These
Boots Were Made for…
By Gail Cawley Showalter
Seeing U
Through
“No, you’re wrong, Lord. I’ve already
scoured Kmart,” Stephanie said aloud. “I’ve been to Kmart, Wal-Mart,
Target, Academy, Sears, and Dillard’s searching for the boots.”
Stephanie Blackstone, the founder of the
Treasures of the Heart ministry, had provided aid to six orphanages in
Russia in the last two years. But none prepared her for what she saw at
Barskoe Gorodische six months ago. She was shocked.
Now it was April and she could not shake
the images of the children and their shoes from her mind.
Driving to the orphanage from Moscow had
been uneventful. Crops were growing in the wide open fields. It reminded
her of Kansas. A turn down a country road that had no road signs led past
a few wooden frame cottages. Nestled in the corner as the road turned
again stood the 300 year old building, once a Russian Orthodox Church. A
wide path next to the church wound down the slope to a picture perfect
river.
In spite of the beautiful scenery viewed
from the windows, the pear trees blooming in summer, and the river flowing
nearby, the facilities inside were horrible. The building had been left in
disrepair to a few adults that were committed to care for the abandoned
children. Alex, the director, had an agreement with the government that if
they would pay his workers he would find a way to feed the children. They
came faithfully every day even though they had not been paid for the last
eight months.
They were living on the edge of survival
when Stephanie arrived. Raw and rugged conditions existed within the thick
concrete walls. Live electrical wires dangled from the wall sockets
exposing children to one more danger. Hot water was nonexistent. The
limited heat in deep winter didn’t even cut the bitter chill.
Hand-me-downs were layered on for the only insulation between the Russian
winter and their weather-beaten figures.
The kitchen was bare except for a few
persistent flies nibbling on a stale piece of bread. The wooden floor had
rotted and collapsed into the dirt below. And the 99 youngsters who lived
there needed more than walls and food. Their feet had outgrown the already
preworn and worn-out shoes.
Stephanie wondered how the children would resist the elements in the
coming winter. Bare feet during the brief summer months were acceptable,
but the bitter cold of 20 degrees below zero was sure to come.
Growing toes were peeking out of the
holes in the well-worn shoes they were wearing. They wore whatever second
hand shoes were available. Some were once dress shoes, while others were
sandals. Most would not have been appropriate for children even when new,
but those shoes were all they had. The deteriorated leather had broken in
layers and was matted with manure fragments from the pastures where the
children played make-believe among the milk cows. Stephanie knew those
shoes wouldn’t make it through a harsh winter.
How would they fare without
proper shoes in the filth and raw ice? Stephanie
wondered.
Once back in
Texas, Stephanie sought funds to buy the children shoes. A number of
people were sensitive to the need and donated money. Due to the harsh
weather in Russia, Stephanie had decided to purchase boots which would
last longer than regular shoes. The money donated, however, allowed only
$12 for each child.
Stephanie suffers with severe idiopathic
edema which causes swelling. She usually reclines on Mondays to recover
after Sunday activities. This particular Monday she shrugged off the still
small voice urging her to look for boots at the local Kmart.
No store in our warm climate has
boots, certainly not in early spring, she thought. People seldom, if
ever, needed boots in southeast Texas.
Still the spiritual messenger insisted, “Go
to Kmart now.”
“Okay, okay.
I’ll go,” she relented.
She
entered Kmart and made her way straight to the shoe department, certain
that there were no leather boots in this Texas store in the spring.
A well-dressed gentleman approached her.
“May I help you?” he asked her
deliberately, as if he knew he was supposed to appear at this moment just
for her.
A little surprised,
Stephanie chuckled. “Only if you have heavy duty winter boots. I need 99
pairs in children’s sizes!” she said, almost challenging him to respond.
Wondering what this distinguished
gentleman was doing here, she asked curiously, “Who are you?”
“I happen to be the buyer for the shoe
department at this Kmart,” he said with a smile. “What sizes do you need?”
he asked.
Still joking Stephanie
said flatly, “Every size.”
“Funny
thing,” he said, his voice sounding puzzled but intrigued. “I just
received a shipment of boots that weren’t ordered for this store, and I
didn’t know why.”
Astonished,
Stephanie allowed him to show her the “miraculous” merchandize. She then
explained the situation to him. As if he were appointed, he went to work,
sorting and stacking.
He loaded
box after box of boots onto a large roll around shopping cart. Many were
already marked as sale merchandise. He marked the others half price. There
were boots for boys, girls, and teenagers, a wide selection of sizes for
kids 7-17 years of age.
“I don’t
know how many pairs there are, but I hope these help,” he said after he
had the cart piled high with an assortment of boots.
Stephanie, astounded by the surprise
shopping spree, said genuinely, “I am amazed by this. Thank you ever so
much for your kind generosity.”
Her van was brimming with boots. She thanked God, amazed, at how He had
provided for the orphans in such a specific way. And sent up a prayer of
gratitude that she had responded to the spiritual messenger.
The total bill averaged out to $12 a pair,
and there were exactly 99 pairs of boots. Each child would have a pair for
the winter.
They were shipped in a cargo container
to England in July, caravanned through Belgium, Germany, Poland, and
Belarus before they were delivered on what was Russia’s Christmas Day,
just before the temperatures dipped 20 degrees below freezing.
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Photos on the left are the shoes as
we found them wearing in September 2000.
Center and right shows the delivery of the new boots in January
2001. |
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material herein is exclusively the property of the author and is not to be
used without written permission from the author.”