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Warm Blankets FAQ
Who is Warm Blankets Orphan Care?
~ Warm Blankets
began in 1999 as a private effort of Craig and Barb Muller and Bob and Mary
Beth Hoyler of Illinois. (See the Who's Who page for pictures). They started by
funding projects to restore the lives of orphans in the most desperate third
world countries of Cambodia, India, and Central America. The mission has
grown as it has teamed up with other orphan focused organizations into
Thailand, Uganda, Democratic Republic of Congo, Indonesia and East Timor.
Warm Blankets' largest mission growth has been in Cambodia where over
seventy structures have been built in local villages to be homes for orphans
and homeless widows. These facilities also serve as churches, community
centers and sometimes as schools.
Craig Muller, founder, is a successful businessman whose past CEO and
Board level experience in technology companies has given him an approach to
serving the poor and the orphan by using his knowledge of innovative Web
technology in a unique way. Warm Blankets Orphan Care uses everything from
cellular systems to satellites in coordinating efforts to rescue orphans
from extremely remote and often life-threatening situations.
The mission of Warm Blankets Orphan Care International is to restore the
lives of orphans in partnership with churches, corporations, organizations
and individuals who have a passion to help needy, parentless children. (See
the
Our Mission
page for more information).
What are the key guiding principles
that contribute to the success of the Warm Blankets mission?
- Each home is first a church. Children need to be
brought up with absolutes that the Bible fosters. Relying on God as our
provider and guide makes all things possible.
- Children should be rescued and nurtured in or
close to the area where they were brought up, so small homes are built in
local villages.
- It is in the best interest of orphaned children
to be reunited with extended family members.
- We do not build large institutions that can
become overcrowded and impersonal and force children to be moved far from
their familiar surroundings.
- Based on James 1:27, we seek out homeless
widows, especially those with children, as caregivers. Widows know the pain
of loss the children are experiencing and they also need a placed to live
and bring up their own children.
- The ratio of caregivers to children should be
1:5. This is probably the best ratio of anywhere in the world.
- We developed a model where a whole home is
sponsored by an individual, church or organization. Disbursements are based
on cost plus factors which are less dependent on the number of children than
on improving conditions and services to the kids.(Child sponsorship is
appropriate for a child who lives in a poor area with their parents, but
that approach creates serious drawbacks in orphan home situations. Using
child sponsorship as a criteria for revenue in a orphan home provides an
incentive for the leaders to try to keep as many children as they can under
the home's roof. It promotes mistrust because leaders may be less likely to
try to reunite a child with their extended family when it means they will
have less money to cover overhead costs.)
- Accountability and communications are
accomplished by using comprehensive Web technology for each home that
includes images of children, caregivers and image documentation of the
general area. It also serves as a point where needs for the home are
expressed.
- In all cases and in all countries, nationals
should receive technological and computer training that will allow them to
maintain the images records, reports, and information for continual
communication with government agencies, sponsors and donors.
- Warm Blankets intentionally partners with
organizations that work with indigenous leaders and workers rather than
foreign missionaries as the means to accomplish their objectives.
How are contributions and resources used in the field to support the rescue of
children?
- Government agencies, sponsors, the medical community
and other agencies require an enormous amount of documentations in
caring for orphans. Warm Blankets has developed comprehensive
methodologies and software to facilitate these required processes.
- Our mission in all countries is to train nationals to
do the work necessary to create and maintain records. This gives
older children job skills. It is a wonderful way to get people in a
position that serves the Lord while they are learning job skills
that may start them on a life long career. To do this, Warm Blankets
has personnel both in the United States (USA) and in-country that
focus on training people at the local level in the competencies
necessary to make the overall operation as self sufficient as
possible. The by-product of the training is that we can sometimes
complete the work at a significantly reduced cost. Third world labor
costs are sometimes a fraction of what they might be in the US.
- We have developed software solutions to make it
easier to utilize non-English speaking nationals to gather critical
medical, demographic and epidemiological information in the field
and send it back to the USA.
- In the USA, Warm Blankets has an internship program
that focuses on communication between the field, sponsors and
grantors. This involves maintaining some fifty Web sites to
highlight and track the work being done specifically for the donors
involved with that work. Images of children, general information
about needs, and other relative information are posted to the web
sites daily by interns. This is an effective way in which Warm
Blankets can serve the donor while also giving valuable Christian
mission experience to youngsters in entering the workforce.
