SPECIAL REPORT A P R O J E C T O F S A M A R I TA N ’ S P U R S E
INSIDE : DELIVERING GOOD NEWS AND GREAT JOY TO CHILDREN AROUND THE WORLD A Special Report from SAMARITAN’S PURSE • pg. 1
“I want every child to know there is a God who loves them.
I WANT EVERY CHILD IN THIS WORLD TO KNOW HIS SON, JESUS CHRIST. This is what Operation Christmas Child is all about.”
Franklin Graham
2015 • Operation Christmas Child Special Report
04 EQUIPPING THE LOCAL CHURCH Shoeboxes help plant seeds for the Gospel in every corner of the globe.
10 THE GREATEST
JOURNEY After they receive their shoeboxes, children are invited to take part in a 12-lesson discipleship program.
14 AROUND THE
WORLD A pictorial "wrap-up" of shoebox distributions around the world.
20 BEHIND THE SCENES
Operation Christmas Child supporters across America inspire others to get involved.
ORDER ONLINE TODAY
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MILLION GOSPEL OPPORTUNITIES!
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We praise God for every person who filled shoeboxes with toys, school supplies, and hygiene items to bring Christmas joy to children overseas. Thanks to your generosity, Samaritan’s Purse will deliver a tangible expression of God’s love to over 11 million boys and girls in 109 countries this year. Best of all, each shoebox provides opportunities for local churches to share the Good News of God’s greatest gift—His Son, Jesus Christ.
Go to billygrahambookstore.org to order Operation Christmas Child: A Story of Simple Gifts, a collection of Christ-exalting stories of lives that have been changed through this ministry.
After receiving their shoeboxes, many children are invited to participate in The Greatest Journey, a 12-lesson discipleship program that teaches them how to faithfully follow Christ and share Him with family and friends. More than 7.4 million children worldwide have enrolled in the course since 2010, and 3.3 million have accepted Christ as their Savior.
THAT’S THE POWER OF A SIMPLE GIFT!
A Special Report from SAMARITAN’S PURSE • pg. 3
“ GO INTO ALL THE WORLD AND PREACH THE GOSPEL TO ALL CREATION.” — MARK 16:15 —
EQUIPPING THE LOCAL CHURCH
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rom Belize to Botswana and from Chad to Cambodia, God is using Operation Christmas Child to help expand His Church to the ends of the earth. A simple gift can bring joy and comfort to hurting children and open doors for entire communities to hear the message of love and redemption from sin through Jesus Christ. As these eternal truths take root, broken families find restoration, churches are established, and a new generation of believers bear witness to the Lord’s faithfulness.
AA Special Special Report Report from from SAMARITAN’S SAMARITAN’S PURSE PURSE •• pg. pg. 55
EQUIPPING THE LOCAL CHURCH
BELIZE Christmas Day 2015 passed uneventfully for many of the boys and girls living on the Caribbean MEXICO island of Caye Caulker, several BELIZE miles off the coast of Belize. Sadly, GUATEMA the holiday has always been just an ordinary day, as their families are EL SALVADOR too poor to afford gifts and many had never heard about the true meaning of Christmas. But the holiday season was not yet over, and these children would soon experience one of the happiest events of their lives. A water taxi carrying hundreds of Operation Christmas Child shoeboxes left a Belize City port and churned through choppy waves to reach the island. A radiant group assembled at the distribution site exchanging smiles and laughter as they opened the boxes to discover an assortment of treasures—stuffed animals, coloring books, and school supplies. Through skits and the presentation of the Gospel booklet "The Greatest Gift," the children also had the opportunity to respond to the Good News of Jesus Christ. Franklin Graham, who joined local church leaders in handing out shoeboxes on the island and in other locations in Belize, told the children that God has already given them the best present they could ever receive. That gift is His Son, Jesus, who came at Christmas some 2,000 years ago to bring salvation to a world lost in sin.
ANTICIPATION: Greta Van Susteren joins in the fun at a shoebox distribution in Belize. She and husband John Coale helped hand out the gifts.
