Flying for Life - Summer 2019

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FLYING FOR LIFE SPECIAL EDITION: (RE)THINK MISSION

THE QUARTERLY MAGAZINE OF

MAF AUSTRALIA


(RE)THINK MISSION Welcome to our 2019 Special edition magazine. Ride For Fuel organiser, Evan Snow

Welcome to our 2019 Special edition magazine. We’re calling it “(Re)Think Mission” for two reasons. The first is to help challenge what may be the preconceived notions of ‘Christian mission’. Throughout the scriptures we are given a model for how to love the people around us. In the life of Jesus, we see His commitment to serving the most vulnerable parts of the community, the ones that were otherwise largely overlooked. We see Him deal with their physical needs (through the provision of food and healing), with their emotional needs (in the way that He would spend time sharing meals with those considered ‘unclean’) and with their spiritual needs in the way He would freely offer the forgiveness of sins. This holistic approach is one that we are eager to follow. The first half of this magazine is about exploring how the mission of MAF meets these needs through medical care, aid and development, disaster relief and delivering the good news of Jesus.

It can be sometimes tempting to think of these ‘missionaries’ as super Christians, as people who heroically leave their jobs, their homes and their families and venture out into the great unknown, without a shadow of doubt or questioning.

2 0 1 9 : T H E Y E AR AH E AD

But as you will see in this magazine, the people serving with MAF are just like any others. They have good days and bad days, their doubts and obstacles to overcome.

MAR 1-3

APR 19-22

M AY 4 - 5

JU N 17 - 21

Avalon Air Show

Belgrave Heights Convention

Wings Over Illawarra

Alumni Reunion

A spectacular day out. Come along and try out the flight simulator!

Calling all Melbournites! Come and say hi at our table!

We’ll be at this fantastic annual airshow for Sydneysiders.

A special reunion for MAFA and MAFNZ alumni held at Treetops, QLD.

SEPT 1

OCT 10-13

RIGH T N OW

Father’s Day

Ride For Fuel

MAF Website

Our ever-loved Fuel for Father’s Day is back. Get your church involved!

Fancy a tough bike ride? Ride For Fuel may be right up your alley!

We’ve made a few exciting changes to our website: maf.org.au. Take some time connect online and get behind this exciting mission!

Walking faithfully with God, they are simply using their gifts - alongside others - to do what they can to serve these isolated communities. We hope this magazine inspires you to re-think your place in this mission. Is God calling you to use your career with MAF? Perhaps you can more deeply commit to praying for MAF or become more involved in supporting the financial needs of this mission. Together we will bring hope – and deep joy - to the places where it is needed most. In His Service,

The second reason we called it “(Re)Think Mission” is to help inspire you to consider your place in this mission. Thousands of lives are being transformed – physically and spiritually – as a result of the men and women serving with MAF.

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Fuel For Father’s Day is back in 2019!

Ian McDougall General Manager MAF Australia

The MAF mission - reaching the most isolated communities with hope - depends on people like you to make it happen. We would love you to play whatever role you can this year to help support and advocate for this exciting ministry. Call us to have a chat: 1800 650 169

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(RE)T HI N K M I SSI ON

(RE)T HINK MIS S IO N

Aid & Development

Medical Care With your support we are able to reach isolated people in their time of need and turn days of walking into mere minutes of flying. Countless lives have been saved as a result of this ministry. The following story told by Pilot Dave Rogers tells of just one precious life saved in PNG.

An example of a public toilet in Khulna, Bangladesh

Each year around 157,000 passengers and their 6 million kilograms of freight travel aboard our aircraft to deliver hope. The majority of MAF flights are in support of the 2000 organisations that rely on us to reach the isolated areas to deliver their service. The following story shows how just one of these partnerships is drastically transforming communities. Story and photos by LuAnne Cadd Khulna, the third largest city in Bangladesh, has a population of 1.5 million people, yet has no public sewage system. It’s a staggering thought. Isn’t it? Without a modernized sewage system, the job is carried out by hand, and often reserved for Bangladesh’s poorest slum dwellers. These workers, known as ‘sweepers’ or ‘emptiers’ take on the task of manually removing the faecal sludge when the tanks become full, often dumping it into any nearby drainage they can find. They are underpaid, unregulated, and suffer health issues and often fatal accidents from the methane gas. In 2016 alone there were 31 deaths of ‘emptier’ workers as a result of the methane gas present within and around the tanks. ‘One day I had an accident when I went to clean a septic tank. As soon as I removed the slab from the tank, methane gas released from the tank and lit up because of the gas lamp I was carrying, and consequently burnt my hand, back and chest,’ one emptier describes.

