Archives For Kickstarter

I know I’ve already blogged about the Becoming Fools film project, and have posted a two-part interview with the film’s director Scott Moore, but I think it’s important enough to mention it yet again. The film’s Kickstarter campaign got underway last month, and now, about halfway through its allotted 50 days, it still has a way to go to meet its goal. If you’re intrigued by the idea but not wild about making a donation so someone in Nashville can make a movie, I understand. But this really is about a lot more than just a film. Please read this letter from Joel Van Dyke, shared with Kickstarter supporters this evening (and posted here with permission), who knows first hand the impact this film could have in the lives of many kids on the streets of Guatemala City:

Yesterday morning I had a profound experience that I feel compelled to share with you all. I had breakfast with 14 year-old Gabriela. The profound part of the experience was that I did not even know I was having breakfast with her until after the breakfast was finished. As I stood up to speak, I saw her …. I forgot where I was for a minute and immediately ran over to give her a huge hug suddenly realizing that I needed to hold my composure in order to make the “presentation” I had been asked to give.

I was invited to cast the vision for a street youth focused conference to a group of ministry leaders, pastors and organizational executives who have begun to meet together once a month over breakfast in Guatemala City. Fourteen different churches, organizations and para-church ministries all lead by Guatemalan’s have been meeting to see what they can do collaboratively for the street kids of Guatemala that they have not been able to achieve on their own. Having never met each prior to these gatherings, they are now uniting, praying together, meeting at their respective ministry sites and making collaborative plans on how to serve and work together. The vision of the Becoming Fools film project has seeded this movement towards synergistic collaboration and the film will tell their collective story to mobilize resources for their united and expanding vision. A vision that is turning them into “fools” for children like Gabriela.

So who is Gabriela and what is it about her story that compels me to want to take the time to write this? It is, actually, deeply personal!!

My family and I first met Gabriela when she was attending Tita Evertsz’ school in La Limonada. We felt very drawn to her and her little sister Elena. They came over to our home for several weekend sleep over’s to have play-time with our kids and our neighbors.

After several years, however, Gabriela went the way of the streets leaving a very dysfunctional and abusive home environment. We lost complete contact with her until a year ago when Tita called to tell us that she had been brutally beaten and then left to die in the “river” (“sewer water”) of La Limonada. We were heartbroken for the little girl that we had played with in our home on several occasions. Miraculously, she survived the attack and was brought to a Guatemala City hospital where she eventually recovered from her near death encounter.

When released from the hospital, Gabriela went back to the streets and eventually turned up in the group of street kids at the “tanque”, where Italo poured out his life. From there she was loved and nurtured enough to desire changes in her life and eventually accepted an invitation to move off of the streets and into Shorty’s rehabilitation program, convincing her family to move in with her. Yesterday, she was having breakfast with us because Italo’s sister Velvet had promised to bring her to a medical clinic immediately after the meeting. I had no idea she would be there but like the metaphor of the repaired doll in Reparando that works as a tapestry of God’s scandalous grace, her presence yesterday to me had profound significance.

It seems to me that many people who have been exposed to and been asked to contribute to the Becoming Fools campaign have chosen not to pledge support because they are not interested in pledging their hard earned money simply to help produce a film. However, I am writing from the depth of my heart to share with you that this campaign represents SO MUCH more than just the production of a film. It is the vehicle from which the prophetic voice of thousands of Gabriela’s will be heard by the church in Guatemala and by tens of thousands of people around the world. It is the vehicle through which the collective dreams and aspirations of 14 plus Guatemalan lead organizations who are serving in the spirit of Italo Castro’s legacy can be mobilized into tangible expressions of love on the streets of this great city.

The breakfast yesterday morning and the almost haunting image of Gabriela’s guarded but smiling face looking back at me has increased my resolve to invest in this campaign. It is the resolve to help raise the funds needed so that this incredible story can be told and a movement unleashed. I am praying with all of my heart that hundreds of you reading this will join my family and I in prayer and pledged support for this incredibly important vision that has so much potential to touch thousands and thousands of lives.

Will you please join us in Becoming Fools for Gabriela and the thousands like her on the streets of Guatemala City. This is our chance to unite together to be part of the redemption of their stories for the glory of our Almighty God whose heart is filled with love for us…. and them!!