“We want every child to know they are precious and loved by God, and these shoeboxes help demonstrate that,� Graham said. Christians in Belize are seeing their prayers answered as God uses Operation Christmas Child HONDURAS shoeboxes and The Greatest Journey discipleship lessons to NICARAGUA saturate the smallest country in Central America with the Gospel. Virtually every child in the COSTA RICA entire nation will receive a shoebox gift from Operation PANAMA Christmas Child before they grow up. Some people even describe Belize as the “Shoebox Nation.� Hundreds of churches from 15 denominations across Belize are implementing a national strategy that covers every corner of the nation over a six-year period. This is crucial, because Belize desperately needs the Gospel. Over 80 percent of adults describe themselves as Christian, but only 10 percent attend church regularly. Belize is plagued by poverty, broken families, gangs, drugs, and the highest HIV infection rates in the Western Hemisphere. Next to one of the churches that handed out shoeboxes in Belize City is a school, where only one of the 200 students
PERU comes from a traditional family with a mother and father at home. “Children will tell you, ‘My dad was never in my life,’” said Arita Lemus, the national coordinator for Operation Christmas Child in Belize. “When we can teach them that God is a father to the fatherless, that makes a difference in their lives. It’s powerful that we get into the kids’ lives early.” Arita’s husband, Eduardo, is a retired pastor who mobilizes churches throughout Belize to participate in Operation Christmas Child. He says The Greatest Journey discipleship lessons fill a huge void. “Ninety percent of the churches do not have anything like this,” he said. “These lessons really ground the children as they grow up.” Over 500 Christians across Belize have been trained as volunteer teachers for The Greatest Journey. Many of them, Arita said, received shoebox gifts when they were younger. “A simple shoebox made a difference in their lives. That’s how they heard the Gospel and got saved, so now they want to share it.”
REACH ING T H E U NREACH ED Three shoebox distributions took place in 2015 among the Achuar, a remote Amazonian people of nearly 20,000 souls. In villages accessible only by canoe, Peruvian church leaders proclaimed the Gospel to families in the Achuar language. Afterwards they handed out shoebox gifts to the children. One boy was so delighted that he gave papayas to the presenters as a “thank you.” Many of the parents said they had never heard this message about God or Jesus before. Praise God for the seeds of faith that are being sown in their hearts.
“Thank you very much for sending these shoeboxes to hard-to-reach places where many children need to hear the message of salvation.” — Belen Salazar, Operation Christmas Child volunteer and former shoebox recipient in Peru
BELIZE: Franklin Graham delivers Christmas greetings to children at a church in the Rootsville squatter settlement outside Belize City.
A Special Report from SAMARITAN’S PURSE • pg. 7
EQUIPPING THE LOCAL CHURCH
MOLDOVA A N EW GE N E RAT I ON OF B E L I EV E RS “A small present in Moldova opens so many doors,” said Andrei Ciobanu, a pastor and church planter in the southern part of the country. “Operation Christmas Child is a great opportunity to share the Gospel with both children and adults.”
“A small present in Moldova opens so many doors.” Andrei Ciobanu
Pastor Ciobanu is excited that Samaritan's Purse is taking Operation Christmas Child and The Greatest Journey discipleship program to communities that do not celebrate Christmas or understand its significance. Local churches in the former Soviet republic are even handing out shoebox gifts in public schools. That’s a dramatic change from decades ago under the Communist regime when Christians could not openly practice their faith. “I remember from my childhood how at school we praised the name of Lenin,” said Pastor Ciobanu. “Now at school, children praise the Name of the Lord. This is the beginning of a new church,” he said.
MOLDOVA: Children celebrate receiving their shoebox gifts in a nation where local churches have distributed more than 1.3 million shoeboxes since 1997.
WEST AFRICA: Open hearts led to “open doors” when the children in this rural village received shoebox gifts. A church was planted in the community and the congregation continues to grow as more children and adults receive Jesus as their Savior.