Injured patient is carried onto a MAF flight in Goroka, PNG It was during the second trip of a busy day in Papua New Guinea when I was approached. A woman had been hit in the head with a rock and was in urgent need of a doctor. I was faced with a problem. How could I help the patient and still manage to deliver the almost full plane load of passengers and cargo I was due to drop at the next two airstrips. Given the flying restrictions, it wasn’t an option to carry both the existing load and the injured patient at the same time. My next thought was to see if I had enough fuel to make my next two stops as planned and then return for the woman. It’s typical for us to carry around 30 minutes extra fuel (on top of the reserves already required by law) to allow us margin to deviate around unexpected weather. Because of the favourable weather, I decided I could use this extra fuel to help me get back and make the extra stop. I worked hard to get back to the community as quickly Special edition / FLYING FOR LIFE / 4

as possible, and when I got back there about 45 minutes later, I was glad I did. The patient was barely conscious as we carried her towards the plane. I couldn’t get her to stand on the scale so I had to weigh both her and the carrier together and work out the difference. I quickly completed the paperwork and prepared for departure. Now we were finally ready to get her on the way to the care she so desperately needed.

An ‘emptier’ works to manually clean a septic tank in Bangladesh

SNV, an organisation founded in the Netherlands, is partnering with MAF to address and improve the sanitation system and working conditions of sanitation workers in the city of Khulna, Bangladesh. The Faecal Sludge Management project is a 4 year sanitation project to improve the living conditions of Bangladesh communities. The project aims to develop faecal sludge management services, which includes building government capacity to develop and implement waste management policy, services, and treatment, as well as protect the health and dignity of those who manually remove the faecal sludge from tanks.

Once in the air I sent a message to the base using our satellite tracker asking them to call for the ambulance so it would be ready when we landed.

SNV is working hard toward providing safer and more profitable working conditions for these workers, including health and safety training and access to protective gear such as masks, which have changed little in 100 years.

They replied moments later saying they’d made the call, and sure enough as I taxied in – there was the ambulance waiting for us. We helped her onto the ambulance and I continued with the rest of my busy day, satisfied in the knowledge that we’d been able to change, and quite possibly save, another life.

Khulna, located in the south of the country has no airport which means the fastest way to the city is by MAF’s float plane. SNV moved staff back and forth between Dhaka and Khulna 65 times last year and hopes to use MAF even more this year.

A mother and son collect water from a local water pump

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(RE)T HI N K M I SSI ON

Emergency Relief

(RE ) T H I N K MISSION

Good News of Jesus MAF flies in and out of around 1400 airstrips worldwide. That’s more than the top 4 airlines combined! We are blessed to be able to partner with local churches, missionaries and Bible translators to deliver the good news of Jesus to some of the most remote communities in the world.

Recently, MAF flew Balku and Mary - a couple from the homeland of Gurrumurru to lead an outreach in Dhoyndji and Gangan. Dhoyndji Arriving in Dhoyndji, Balku, Mary and their daughter went around the homeland to call people together for a small message. Once a group was gathered, Balku spoke about how God is slow to punish and quick to forgive. After sharing a word of encouragement from the Bible, Balku and Mary prayed for the gathering and said goodbye. We then left for Gangan.

MAF’s expertise and resources uniquely position them to rapidly respond to and care for these isolated communities in critical times of need. When disaster hits, MAF responds quickly with air transportation, emergency communications, logistics support, and experienced personnel. Getting the right people to the right place at the right time. MAF flew help to the tsunami disaster in Indonesia in 2004, Cyclone Sidr in Bangladesh in 2007, the Haiti earthquake in 2010, the Horn of Africa famine in 2011, the Ebola epidemic in Congo in 2013, the earthquake in Nepal in 2014 and most recently the 2018 earthquake in PNG and the tsunami disaster in Sulawesi, Indonesia in 2018.