- Warm Blankets supports individuals and teams that go
into the field to train indigenous persons in the skills needed to
maintain the infrastructures required to care for the children and
support the work of the Churches.
(You can support the ministry by giving on our convenient
on-line
giving page).
Does Warm Blankets have a religious affiliation?
~ As a Christian
organization, Warm Blankets is non-denominational and works with many
different churches and denominations. The organization is grounded in the
scripture verse of James 1:27, which reads: "Religion that God our Father
accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in
their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world."
Our emphasis is on working with organizations that plant churches to be
used both as a church and an orphan home.
What are some of the ways sponsors help orphans and widows through Warm
Blankets?
~ Orphans'
lives depend totally on our ability to serve the needs that any family
such as your own would have (i.e. housing, schooling, food, loving care,
etc.). You can help them by contributing your time, talents, and
resources. Sponsors help the most in these areas:
-
Whole
home sponsorship - (Warm Blankets
Orphan Care is not a “child sponsorship” organization.) We look to
individuals, groups and institutions to help fund the cost of raising
the children.
- Programs and special projects - By
choosing areas of need such as the building or funding of projects
related to septic systems, wells, vehicles, kitchens, emergency medical
funds, bunk beds, etc., you affect the most basic issues of the boys and
girls in the Church Home(s) you help.
- General operating funds - Without
faithful donors or grants to cover our operation costs, our growth
will stagnate. Our core systems and infrastructure depends on it. This
is the hardest money for Warm Blankets Orphan Care to raise. We send
100% of all designated funds directly through to children's programs and
homes. That is made possible through mature givers who know the
importance of tight controls and accountability that is maintained
through the General Operating Fund.
Operating expenses are not the most
glamorous place to give, so we want to acknowledge the people and
organizations that contribute their time, talent and resources so that
others are blessed with a chance to serve the orphans and widows in
specific ways.
- Prayer - There are pictures of each
individual child and their caregivers on each of the 50+ Church Home web
sites. Warm Blankets has a formal prayer list for orphans which may be
obtained by request. In addition, we ask that you pray for the Church
Pastors, field personnel and villagers whose response to the Holy Spirit
brings a childhood to a child who might not have had one otherwise.
How many homes has Warm Blankets helped to build in Cambodia?
~ There are now
80+ homes are now completed to the extent that they are caring for children
in a constructed building. There are another ten homes in various stages
from planning to near finished construction.
Can we visit a church home?
~ Warm Blankets
has traditionally organized four or five mission groups a year which visit
the areas where we are rescuing orphans. We would strongly recommend you
travel in one of those groups for safety and logistics reasons. Private
trips can be arranged however. You should keep in mind that any persons
having direct contact with the children are required to fill out an
application and to submit to a background check. Please allow plenty of time
for this process to be completed. (Applications can be found under Resources on the home page).
What is Whole Home Sponsorship?
~
As the name implies, it is support of a
complete family of orphaned children and their caregivers that are part
of one particular Church Based Orphan Home. The contributors generally
agree to work together over the years to supply financial, prayer and
arms length nurturing for the whole Church Based Orphan Home. Click here
for more information about the
Whole Home Sponsorship Program!
What is a Church Based Orphan Home and how is it different from institutional
orphanages?
~ Most people
think of an orphanage as some sort of sprawling, dingy, isolated
institution. Warm Blankets supports a quite different model. Based on pilot
programs developed in Cambodia, Church Based Orphan Homes follow a strict
model where the Children’s Home is designed for multiple uses. In Cambodia,
the buildings are designed with the child's safety our primary concern.
Sleeping and privacy quarters for the children and caretakers are separate
from public areas used for church services, music or worship. In
addition, the facility may serve the local village in other ways such as
serving as a community-training center. In some cases, the homes have been
used as temporary medical treatment centers for surrounding villages.
MORE..
Who are Whole Home Sponsors?
~ Whole Home
Sponsors are individuals, groups, churches and organizations that have
committed to the financial, prayer and arms length nurturing of a Church
Based Orphan home. Typical sponsor groups are made up of people with similar
interests or geographically based affinities such as those who might attend
a certain church or belong to a club or small group. The group might also
include family members, neighbors. You can learn more about our
Whole Home
Sponsorship program.
