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Billy, Kate & Will in Perú

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Kawai

Summer season, Part 1

Posted on Saturday, July 12, 2014 Leave a Comment

We are about halfway through the busy summer season of short term teams. So far, I have been to Kusi three times, Ica three times, Kawai, Cusco and Puerto Alegría in the span of about 6 weeks. Billy has been to Kusi twice, Ica three times, Cusco three times and Kimo. Needless to say, it has been a lot of traveling.

Despite the many hours on buses and planes, the destination is always worth it. At each destination we find familiar faces, friendly hugs and smiles and we pick right up on where we left the conversation the last time we were there.

I’ve had two really great groups in June. The first was a team of 8 women from Baylor University in Waco, Texas. We started their 2 week Peruvian journey in Kawai working on painting the playground and also visited a school in nearby Cañete with Scripture Union’s schools ministry. It was an all-girls elementary school so the team shared about the importance of friendships and what it means to be a good friend.

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From Kawai, we headed south to Ica where we spent 4 days playing with the Girasoles at the home. We went on a caminata (walk) with the older boys to the Bosque de Piedras, a “stone forest” not so nearby the home, explored the tall sand dunes at the nearby Huacachina oasis, had a movie night with the kids on the patio under the stars and delivered free water like we do with most groups to a poorer area of the city.

Continue reading…

Posted in: Peru | Tagged: Girasoles, Ica, Kawai, Kusi, Peru, photos, Valle Sagrado

Two weeks and two groups

Posted on Thursday, July 11, 2013 Leave a Comment

Two weeks, two groups and four locations later we’re almost to mid-July…

As I write this, I am heading south to Kawai, our boys home on the beach. We’ve just passed Km 41 on the Panamerica with about 47 more to go. I’m heading to Kawai just for the day to meet one of our groups, Health Bridges International, and to spend a few hours with Billy. HBI is a group of medical and dental volunteers from the United States and Peru. They come two times a year to put on medical and dental clinics for nearby communities where we have Girasoles boys homes. Billy has spent the past 4 days with the group in Ica and now they are spending another 4 days in Kawai.

For me, the last few weeks have added a considerable amount of kilometers to my travel total. I was able to spend a week with some familiar faces from home with the annual group from First Presbyterian. Despite the fact that Billy and I were in Michigan in April and have plans to return for home leave in the fall, it is still always nice to have a group from home come to our other home. I am blessed to have faithful supporters from my home church, and even more blessed that the church has partnered and committed to support Scripture Union through a yearly work group. The church has been faithfully sending a work team every year since 2001 and has been a blessing to the Girasoles boys and Scripture Union staff.

I started my week with the First Presbyterian group in Kusi and from there we headed south to Ica. In both locations the group wanted to have a party to celebrate friendship. We decorated the dining room with crepe paper and balloons one night before dinner and each boy received a party bag with some small toys, candy and a bottle of soda. Over the years, the group has watched many of these kids grow up and they wanted to do something special to celebrate the years of friendship shared.

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In Ica, we were able to share water with an area of La Tinguiña. The city is finally in the process of installing sewage and running water for the residents of the shanty town area but it is taking longer than anticipated and until then we will continue to support this area with free, clean drinking water.

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The group was planning on visiting a few school classrooms while they were in Ica but due to an unexpected government holiday for the “naming of the pope”, classes we cancelled. Nestor, the SU schools worker in Ica organized for a group of niños trabajadores (working children) to come to the home. A group of 50 children joined our 12 Girasoles boys for a morning of games and a lesson presented by the group.

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Later that evening, we took the boys and staff out for dinner – for a delicious pollo a la brasa (rotisserie chicken). It was a fun to go out for dinner with everybody and to do something out of the ordinary.

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At the end of the week, I said goodbye to the group and spent a quick night at home before meeting another group to go to Cusco for a few days – 24 high school students and 6 teachers from Scotland. They had just returned to Lima from spending the week prior in the jungle at Kimo and I was to accompany them for the remainder of their trip to Cusco and Puerto Alegria.

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Because of schedules and tourism, we only spent one day at the boys home in the Sacred Valley. Despite the quick trip, I had an opportunity to talk with the house parents Héctor and Maritza, play a few games with the boys and learn a few more phrases in Quechua (arinchu kashanki – how are you?).