Story and Photos by Divyan Ahimaz Over the years, MAF has nurtured valuable partnerships with Yolngu Christian leaders in Arnhem Land. MAF regularly flies them into the remote Yolngu homelands where they are an immense source of encouragement to the people they meet.

Remote communities are often the hardest hit when disaster strikes. Cut off from resources and adequate transportation routes, these communities are left even more vulnerable when critical circumstances arise.

thanked God saying, ‘Thank you for bringing Balku and Mary, God. Thank you for the encouragement they are. Bless MAF in their flight! Thank you for sending them here!’ As we prepared to leave, Balku told us that the tree we had gathered under was planted by late Rev. Dr. Gumana in the 70’s, with a vision for church to happen in Gangan. In a sense, it was a reminder that MAF’s ministry flights are seeds being sown in Arnhem Land; seeds that will one day grow to be mighty trees that bring together these homelands for Christ. *old-man – an introduced word to address an elderly man in the Yolngu community who is respected and looked up for his wisdom in things.

Tsunami in Indonesia

Cyclone Sidr in Bangladesh

Gangan Church After about 30 minutes of flying, we landed at the Gangan airstrip. Mary’s brother, Marikuku came to pick us up in the community tractor! Marikuku drove from the airstrip to the other side of the homeland, where we stopped beside a tree.

Balku, Mary and their daughter

When we arrived, the old-man* of the community was preaching. His message to the community was about knowing God through a relationship with Jesus. Balku led the gathering into a time of prayer and Mary joined him in praying for the people around. A few elders came to the microphone to pray for the community as well. An elder lady from the community

Special edition / FLYING FOR LIFE / 6

Relief supplies arrive in Huya, PNG following the 2018 earthquake

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AARON & KATIE RIGG Arnhem Land | Pilot

ANDREW & LIZ JENKINS Cairns | Pilot

ANDREW & MYFANWY LITTLE Mareeba | Pilot

ANTON ZHANG Arnhem Land | Pilot

MAF AUSTRALIA CURRENTLY HAS

MATT & LINSEY PAINTER Cairns | Operations

MATT & REBECCA HENDERSON Arnhem Land | Pilot

MATT & SHANNON ROEDIGER Arnhem Land | Pilot

MICHAEL & KAREN PENN Mareeba | Logistics

MICHAEL & NAOMI BEATH South Sudan | Pilot

MICHAEL & RACHAEL WAKEFIELD PNG | MAF Technology

NEIL & CHERYL ALEXANDER Mareeba | Pilot

NEIL & TINA EVANS Cairns | Information Technology

NIGEL & GEORGINA GORRY Cairns | Information Technology

PAUL & CLARE WOODINGTON PNG | Pilot

PHIL & MARGARET SNELL Mareeba | Engineer

PHILIP & DONNA ANDREWS Mareeba | Engineer

RHYS & ANGELA MORRELL Arnhem Land | Pilot

RICHARD & BERNADETTE AXON PNG | Pilot

RICK & HUDSON HIGLETT PNG | Information Technology

ROLAND & SARAH VANDERVELDE Arnhem Land | Liason Officer

RYAN & ANNA CUTHEL Kenya | Pilot

TIM & ANITA YOUNG Mareeba | Engineer

STEPHEN & SUE CHARLESWORTH Cairns | Regional Director Asia Pacific

TOM & GEMMA MEEKS PNG | Engineer

THOMAS & CLARE BAERTSCHI Arnhem Land | Engineer

SIMON KEPERT

TIMOTHY & ANNA SOUTHCOTT Timor-Leste | Pilot

STEVEN & MARGOT BIGGS Liberia | Pilot

MORE THAN 50 FAMILIES BRAD & NIKOLAI DAN & SHANNON BALLIN PERRETT Mareeba | Pilot/Engineer Mareeba | Engineer

