Youth's church groups spends portion of summer vacation on mission trip

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Members attending the mission trip in June were, front row, left to right: Adeana Burger, Tyler Hammer, Whitney Munro, Emylyn Wright, Claire Rypkema, Zoey Nelson, Ashley Denton, Grace Nelson, Blake Wellington, Jonea Dalberg, and Shane Dalberg. Back row: Nancy Crandall, Matthew Crandall, Kip Crandall, Kelsey Pudlas, Carly Stephens, Emma Crandall, Derek Stienmetz, Sarah Scott, Ricky Greenwood, Dave Saam, and Holly Funke. Photo supplied
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Several local youths spent a week of their summer vacation helping a Native American reservation in need.

A group of 18 youth and 4 adults with the Oregon United Methodist Church, traveled to Lake Traverse, South Dakota, and spent June 23 to June 30 helping that community.

The group teamed up with members from a Colorado Presbyterian church, a Catholic church from the Racine-Kenosha Wisconsin area, and a Methodist church from Eau Claire, Wisconsin in order to help Native Americans who live in the area.

“It was a great way for us to grow as a church group,” said Oregon United Methodist Church member Nancy Crandall, who attended the trip.

Derek Stienmetz, a sophomore at Oregon High School, was one of 18 youths that took part in the trip.

"It was life-changing because I helped people and I got to see how it impacted their life," said Stienmetz.

One site in need of work was St. John’s Lutheran Church. Volunteers hauled garbage to a dump in order to clear out the inside of the church.

The drywall was torn down and then the walls were repainted, along with a picnic table outside.

Others helped with children at the West Side Elementary summer school program, where workers helped with activities such as roller-skating and art projects.

A group also helped with a kid’s club that was open to all local children. They organized games, arts and crafts, skits, songs, and stories that were themed around a Bible story while also taking the kids to a local park.

Groups of people also took time to volunteer at a local nursing home, daycare center, and with assisted living, and worked on a local one-room schoolhouse from 1908 that needed to be scraped on the outside and repainted.

During the evenings, all 70 members of the different churches gathered to worship at their camp in Sisseton, South Dakota. This was followed by church group time, where each church group met and were able to spend time together.

There was also time for sightseeing and learning during the mission trip.

Oregon church members made a stop to Sioux Falls, South Dakota, where they learned about the history of the falls and were able to eat breakfast at a restaurant overlooking the falls.

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