What are the steps involved in establishing and leading a whole home sponsorship
program?
~ The first step
would be to contact us
at Warm Blankets Orphan Care. We can go over a couple of options with you.
If you are going to be sharing the sponsorship with some friends or family,
we will give you multiple copies of the materials we use to explain the
process. There is also a short application we can email or fax to you.
Among the options for sponsoring children on a regular basis, the two most
common options are “sole” sponsorship of a whole home and “shared”
sponsorship of a home.
-
A sponsor could be the sole sponsor for an orphan home - From land
purchase to a completed Church Home an individual or organization could
do it all. In this case, you or your group, buy land, build, staff,
rescue children, and fund the entire project. Cost: $60,000 start-up
plus travel and teams cost and an ongoing management cost of $2400 per
month. Warm Blankets assists in the contacts and management of the
process.
-
Shared Sponsorship Effort
- You or your group concentrate on Orphan and Widow care. In this case,
Warm Blankets will work with partners to find the funds to build a new
church home or upgrade an existing church home. With our partners, WB
supports the initial infrastructure at least until the home is able to
support a full 40 children. Once children are brought in, you or your
group step in. What the Lord wants is people caring for people. It is
discipleship, not sponsorship. It quickly becomes a situation where your
life is changed through the lives you change.
Multiple families might join each other to serve as a caring group for a
Church Home in Cambodia. The cost ranges from $1200 to $1800 per month.
Short term trips for small projects would help cement the relationship
and allow for special projects like fans in the church, concrete pads
for play areas, land mine barriers, lighting, screens for windows and
doors, agriculture projects, eye glasses, inoculations, English lessons,
training in worship, sewing, and others.
What kind of communication and information can we expect from our Church Home?
~ You will
receive a packet of information about your Home, which will include
information about the children, the geography, the area and country of
Cambodia and specifics about the home.
You should expect delays in communications due to the logistics of the
country, which has no infrastructure. There are now over 50 homes in
Cambodia. They are spread out throughout the country. There is no mail
system. At least half of the year the roads are impassible because of
monsoon rains. In the dry season, many of the bridges are out. All of this
is to say that communication and contact are not on a regular basis!
Technology such as cell towers and cell phones are costly and move up the
priority list slowly. However, there is usually someone from the central
office in Phnom Penh that visits the home once a month or so. On occasion,
if the person visiting has been trained to do digital photography, has a
camera with him/her and has some time, he/she will take some pictures. At
the very least, he/she will relay any major changes in the children's'
health, care or accomplishments to the main office. The main reason for the
visit is to perform certain site survey observations relative to quality of
life and material issues such as checking the well, inventory of food,
delivery of goods, checking on supplies, in taking new kids, praying with
caretakers, worship leadership, etc.
In addition to the visits by field staff, at least one and sometimes more of
the Home Fathers, Home Mothers and the Pastors are required to come to
training once a month in Phnom Penh. This is a very precarious trip for most
of them, by the way. At this training, they will be asked for updates on the
children's health, conditions in the home, etc. Bible study and Orphan care
are main topics for the training.
If there is any information that represents significant change in the
conditions at the home or relative to immediate needs, we will contact a
designated person or group of persons, generally by e-mail. We also love to
share pictures, so we’ll let you know if we get any new ones.
How would I find an established whole home sponsorship group of people who are
seeking other
participants to join their group?
~
There are groups that have a shortfall on
a monthly basis until they establish a full contingent of givers and
participants that cover the total commitment for their Church Home. We will
help you find a group that fits your desires to serve. Contact the Warm
Blankets Orphan Care office at 877-33-BLANKETS (877-332-5265) or email us at
information@warmblankets.org. You may also contact
us through the Warm Blankets Web Site (click here).
Are my gifts to Warm Blankets tax deductible?
~ Warm Blankets
Orphan Care International is a 501 (c)3 charitable organization recognized
by the IRS. All gifts are tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law.
Whether or not your gifts are deductible on your tax return may depend on
your own financial situation and the tax form you use.
Does Warm Blankets do adoptions?
~ Warm Blankets
orphan care is a ministry that serves as a means for indigenous villagers to
care for orphans in their own countries and does not include arrangements
for adoptions. However, you may want to check with organizations that only
deal with needy children (like World Vision) to find out who they might
recommend as a viable adoption partner.
How do kids get to a school?