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From the beautiful mountains and valley, we headed north to the jungle to spend a few days in Puerto Alegria where we made a trip to the mouth of the Amazon River, visited Belen and spent a lot of time playing with the Girasoles boys.

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We returned to Lima for a traditional visit through the city and the group left for their long return trip to Scotland. For me, it is back to Puerto Alegria tomorrow morning for the next week with a group of friends from North Carolina. Billy ends his time with Health Bridges International tomorrow and heads to Kusi on Saturday morning!

– Kate

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Posted in: Peru | Tagged: Dearborn, Ica, Kawai, Kusi, photo, Puerto Alegria

Two Weddings and a Party

Posted on Saturday, March 2, 2013 1 Comment

The final part of our busy January is ready at last…

In addition to Katie’s visit to Peru, our trips to Kusi, Ica/Nasca and Cusco/Machu Picchu, January was also a big month since it, as you have already guessed, culminated in our wedding (and subsequent trip to Cusco with family and friends).

After months of dress fittings, emails, meetings, suit fittings, navigating through hundreds of Pinterest photos (of flower arrangements, suit styles, dresses, invitations and anything else you can imagine), AIDS and tuberculosis tests, a newspaper announcement, translated birth certificates, the day (or days) finally arrived.

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Before any of the ceremonies, the SU staff in Lima hosted a shower for both Billy and I. Apparently, both wedding and baby showers here are more for the guests to have fun with the groom or father-to-be. Billy’s participation in the shower was more than just stopping by to open gifts – he was there for every game, speech, and definitely present as we did a “practice wedding ceremony”.

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They dressed us up in wedding attire and set the chairs into rows and literally performed a wedding ceremony – from walking down the aisle to vows, from toasts to the first dance.

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In Peru, the religious ceremony that we are used to in the States holds no legal validity. To get married here, a couple must have a civil ceremony and then if they choose to, they have the religious ceremony afterward. It is not uncommon for couples who have been together for years and live life as a married couple to legally not be married due to the cost or the pile of paperwork that needs to be submitted. It is also common for couples to have their civil ceremony but wait 6 months or even a year or two as they save money for the big wedding event.

Since Billy and I were having the “big wedding event” with our religious ceremony, we elected for the basic Tuesday afternoon civil ceremony at the Salón de Matrimonios in Surco (our district within the city of Lima) a few days before our religious wedding. Before the ceremony, our wedding photographers did a little shoot with us in the Parque de la Amistad, where the Salón de Matrimonios is located.

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We had never attended a civil ceremony before and weren’t exactly sure how formal they are or what was going to happen. At our last meeting (of many) with the staff of Surco Matrimonios, I happened to ask for a copy of the text that the officiant would use. We knew that we would promise to “feed and educate our children” and that among other things, “both parties will have equal say in the location of the household” but other than that, we were clueless.

So on a Tuesday afternoon at 4pm (January 22nd to be exact), Billy and I were legally married in simple ceremony in a yellow room with some interesting paintings on the walls – and then went to dinner to celebrate with our witnesses, best man, maid of honor and my brother.

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The following day, our first international guests began to arrive and the busyness that is a wedding plus international guests really kicked in.

About 5 months prior, Billy and I decided that we wanted to get married in Peru and be able to share the day with our friends here. We knew that it would mean that not all of our friends and family from the States would be able to come because of the travel commitment, but we would understand. We wanted to get married in a place that has become very important in our lives, and the place that we met, became friends and became a couple. Specifically, we wanted to get married in the chapel at Kawai – a property that Scripture Union owns about 90 kilometers south of Lima on the Pacific Ocean. It is a place that we have spent a lot of time at over the past 11 years and, was one of the locations we traveled to on our first trip to Peru in 2001. We even spent a good part of that trip helping build the chapel on the property.

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As the RSVPs from international guests started to roll in, we decided to make the wedding not just a one-day affair, but a whole weekend at the beach for our guests. After everybody arrived in Lima, we all headed south to Kawai on Friday afternoon to enjoy the sun, beach and final preparations before Saturday, including the rehearsal and the rehearsal dinner.

