Author: Ovi Cornea

  • Give a Gift of Love

    Give a Gift of Love

    Here we are again in that time of the year when everyone is thinking about family, joy, being with the loves ones and gifts, many gifts. We would also like to do something for the orphan children in Kachere and Mpyupyu, just like we did every single year, and we need your help.

    As you know, these children receive daily food and love at our two Feeding Centres, but I know they look forward for something special during this Christmas. I also know they will never ask for anything, but you could read in their precious eyes that they anticipate something will happen.

    Help us prepare a gift for them, for this year’s Christmas.

    We’ve been doing this every single year since the beginning of this ministry and we would like to continue now in 2016. Our plan is to collect an online offering until December 20th. After that, we will use all the money collected to buy them something useful. As you know, for the past 2 years rains have not come as expected and many people are suffering. Although these children get 2 meals every day, the 3rd meal at home is often missing. Help us to buy them a bag of maize, a couple kilograms of rice and a new blanket and clothes.

    We need $32/child. I know it may seem a lot, but only a bag of maize goes for more than $20 at the moment. A bag of corn flour feeds a family for 1 month.

    If you would like to be a part of this great ministry, please use the form below. All you need to do is fill in all the information required, then press the DONATE NOW button at the bottom of the form. It will then take you to a secure PayPal page, where you can continue with the donation. I would like to remind you that no PayPal account is necessary for this transaction.

    Moreover, if you would rather send your gift using the traditional way (maybe through your church or sending a cheque), you can do that also. We only ask you to send us a note so that we know where we are and how far we need to go. We will also update the progress bars. Open this page, Give, for more details.

    [DONATIONS NO LONGER ACCEPTED FOR THIS PROJECT]
    [FIND OTHER PROJECTS YOU CAN BE A PART OF HERE]

  • Our new intern: Roxana

    Our new intern: Roxana

    Hope for the Future Baptist Mission in Malawi has recently started an internship program, where young men and women can come for a short period of time in order to observe our ministry and prayerfully consider where God may lead them for the future.

    The ministry in Malawi is growing fast and we feel one of our greatest needs is for more manpower, for more workers on the mission field. With God-given coworkers, the ministry in Malawi can be much more efficient both in reaching people with the Gospel and also in helping those in need.

    We knew about this need at least 2 years ago and we are extremely happy to see that at least 1 person answered this call. Our future intern’s name is Roxana, she is from east Romania and she will be joining Hope for the Future Malawi in just a few weeks.

    Roxana with Hope for the Future

    Although we personally know Roxana for a long time, her relationship with the Malawi Mission goes at least 2 years back when, while on our furlough, we had a chance to talk to her more about what God is doing over here. Not long after that, she had become a part of the ministry with the orphans, by faithfully sponsoring one child. Herself being an orphan, Roxana clearly understood the depth of the pain these children go through, by growing up without the support of parents.

    After surrendering her life to Jesus, following her grandmother’s example, Roxana felt that her duty in this world is to care for children that hurt. She constantly prayed for ways she could help them, serve them. After graduating the University of Medicine in Romania, Roxana did what she was always meant to do: care for the little ones that needed love. God used her pain to heal others and, doing that, her soul also got healed.

    Being the oldest among her 10 siblings, Roxana had to make sure they are all taken care of. The last ones took off from home not to long ago and now she is finally free to serve those that need her the most: the children in Malawi.

    Roxana told us that God calls her to come join us in Malawi; she satisfied all our requirements (the English page may not be updated yet) and was approved by her pastor and church. She announced her decision in her church and they are ready to support her in every way possible.

    We are now waiting for her visa to be approved and she is ready to come.

    Hope for the Future’s internship program is NOT a paid program in any way. The intern comes with the purpose to see and observe the ministry in Malawi in all of its forms, while making sure he/she can self support. All the volunteering will be mission oriented only.

    If the intern desires to work with Hope for the Future full term, he/she will need to leave the country, as per Malawi Immigration rules. His/her application will be considered and, if approved, the necessary steps will be taken in securing him/her with a TEP (Temporary Employment Permit). Further extensions of that visa can be also considered.

    Roxana will be with us for the next 3 months, loving and serving those precious children we take care of in Kachere and Mpyupyu. Her personal experience with orphanages, pain and the sense of feeling rejected will give her all the tools she needs to help our kids.

    We look forward to a good, profitable time in the ministry. Pray for Roxana, as the culture shock will definitely send her emotions on a rollercoaster. Malawi is the poorest country on earth, and seeing/experiencing that will change anyone for life.

    Of course, if you read this and want to be an intern with Hope for the Future, you can contact us and ask us how.