DANIEL & SILKE ROTH Mareeba | Engineer

DARREN & MEREDITH LYDEAMORE Cairns | Maintenance

SERVING WITH MAF ALL ACROSS

THE WORLD. ALTHOUGH FROM DAVID & JEN PETT Cairns | Pilot

DAVID & NAOMI WALMSLEY PNG | Engineer

DEAN & CHRISTIE GILES Cairns | Operations

ED & LIZ HAWTHORN Mareeba | Fleet Manager

DIFFERENT BACKGROUNDS AND DIFFERENT AREAS OF AUSTRALIA

IAN & ADELE PURDEY Arnhem Land | Pilot

ANDREW & CINDY HADFIELD Mareeba | Engineer

JAMES & RUTH MOLLENHAUER South Sudan | Facilities Manager

JASON & ALLISON ROBINSON Arnhem Land | Pilot

THEY HAVE COME

TOGETHER TO PLAY THEIR PART IN BRINGING

JASON & KIM JOB Timor-Leste | Pilot

MARCUS & JULIE GREY Mareeba | Pilot

KEVIN & CAROL MARK & JODIE KRAAK SIMMONDS Kenya | Quality Manager Mareeba | Engineer

HOPE TO THE MOST ISOLATED

PARTS OF THE

WORLD. LUKE & CATHERINE NEWELL PNG | Pilot

JOHN & HELENA HERMANUS Mareeba | Engineer

IAN & ASHLEE RUDDUCK Arnhem Land | Pilot

MARK & LISA HAAGENSEN Arnhem Land | Pilot

Arnhem Land | Pilot


DE PE ND EN T ON G OD Matt Henderson’s story

Matt Henderson is a MAF pilot serving in Arnhem Land. He also works as the base manager in a community called Gapuwiyak. Matt’s journey to becoming a MAF pilot highlights that God uses all sorts of people from all sorts of backgrounds to achieve His purposes. And once you follow His leading, there are many unexpected joys to discover.

“When you’re stripped of all the support you’d normally have – you give God room to move.” What brought you to the point of deciding to get involved with MAF? My wife, Rebecca, and I attended the Reach Out missions conference together. There we met a representative from MAF and had a talk to him that planted seeds in our minds. We used to look at the ministry and say, “That’s an awesome ministry. Somebody should do that. Somebody else should totally do that.” I never got a phone call from God, or an email, or a text, or anything that said, “Please come join MAF.” But God put MAF in our path and we had to decide what to do with it. Eventually, God removed our excuses and fears, and we decided to pursue it! How do you think God used your life before MAF to prepare you for mission?

Matt Henderson accompanied by wife Rebecca and their three children

When I was 22, I had an accident during a motorbike race. I broke my ankle, I dislocated a bone 180 degrees, and I couldn’t walk for two years. After two years of treatment, the doctors were looking at doing another fusion, which would lock up the ankle and basically make a fixed ankle. Instead, I had just had enough, and as a 24 year-old who had put my life on hold for two years, I needed to do something different. So I asked for an amputation. It was a dark time. But that experience was a fork in the road, because I ended up working for the prosthetics company that made my leg – and that was the company that moved us to Australia, where God brought us to MAF. My job meant that we could comfortably pay for the flying training. But my work also gave me a lot of learning and professional experience.

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Even though I’m here as a pilot, there’s a lot of other things that MAF can use my old skills for. For example, at my old job my team was very multicultural. There were language barriers and social barriers. But that prepared me for missions, now that we’re in a multicultural environment. This journey has been tremendous. God has just been turning doorknobs, opening them up and moving levers up and down. And when I look back at it, to me it’s incredibly clear that God’s hand ultimately led us to where we are today. What do you love about serving with MAF? It beats the heck out of commuting in traffic! I like to be a workhorse for God, flying planes and taking care of the logistics. But I also love the opportunity to connect to people, meet them where they’re at, see if there’s a need I can address, and open up conversation. As a family we also get to build lots of meaningful relationships. All of my neighbours are Indigenous people in the area. I spend lots of time hunting and fishing with local men. Ministry is right outside the door all the time. What challenges are there in serving with MAF? Australia is a country of extremes already, but nowhere is that more apparent than in Arnhem Land. The heat, the humidity, the logistics, the people, the culture, the language. It’s a lot to adjust to, especially with a young family. Early in our time, when we had only been in Gapuwiyak about five months, our son had a respiratory issue. It was more than a three hour drive to the main hospital and it was late, so we went to the local clinic. They put him straight on oxygen and Care Flight was there soon after. This really showed us that when you put yourself in a vulnerable position – when you’re stripped of all the support you’d normally have – you give God room to move. He shows up in your life, and helps take control of all your worries and anxieties. What’s one way that God has blessed you in mission? Some people think that as missionaries living remotely, we’re deprived of a lot things. But when we go back and speak with churches, or we talk to other people that support us, they see that we actually have this amazing relationship with God. Having to be so dependent on God has brought us so much joy.

