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Kelly Jadon

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Hometown Heroes

A news blog about ordinary people making extraordinary contributions to their communities.

Never Give Up Hope

April 17, 2018 Kelly Jadon
The Levenar Family: Left to Right, Tatiana, Joan and Michael

The Levenar Family: Left to Right, Tatiana, Joan and Michael

The Ukraine is a country bordering Russia in Eastern Europe, geographically, the largest country within Europe.  The Ukraine has survived many wars, including German occupation during World Wars 1 and 2. Today it is still at war with Russia, fighting over the Crimean Peninsula regularly makes headlines on evening newscasts. 

Families in the United States adopt children from the Ukraine each year.  Since 1999, 10,847 children have moved to the United States.

Recently, I spoke with Joan and Tatiana Levenar, mother and daughter, about their Ukraine experiences. 

In 2006 Howard and Joan Levenar applied to adopt a child from the Ukraine.  The paperwork was “tough” according to Joan.  The couple had to wait a year afterward to be “invited” to come to the former Soviet Bloc country.

Howard Levenar with Tatiana and Michael, the first day of their adoption.

Howard Levenar with Tatiana and Michael, the first day of their adoption.

When Joan and Howard arrived, they were allowed to look at books with children’s photos in an orphanage.  The first picture Joan saw was Tatiana’s, who was ten years old.  On the back was her younger brother’s picture, Michael, aged five, who was living in a separate orphanage.

Tatiana was called by the head administrator, a rough woman, to meet the Levenars.  “Some people want to adopt you.”   Tatiana remembers, “That was the best feeling I ever felt.”

Tatiana’s biological mother was addicted to drugs and alcohol.  She had several children by different men, leaving them in the care of her own mother, Tatiana’s grandmother.  When the grandmother passed away, Tatiana recalls, “My mother was there, but she chose not to keep me.  She gave us to the government.  In the orphanage there were days when I didn’t feel loved, my own family didn’t want me.  I felt like no one wanted me.”

Joan and Howard spent six weeks in the Ukraine.  They went back and forth between orphanages visiting with both Tatiana and Michael.  Wherever they went they were asked to pay in U.S. dollars for every little service, even taking gifts.  In court, Tatiana was required to state whether or not she agreed to go with the Levenars to the United States.  Michael too had to agree. 

Tatiana’s overbearing orphanage caretaker told her, “Don’t go to America; they’re going to kill you there.”

The final ten days of their stay were allotted to the birth mother to be given an opportunity to change her mind and keep the children.  She never did.  But Joan found the experience horrifying stating, “I knew they were mine, but I couldn’t have them.”

The Levenars purchased new clothing for their children, who were required to strip off every article of orphanage wear, even the underwear, leaving it behind for other children.

In 2007 Tatiana and Michael Levenar arrived in their new home. 

Joan warns other prospective parents, “Be prepared for a culture shock.  You don’t appreciate our country until you go overseas.  There wasn’t even running water in the areas outside Kiev.  Water was still being drawn up from a well. Horses were the transportation.  The orphanages had mold all over. We went to the U.S. embassy while in the Ukraine.  I cried when I saw the United States flag.”

Tatiana has excelled.  She is a graduate of Jensen Beach High School.  An all “A” student, she now holds a job and is enrolled at the Police Academy at Indian River State College.  Her goal is to be a Sheriff’s Deputy.

Tatiana is not like other young people her age.  She has known suffering as a child.  Like all the children in orphanages and without permanent homes they were starved for love and attention.  Tatiana has gotten beyond her past.  She says, “I am blessed.”  In her mind, belonging to the Levenars was like “being born again.”  She appreciates and loves her mother and her father, Howard, now deceased.  

To other children, Tatiana says this, “Don’t ever give up hope.”  Tears ran out of her eyes.  Joan’s too.  God heard that little girl’s cry.