  • Good tree, bad tree

    Good tree, bad tree

    We all know that appearances can be deceiving, and this seems to apply to what would otherwise call a good tree. On one of the first days of this year’s rainy season, we heard a big noise one late evening, coming from the bottom of the hill. A tree has fallen and, much to our surprise, it was what we thought to be a very good, healthy tree. It looks like it was a good tree on the outside, but completely rotten on the inside, thanks to our wonderful African termites.

    I am going to have to treat all of our trees, since these termites will never stop the destruction.

    Over the years they made themselves a nest within the trunk, slowly but surely destroying it form inside out. All was needed was a little wind and the mighty tree came down. These are some pictures I took of what is left:

    Tree destroyed by termites

    Tree destroyed by termites

    Tree destroyed by termites

    Tree destroyed by termites

    Tree destroyed by termites

    Tree destroyed by termites

  • How to grow a baobab tree

    How to grow a baobab tree

    Throughout the life of this blog I mentioned the Baobab trees and its fruits several times, although until now everything was only in the Romanian language (sorry my non-Romanian readers 🙃). Despite writing in only one language, the response was quite surprising, Romanians from all over the world writing me and asking more informations. Some even asked me if I could send them fruits or powder.

    Baobabs are widely found here in Malawi, its fruits being considered “the African sweets”. The only problem is that they are not sweet, but rather sour, so the most appropriate name would probably be “the African sour candy”.

    With the looks of a tree from another planet, the Baobab is very interesting and also extremely helpful in Africa, both to people and to the animals. Some people even call them, for good reasons, “the trees of life”. The wood is like a sponge and they keep tons of water (up to 26,000 gallons) during the dry season. The elephants literally take bites out of this trees, sucking the precious water that sustains life. Children in Malawi enjoy the fruits which are, as mentioned, sour but also dry and very powdery in consistence. Baobabs can be used for clothing, fiber, medicine, food, water source and many other uses. Read more about the Baobab trees here: Andasonia.

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    Being the beginning of the rainy season, I got some baobab seeds and I am just about ready to start planting them. But how do you plant a baobab seed? Well, it turns out all you need is an elephant!

    Baobab trees do not like neighbors, even in the form of their own species. Water is scarce and the last thing a baobab tree needs is another one growing close by and competing for the precious commodity. If other trees multiply themselves easily by the fruits that fall down and rot away close by, the baobab is using another method to insure its survival: the elephant. If the baobab fruit falls from the tree, the seeds within will never produce another tree. The reason is the seeds are covered with a tough coat and only the hot stomach acid of an elephant will prepare it for germination. To make sure the mighty mammals play along with the plan, those seeds are covered with a rich, velvety, yoghurt flavored and sour powder that elephants cannot resist.

    While in the elephant’s stomach, the seeds spend the next 4-5 hours getting themselves ready for the outside world. Eventually, the seeds are deposited some distance away from the original tree, ready to germinate and packaged in a perfect blob of warm fertilizer.

    Although we live in Africa and elephants are not that far away from us, we still feel we should try to find another way to replicate the necessary conditions to grow these seeds. After all, it is not that easy to bring an elephant on the property and have it play its part!

    So, the best way to trick the seed is to use a very fine sandpaper to reduce the thickness of that tough coating. Once the inner white layer is slightly revealed, the seeds need to spend the next 24 hours in warm water. After that, they need to be dried for 1 day and only then they are ready to be planted.

    The seeds need some initial care, but nothing too complicated especially since Malawi has the perfect conditions for them. The right amount of water combined with the right amount of sun will do the trick. I plan to plant these seeds in a plastic bowl so I can better control their environment during the initial months. I don’t need anybody to step on them or for something to fall over them. Once the seedlings reache a certain size, I will plant them on our property and we will continue to make sure they grow trouble-free.

    Hopefully, after some years, Hope for the Future will have some of these iconic African upside-down trees.

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  • Hope Baptist Church, Ntangaleya

    Hope Baptist Church, Ntangaleya

    Yesterday we worshipped our Lord together with our Brothers and Sisters from the village of Ntangaleya. Hope Baptist Church, Ntangaleya, is close to our church in Mpyupyu, and it is amazing to us to see the spread of the Gospel in the surrounding villages.

    This church was planted in 2009 but didn’t have a pastor until recently. No one was ready enough to think they could lead God’s people until something amazing happened in the beginning of this year, when we had a Evangelistic Camp in the neighboring village of Mpyupyu. Together with our visitors from FBC Jackson, we were carrying on with the camp when some folks from Ntangaleya brought to us a dying child whom later God healed. You might remember Siyeni, the 14 year old boy who had an oversized belly. A few weeks later we took him to the hospital where, after 2 surgeries, he got better.

