Mission Aviation Day 2009 – Tucson, AZ

October 5, 2009 by UIM Aviation Admin  
Filed under Events, Mission Aviation Day

MAD was great exposure for local kids to missions and mission aviation!

MAD was great exposure for local kids to missions and mission aviation!

Have you ever seen the city of Tucson from a seat in a Cessna 206 airplane?

Those who came to Mission Aviation Day (a.k.a. “MAD”) at Ryan Airfield had an opportunity to do just that. Our pilots were busy as they flew more than 400 people throughout the day. With activities to engage the young and old, visitors learned about the many different ways God uses airplanes on the mission field to reach people. Although we were the main sponsor, 15 other mission organizations were also represented. Games, rides, food, and a variety of entertainment made it a fun, worthwhile way to spend the day.

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UIM Aviation Video – STOL Techniques

September 4, 2009 by UIM Aviation Admin  
Filed under Videos

Here is a great two minute glimpse into the STOL technique used daily in UIM Aviation missionary aviation flights.

http://www.vimeo.com/6416958

UIM Aviation – God provides new hangar in Chihuahua!

July 23, 2009 by UIM Aviation Admin  
Filed under projects

chihuahua_hangar“Your rent is going up,” said the owner of the eight-plane hangar at Chihuahua International Airport.

For 12 years UIM had rented a space here for $500/month. However, a short while later, this hangar was seized by the airport for unpaid fees. Thanks to a friend, we were informed the night before and removed the airplane, parking it in the more vulnerable out-of-doors. We needed a solution fast. The Lord had obviously prepared us for change.

Nosing about, Dennis Joyner and Wolfgang Grotendiek inquired about space at a private owner’s airstrip, just minutes from the International Airport. The owner, Fernando Amaya, was willing to work with us.
Dennis, UIM’s Chihuahua Area Manager, punched some numbers and realized that over a period of 10 years, UIM could build a hangar at a lower cost than 10 years’ worth of rent. He, Dave Wolf and a Mexican friend went to visit Fernando and see what they could work out. Fernando agreed to the idea of constructing a hangar in lieu of monthly rent.

chihuahua_workers

The Lord’s people have freely given of their time, sweat and finances to make the new hangar in Chihuahua a reality. Thank you!

The project was approved but there was no way to get funding from the budget. Our Chihuahua staff researched possibilities. Dennis shared the dream with his brother in Arkansas. The Lord impressed their church, Freedom Fellowship, to raise enough money for a 60’x60’ slab, which UIM staff plus a few volunteers promptly poured. Later the Lord touched Mountain View Baptist Church in Tucson as well as an interested individual to fund the poles, trusses and roof tin, so the team put up the poles and the roof. What a blessing that the Lord so skilled our staff that they could do this work.

The next phase in the project was to enclose the walls and hang the main doors. Would the Lord still provide?  He did indeed. An Indiana couple and a visitor to the July Oshkosh Air Show donated enough funds for these materials. An unexpected gift from another Indiana man will be used to complete a bathroom. Dennis expects to have enough money left from all the donations to paint the hangar floor and hook up electricity.

The Lord’s people have freely given an astonishing $20,500 for this hangar. We hope to finish the building for around $25,000. How exciting to watch God work! Step by step, He has provided for each phase of the project from totally unexpected sources and construction has proceeded with continuity.

UIM Aviation – The beginning of the Guarijio Church

July 21, 2009 by UIM Aviation Admin  
Filed under people

Their families live removed from a world familiar to you and me. Children walk one hour to school on a rugged footpath.  Raising chickens for eggs and growing corn and beans provide the main food supply. They believe sickness and death is the result of a curse. Death itself brings years of punishment before being sent to the father god, the sun. They are the Guarijio Indians. From an airplane, each isolated village is just a blink in a road-less expanse of territory. How, one  marvels, is God going to reach these people?

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About twenty years ago, a group of New Tribes missionaries came to the Guarijio village of Tojiachi. They began to learn local culture and language in order to, one day, present to the people a Bible in their native tongue. Building relationships with the Indians and gaining trust was a long, slow process. Such special events as medical and dental clinics helped prove that the missionaries came with a desire and a message to improve life. Over the years, UIM Aviation has been privileged to aid this effort by providing service for medical emergencies and transportation for clinic teams, their equipment, and various consultants.

In 2001, one such dental clinic  brought Santos Tigre and his family from the village of Chiltepín, six hours walk from Tojiachi. This was the first time the missionaries had heard about this Guarijio community. Santos told them that years before a traveling evangelist, whom UIM still flies monthly throughout the area, had shared the Gospel with them in Spanish.