~ In many cases
the Church Home is located so that it is accessible to a village school.
Where the distance is too great or no teachers are available, temporary
teaching is done right at the home. The area that is used for church
services is set up as a school.
Monsoon season presents a challenging situation where it is a long distance
to school and there is no vehicle. A small trailer hauled by a motor scooter
would not only serve as a school bus, it could be used as a means to haul
goods back from market or from farm donations. A pick up type truck would
even be a better solution. There are very few vehicles of any kind in our
system.
Why isn’t Warm Blankets Orphan Care involved in foreign adoption?
~ In the areas
of the world where the incidence of orphans is high, the value of life and
human rights is generally low. Poverty is rampant and corruption is common.
This combination of circumstances sets the stage for the unthinkable
practice of child trafficking. In underdeveloped third world countries, the
selling of babies for “adoption” to US citizens is a multimillion-dollar
business.
According to one of Cambodia's largest human rights organizations, the
League for the Defense and Promotion of Human Rights (Licadho), the
moneymaking potential in foreign adoptions is so great that it has inspired
a network of unofficial ''recruiters'' who scour neighborhoods in search of
young children. These recruiters often manipulate birth mothers with
lies or false promises in addition to cash in order to get them to turn over
their children.
For Warm Blankets Orphan Care to be effective, we have to be above reproach
with regard to caring for true orphans. In order to keep children in their
native land, growing up in their own culture, it is important that we
concentrate on giving long term care where needed and reuniting children
with their extended families, if possible.
Can Warm Blankets Orphan Care recommend an adoption agency for those seeking
adoption?
~ To be sure
we will not be part of or accused of trafficking in children, it is our
policy that no officer or employee of Warm Blankets Orphan Care
recommend or work with any parties involved with the transfer of
children to adoption agencies or organizations.
What are the policies of Warm Blankets Orphan Care relative to reunification of
orphans with their
extended family?
~ If it
doesn’t put a child in jeopardy, an orphaned child should be brought up
by the extended family. Our policy of always building small homes (no
more that 50 children) in or near a local village allows us to keep
children in the local area where they were brought up. The proximity of
the home to an indigenous community increases the probability that a
child will be found by a family member that may be searching for them.
In addition, we will seek out the extended family members through
inquires in nearby villages. We also require an extensive interview
process to find out all we can about an individual child. This will
sometimes uncover a relative that the child may have thought they would
never see again.
How are the caretakers recruited?
~ They are
typically recruited from the local church congregation. Church Homes start
as what we call “cell churches” . A cell church is a small group of people
who start meeting as a result of one person who has actively witnessed the
Good News of Jesus Christ. Usually, that person is actually someone who
heard about the Gospel from another church planted by the same group that is
building the Church Homes.
Services, Bible study, and fellowship in a cell church usually take place in
a small shack such as those typical in remote villages. Most times it is the
home of someone in the church, probably the pastor. Church Homes always
spring up from a cell group. In that way, we know that there are
enough growing Christians that the Home will have caregivers. Churches are
asked to seek out the most qualified caregivers as leaders first. The
organization is grounded in the scripture verse of James 1:27, which reads:
"Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look
after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being
polluted by the world." We therefore require that Church Homes seek
out trainable, willing, Christ-seeking, widows as the mainstay of the
overall caregiver network.
How is religious training accomplished?
~ Home
children, caregivers and the children and guests from the local area are
offered Bible teaching on a daily basis. In many of the homes, Bible
study is done before breakfast every day. In the early evening, there is
always a time of worship. Many homes have an array of musical
instruments. As the kids are taught how to play the instruments worship
time is enriched with their contributions.
If you would like a copy of a video tape of a typical worship time,
contact us at Warm Blankets. We would be happy to send you one.
Periodically, worship videos are also put on the Web.
Bibles are still a scarce commodity in rural areas. We search out Bibles
in the native language. In Cambodia, we teach the children with colorful
picture bibles and biblical materials in the Khmer language. The
biggest shortage is for the village kids and their parents. The cost of
supplying the villages with Bibles is not taken from the support money
for kids. Therefore, we seek separate outside contributions for this
purpose. In some cases the Bibles are donated, but the distribution can
be costly. Bibles are not just handed out randomly. To be effective, we
look to support nationals with the gift of evangelism to be able to
witness to the recipients as they make them a gift of the Bible.
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