    Well, people from Ntangaleya thought Siyeni would die and didn’t have much hope. God healed him and Siyeni’s grandfather was so amazed that he vowed to serve God. That’s exactly what he did and the people from the church voted him as their pastor! No one else in the village was more fit to become a pastor as someone who God touched in such amazing way! Praise the Lord for pastor Misinde.

    Hope Baptist Church, Ntangaleya

    The church body is still fairly small for a Malawian church but we trust the growth is just now starting. More importantly, we hope people will continue to experience God in amazing ways.

    The time with the church in Ntangaleya was great! Our hearts were blessed by the short time we spent together on Sunday and we definitely look forward to another service in the future.

    On a side note, Siyeni is doing so much better now. He is a happy boy, running, jumping and playing just like anybody else his age. Soon we will need to take him back to Blantyre for his regular check-up and we expect the doctors to remove the colostomy bag Siyeni had to endure while he was healing.

    Pray for Siyeni and pray for the church in Ntangaleya. May the continue to see God’s hand at work in their lives!

    Hope Baptist Church, Ntangaleya
    Picture with the church body.
    Hope Baptist Church, Ntangaleya
    Enjoying a Malawian meal after the service.
    Hope Baptist Church, Ntangaleya
    With Aimee, Siyeni and Jessica.
    Siyeni
    Siyeni, in April 2016.
  • BlueZone Ltd. (Malawi) – the real public relations

    BlueZone Ltd. (Malawi) – the real public relations

    What happens when online retailers makes mistakes in their pricing and customers buy the products? Should they honor the orders or not? If they do honor the order, how will that affect their image?

    A similar incident happened today with an online retailer in Malawi that sells pumps, solar equipments and inverters, BlueZone Ltd. (Malawi). I don’t know much about BlueZone, but I know they carry good brand items at fair prices, something hard to find here in Malawi. Let me tell you the story.

    In 2014, someone from Austria bought us a submersible pump that we have now finally installed. The pump works great but we don’t know if it has run-dry protection or not. You see, the pump is very powerful (5,000 L/hour or 1.320 gallons per hour) and draws the water faster than the well can replenish itself. Without a run-dry protection, the pump will burn itself out if it is allowed to run when there is no water. Being deep in the ground, one cannot know for sure if water is available to the pump at any given moment, so the risks are great. We need a submersible pump with all the necessary sensors preinstalled.

    Today I decided to look online and see what I can find. I knew about BlueZone from a friend and I knew they have a web shop. Scrolling through all the available submersible pumps I discovered one that was so cheap, I couldn’t say no to it. Actually, it was 0 euros. Now before you shake your head, hear me out. BlueZone may not be legally bound to honor such orders where someone made a mistake, but in the same time, who says I, as a customer, cannot press “BUY”? I mean, it is remotely possible that BlueZone wanted to leave a gem in and reward good customers who actually surf through their website, right? Right?

    BlueZone Ltd. (Malawi)

    BlueZone Ltd. (Malawi)

    Anyways, long story short, I made the “purchase” and left a note: “I trust you will honor my order.” The order went through, I received the automatic emails that confirm your purchase and I was waiting for them to contact me. And contact me they did. Actually, the big boss who is a Danish citizen I believe, wrote me the following email. His name is hidden by me.

    Dear Mr Ovi Cornea.

    Although we appreciate your registration and high level of humor,- we unfortunately have to decline your order.
    The Bluezone web-shop is now closed and until we have fixed this obvious error.

    Your contact is appreciated.

    Thank you
    K** G***** J********
    Bluezone Ltd.

    Regards,
    Customer service

    In all fairness, I wasn’t joking when I placed my order, but I can understand them not willing to sell me an expensive pump for 0 euros. This is not a matter of legal rights, but of public relations. Online retailers have made these types of mistakes in the past and they chose to honor them, in order to show where their values lie: in their customers. In the same time, other retailers cancelled the orders, like in my case, and moved on.

    It was an interesting experience for me and I definitely appreciate the email from the big boss. One cannot expect a small shop like this to lose so much, can we? Or maybe they should? Promises made in our loss should still be kept, right? Or maybe a confirmed order is not a promise?

    At any rate, Bluezone is a great company with some great people. They stock good, quality products at very competitive prices and they even offer warranty, something very rare to happen here in Malawi. I, for one, will not cease to shop from them whenever I can, because they offer some of the best deals in the country. Nonetheless, I would’ve been extremely impressed to see them honoring this order? That would’ve spoken loads about them. Or, if they didn’t want to/couldn’t honor the full order, maybe they could’ve given me 20% discount on my next purchase or maybe even a good Danish coffee with the owner. I am sure we would’ve had a great time, laughing this thing off.

