Hardworking and Blessed

Cindy is a little bit shy but always smiling. Her mother, Ana, is a fervent Christian who wants the best for Cindy and Antonio, her two children.

Ana enrolled Cindy at the Generación para Cristo (Generation for Christ) Student Center, knowing her daughter’s life would be blessed, but she never imagined the reach that blessing would have.

young woman writing at a desk

The Majucla community, where this story takes place, is a poor urban community on the outskirts of San Salvador city, El Salvador. In the words of Pastor Rodolfo whose church runs this center,

“This community is a place where people live either because they are poor and cannot afford to live some other place in the city, or live in rural areas and decide to move to the city to look for job opportunities.”

Though most of the area is urban with paved roads, street lights, and houses built with bricks, many homes lack other basic services such as water and electricity, because they cannot afford them. Most of the residents do not own the houses either, but they work hard to pay the $40 or $50 in rent every month.

Most of the people living in Majucla are hardworking people, from women selling tortillas in the streets or vegetables in the local street market to hardworking men working in construction or as bus or taxi drivers.

But Majucla has a stigma.

Its walls tell a story, with graffiti that claims a territory. To think of the name of the community is to think about gangs. To grow up in a place like this is to carry the stigma that most likely a boy will become part of the gang and the girl will become the wife of a gang member.

That means most teens in this community have one of three futures: the jail, the hospital, or the cemetery. The root of this shadowy environment lies in one key element: broken families. This was true for Cindy, but not anymore.

When Cindy is asked about the best thing she has received from sponsorship, it takes her a while to answer. After a few seconds in silence, her eyes become watery and a knot in her throat makes it difficult for her to speak.

She sobs for a few seconds and says,

“I prayed a lot that my dad would stop drinking and would become a Christian. I never gave up.”

The beauty of Cindy’s relationship with her sponsors was the support of their prayers. Cindy had the confidence to ask her sponsors to pray for her family which was on the edge of disintegration. The support they gave to Cindy showed up through the letters they sent.

While other young teenagers in the community were joining gangs (where they could find a “family” for protection, a “family” to give them nice clothes, a roof and food in exchange for lifelong loyalty), Cindy was at church, praying for her father. One day Cindy wrote to her sponsors,

“I want to thank you for your prayers, because now my dad does not drink anymore. Now he leads a small praying group, and he is a servant at church.”

man with arm around woman

Through the years, Cindy has received special opportunities, including math workshops, computer courses and learning to work in a bakery. Because she could make bread at a young age, Cindy could provide some income for her family.

Cindy and some of her classmates receive a percentage of the bakery’s sales. Other teenagers and mothers in the Child Survival Program help sell the bread in the community, so the workshop is self-sustaining and a source of jobs for the people in the community.

young people working in a bakery kitchen

All this has contributed to Cindy’s development and to her family’s wellbeing, but it was in the hardest hours that Cindy’s sponsorship was a blessing for her and her family. Soon after her father became a Christian, the family struggled again.

Wendy, Cindy’s tutor tells us,

“It was hard, because you might think that since the father just became a Christian, things would go well, but it was not the case.”

Ana shares,

“The church has been of great support. Not just materially, they have been of great support emotionally.”

Since Cindy’s father did not have a steady job, it was the the Child Sponsorship Program that supported Cindy with basic things such as school uniforms and shoes, and also the family with staples during those times.

Cindy’s father spent almost two years without a steady job. Part of those scarce times he spent in bed, ill. The money from the bakery workshop and the aid from Cindy’s sponsor and the church helped the family stay afloat.

Things finally got better for the family. Antonio got a job, and now the family can cover their basic needs.

man standing with two women

It is Sunday afternoon, and the whole family is dressed up and ready to go to church. Cindy’s father is one of the volunteers at church. They now look like the family God planned them to be.

9 Comments |Add a comment

  1. Christy Streicher June 5, 2013

    And I forgot to say something really important. Please write your sponsored child. When we visited the homes of the children in Majucla, the letters from sponsors were treasures to them. That is one of the first things they wanted to show us. Some have them hanging on their wall. Some have them in their little box of treasures. I sponsor a child who has a younger brother who also has a sponsor but never hears from them, and that makes him very sad. Please, please write:)

  2. Christy Streicher June 5, 2013

    Members of my church have visited Majucla for the last three years. They are very precious people. They are hard working and very loving. We visit our sponsored children, learn about the wonderful work the Project is doing. Pastor Rodolfo and Wendy are such special people. They love all the children and families. We come home more blessed than we could ever know. Please continue to pray for the people of Majucla.

  3. Catherine January 20, 2012

    It is so thrilling to me to be part of a ministry that is changing whole families. Thank you.

  4. thupten lhamo January 20, 2012

    i am just a student. last time i saw an indian boy of age 11 who is fool but very clever to catch up things and he got a very good manner so, i asked him about his studies but he say he doesn’t study. i felt very sad but i am not in a condition to help becos i m myself is under SOS so i thought of helping his studies. therefore i searched for a charity who work for poor children and i found this blog. it would be very kind if someone can help him. thank you for reading.

  5. Emily January 19, 2012

    I sponsor a sweet girl from this project and loved reading of this great success story right from her neighborhood!

    1. Christy Streicher June 5, 2013

      Your child is in a wonderful Project full of lots of love. We will be going back in January. If you want to email me your child’s name I will try to find her and take a picture of her for you and send it to you when I get back.

  6. Katie Axelson January 19, 2012

    I love the Compassion blog because of the stories of success that it shares. How people like us have given just a little bit of our lives (a bigger sacrifice for some than for others) and how God has used it beyond what we could imagine. Stories like this make me want to cheer outloud for the work the Lord is doing thought Compassion (and sometimes I do)
    Katie

  7. Jennie January 19, 2012

    What a beautiful testimony. Praise God! Thank you for this very moving story. Our God is a big God, isn’t He?!

  8. Christine January 19, 2012

    Praise God! What a story to wake up to! Thank you, Nestor.

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