AFRICA* B U I LD IN G A N EW F OUN DAT I ON We praise God that 29 new churches are thriving in one West African nation, in part because of Operation Christmas Child and The Greatest Journey. These churches are lights shining in some of the darkest parts of the country—among unreached groups whose populations don’t know Christ or anyone who can tell them about Him. Of this nation’s 18 million people, 4.5 million are unreached. The churches planted as a result of Operation Christmas Child are spread across seven of the nation’s 28 ethnically distinct groups. Among one tribe who are only 0.2 percent evangelical, a pastor has served in a village since 1993. Despite faithful efforts to evangelize, he did not see a single person come to Christ for 21 years. But in 2015, Operation Christmas Child shoebox gifts opened a door for a church to be planted in the village. As a result of these generous gifts, parents have given their children permission to attend church. In addition, the local imam is now telling the children of the village to go to church to learn about God. This was unheard of before giftfilled shoeboxes were distributed. In another village, several pastors tried to share Christ but were turned away. Only when one of the pastors organized a shoebox distribution for 400 children in cooperation with village and school officials did that change. The village chief was so moved by this expression of God’s love that he gave his entire family permission to become Christians. He also provided land to build a church. Both children and adults there have now accepted Christ as their Lord and Savior. A village of animist worshipers formerly "welcomed" Christians who tried to visit by stoning them. But now through Operation Christmas Child and The Greatest Journey discipleship course, children in that community have come to Christ and are now serving as strong prayer warriors in the local church.
THE POWER of The Gospel:
“We thank God for the gift boxes that gave our local church an opportunity to present the Gospel to children. We have seen our boys and girls grow in faith through The Greatest Journey lessons. They are now able to pray and share the Word of God with other children. May God bless all partners and supporters of Operation Christmas Child."
—Elshadai International Christian Centre, Zambia
*Because of security concerns, we are not able to identify specific locations and names.
A Special Report from SAMARITAN’S PURSE • pg. 9
THE GREATEST JOURNEY
“GO THEREFORE
AND MAKE DISCIPLES” —MATTHEW 28:19—
In over 100 countries, local churches are following Operation Christmas Child shoebox gifts with The Greatest Journey, a dynamic discipleship course developed by Samaritan’s Purse that teaches boys and girls to faithfully follow Christ and share Him with others. When they graduate, the children receive a certificate and a New Testament in their language to further equip them to be lifelong disciples. Some of them have led family members to Christ, and now they are attending local churches. Here are some glimpses into how God is using The Greatest Journey to build His kingdom around the world.
Shukuran, whose name means “thank you” in Arabic, shares what he has learned in The Greatest Journey with other children.
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MALAWI SHUKURAN WAS DRIFTING TOWARD VIOLENCE, BUT THE LORD USED AN OPERATION CHRISTMAS CHILD SHOEBOX TO CHANGE THIS 12-YEAR-OLD BOY’S HEART. “When he received the gift we were very happy. That was the beginning of knowing God,” his mother Agnes Banda said. The toy cars, airplane, books, pens, and soap inside delighted them both. Shukuran’s favorite part, though, was "The Greatest Gift" Gospel booklet he received along with his shoebox. Interested in what he read about Jesus, Shukuran accepted the invitation to come to The Greatest Journey classes offered by the local church in his Malawi village. That’s where he gave his heart to Christ. After the second week of the course, he asked his mother and siblings to attend church with him, where they also became Christians. Sadly, Shukuran’s father immediately left his family because of their new faith. Now Agnes washes clothes and bakes to try and earn enough money to feed her children and pay their school fees, but she often comes up short.
Despite these struggles, Shukuran is becoming a spiritual leader. Now with a changed heart, he is no longer obsessed with violence and is passionate about sharing God’s love. People affectionately call him “pastor” because he is always organizing events at church—including evangelistic campaigns for their community. His peers follow his example in outreach. Pastor Henry Mankanamba, the actual pastor of the church, said of his protégé, “The same child who was rude became humble.” Shukuran forgave his father for abandoning the family and not providing for their financial needs. Remembering Shukuran’s shoebox gift, Pastor Mankanamba said, “It was a drop of love. To them, it became an ocean.” Now with hope, his mother said, “I know when I go to God I will find help.”
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LANGUAGES for Bible materials
5.2
MILLION
children graduated since 2010
2.7
MILLION
boys and girls participated this year
3.3
MILLION
reported decisions for Christ since 2010
Shukuran
A Special Report from SAMARITAN’S PURSE • pg. 11
SOLOMON IS NDS
THE GREATEST JOURNEY
FIJI
WALLIS AND FUTUNA IS.