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PL AYING MY PAR T

Ken Brown’s story

SERVE WITH MAF

Ken Brown is the Finance and Resources Manager for MAF in Nairobi, Kenya. He shares his story about using his background in accounting to play his part on the mission field.

Critical Vacancies

Tell us about your life before MAF. I’ve been an accountant for nearly 25 years, and I served in a number of roles in the UK, and overseas. Just before joining MAF, I was working in Egypt.

What made you consider mission?

Ken Brown and his family

While in Egypt, I went to a mission retreat and the speaker was talking about the need for accountants and other professionals on the mission field. I felt at that point that the Lord was very clearly saying to me, “That’s what I want you to do. I want you to go back to the UK, get further experience, and then come back and use those skills on the mission field.”

BANGLADESH •

SOUTH SUDAN

What challenges have you encountered serving with MAF?

Although it was on our hearts to bring the family out to sub-Saharan Africa, the logistics can be a little bit tricky. One of the things that we had to consider was how were the kids going to be educated? Were we going to have to send them away to boarding school or were we going to have to homeschool them? Neither really appealed. Being posted to Kenya was actually ideal for us, because the school system is pretty good. There’s an international school. The level of education is like a regular British secondary school.

Ken Brown working with a local

Another thing that we found a challenge when we accepted the role with MAF was the prospect of raising financial support. I’m a fairly independent person, so it was a challenge to take that role of humility to ask for money. But actually, what I found was it was a tremendous blessing, because every time an individual signed up and said, “Yes, we will be one of your supporters,” it felt like we were no longer going overseas on our own. We were going as part of a team.

Communications Officer

PAPUA NEW GUINEA • •

Ken Brown and his team

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Head of Finance Residential House Managers

UGANDA •

Area IT Manager

What do you love about working with MAF? Getting a plane in the sky isn’t just a straightforward operation. It involves all sorts of people, as well as the pilots and the engineers. There are so many people in the background that are helping to get that plane up there and I’m glad that I’m able to do my bit to facilitate that.

Air Maintenance Engineer

ARNHEM LAND •

Building Maintenance Manager

Home School Support Teacher

Licensed Aircraft Maintanence Engineer

MAREEBA •

Licensed Aircraft Maintanence Engineer

(RE)THINK MISSION: Serve with us For almost 70 years pilots, engineers, managers, teachers, administrators and many other professionals have come together to bring transformation to remote communities. See how you can play your part via our online journey at maf.org.au/bigger or email personnel@maf.org.au Special edition / FLYING FOR LIFE / 13


Together, we are

FLYING FOR LIFE “We would love you to join with us in bringing this fullness of life to the isolated communities that we serve. Together we will see many lives transformed in Jesus’ name!” Ian McDougall, General Manager MAF Australia

GIVE

Our organisation and the communities we serve depend on your constant prayers. The MAF mission began almost 75 years ago reliant on prayer and it remains that way today. If you’d like to serve our organisation with faithful prayer you can sign-up to receive ‘Fuelled by Prayer’ - our monthly prayer guide. It outlines the needs and praise points for both our global mission and the staff that serve on the field.

When donating to MAF, it can be helpful to think in terms of ‘jerrycans of fuel’. Each jerrycan holds 20 litres of fuel and keeps us in the air for roughly 20 minutes. In the remote communities we serve, those 20 minutes are so often the difference between life and death.

To sign up for Fuelled By Prayer and order the Staff Prayer Handbook, visit: maf.org.au/prayformaf

If you have been inspired by the stories of MAF Flying for Life, please consider contributing financially to the work of MAF. Your partnership offers remote communities the basics of life, the delivery of medical care, a release from oppression and the good news of Jesus. If you want to talk with someone: Lolly Fernandez Donor Services Officer: 1800 650 169

If you want to talk with someone: Eleanor Rivers-Suharno Communications Officer: 1800 650 169

4 EASY WAYS TO GIVE

Call us

1800 650 169

Online www.maf.org.au

Bank Transfer

Mail PO Box 7187 Baulkham Hills 2153

GI F TS I N WI LLS

Not all of us can confidently land a small plane on a remote airstrip, or know our ‘yaw’ from our ‘roll’, but we can all tell a good story. Fortunately, MAF has incredible stories to be told. Stories of lives transformed. Every story you tell, helps support our pilots, engineers and the remote communities they serve.

