Monrovia – The Executive Director of one of Liberia’s disabled homes, Mission for Hope for the Disabled, on Sunday, February 24, extended words of gratitude to members of the Okigwe Zone Progressive Union of Liberia (OZPUL) for the organization’s continued support to members of his disabled home.
Pastor Victor S. Wilson described the food items given to his home as very important and prayed for God’s blessings for members of OZPUL.
Mission for Hope Disabled Home is in Rehab Community, Lower Johnsonville, Montserrado County.
The food items included eight bags of rice, two bales of cloth, two crates of (soda) soft drink, one five-gallon container of Argo oil and one five-gallon container of red oil, three bags of salt, one carton of soap, candles and three packs of candies.
Pastor Wilson said as they continue to pray for OZPUL members, they will also pray for their families and businesses.
He said OZPUL’s present in Liberia is a blessing to the less fortunate. According to him, it is very difficult to see Liberians forming club like the OZPUL to give support to less fortunate, but they will rather open drinking clubs, night clubs and birthday clubs.
Turning the items over to Pastor Wilson, the Chief Patron of OZPUL, Mr. Nze Chucks P. Korie stated that they love the home and are in sympathy with them.
“We know very well that members of Mission for Hope are people that have been designated by God. The road to God is not a straight road. So we all have to pass through many things and we as members of OZPUL families visit to you people every year is not our right to do so but is a privilege given to us to come and see our brothers and sisters, who are in need and we want to receive blessing from God because you all are sons and daughters of God. I call this your disabled home the ‘Promised Land’ of God because each year we visit you people we can always leave here with testimony full of blessings.”
Chief Njoku promised that they will continue visit the home based on the love. He promised that would come to visit with them every third Sunday in February of every year. Mission for Hope Disabled Home was established 1988 in Harper City, Maryland County by Rev. Mother Sister Mary Sponsa Behran Order of the Francis (OSF). The mission was relocated in Monrovia on December 24, 1999. It presently has 75 disabled persons. The home also runs a high school — Our Lady of Fatima Rehab Community School — which starts from kindergarten to 12 grades.