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A UMNS Feature
By Barbara Dunlap-Berg*
3:00 P.M. ET June 21, 2012
A little boy takes in the activities during the Shoebox Christmas
giveaway at the Children of the Harvest/Spirit Lake Ministry Center in
Sheyenne, N.D. UMNS web-only photos by Mike Flowers.
It all starts with a sturdy shoebox. Add a dash of love — perhaps a
fun toy, cozy mittens, a little bag of candy and the story of Jesus’
birth — and the results are smiles from children and gratitude from
their parents who cannot provide those small gifts.
Through “Shoebox Christmas,” Mike and Libby Flowers, United Methodist missionaries from the Dakotas Annual (regional) Conference, brighten the holidays for families in two states.
In 2011, the Flowerses distributed — primarily to Native Americans —
5,652 shoeboxes. They hope to write their own loaves-and-fishes story
and multiply that to 40,000.
“Approximately 35,000 children live on Native American
reservations in the Dakotas,” Mike Flowers said. “Those children are
mostly the forgotten of our society.
“The typical recipient of a shoebox Christmas gift … lives below the
poverty line. In 2011, Pine Ridge, Rosebud and Enemy Swim School in
South Dakota and Spirit Lake and Turtle Mountain reservations in North
Dakota received Christmas gifts.”
“Almost anything that fits in a shoebox is worthy of being a Shoebox
Christmas gift,” said Mike Flowers, who oversees the Shoebox Christmas
ministry.
Six years ago, after working in retail careers, the couple answered
God’s call to ministry at the Children of the Harvest/Spirit Lake
Ministry Center (Advance #3020453) in Sheyenne, N.D., and latched on to
their predecessor’s Shoebox Christmas idea. Now in their sixth year
there, they have found their niche.
“Building relationships is the best way to minister,” Mike Flowers
said. “Before you can feed someone spiritually, you need to feed (him
or her) physically. Our ministry is based on trust and compassion. We
live our Christian values, and then, if all else fails, we talk.”
Little gifts mean a lot
In the autumn, treat-filled shoeboxes begin to arrive from
individuals and congregations across the Dakotas. The Flowerses peruse
each box to ensure gifts are appropriate.
“We start auditing and sorting them in October,” Mike Flowers said,
“so we can deliver them by the middle of December.” Volunteers from
area churches help with that task.
From late November to early December, the Flowerses “drive about
1,400 miles, picking up boxed blessings from all over the Dakotas.”
“I like to watch the parents,” Mike Flowers added. “You can see the
joy on their faces as their children get the gift. We have had many
come to us and thank us for making their children happy. Several
mentioned that without these gifts, their children would not get
anything for Christmas.”
Choosing between food and gifts
One mother confided to Mike Flowers that her 8-year-old son had asked, “Why is Santa mad at me and my sisters?”
She said she could not answer her son. Often, she had to choose
between food for her family or gifts for the children, she explained.
She felt guilty and told her son and daughters that Santa sometimes ran
out of gifts because there were so many children in the world. Many
times, the mother cried herself to sleep.
The family had recently moved to the Spirit Lake Nation from another
reservation. When the young woman heard about the Shoebox Christmas
giveaway at the recreation center, she was excited for her children.
She worried, however, that since she was not a registered member of the
tribe, her children would not be eligible to receive the gifts.
To her surprise, no one asked about her tribal affiliation. They just
pointed her to the line to see Santa. For the first time in his life,
her son got a gift from Santa. He told his mother that Santa was not
mad anymore and that he was a neat guy.
“God provided one little boy and his sisters with their first Santa gift,” Mike Flowers said.
While a similar, well-known program requests money to pay shipping costs, the Flowerses do not do so.
“Libby and I deliver most of the shoeboxes ourselves, with the bulk
of the gifts staying on the Spirit Lake Reservation,” Mike said. “We
seem always to receive enough donations to cover the cost of fuel for
our vehicle.
“We love what we do.”
*Dunlap-Berg is internal content editor for United Methodist Communications, Nashville, Tenn.
News media contact: Barbara Dunlap-Berg, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org
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