ABOUT MIKA’s LUNCH




Outside of Santo Domingo, the capitol of the Dominican Republic, lies Batey Fao. The village is a shanty-town, made up of tin shacks and inhabited by Haitians from the other side of the island. It lies under a set of high power lines. The Haitians are mostly illegals, having come over from Haiti to work in the sugar cane plantations that used to be owned by the Dominican government. The plantations were later privatized, and the new owners fired the Haitians and replaced them with Dominicans. The Haitian people, often living as squatters, are now day laborers, hustling to get work wherever they can find it. In a good day, they might make the equivalent of two American dollars. The conditions in Haiti are so much more horrific, however, that the Haitians remain in the Dominican as they seek to make new lives for their families.

In the village, there is a Christian school named the Jerico School. This school has grades one through eight, and its students are mostly Haitian children. Many families struggle to make the tuition payments, even at ten dollars a month. The parents see the Jerico School as a hoped-for “ticket out” of the village for their children. In the school, the children learn Christian values, learn to read and write, learn arithmetic, geography, and other subjects. If they can make it through the eighth grade, and better yet high school, they have a real chance to earn Dominican citizenship, thus opening the doors to employment, health care, and a new life.

Students at Jerico School wear uniforms, and often siblings go to school half a day, then return home to their shack and give up their uniform to their sibling so he or she can attend the other half of the day. There is typically little or no food in the home for a mid-day meal.

Mika’s Lunch is named after a little girl named Mika, now an adult, we have gotten to love Mika, her family and the whole village. Mika is from a family that has little but even so has a great faith that the Lord will provide.

The aim of Mika’s Lunch is to give a noon meal to the students at not just Jerico School but many other schools as well, so the children can better focus and learn. The meal is simple – a mixture of rice, protein and vegetables that is created to be nutritious and filling. It provides enough to settle the brain down and keep the body going until the evening meal, if there is one. The principal of the school shared these words, “The children are concentrating more, they are never late for school, they are returning with their homework, and they don’t cry anymore because they’re wondering if they will have money to eat. Something wonderful is going on in our school right now.”

There is a story similar to Mika’s at every school and in every village that we serve.

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