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The following day was the big day. While the girls and I went to the salon to get ready, Billy helped with the final details and the decoration of the reception tent.

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And then once we were back in Kawai, it was time for the ceremony.

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And then it was time to party!

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We were very blessed to to have two wonderful wedding days and to be surrounded by friends and family from Peru but also the United States and England who traveled a long distance to celebrate with us.

As we wait for the professional photographs, thank you friends and family for sharing your shots with us!

Up next — the great Cusco adventure!

Posted in: Peru | Tagged: Kawai, photos, wedding

Spring Review

Posted on Wednesday, January 2, 2013 Leave a Comment

I can’t believe it is already January. Almost 2 weeks after Christmas. Even worse it has been almost 4 months since I have written something here and I don’t know where to begin. The whole spring season has passed… it is no longer winter here, but summer!

The busy work team season came and went. Unlike the previous three years where I basically set up my own room at Puerto Alegria (our boys home in the Amazon jungle) and lived there for 6-8 weeks, I spent almost every week at a different location this summer. To some the constant travel might be tiresome, but for me it meant a new experience each week and time with friends all over the country.

Things started to slow down in September, but just briefly. Billy and I accompanied a team from Nashville to our boys home in the Sacred Valley (just an hour outside of Cusco) for the week. Peru is a beautiful country, but I can’t think of a place that is any more beautiful here than the Sacred Valley. The valley used to be the backyard for Incan royalty, and they especially appreciated it for its special geographical and climatic qualities. It was one of the Incan empire’s main points for the extraction of natural wealth, and one of the most important areas for maize production in Peru. But apart from all of that, the valley, mountains, adobe buildings and rich colors are beautiful. Drive between the little towns about an hour before sunset and it is amazing.

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After the week in the Sacred Valley, we returned to Lima for a couple weeks to catch up on office work and prepare for the next 2 groups in October. Once October came, we hit the ground running with 2 very different teams and many hours on the road. Neither Billy or myself can really explain where the month of October went because it just flew by so fast. One minute we were meeting a group at the airport during the first week and the next, kids were roaming the neighborhood going trick or treating.

We started October by heading south to Ica for almost 2 weeks with a group from Scotland.

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And then headed north to Kusi for a few days with a team of medical volunteers from Health Bridges International. The HBI team comes to Peru about twice a year to work with Scripture Union – once in July and again usually in October. Typical HBI medical campaigns consist of setting up temporary, 1-day clinics in local schools, medical posts or even on SU property and offering free medical and dental services to the general public. On this trip, we divided the week between Kusi (about 8 hours east of Lima) and Ica (about 4.5 hours south of Lima) and the American and Peruvian medical volunteers gave personalized attention to the Girasoles boys and staff.

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November was a bit slower than October, but I managed to travel to Iquitos two separate times in the month. Billy and I spent a week helping a group from Living Waters for the World from a church in Nashville. The LWW team has installed a few different water filtration systems on SU properties and at a local church in Iquitos and they had come to check on the systems, perform maintenance as needed and scope out potential locations for another system.

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I ended up going back to Iquitos just a few days later with a small group on a vision trip. Vision trips are comprised of people who are interested in the ministry of Scripture Union Peru and want to know how they can get involved either as leading a work team or supporting the ministry financially. The 4-person group from the Hilton Head, SC area spent about 10 days in Peru and covered more country than most Peruvians do in a lifetime. I joined them exclusively for the Iquitos leg of their trip and in just 48 hours we visited our 2 boys homes, went out on the Amazon Hope boat while it refueled and flew to and from Iquitos.

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We were in Lima long enough to celebrate a traditional Thanksgiving dinner. While the services, classes and events at our church, Camino de Vida, are in Spanish, the lead/founding pastors are Americans. Each year for Thanksgiving, the couple invites the Americans who attend the church to join them for dinner at their home.

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In December, we didn’t travel with work teams but still managed to get out of Lima for various events. A weekend was spent on the beach at Kawai for a leadership training for SU staff and later in the month we ventured to Kusi for the week to celebrate Christmas with the boys there.