Contact Kelly Jadon at:  kfjadon@gmail.com

(C) 2018 Kelly Jadon

In Florida, Jensen Beach, Martin County, Treasure Coast Tags adoption, ukraine
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Committed Public Figure: Gordon Mularski

February 27, 2018 Kelly Jadon
Carol and Gordon Mularski

Carol and Gordon Mularski

No one’s job is easy today, but do you work 50 to 70 hours a week as a public figure?  Do you keep up with constant technological advances, deadlines to meet, people to accommodate, licenses to be renewed and yet create work that’s fresh, innovative, interesting and applicable to a large variety of people?

A church pastor must do all of this and more. Senior Pastor of TC3 (Treasure Coast Community Church) in Jensen Beach, Gordon Mularski, laid it all out across his desk.  He states, “A pastor must be proficient at many things.”  Currently, Pastor Mularski is working on implementing a discipleship program, attending to church building plans, keeping up with the church’s financial responsibilities, connecting his congregation to the community through the Double Dog Dare “Pay It Forward” initiative.  He must also walk his own personal spiritual journey, oversee his staff’s spiritual needs, look over last year’s victories, and prepare a sermon each week that has enough depth for a seasoned believer yet is simple enough for a new listener.

Whew!

He's also planning a church trip to the Holy Land, recording videos for social media, choosing music to correlate with his message and has implemented a financial help program.

A pastor’s work involves a very public life, not just for himself, but also his family.  They are in the limelight, receiving phone calls at all hours and receiving criticism and threats.  They deal with society’s breakdown and cultural shifts toward the occult and crime.  However, a pastor and his family are also normally highly regarded, honored, loved, prayed for, and supported by the church.

When I was a child, my local pastor was a part-time reverend.  He worked another job.  Today’s culture has altered a pastor’s work, making more demands upon him. Approximately 54 percent work more than 55 hours a week, and 18 percent work more than 70 hours a week, causing stress.  Many pastors are depressed, fatigued, and short on money for bills. (Church Leadership)

Yet these men are not quitting in high numbers. 

Most pastors are committed people who have learned how to handle the necessary role of servant-leader.  Pastor Gordon Mularski calls it, “The Art of Pastoring.”  He admits that at times he must disappoint people “at a level they can tolerate.”  He has not and will not sacrifice his family for his work.  Fruit of these comments are his two grown children who do not have issues with the church.

The role of a pastor is not a job, it is a calling; it’s not easy.  Pastors need rest, time away to refresh and renew.  They need vacations with their kids and quiet dinners with their wives.  They need less criticism and more prayer. 

Gordon Mularski has pastored Treasure Coast Community Church for 15 years.  His greatest blessing has been seeing the life-changing work through the power of Jesus in a very real way.  His Atlantic Ocean baptisms often include entire families.  Generational and cultural barriers have been broken too—a former prostitute and a man with a $100,000 Mercedes were baptized the same day.

Not long ago, the congregation was challenged to pray for three people every day for a specific time period.  Shortly afterward Treasure Coast Community Church held a baptism.  A woman told Pastor Mularski, “These three women you baptized are the three names I prayed for daily.  They are my sisters!”

Pastor Mularski emphasizes the need for church leaders to ask God’s favor in everything they do, and to help a congregation understand that they themselves are the church, not a building.  He adds, “Wherever you go, look for opportunities to be used by God, even in bars.  Walk with a sense of mission.” 

Pastoral support is necessary.  The church itself is necessary.  The two come together.  To pull a vibrant church and its leadership out of a community would leave a gaping hole of loss—food pantries, kids’ clubs, teen youth groups and a host of other programs. Each year, 4,000 churches close their doors.  Those communities become dimmer. Darker.

Keep the lights on in your community.  Support your pastor as he stays and keeps a commitment to his calling as Gordon Mularski has. As you do, you support your church. Its presence is significant.

If you’d like to reach Gordon Mularski or for more information about Treasure Coast Community Church, contact: 772.334.3999;  email:  info@tc3.org

Contact Kelly Jadon: kfjadon@gmail.com

(C) 2018 Kelly Jadon

In Florida, Jensen Beach, Martin County, Treasure Coast Tags tc3, treasure coast community church, jensen beach, gordon mularski, pastor
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