SAMOA
On the nation’s second largest island, in Journey class the next week. VANUATU AMERICAN the village of Laduna, 15 children gathered Thirty children returned. In Lesson under a mango tree to learn about Jesus in The One, Pastor Waisea taughtSAMOA about Creation, Greatest Journey class. The boys and girls were emphasizing that people are made in God’s so excited about what they were studying that image. Eleven-year-old Melvin was so moved FIJI they invited their parents to come to class as by what he heard that he gave his heart to TONGA well. Christ at the end of the lesson. By the third lesson they had grown to more Melvin's life changed so completely that NIUE PACIFIC OCEAN NEW CALEDONIA than 80 participants! So for the fourth lesson his grandfather, the local witch doctor, took they relocated to the top of a hill under a larger interest. mango tree. Seeing the need for more space yet, they built a “ The idol worship stopped.” large open-air shelter on top of the hill. This allowed the children to meet for class under the mango tree Soon the rainy season set in and the village and for the parents to receive the same content with succumbed to mud. The Greatest Journey class began more age-appropriate instruction in the structure. A meeting in Melvin’s home next to the main road. church of 100 now worships under this shelter every Around this time, his grandfather became very sick. Sunday. Desperate, he asked Melvin to bring Pastor Waisea Not far from Laduna, in the village of Vunika, 80 to pray for him. “Just tell him to bring that Jesus children emerged from their homes among the sugar with him. I want to know that Jesus,” said Melvin’s cane Norfolk fields to hear the Gospel and receive an Operation grandfather. Island Christmas Child shoebox gift. Pastor “Waisea,” who had When Pastor Waisea challenged him to abandon his walked six hours from his home in Labasa to be there, idols and trust in Christ, the witch doctor repented of invited all the children to return to begin The Greatest his sin and surrendered his life to Jesus.
New Zealand
FIJI: Sitting under a mango tree, boys and girls pause during The Greatest Journey class in Laduna to thank the Lord for the opportunity to learn more about Him.
Cook Isl
INDIA: The Greatest Journey classes include skits and games that help children learn Bible stories and memorize Scripture.
Melvin’s grandfather then invited Pastor Waisea to hold church in a shed in his yard. The Greatest Journey students brought their families to the services. When they outgrew that building, Melvin’s grandfather extended the roof to accommodate more people. Soon overflowing from the expanded shed, a neighbor across the road offered them a quarter of an acre to build a church. Forty people came to their first service. One elder said, "On Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Saturdays the people used to meet to pray to their gods. Then the shoeboxes came and the Bible lessons were preached to the children in their homes. After about six months, the idol worship stopped. Now 100 people regularly attend the Vunika church." We praise God for opening doors and touching hearts with His truth and salvation.
MEXICO: At a children’s home in Guadalajara, girls and boys learned about the love of their heavenly Father through The Greatest Journey discipleship course.
A Special Report from SAMARITAN’S PURSE • pg. 13
AROUND THE WORLD
“
LET THE LITTLE CHILDREN COME TO ME ...
FOR OF SUCH IS THE KINGDOM OF GOD ” — LUKE 18:16 —
Their smiles and joyous laughter speak a universal language. In 109 countries across the globe, the Lord used Operation Christmas Child to bless boys and girls who have endured poverty, famine, disease, and war. From traumatized Syrian refugees living in camps in southern Europe to earthquake survivors in Nepal’s Himalayan Mountains, Samaritan's Purse was able to share the Good News of Jesus Christ thanks to your simple shoebox gifts filled with toys and love.
MALAWI: What’s more exciting than a surprise gift prepared by a child on the other side of the world? These boys and girls eagerly wait to discover the treasures in their shoeboxes.
AASpecial SpecialReport Reportfrom fromSAMARITAN’S SAMARITAN’SPURSE PURSE • • pg. pg.15 15
AROUND THE WORLD
CAMEROON: Operation Christmas Child shoeboxes brought delight to these girls at Songkwari Church in the city of Londji.
HONDURAS: School children in Intibuca receive toys, classroom supplies, and "The Greatest Gift" illustrated Gospel booklets that tell the story of Christ’s birth.
UGANDA: Rowboats are used to transport cartons of shoeboxes to children living in remote river settlements.
IRAQ: Fleeing war and terror, these children were happy to receive shoebox gifts from Samaritan's Purse at a displacement camp in northern Iraq.
A Special Report from SAMARITAN’S PURSE • pg. 17
INDIA: The boys and girls at this orphanage erupted into joy as they shared the treasures in their shoeboxes with each other.