    Business is important and profits are vital. All companies claim they value their customers, but do they really do it?

    UPDATE Nov 25, 2016

    Yesterday I received a phone call from one of the employees at BlueZone. He said the boss told them to give me a t-shirt, I guess for consolation prize :). Today, the t-shirt arrived in the mail. I must say, it is a very good quality polo shirt, probably made with hot weather in mind. Kind of like my Cool 18s. Lita is very happy with it since it is for women :).

    BlueZone Ltd. (Malawi)

    BlueZone Ltd. (Malawi)

  • Bible School & Primary School

    Bible School & Primary School

    These are the latest updates on the two main projects we have at this time, Bible School and Primary School:

    Bible School

    Bible School, Zomba, Malawi

    Bible School, Zomba, Malawi

    Bible School, Zomba, Malawi

    Bible School, Zomba, Malawi

    Bible School, Zomba, Malawi

    Bible School, Zomba, Malawi

    The Bible School, or Bible Seminary, is being built in Zomba, at the mission house. The project is underway and, recently, the builders and carpenters have put up the roof. A team of men are working on the septic tank, while carpenters are being mobilized to install the ceiling. After that, we will plaster the inside, do the pointing on the outside and start concentrating on finishing up the interior. The electric has been installed but the connection to the national grid will happen soon after the ceiling is done. Plumbing needs to be done also, so we still have a lot of work to do.

    This project is not fully funded yet, we are still in need of a minimum of $5,000. We know the Lord will provide in time, so that the work doesn’t stop.

    Primary School

    Hope for the Future Elementary, Kachere, Malawi

    Hope for the Future Elementary, Kachere, Malawi

    Hope for the Future Elementary, Kachere, Malawi

    Hope for the Future Elementary, Kachere, Malawi

    Hope for the Future Elementary, Kachere, Malawi

    Hope for the Future Elementary, Kachere, Malawi

    Hope for the Future Elementary, Kachere, Malawi

    Hope for the Future Elementary, our Primary School, is also being built as we speak, this one in the village of Kachere. The work is going very well, and the two blocks have now roof on them. The men (and some ladies) are plastering the walls on the inside of one of the buildings. The second one will be finished soon after. A large team of builders are working on building the offices for the teachers, while a smaller team is building the outside restrooms for the pupils.

    By the grace of God, this project has been fully funded and, on December the 7th, we will have the official opening, Lord willing.

    The work in Malawi is going strong and we still covet your prayers day by day. It is not an easy task to keep an eye over all these projects (and we have more we work on), but we take every day at a time and we trust that His grace is enough. Pray that our focus is and will be on the most important thing: people’s souls. I am a type of a missionary who doesn’t think blocks, bricks or buildings say anything about the work we are doing. Just because one builds something, doesn’t mean he is actually having a ministry. I want to stay focused on people’s lives and their souls. With eternity in mind, only their souls matter. I see these building as means to an end, tools to accomplish what God called us to do.

    Thank you “Holy Trinity” Baptist Church for your continual support and trust. Thank you First Baptist Church, Jackson for doing so much to see the Bible Seminary standing up as it does now. Thank you Ridgecrest Baptist Church for supporting the Primary School in Kachere. Thank you every other church, big or small, for supporting us and our ministry. Thank you to each one of you, individuals, who pray and give, so that we can be here, live here and work here. God is using all of you for something greater than all of us.

    May He be glorified!

  • Primary School

    Primary School

    Latest pictures:

    Hope for the Future Elementary
    The roof is installed on one of the school blocks.

    Hope for the Future Elementary

    Hope for the Future Elementary
    Transparent roof for extra light.
    Hope for the Future Elementary
    Plastering the inside walls.

    Hope for the Future Elementary

    Hope for the Future Elementary
    Teachers’ offices
    Hope for the Future Elementary
    Aerial view.
  • Ready to recruit teachers!

    Ready to recruit teachers!

    The building of our Primary School in Kachere is underway and we are now ready to receive the resumes and recruit its new teachers. Lord willing, we will start next month and provide the much needed education for the children of Kachere and surrounding villages.

    May God be glorified!

    Newspaper Ad Hope for the Future Elementary School

  • Walls are going up!

    Walls are going up!

    This is just a quick update to let you know that the work in Kachere, at Hope for the Future Elementary School, is going on well. Right now, the walls are being raised and pretty soon we will be ready for the roof. God is good!!!

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