Just
outside the small Mexican Puebla of Teopisca, Chiapas about thirty minutes
southeast of San Cristobal de Las Casas, is an orphanage. Its name is Casa Hogar Canaan and it is
home for twenty-two of the most outgoing, well adjusted and happy children you
have ever met. The reason is
because this orphanage was founded and is run by two of God’s most humble servants,
Carlos and Yara Ruiz.
In 2005 Carlos, a Christian pastor, his
wife Yara and their three young children were living in a small rent house on a
meager preacher’s salary. DIF,
Mexico’s version of Child Protective Services came to them with six small
children in need of a home. Unable
to turn these children away, the Ruiz family opened their home and thus began
Casa Hogar Canaan. In order to
feed so many little mouths, Carlos began working as a carpenter in addition to
being a full-time pastor and when Yara wasn’t busy being a mother to nine young
children, she sold used clothing to the indigenous ladies for a little extra
income. According to Carlos there
were many times when they had no more than 50 pesos and no idea how they would
all eat. But, as he says, “God
always provided and we never went hungry.”
With
the help of an American missionary, the Ruiz family purchased a small tract of
land with a dilapidated old farmhouse and began the process of building Casa Canaan
a proper home. But, it wasn’t long before DIF was back again with more children
in need and the construction process had to be put on hold while more
youngsters were being fed and clothed and educated and loved and raised into
Godly, wonderful people.
Every
child has his or her own story of what life was like before Casa Canaan, and
each of them has a dream for their future. Three-year-old Jaime has Spina bifida and needs an operation
to keep him out of a wheelchair. Llovany,
also three suffered a terrible beating by his father leaving him unable to walk
or talk. Although medical care is
virtually free for Mexico’s indigenous people, there are costs associated with
getting these children to Mexico City where they can be treated.
Being
at Casa Hogar Canaan doesn’t feel at all like being at an orphanage. It feels like being with one big
beautiful family, living on so little, in need of so much, and asking for
nothing.
Please click on Urgent Needs and Support
Casa Canaan to see how you can help!
Thank you and God
Bless you!
Clint and Karen Hough
James 1:27
Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows
in their distress..