NEPAL: Many young survivors of the spring 2015 earthquakes lost their homes and belongings. Samaritan’s Purse provided immediate emergency relief to their families, and in December we delivered gifts of hope to encourage the children.
ECUADOR: The only way to deliver shoeboxes to some isolated Amazon settlements is by plane or canoe.
AROUND THE WORLD
PHILIPPINES: With her two youngest children seated behind her and three children walking beside her, this Filipina mom shares in the excitement of returning home from a shoebox distribution.
A Special Report from SAMARITAN’S PURSE • pg. 19
BEHIND THE SCENES
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TEXAS: Members and friends of Grace Baptist Church in Wild Peach, Texas, gather for a shoebox packing party, intent on preparing 2,000 gifts.
SMALL CHURCH WITH A TEXAS-SIZE HEART Sixty miles south of Houston sits the little village of Wild Peach, Texas, home to one convenience store and Grace Baptist Church, a congregation of 25. In 2013, Pastor Mark Brumbelow was ecstatic when they more than doubled their usual Operation Christmas Child contribution and packed 43 shoeboxes. The next year, though, he sensed God wanted them to pack 500. The congregation initially thought he was crazy, but they packed 532 shoeboxes. Their generosity overflowed, but Mark was concerned their Christmas missions offering would suffer as a result. He said, “Last year after packing 500 shoeboxes, our missions offering doubled over what it had ever been before. I’m telling you, Luke 6:38 is true. ‘Give, and it will be given to you.'" Still, the congregation was surprised when in 2015, Mark believed God wanted them to pack 2,000 boxes. They decided to
trust God for the goal. June Reeves, a 27-year employee of Walmart ®, brought in bags of items for shoebox gifts, including 300 pairs of flip-flops. Charlie Meazles, a Marine veteran of the Korean War, also got involved. As he packed his shoebox, he said, “I do it for the kids everywhere. I hope they come to know Jesus as their Lord and Savior.” Since Grace Baptist has participated more in Operation Christmas Child, they have seen the Lord's provision. Each year, God has provided more than enough money to cover the $7 shipping cost for each box they pack—including all 2,118 of them in 2015. “We haven’t done anything special, but seek to obey God and what He’s told us to do,” Mark said. “There’s nothing special about Grace Baptist Church or its preacher. But I tell you there’s something mighty special about the God that we serve.”
BEHIND THE SCENES
LEADING BY EXAMPLE
Jordyn McNeal
“My dream is to make other kids’ dreams come true,” said Jordyn McNeal, a 9-year-old from Alabama. “I want them to know that God loves them.” That’s what motivated her to rally friends to pack 5,000 shoeboxes in 2015. She issued a challenge to youth in schools and churches. Through letters, phone
Praise God, Jordyn exceeded her goal, personally packing 1,320 of the 5,161 shoeboxes collected through her efforts. And Jordyn has found other ways to stay involved with Operation Christmas Child. She was excited to share her passion for the project by speaking at community celebrations at four of our Processing Centers in Denver, Colorado; Orange County, California; Dallas, Texas; and Charlotte, North Carolina during the Christmas season.
“I want them to know that God loves them.” calls, and Facebook messages, Jordyn got people from coast-to-coast involved. But Jordyn wasn’t just looking to others to pack boxes. She personally set out to fill 1,000 of the 5,000 shoeboxes by asking stores, hospitals, and dentist offices if they would donate items like toys, toothbrushes, and soap. Then she hosted a huge packing party, inviting friends to help her fill the boxes with all the supplies she gathered. She also encouraged more than a dozen churches to participate in Operation Christmas Child for the first time.
CHRISTMAS JOY: James Buller, 6, and Keria Teul, 7, in Belize City are among more than 1,000 children who received boxes personally packed by Jordyn McNeal in 2015.
"WE'RE PART OF A TEAM" Bob Pattison, church relations volunteer for South Orange County, California, works to encourage church involvement with Operation Christmas Child through his area team. His specific coverage responsibility is the San Juan Capistrano area. Bob is excited about the Samaritan’s Purse project because “this is a tangible way to show the children that God loves them. Then it works upward: through the children, parents are saved, communities are saved.” Bob also enjoys serving with other volunteers. He said, “I’m a captain, but I can’t do it without mechanics, flight attendants, and co-pilots. As with Operation Christmas Child, we’re part of a team. As congregations working together in the body of Christ, we can make a big impact.” Year-round Connect volunteers are critical to the work of Operation Christmas Child and provide an opportunity, through local area teams, for many more people to serve Christ effectively.
