Church Helps
Orphans in Rwanda
United Christian Parish of Reston receives the
2005 Global Perspectives Award.
Mirza Kurspahic - January 27, 2005

Members of the UCP
Team visit children in Rwanda. |
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Communities of
faith often hold fund-raisers to raise money for local needs. However, some of
those communities recognize the needs of people in other regions of the world,
as many have for the tsunami relief fund.
The United Christian Parish (UCP) of Reston was honored at Martin Luther
King Jr. Day Celebration by the event's Planning Committee with the 2005
Global Perspectives Award. The church was recognized for its work in Rwanda,
helping the country's orphans get shelter and education, among other things.
The church became involved in Rwanda around seven years ago after its organist,
Yvonne Kauffman, saw a television program about the needs of children in Rwanda
following the 1994 genocide. "The people who should be getting this
award," said Kauffman, "are the people in Rwanda." She said after
the genocide, the country was left with an estimated 800,000 orphans. Since
then, more people have died as a result of poverty and some from AIDS, raising
the number of orphans to nearly a million. After seeing the program, Kauffman
decided the church had to get involved somehow, although she was not sure how to
do so.
THE CHURCH LEARNED of the efforts of a Methodist reverend in Rwanda, the Rev.
Kaberuka Jupa. Since the Methodists had representation in Rwanda, and
are one of the four denominations represented in the UCP, the church decided to
make contact with Jupa. He had escaped from Rwanda into the Congo with a number
of other refugees, where he began planning for orphanages and schools.
Upon returning to Rwanda, the plans began to be realized. Under the
auspices of the United Methodist Church, the UCP now has scholarships for 65
Rwandan children. The government in Rwanda charges $120 per year for an
elementary-school student to attend school and $325 per year for a
secondary-school student, said Kauffman. The Rev. M. Bruce Irwin, the pastor and
team leader of UCP, said the church helped build a clinic and a school in three
provinces, and is now working to establish a much larger facility in the
capital, Kigali.
It is a major financial responsibility the church decided to undertake. The
complex, a school, orphanage and a clinic, is estimated to cost around $1
million. It is about halfway built. The government of Rwanda requires a brick
wall around the complex, which alone is estimated at $450,000.
So far, the money UCP sent to Rwanda was raised by the church's members.
However, an independent nonprofit organization has been set up to support UCP's
efforts, in case people did not feel comfortable contributing through a
religious organization. The Rwanda Foundation Inc. received accreditation from
the state of Virginia in September 2004. The mission of the organization is to
support charitable work in Rwanda. Jim Vollmer, the chairman, said the
foundation raised $1,800 to date. It is planning on sending out letters in the
coming weeks, and setting up a Web site,
in order to let the people outside of the church community know about the
efforts in Rwanda. "The only shot the orphans have to get an
education," said Vollmer, "is if a group from outside comes into
Rwanda." There are an estimated 100,000 children living in the streets of
Kigali, said Vollmer.
Kauffman said UCP teams had visited the orphans in Rwanda twice, in January
2002 and again in June 2004. On its first trip, the team was asked to
leave the country early, as a volcano had erupted, and the U.S. government did
not feel it was safe for its citizens to be in the country. The eruption, said
Kauffman, created earthquakes for three months after it. Upon return in 2004,
she noticed a lot of the people who had to rebuild their homes after the
genocide, had to do so again after the volcano eruption and subsequent
earthquakes. "You can see they keep rebuilding and rebuilding," said
Kauffman, "their spirits are wonderful." She added the people of
Rwanda were glad to see anybody cared about their situation. UCP is planning on
sending a team to Rwanda again in 2006. Just as UCP visited Rwanda twice, Jupa
had visited UCP twice. His third visit is planned for this summer.
THE METHODISTS IN RWANDA are now 65,000 strong and are growing at about 5,000
people per year, said Vollmer. He said a statement dated Dec. 13, 2004, stated
UCP sent $130,000 to Rwanda in 2004. Vollmer added he is working with the
Herndon Rotary Club to get a grant for the work in Rwanda, thus setting up a
Rotary International Foundation. To contribute to the efforts in Rwanda through
the UCP, send a check to the UCP, and write on the check the donation is for
efforts in Rwanda. UCP is located at 11508 North Shore Drive in Reston. To
donate through the Rwanda Foundation, send money to 12804 Wrexham Road, Herndon,
VA 20171. Donations to the Rwanda Foundation are tax deductible. UCP is an
ecumenical church combining four denominations: United Methodist, Presbyterian,
United Church of Christ and Disciples of Christ. To learn more about the
church's mission to Rwanda, visit www.unitedchristianparish.org/rwanda.htm
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