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From the wheat fields and bargain stores of rural Manitoba, Ben and
Helen Eidse were the first missionaries sent overseas by their
churches. On the African savannah they partnered with the
Chokwe-Lunda who taught them language, culture and proverbs, which
Ben used to explain salvation. Helen delivered the leprosy cure,
mothered orphans, cared for the excluded, sick and poor. Their
partners helped establish 80 churches, translate the Bible and run
24 clinics. They deepened their faith in spiritual battle against
sorcery and corruption. The Eidses sought to empower the powerless
and raise a family despite revolution, disease and disability. Back
in Canada, Helen took in the homeless and Ben became president of
Steinbach Bible College. As first chancellor, he continues a
counseling, healing prayer ministry.
From the wheat fields and bargain stores of rural Manitoba, Ben and
Helen Eidse were the first missionaries sent overseas by their
churches. On the African savannah they partnered with the
Chokwe-Lunda who taught them language, culture and proverbs, which
Ben used to explain salvation. Helen delivered the leprosy cure,
mothered orphans, cared for the excluded, sick and poor. Their
partners helped establish 80 churches, translate the Bible and run
24 clinics. They deepened their faith in spiritual battle against
sorcery and corruption. The Eidses sought to empower the powerless
and raise a family despite revolution, disease and disability. Back
in Canada, Helen took in the homeless and Ben became president of
Steinbach Bible College. As first chancellor, he continues a
counseling, healing prayer ministry.
One of the main water resources for Florida, Alabama, and Georgia,
the Apalachicola River begins where the Chattahoochee and Flint
rivers meet at Lake Seminole and flow unimpedted for 106 miles,
through the red hills and floodplains of the Florida panhandle into
the Gulf of Mexico. "Voices of the Apalachicola "is a collection of
oral histories from more than thirty individuals who have lived out
their entire lives in this region, including the last steamboat
pilot on the river system, sharecroppers who escaped servitude,
turpentine workers in Tate's Hell, sawyers of "old-as-Christ"
cypress, beekeepers working the last large tupelo stand, and a
Creek chief descended from a 200-year unbroken line of chiefs.
A fusion of voices and deeply personal experiences from every
corner of the globe, Unrooted Childhoods presents a cultural mosaic
of today's citizens of the world. In twenty stirring memoirs of
childhoods spent packing, writings by both world-famous and
first-time authors (many published here for the first time) make
universal the story of growing up without the opportunity to ever
feel rooted. Best-selling fiction and non-fiction authors Isabel
Allende, Carlos Fuentes, Pat Conroy, Pico Iyer and Ariel Dorfman
contribute powerful and deeply personal accounts of mobile
childhoods and the cultural experiences they engender. The memoirs
touch on both the benefits and the difficulties of growing up in
the ever changing landscape of diplomatic, military and other
expatriate communities.
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