and several other products locally and also bought paint locally to cover the walls on both in the second-floor space and the wood surrounding the insulated panels we had previously constructed.

We had not have time to complete the painting portion of our project before having to leave for dinner, so on the drive to La Familia the next morning we were a bit frustrated because still had a lot of painting to do before we could move on to constructing the sound partitions, but when we arrived at the job site we were delighted to see that members of the La Familia staff along with some of the older boys had finished of the painting after we had left.

(Robbie Hamilton and Brian Walter stapling fabric over the panels)

The next day went extremely smooth. We got all 12 panels installed, four on each side wall and two on both the front and back walls. Using an App that measured decibels, we were pleased that the panels did the job intended. (See Photo of panels installed on one of the walls.)

(Panels installed on one of the side walls of the second floor worship space.)

On our third day at La Familia, two more new children were brought to the home by DIF, a Mexican government agency that removes children from potentially dangerous or unhealthy home situations, bringing the total number of children to 35. (See Photo of these two children after being bathed and dressed in clean clothes.)

(The two children — Michelle and Aldo — who arrived during our visit.)

On our fourth day, the women of the church located on the second floor of La Familia prepared lunch for the team.

(Delicious tortillas filled with all sorts of yummy local goodies.)

Eight New Children at La Familia

I received a communication yesterday from Silvia that yesterday La Familia received eight new children (two families, one family of five and another family of three.)

Marshall Sansbury from Lighthouse Fellowship in Fort Worth, TX visited the casa with a team in early July. In a few days, John Williams will be leading a team from his church in Signal Mountain, TN and Tim Baker and his son, Ben, are visiting the casa at the same time as the Tennessee team. Robbie Hamilton, a team from Oklahoma and I will be arriving in Tecamachalco on July 29 and we can hardly wait to meet the new children.

In the first family, we have:
Joan Erik Galindo Torres —————— 14 years of age
Angel Manuel Galindo Torres ——— 12 years of age
Danna Laura Galindo Torres ——— 9 years of age
Jesus Gael Galindo Torres ————— 6 years of age
Guadalupe Galindo Torres ————— 5 years of age

In the second family, we have:
Santiago Adolfo Vallines Mendez —— 9 years of age
Bruno Said Valines Mednez ————— 7 years of age
Jose Angel Vallinez Mendez ————— 3 years of age

Those of you who have been in Palmarito when new children have arrived realize what a trauma this sometimes can be, but once again we can all be proud of our children. They made each of the new children feel like insiders as they went through the rigors of adjusting to a new home, a new brothers and sisters, new schools, etc.

I will send photographs as soon as I receive them.

Bill Lee, President
Embrace the Dream Foundation, Inc.
864-303-8366 (Mobile)

Robert Sawyer Funeral to be held on July 2, 2019 (location to be announced)

It is with a great deal of sadness that I report that Robert Sawyer, most recently of Fort Worth, Texas, was killed in an automobile accident this past Sunday night. I am writing this to those I consider to be friends of Palmarito, Puebla, México-based Casa Hogar La Familia and Greenville, SC-based Embrace the Dream Foundation, Inc.

I doubt that today there would be a Casa Hogar La Familia were it not for the considerable contributions of Robert Sawyer. In our darkest hour, when we had severed our relationship with our church partner in Ciudad Serdan, we asked for an 18-month lease on the building, which I thought was sufficient time to locate a new casa. I was so wrong. To my surprise, land was running the equivalent of $25,000 an acre for eroded land with no electricity, no water, no sewer and no telephone lines. We didn’t have that kind of money for what we considered a minimal amount of real estate: two acres.

We told our plight to everyone we met in Mexico, but still nothing we could afford became available. Finally, a pastor in the town of Tehuacan, a fairly large town about an hour’s drive from Serdan, in the southern portion of the State of Puebla, learned of two small houses under construction nearby that were close to completion and would soon be available for rent.

We could afford the rent, but the climate was miserable, especially when you compare it to our location in Serdan. Unlike Ciudad Serdan, Tehuacan was close to sea level and tropical, which meant it was in the mid to high 90s almost every day and air conditioning was not something Mexican children’s homes could afford, so we sucked it up and did what we had to do to get from day to day while we continued to look for land.

A grandmother of two of the children at La Familia lived in a small town I had never heard of — Palmarito, Puebla, Mexico. She happened to cross paths with the mayor in Palmarito and told him about the gringos who took care of her grandsons, and who were looking for approximately two acres of land to build a children’s home. She told him that we were nice folks and would be good for Palmarito because when we visited the casa hogar, we spent a lot of money on hotels, food, building supplies, etc. Then she matter of factly asked the mayor, “Why don’t you just give them the two acres?” She almost dropped her teeth when the mayor responded with, “Okay, I will give them the two acres they need.”