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It has been a busy but fulfilling and fun last few months. Each of this trips is worthy of an entry on its own – each has plenty of stories and photos to share – but time got the best of me.

Since I didn’t get to say it before, Merry (belated) Christmas and Happy 2013. As Billy and I look forward to a wedding, a well-anticipated visit of friends and family from the States, many trips with work teams, and our own trip to the States in the spring, we wish that your next year be happy, healthy, and prosperous.

*And I promise to not let another 4 months go by!

Posted in: Peru | Tagged: Girasoles, Ica, Iquitos, Kawai, Kusi, Peru, photo, Puerto Alegria, Scripture Union, Valle Sagrado

Three videos

Posted on Friday, August 10, 2012 Leave a Comment

Just wanted to share a few videos from the past few months…

In January, the boys from Girasoles Kusi came to Lima for vacation and Billy and I were able to help keep an eye on 40 boys in a city of 10 million. On one of the first nights in the city, we went to the beach to watch the sunset. It was a big first for many of the boys and they just couldn’t help getting in the water (notice Zócimo who wasn’t expecting the waves and got caught in the water 20 seconds into the video).

In February, Billy and I spent a week in Kawai with a group from Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York City. They wanted to prepare a Korean dinner for the boys which included wantons and a very spicy noodle soup – even spicy for the Peruvian boys who regularly pour ají pepper over their food. Really long noodles and spicy soup made for a fun dinner. Jonathan (who was sitting to my right) was brave enough to get more broth, but then proceeded to sweat after eating a few spoonfuls.

The students at the primary school in Kusi are experts in traditional Peruvian dances from the sierra. Here, two of the students perform a traditional huayno peruano for a visiting group.

Posted in: Peru | Tagged: Kawai, Kusi, Lima, Peru, Scripture Union, video
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katebruder

Traveler. Spanish speaker. Michigan native✋🏻. Peruvian citizen 🇵🇪. 📍Lima, Perú

[late post] May have been chastised for taking a p [late post] May have been chastised for taking a photo on the sidewalk in front of the embassy last month but thankful for the opportunity to participate in free and fair elections while overseas. I only wish the ballot drop off hours had been longer so Will could have come with us 🗳️✉️
Thankful for a church that loves its kids, generou Thankful for a church that loves its kids, generously invests in them and shares that the light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it. 

@caminodevida @kidscdv #fundayfestcdv
A visit to the Palacio de la Moneda in Santiago 🇨🇱 

#littlewilliamnoah
Spring break trip to Santiago, Chile 🇨🇱 A de Spring break trip to Santiago, Chile 🇨🇱 A dear friend has been working in Santiago and thanks to some great points redemptions for flights and hotel, we made the trip to see her and explore a new city and country. We were amazed at the differences between Santiago and Lima (amazing public transportation! open spaces and greenery!) and loved spending time with @minazavala 😘
Spent the morning in Callao for a track meet. Will Spent the morning in Callao for a track meet. Will competed with the San Borja team in 4 races in the U8 group (50 meters, 200 meters, 4x50 meter mixed relay and 5x50 meter boys relay) and earned a medal in every race. We love watching him have fun and see how his hard work in practice pays off! 🥇🥈🥉🥉 #littlewilliamnoah
Slow days and late summer evenings on the water wi Slow days and late summer evenings on the water with family 🐟☀️ 

#littlewilliamnoah
After 3 years, we finally enjoyed a glorious Michi After 3 years, we finally enjoyed a glorious Michigan summer for a few weeks doing all the outside things possible. Spent way too much time delayed at the Atlanta airport and not nearly enough time with family. 

#littlewilliamnoah
Your greatest contribution to the kingdom of God m Your greatest contribution to the kingdom of God may not be something you do but someone you raise. - Andy Stanley

Happy Father’s Day, Billy! The legacy you are creating for Will and the example you show him daily of how to be a father and husband is our greatest blessing. We love you. 

#littlewilliamnoah
Last night Will went to his first professional soc Last night Will went to his first professional soccer game, a friendly match between Perú 🇵🇪 and Paraguay 🇵🇾. Even though the game started after he normally goes to bed and ended in 0-0, he was so excited to cheer for @labicolor and loved it ☺️⚽️ #littlewilliamnoah
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