During this same time, more and more Mexicans were moving to Tojiachi and dominating over the Guarijios.  Wishing to maintain their focus to reach native people groups, the missionaries surveyed the surrounding area for a new home base. Among other villages, their search took them to Santos and his family in Chiltepín. After a few years of monthly visitations as the Lord led, the missionaries pursued and received permission to build homes in this community of fifteen families.

Relationships developed and some of the Guarijios were asked to be language helpers. In April 2006, they helped the missionaries begin trans- lating over 1700 Scripture verses used in a chronological Bible study. A rough draft was completed seven months later. This draft must be checked for comprehension on separate occasions by at least two separate individuals who are completely unfamiliar with the information they will read. Santos’ father, Martimiano, was willing to help. He had heard the Gospel a number of times in Spanish and was eager to learn about God.  He did not, however, convey a true understanding of the significance of Christ. Martimiano’s review of these Scripture verses was the first time he had ever received God’s Word in his native language.

As they came to verses referring to Christ, the missionaries witnessed Martimiano link important concepts between the Old and New Testaments. He realized that Christ was God’s sacrificial Lamb to take away sin once, for all.
Through over 20 years, a change of location, and different teams of missionaries, God faithfully pursued the Guarijio people. That day, His Word penetrated a new heart. Martimiano’s knowledge became understanding.
“This Book,” Martimiano remarked, pointing to the Bible, “really opens our eyes and makes us start to think. It cuts off our burro ears.” (In Mexico, referring to someone as a burro means they are ignorant; Martimiano meant reading the Bible removes ignorance.)

“It is better that you tell us in Guarijio so we don’t forget,” he continued, “but there is no one to tell people in (the villages of) La Barranca and La Finca.  Who will tell them?”

Indeed, who will tell them?

UIM Aviation supports the ministry of Mexican missionaries

June 27, 2009 by UIM Aviation Admin  
Filed under people

beautiful_feet_article350x200BEAUTIFUL ARE THE FEET

Rounding the last cliff in the heart of a narrow Mexican valley on July 17, only two or three hundred feet off the ground, Wolfgang Grotendiek set the flaps and prepared to land. The airstrip, looking alarmingly narrow and short, came up at a rush, and the wheels crunched the ground with a jerk. Trees and shrubbery flew by, and just when it looked like the runway was running out, he crested a hill and rolled easily down the rest of the airstrip.

Stepping out of the aircraft at Palmarito is like going back in time. The mountains feel vast—and very, very quiet. Even a donkey’s bray, rooster’s crow or dog’s bark hardly penetrates the silence.

People quickly appeared on the airstrip to greet the missionaries. They greeted their host with the customary abrazo and followed him down the narrow path to the simple white-washed house where they had arranged for the evening’s meeting.

As they did so, Wolfgang took off to pick up a second group of Mexican missionaries and take them to Saucillo, where they would spend the week visiting and teaching in several surrounding communities. The same day a third group, led by Pastor Alfredo Marin from a Baptist Church near the Gulf of California, drove up to Mesa Colorado to minister to a group of 15. He baptized four new believers that week.

beautiful_feet_pastors

Job Sierra flies out to Guarijio villages in the UIM Aviation airplanes, visits the villagers, preaches and teaches all week, then reverses the journey for the trip home.

Who are these men and women who go from village to village preaching the Gospel every month? Years ago, Alfredo Marin was a Bible School student in Guaymas on the Gulf, and Ron Hamilton, an American from Arizona, was their teacher. Hamilton wanted his students to get practical missionary experience, so he began to fund flights to get them into the mountain villages where they could share God’s Word with love and power to people who had no clue of it.

Since that time, about a dozen men and women from various coastal churches have joined the monthly trek. At an age when most men are thinking of slowing down, Job Sierra, for instance, is still trucking six hours from his home up to the mountains every month.  He then flies out to Guarijio villages in the UIM airplanes, visits the villagers, preaches and teaches all week, then reverses the journey for the trip home.

In 25 years these Mexican missionaries have seen about 40 people a year come to know Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior, a considerable cadre of believers by now. But the cadre of believers is not intact. A great many have left their villages—including the best Church leadership potential—because they could not make a living and did not want to be involved in the illegal activities by which others prosper. Hamilton says the path to starting churches in these villages has been “difficult, difficult, difficult.” So, little bands of poor believers are left without leaders and that’s what keeps these committed Mexican missionaries going out. They will not leave the people God has given them as orphans.