Including a charity in your will is one of the most powerful ways you can create lasting transformation. A legacy gift to MAF is an investment in an established organisation that has demonstrated careful and effective stewardship of the donations we’ve received over the past 70 years.

If you’re keen to make a meaningful impact here at home, we invite you to ‘Be a Voice’ in whatever way you can for MAF.

Partnering with MAF in this way ensures your legacy is the delivery of the basics of life, the delivery of medical care, a release from oppression and the good news of Jesus to the remote communities at home and abroad.

Become one of our team of advocates spread around Australia, praying for our work in the field, telling the story of MAF in churches, running events or mentoring others.

If you want to talk with someone: Edgar Voigts Relationship Manager: 1800 650 169

The time you give as an advocate doesn’t have to be much, but it will make a meaningful difference in transforming lives around the world.

P RAY

It is paired with our Staff Prayer Handbook, a booklet that helps you get to know the Australian staff serving around the world.

ADVOCATE

To find out more, contact aus-advocate@maf.org.au If you want to talk with someone: Matthew McBurney Advocate Coordinator: 1800 650 169

STAY CONNECTED To hear our incredible stories fresh from the field, jump online and sign up for our monthly e-news! Hear the stories, watch the videos, see our photos, meet our missionaries and be kept up-to-date with the latest developments in this life-changing ministry.

GO Real adventure will come when, trusting in God and following His call, you step out in faith and learn to lean on Him in a whole new way. It’s not easy leaving your comfort zone. But when you serve with MAF – determined to bring help, hope and healing to the remote parts of the world – you’ll experience the adventure of a lifetime. The needs in remote communities are vast. We need Mission Pilots, Aircraft Engineers, Programme Managers, Operations Managers, Finance Managers, IT Managers, Facilities Managers, Teachers, Administrators, Tradespersons/Builders and more! MAF’s vision is simple: to see isolated people physically and spiritually transformed in Christ’s name. Join with us now and be part of real transformation. Take the first step in this adventure today. Sign up for our online journey at www.maf.org.au/bigger or email personnel@maf.org.au If you want to talk with someone: Kuren Galant Recruitment Manager: 1800 987 221

You can subscribe or get the latest if you go to: www.maf.org.au/stories

MAF Australia BSB 032164 ACC 183831

TRANSFORM LIVES WITH A GIFT IN YOUR WILL If and when the time is right for you to include a gift to a charity in your Will, please remember MAF. After you have provided for your family, a gift to MAF in your Will, whatever size, will make a real difference to the remote and isolated people. For further information and resources, please contact Edgar Voigts (Relationship Manager) on 1800 650 169 or e-mail: edgar.voigts@maf.org.au

Flying for Life (ISSN: 2202-0365) Design/Editor: Cadence Media (cadencemedia.com.au) Printer: BHB Printing Flying for Life is the official magazine of Mission Aviation Fellowship and CRMF in Australia. Articles may be printed with acknowledgment. Flying for Life is a member publication of the Australasian Religious Press Association. If you no longer wish to receive Flying for Life (MAF News), please advise us at: MAF Australia 1800 650 169 and your name and details will be removed from our distribution list.

MAF Australia and CRMF ABN 26 134 583 887 PO Box 7187 Baulkham Hills NSW 2153 Contact: 1800 650 169 | 02 8014 6450 maf@maf.org.au | www.maf.org.au Privacy Statement MAF is committed to your privacy. We will only disclose your information in accordance with our Privacy Statement and/or with your permission. Our Privacy Statement explains what information we collect from you and how we intend to use it. You can view our Privacy Statement at maf.org.au


thank you

for playing your part in bringing emergency relief, medical care, long-term development and the Good News of Jesus to the world’s most isolated communities!

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FOLLOW MAF ON:

 www.maf.org.au


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