The mission of RHHP..

The mission of RHHP is to provide a Christian community setting where persons of various cultures learn from each other, the surrounding neighborhood, and life in Baltimore city. We believe that people's lives are blessed by being part of faith communities.

Sunday, January 4, 2009

A few words about this blog......

This blog is the brainchild of Sarah Buskirk, one of our Mennonite volunteers. Everyone in the house is welcome to contribute to it. Just ask Sarah if you would like to post anything.

Individuals in the household will not be identified unless they agree to be. There will not be any photographs which will identify asylum seekers. Understandably, they are wary of their identities floating out there in web. We will also not post images of others who do not want to be seen by all in cyberspace.

Thursday, January 1, 2009


Food preparation and the sharing of food is an important part of the life of our house. It brings us together in fellowship as nothing else can do. We commiserate much and laugh even more with each other around the kitchen dinner. Over meals, we learn about each other and from each other. We encourage each other on our journeys. I suspect that our meals give us those precious few moments that remind us that we are not alone in our journeys and struggles. In the photo on the right we see the first meal one of our asylee housemates cooked for himself with the coaching of another housemate. A highly accomplished in his home country, he had never had to cook for himself. Now that he is separated from his wife and children, he has to pick up domestic skills that was once not expected of him and he is doing so with relish. It is a blessing to the rest of us that we can be a part of his new life.

Who lives in the RHHP?

RHHP might also be known as a house of transitions. At its capacity, there may be as many as 15 residents in the RHHP all of whom are undergoing important life changes of one sort or another. Our asylum seekers and asylees (those who have been granted asylum because of persecution in their home countries and allowed to remain in the US) are compelled to make these changes by circumstances in their home countries. At this time, we have three Cameroonians, one Iraqi and one Ethiopian. Others live here while they attend school in Baltimore. Also living here is a unit of Mennonite Volunteers who elect to serve one year or longer in Baltimore where they work in a variety of human service agencies. One volunteer teaches music and art in a Christian school and she regales us with her exploits from her classroom. It is inspiring to see how she plunged into an urban environment so different from what she was accustomed to and in a few months flourish in her job despite the lack of resources both of the school and challenges her students bring into the classroom.

For such a mix of people going through changes, RHHP provides sanctuary and community which makes it easier for them to live through these times of uncertainty.