Joel Van Dyke

Please consider helping Athentikos make this film happen by joining the ‘Becoming Fools’ Kickstarter campaign.

A little lull

August 30, 2011 — Leave a comment

Just a little heads up that the content here on the blog is going to be a little less robust than usual this week and maybe a bit of next week too. I have two book reviews due this week for a couple of magazines and I have some work to do to prepare for a cool speaking gig at my alma mater, Eastern University, in mid-September. That on top of a full-time job, beautiful weather to enjoy and a wedding to plan!

In the meantime, in case you’ve missed some of my recent stuff, feel free to read my review of Little Princes by Conor Grennan in PRISM. Also, be sure to check out my recent interview with Scott Moore (parts one and two), and consider supporting his Kickstarter campaign to fund his important next film, Becoming Fools.

I’m grateful for each of you that you continue to take the time to read the blog and give your comments; it means a lot to me.

Grace and peace.

I recently watched Reparando, a documentary about some faithful people who are committed to weaving the fabric of shalom in some of the most unraveled parts of Guatemala City. Simply put, it’s one of the best documentaries I’ve ever seen. I really encourage you to figure out a way to see it. Within the next couple of weeks, hopefully, I’ll have an interview here on the blog with Scott Moore, the film’s director and producer.

But in the meantime, I’m excited to help spread the word about the new film from Athentikos, the non-profit film production group that made Reparando. It’s called Becoming Fools and yesterday it launched a Kickstarter campaign to raise funds to cover the costs of production. I know, I know… someone else who wants your money. But take a look at the teaser video and give it some thought. I really love what Athentikos is doing, and I know that not only will this will be a great documentary, it’ll also make a big difference in the lives of these kids on the streets of Guatemala City.

If you like what you see, please do consider pitching in at Kickstarter to make the film happen.

Saving Blue Like Jazz

October 4, 2010 — Leave a comment

I remember where I was when I first heard about a book called Blue Like Jazz.

I was in a Sunday school classroom at a megachurch in a wealthy suburb of Atlanta at a conference for campus pastors and college ministry leaders and – sure, why not – college students like me. It was a seminar led by the one and only David Crowder, called something like “David Talks With Various People About Random Stuffâ€?.

He introduced it by saying that he would often receive free books from publishers in the mail and he often didn’t give them the time of day. But then there was one with a peculiar title and an intriguing cover and an even more intriguing subtitle, so he flipped it open and read the Author’s Note and it blew him away, as did, he said, the rest of the book. So he read to us:

I never liked jazz music because jazz music doesn’t resolve. But I was outside the Bagdad Theater in Portland one night when I saw a man playing the saxophone. I stood there for fifteen minutes, and he never opened his eyes. After that I liked jazz music. Sometimes you have to watch somebody love something before you can love it yourself. It is as if they are showing you the way. I used to not like God because God didn’t resolve. But that was before any of this happened.

I didn’t buy the book right away, but later that year I took it along on a weekend trip to Orlando with some friends. I read it on the plane, in the car, on the floor, on the couch, and on the deck of the casino cruise while everyone else took their chances. Basically, I devoured it. And apparently so did everybody else, because it became a bestseller and got everyone talking and it spawned all sorts of other nonreligious-but-spiritual memoirs after it.

Everyone has something different to say about what Blue Like Jazz meant to them the first time they read it. Some loved it, some hated it, some didn’t get it. For my part, I felt like Blue Like Jazz gave me the permission to write the way I had always wanted to but never knew I could. It gave me permission to find my own writing voice. And for one who was studying journalism in college at the time and has gone on to do other writing since, that was quite a big deal for me.

So when I learned about Blue Like Jazz: The Movie a couple of years ago, I was really excited. Then when I learned, more recently, that it had been scrapped for lack of funding, I was really bummed. But more recently still, others who have been impacted by Don Miller’s work decided that it shouldn’t die just yet. A couple of ordinary readers/fans have launched a campaign to raise the additional $125,000 needed to actually make the film. At the moment, one week into the campaign, 1100 people have donated a total of $90,000, just $35,000 shy of the total needed.

I was happy to do my small part, and perhaps you’ll be interested in pitching in as well.