SELINSGROVE — Winfield native Beverly Mitchell may be a long way from home, but she’s right where she wants to be.
For years after graduating from Lewisburg High School in 1966, Mitchell worked in the city of Philadelphia’s health department.
She returned home to care for her father in 1998 when her mother died unexpectedly. Following her father’s death a few years later, Mitchell traveled to Uganda on a mission trip with Christ Community United Methodist Church to prisons in Uganda and Kenya.
It was there she discovered young children of women inmates often live with their mothers behind bars, some for several years.
A second “short-term” trip in 2006 led to a more permanent stay when she and fellow missionary Janet Morrison developed a plan to free the children while helping them maintain a relationship with their jailed parent.
Gateway International Missions in Taylorsville, N.C., assisted the pair in opening a home in February 2007 in Uganda, and today Children of Promise has 17 residents ranging in ages 2 1/2 to 14. Six other children have been reunited with their mothers.
Six months after the home opened, Mitchell sold her home in Winfield and returned to Africa.
“When I saw the babies and children living in the prisons here, God touched my heart to ask if we could open a home for them to stay until their mothers were able again to care for them,” she said. “Never would I have thought of myself venturing far from home and never as an ambassador for Christ, but here He sent me.”
The mission statement of the home is to provide care to children of female inmates who have no other relatives to meet their physical, medical, emotional, educational and spiritual needs.
In addition to caring and educating the children, Mitchell said, the aim is to foster the bond between mother and child and extended families when possible.
Depending on the proximity of the jail to the home, children visit with their mothers anywhere from monthly to four times a year.
Christ Community Pastor Barry Robison said Mitchell wrestled with the decision to leave her home and move to Africa, but was unable to ignore “God’s call.”
“She sees this as a way of sharing the blessings she’s received,” he said. “She’s a giving, humble person who doesn’t like the limelight, but she’s also joyful and upbeat.”
In addition to her work with the children, Mitchell assists in medical clinics throughout the region as well.
“We run into needs everywhere,” she said.
It’s not uncommon for people to knock at the gate of the home asking for money to allow a child to attend school or receive medical care or food.
“We see children and old people with significant medical problems needing care beyond what a nurse can provide. We see children with no food, no clothing, no adult assistance.” Mitchell is grateful for the help she’s received from family members, friends and the Christ Community congregation.
“Last month I ran into a young girl who was moved from her village to take care of her grandmother. As a result she has not attended school in over a year,” she said. “The grandmother and this girl have no money and live off food she can gather from a neighbor’s field or food passersby give her.”
News
Winfield native helping families in Uganda
- News
-
-
Jokester cop tased intern at station
NORTHUMBERLAND — A Northumberland police detective claims in a lawsuit filed Wednesday he was wrongly blamed after an officer shot an intern with a Taser gun while fooling around at the police station in December.
-
Midd-West taxpayers face increase of $109
MIDDLEBURG — The Midd-West School District on Thursday night announced an average property tax increase of $109 to help offset its $1.8 million budget deficit for the 2012-13 school year.
Midd-West will also close two elementary schools, consolidate two middle schools, cut programs and furlough seven teachers and 23 other staff members. -
LARA: Charred bridge sound
LEWISBURG — The fire-damaged railroad bridge crossing the Susquehanna River at Lewisburg is structurally sound following the March fire that discolored steel and charred roughly 400 ties, the Lewisburg Area Recreation Authority said at its meeting Thursday.
-
Stat of the Day: $2.6 million
Stat of the Day: $2.6 million.
That's what President Barack Obama has spent on advertising in Iowa, which may be a battleground state in November's election against presumptive Republican nominee Mitt Romney.
-
Northampton County jury sentences man to death in officer killing
EASTON — Jurors in eastern Pennsylvania have sentenced a man to death for fatally shooting a police officer last summer.
-
'To Do': Ambulance Anniversary
DANVILLE - The Danville Ambulance Service will celebrate its 60th anniversary with a free pig roast open to the public starting at noon May 25 at the service on A Street.
-
Judge denies convicted teen's request to attend vocational school
MIDDLEBURG — The teen convicted of causing a March 2010 car crash that killed two classmates will not be allowed to leave jail to attend a vocational school.
-
Private supply ship flies by space station in test
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The world's first private supply ship flew tantalizingly close to the International Space Station on Thursday, acing a critical test in advance of the actual docking.
-
Forecasters: 9 to 15 storms this hurricane season
MIAMI — U.S. forecasters predicted Thursday that this year's Atlantic hurricane season would produce a normal number of about nine to 15 tropical storms.
-
Police Log 05.24.12
A roundup of police news reported by departments across the Central Susquehanna Valley.
-
60 and counting: Laptop
A laptop computer has changed my life.
-
10 Things to Know Today
Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today (times EDT):
- More News Headlines
-
Jokester cop tased intern at station