When we parted company with our church partner, we lost our connections for directors for the home. I had heard about a gringo from Texas who had first come to Mexico to assist with an earthquake disaster. After several life-changing events, not the least of which was becoming a Christian, this man ended up founding a new children’s home in a building another church had abandoned. His name was Robert Sawyer.

Robert Sawyer had grown that single children’s home into nine homes, so I figured he certainly knew a lot about running children’s homes and building new facilities.

I boarded an all-night bus for the 12 hour drive to Guadalajara, changed buses there and took a short 3-hour bus ride to another Mexican city I had never visited, Colima, in the State of Colima, to meet this man, Robert Sawyer.

Robert had grown up on the Texas side of the Red River. He told me stories about paddling a small fishing boat over to the Oklahoma side of the river to buy beer legally at age 18, but then floated it back over to sell it in Texas where the drinking age was 21. All of this, Robert explained, was before he became a Christian.

Robert fell in love with his pastor’s secretary, Carmen, and they were soon married. Carmen and Robert moved into a small apartment in one of the children’s homes and raised their son, David, in the same dormitory as the other male residents lived in. Carmen planned the daily menu and took care of the children while Robert took care of repairs and landscaping. Carmen was mamá and Robert was Papá.

Eventually — after about 20 years as house parents living in the children’s home — Robert and Carmen bought a small two BR and one bath home. They operated the children’s home during the day and turned over the home to the volunteers at night and drove the short distance to their new home.

When I arrived in Colima, the first thing Robert did was to introduce me to Nahum, his pastor. Nahum is one of these really special pastors who was dynamite in the pulpit, but also a terrific administrator, excellent at pastoral care, and an incredible teacher.

Nahum had founded his church when he was 18 and at the time I met him (I’m guessing at that time he was about 55 years of age) his church had over 4,000 members and operated a large Christian School. Robert discussed with Nahum our need for directors — ideally a husband and wife team — and they came up with a nearly perfect couple; their names were Juan Francisco and Silvia, who, incidentally, had three young children of their own.

Juan Francisco and Silvia are still directors at Casa Hogar La Familia. They have been in this capacity since 2005.

After installing Juan Francisco and Silvia in the temporary home in Tehuacan, the first order of business was to get started with construction on a building to house Casa Hogar La Familia on our two acres in Palmarito. This is where Robert Sawyer became worth his weight in gold. He had so much experience that he knew the mistakes to avoid. He used an exterior concrete block siding product that looks as good today as it did the day it was installed. He used portable bookshelves as partitions in the dormitories to give us flexibility when the government agency that oversees children’s homes modifies the number of children allowed to live in one dorm room.

This actually happened to us when the government agency reduced the number of children allowed in one dorm room from twelve to just nine. I could go on and on praising Robert for his foresight as he laid out the floor plan and selected building products for construction.

It was Robert who would take the all-night bus ride to Palmarito to supervise the contractors working on the new building. The entire two-story building was built one five-gallon bucket of concrete at a time. The workers would hoist the five-gallon buckets onto their shoulders and walk the freshly mixed concrete up gangplanks to the second floor.

On one mission trip that involved building the closet systems in two of the dormitory rooms, I invited my son and my oldest grandson to join us from Saint Andrews Episcopal in Downers Grove, IL. My grandson, Quentin, was just 12 years of age and he did a lot of growing up during that week of “heavy lifting.”

The first significant donation we received that allowed us to begin construction was $50,000 that came from a member of Robert Sawyer’s childhood church in Texas. That was the kind of person Robert was. He inspired confidence and trust with everyone who got to know him well.

A few years ago, Robert made the decision to move back to Texas to take care of adults who needed foster care. When Robert was taken from us this week, I was told he and Carmen were operating eight such foster care facilities.

Robert’s son, David, and his family have also moved to Texas from Mexico and David is reportedly doing extremely well in his profession.

With his wife, his in-laws and his son in the vehicle Robert was driving, they ran head-on into a man who was apparently trying to commit suicide as he had entered the interstate highway driving the wrong way — at night in the pitch black dark — and with his lights turned off. Robert died in the accident when he was hit head-on. Fortunately, his family was only bruised and had no life-threatening injuries.

Our prayers are being lifted up for Robert’s family, Carmen and David and David’s family. When the Lord took Robert Sawyer in that automobile accident this week, it had to be because he was badly needed someplace else in the Kingdom. We will be forever grateful for Robert for coming to our rescue in our darkest hour. May God bless the soul of Robert Sawyer. RIP.

For more information, do a Google search for: Fort Worth Obituaries or search for Robert Sawyer on Facebook.