Muchas Bendiciones from the Cortez Family
The parents of Karla Lorena Cabrera Cortez, one of the students sponsored by our becados program, sent a letter of gratitude to The Least Among Us. It translates as follows:
December 19, 2006
Dear Padre Patricio and the other benefactors of this very important foundation:
Receive special greetings from the Cabrera Cortez family, wishing that in this Christmas the child Jesus and the Virgin Mary pour out abundant blessings on your spiritual works and your labors that benefit those in most need in our dear town of Santo Domingo de Guzmán.
Dear Father, by means of this letter we want to express our most sincere thanks for the most important aid that you have brought and continue to bring to our daughter Karla Lorena in the form of her scholarship that she is able to study for her technical High School degree. We are very grateful to God and to all of you who have made it possible for the youth of our town to prepare themselves academically as future professionals, especially our daughter Karla Lorena.
We are well aware that we are not able to pay back the donors for the sacrifice that they have made so that those in most need can receive such great aid but God Almighty and the Virgin Mary will repay you one hundred times one hundred. We will continue to pray for you the founders and for all the donors who contribute to the foundation and its success.
May God bless you all and may you have a Happy Christmas and a prosperous New Year.
Juan A. Cabrera
Teodora Cortez de Cabrera
Karla Lorena Cabrera Cortez
Karla is in her second year of bachillerato at the Instituto Nacional Jaime Abdul Gutierrez in Sonsonate.
Father Keane encountered Madeline during his July 2006 trip to El Salvador when her mother came to thank Father for TLAU’s supporting Lydia, Madeline’s older sister, through the becados program. She was extremely small for her age, 13 pounds at one year, because
she had a hole in her heart–a ventricular septal defect that could only be treated with surgery. However, because of her family’s poverty, surgery was an impossibility. So Father Keane began talking to parishioners in North Carolina, particularly at St. Mark parish in Wilmington and St. Patrick parish in Fayetteville, and before long he had almost $19,000 from nearly 45 different individuals and even a few children holding a yard sale.
Walter serves as a project overseer for TLAU. He receives solicitations from schools which he relays to me, Leonard, Father Keane, and other TLAU officials over the phone or via email, or he allows me to personally assess the necessity of each solicitant when I travel to El Salvador. When a decision is made, Walter plans the project by drawing up a budget and procuring a blueprint of the future structure. During construction, Walter travels to the location at least several times a week to purchase raw materials, pay for specialized labor and transport, and oversee the quality of the work. It is important to remember that all supplies and materials are purchased directly by Walter and remain property of TLAU until the completion of the project. I am constantly amazed at Walter’s responsibility and meticulous record-keeping, filing hard copies of every receipt of every transaction to show to me personally.