A Special Report from SAMARITAN’S PURSE • pg. 21
NEW YORK: Nyack College students Alivia Mendez, Vastie D’Haiti, and Yadilka Ramos drop off their school’s first Operation Christmas Child gifts.
FROM CHINATOWN TO THE WORLD
Betty Lung
Betty Lung’s passion for sharing the Gospel is infectious. When she found out about Operation Christmas Child through a magazine in 1998, she introduced the project to her church, New York Chinese Alliance, located in New York City’s Chinatown. The church immediately got involved.
“It’s not just a gift. It’s the Gospel that goes with it. ” Betty said, “I wanted to do it for my daughter Andrea, to let her learn how to share, to love people, and to reach out with the Gospel.” That year they packed about 20 boxes as a church. In 2008, the church’s interest in the project peaked when Samaritan’s Purse delivered shoeboxes to earthquake victims near Chengdu, China. Betty said, “They’re not just delivering shoeboxes to people we don’t know. They’re doing it for the people we are related to.” Then in 2012, just after Hurricane Sandy hammered the area, the church opened its doors as a shoebox drop-off location. Now in her fourth year of coordinating this effort, Betty welcomed a host of shoebox packers who came to drop off their gifts during National Collection Week. Victoria Martin, 75, walked 30 blocks pushing eight shoeboxes in a cart in order to hand them off to Betty and send them on their way to children in need. Victoria said, “I pray every day, ‘Fill my heart with Your love.’” Her shoeboxes are just one way she expresses the Lord’s compassion.
Victoria Martin At the same time, students from Nyack College in downtown Manhattan dropped off 44 shoebox gifts. It was the first time the students packed shoeboxes in a school-wide effort. Arlene Delrio was next to unload bags of shoebox gifts. She said, “Our church is in the middle of the projects on the lower east side of Manhattan. We ask them to give to those less fortunate than they are.” Betty rejoiced in each of the 1,250 shoeboxes delivered to New York Chinese Alliance Church this year. She said, “It’s not just a gift. It’s the Gospel that goes with it.”
BOONE, N.C.: This Processing Center is one of eight warehouses where Samaritan’s Purse volunteers prepare shoebox gifts for shipment overseas.
WHERE DID YOUR GIFTS GO?
In 2015, Samaritan’s Purse collected 8,765,637 gift-filled shoeboxes in the United States. Another 2,447,373 came from Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, Switzerland, Austria, Finland, Spain, Australia, New Zealand and Japan. Those gifts were delivered to children in 109 countries, many of which are listed below*:
KIDS HELPING KIDS: A young scout with the organization Trail Life® shows the school supplies and other great items he included in his overflowing shoebox.
Albania Angola Argentina Bahamas Belarus Belize Benin Bolivia Bosnia Botswana Brazil Bulgaria Burkina Faso Burundi Cambodia Cameroon Central African Rep. Chad Chile Colombia Costa Rica Dem. Rep. of Congo Dominica Dominican Republic Ecuador El Salvador Equatorial Guinea Fiji Gabon Ghana Grenada
Guinea Guinea Bissau Guyana Haiti Honduras India Indonesia Iraq Jamaica Kenya Latvia Lesotho Liberia Lithuania Macedonia Madagascar Malawi Malaysia Mali Mauritius Mexico Moldova Mongolia Namibia Nigeria Panama Papua New Guinea Paraguay Peru Philippines Poland
Republic of Congo Romania Rwanda Saint Lucia Saint Vincent Samoa Senegal Serbia Sierra Leone Slovakia South Africa South Sudan Suriname Swaziland Tanzania Thailand Togo Trinidad and Tobago Uganda Ukraine USA (Native Americans) Uruguay Vanuatu Zambia Zimbabwe
*Some countries are not listed for security reasons
A Special Report from SAMARITAN’S PURSE • pg. 23
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PAID Samaritan's Purse P.O. Box 3000 Boone, NC 28607-3000
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