Monday, September 06, 2010
   
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The History
Over nine years ago, when Ed and I first made a visit to Lyndale Girls’ Home and Swift Purscell Boys’ Home, two orphanages located in Highgate, Jamaica, we found living conditions bleak and attitudes hopeless. At the girls’ home we found 30 young girls, ages 6 to 18, were sleeping on holey mattresses, no sheets, pillows, curtains or color! Soap, toothpaste and towels were decidedly missing. All wards of the state, these young girls arrived at Lyndale from various backgrounds of neglect, abuse and abandonment. At the boys’ home we found 75 orphaned boys packed into a small cinder block dormitory with only 2 toilets and 2 showers for all 75 boys. The physical needs for sheets, towels, hygiene products, clothing and shoes were the same as the girls, but the numbers were much larger. For both homes, the need for doctors, dentists, optometrists and psychologists was overwhelming.
Working to Create a Future
The dream of Jamaica Outreach, that all girls and boys leaving the orphanages at age 18 be provided the career training of their choice, has been met with much excitement by the orphans. They are eager to work to make products that can be sold in the United States. These young people are focused, precise and enthusiastic when it comes to creating saleable items that promise a brighter future for themselves.

Presently the girls and boys are making glassbead bracelets to be sold in the United States. They are also working on a line of greeting cards featuring photographs of their homeland. These products are sold through craft fairs, community meetings, churches and friends. The funds from the jewelry and cards sold are deposited into an account solely for the purpose of paying necessary tuitions for vocational trade schools, colleges, or the training of the child’s choice.
Promising a Brighter Future
Something very exciting is happening in St. Mary Parish, Jamaica. A number of orphaned young people are now attending colleges and career training centers of their choice through funds generated by themselves and donations from organizations and individuals in the United States. We have four girls currently in college, Rackel, Delesha, Nickesha and Amanda. Ramone Wynter is attending Edna Manley School of Performing Arts. Shauna Kay has graduated from teacher’s college. Atasha has completed cosmetology school. Josiah is attending medical school in Cuba. Markland and David have completed mechanics school and carpentry school respectively. Six of the boys have completed chef school and are now working in bakeries and resorts. These are astounding accomplishments for young people abandoned as wards of the state. It is the dream of Jamaica Outreach to make it possible for all graduating seniors to pursue their career goals. Providing a promising future for these girls and boys, assures not only a better future for them, but also hope for the land they love, Jamaica.
Change and an Expanded Vision Over the last year, many changes have taken place with the administration of Lyndale Girls’ Home and Swift-Purscell Boys’ Home. The girls’ home was closed for major repairs and has not yet re-opened. Jamaica Outreach has kept in touch with the girls as they scattered in many directions, from other orphanages to foster homes. Recently we made contact with several of our Lyndale Girls at Pringle Children’s Home and have plans to work with this home in the future. The boys’ home has undergone a re-organization and the boys have been placed in various orphanages and foster homes. While our focus continues to be on furthering the education of the girls and boys we’ve worked with at Lyndale and Swift-Purscell, our vision has expanded to the Parish of St. Mary and, specifically, to Pringle Children’s Home.

Over the last eight years, Jamaica Outreach has brought medical and dental teams directly to the girls’ and boys’ homes to service the children, who numbered about 130. With the home closures, our medical and dental teams needed a place to serve.
Doc Jane



OUR MISSION

To improve the lives and promise a future for the youth of St. Mary Parish on the island of Jamaica through health-focused clinics, much-needed constructions projects in area primary schools and orphanages, and scholarshiping outstanding students to attend local colleges and trade schools.

 

 

tamra


OUR DREAM

To assure that all girls and boys graduating from high school in St. Mary  will be provided the career training of their choice, promising a personally productive future for themselves and hope for the land they love, Jamaica. To make health care available to those too impoverished to pay for private medical care. To assist in building projects that promise a better quality of schooling in St. Mary, Jamaica.
 
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Our Vision

 Through a serendipitous meeting nine years ago in the Chicago airport with Ms. Angella Beharie, overseer of two orphanages in Highgate, Jamaica, my husband and I have dedicated ourselves to the promise of a better future for some very, very special Jamaican orphans. This year our vision expanded to working with area primary schools and local medical clinics, further enriching and promising a better future for all Jamaicans. We hope you will share in our vision.
                                                                                                                                                — Pam and Ed Bliss

Pam and Duel

 

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