2020 Global Impact Celebration at Ooltewah UMC
“Each face is a person you helped nourish both body and soul.” 🙏🙏🙏
We invite you to come out to the 2020 Global Impact Celebration on March 13-15, at Ooltewah UMC . The weekend will be packed with activities to help you engage in missions. Be sure to stop by the Breakaway Outreach booth to learn more about how the Breakaway global sports ministry and international camps are impacting children and strengthening communities around the world, and how you can get involved. Jimmy will also be speaking at the men’s breakfast on Sunday morning, 8am. Would love to see you there!
Visit our Global Partnerships page to get a glimpse into what we do and where our sports ministry serves around the world.
Conflict Resolution and Anti-Bullying Workshop
With bullying on the rise in U.S. schools and increasingly diverse classrooms and communities, the need for empathy and conflict resolution has never been more important. Each year, more than 3.2 million students are bullied, while an estimated 160,000 students miss school for fear of being bullied.
Bullying hurts everyone. It can cause lifelong anxiety and depression for victims. Others experience thoughts of suicide or self-harm. Bullying also hurts the educational environment by affecting every child’s ability to learn.
Our network is now offering a community resource workshop targeting conflict resolution and anti-bullying measures. This workshop is conducted in multiple sessions by a behavior interventionist with a Masters in Forensic Psychology—a compassionate and resourceful facilitator with a decade worth of experience in managing and organizing teams with youth leadership.
The design of program focuses interaction and skills based. The topics include Family, School, Community Engagement, positive relationships and bullying prevention. The workshop will benefit, not only youth, but adults to provide understanding and put into place strategies for effective youth development.
Key Elements:
Relationships: The workshop is designed for individuals to be interactive towards one another. One key element to consider would be the impact of relationships on students’ environment in context with climate and culture. Another key element to consider is social competence as it connects to bullying prevention and intervention and coping strategies.
Peer Mediation: Peer Mediation, is a way in which students can think through solving problems and in the end finding a resolution for future conflict. It most certainly demonstrates responsibility, ownership and respect.
Problem-solving and Decision Making: Participants learn work to work, communicate and articulate issues and concerns with others, such as, peers and adults.
Leadership Development: Adults have the skills to continue to practice and implement change initiatives for improve program quality.
Contact us for more information about this workshop and how it can be implemented in your context. This is great program for schools, youth community centers, and juvenile centers.
Where Will You Make a Difference in 2020?
Where will you make a difference in 2020? Your impact can be life changing for this generation—and the next—by serving at a Breakaway youth camp this spring/summer. We have missions opportunities for individuals and teams to serve at our day camps in the Chattanooga area, our regional summer camp for at-risk kids near Greenville (Tennessee), and multiple overseas sports camps (Italy, Germany, Northern Ireland, Dominican Republic). Join us in empowering kids through communities of faith, hope, and love. Serve opportunities include being a camp counselor, leading small group Bible discussions, coaching sports, facilitating recreational activities, helping kids with crafts (VBS lessons), leading worship, preparing and serving meals, and much more. Email us for more specific details.
Update: West Africa Baseball Initiative
The 2020 West Africa Baseball Initiative for Ashanti region of Ghana
This project is in commemoratory of the late W.L. White (native of Lindale, GA), who was a longtime partner with Breakaway Outreach (20+ years) and passed on to his heavenly home last October. Our missional focus with this partnership is threefold:
1) To empower vulnerable children with the gospel while building resilience skills through baseball clinics and sports training
2) To train indigenous coaches in West Africa, equipping and resourcing them to be disciplers and mentoring shapers of future generations
3) To strengthen communities by fostering cross-cultural partnerships, creating sustainable youth sports programs, and providing tangible resources for development
🇬🇭 ⚾ West Africa Baseball Initiative
• 207 kids attended our gospel-centered baseball camp
• 11 schools partnered together for this outreach project
• 24 new coaches trained and equipped for sports ministry
We established the foundation for the very first baseball league in Ashanti region of Ghana, commissioning a head baseball coach and a staff of assistants. Coaches will continue to meet monthly for training together and developing multiple youth teams. We believe that God is going to use baseball to empower kids with hope, bring about gospel transformation, raise up next generation leaders, and further His kingdom through this sports ministry for years to come.
This partnership will soon be expanding into Ivory Coast as we continue to train indigenous pastors and coaches for sports outreach to vulnerable children and to use the game of baseball to make disciples of Christ. Thank you for your prayers and financial support which make it all possible.
Learn more about our global initiatives here.
Empower Dominican Orphans with the Ultimate Adventure
*This initiative has been postponed due to the Coronavirus pandemic.
Empowering Orphans
In 2020, we have the opportunity to take our KidVenturez (KV) program to a level we never imagined. Through one of our international partnerships in the Dominican Republic, we are working on a project to give orphans in the DR the ultimate KV experience. For several years, we have sent teams to serve these children by providing VBS and sports programs at the orphanage in Barahona. A few years ago we built a basketball court for the orphanage. Now some of those orphans will have the opportunity to realize something they have only dreamed about—coming to America.
In the summer of 2020, we envision bringing a group of these orphans to the U.S. for the ultimate KV experience. The kids will attend our summer camp near Greenville, attend a MLB Double-A baseball game, visit Dollywood, and see the stunning Smoky Mountains of East Tennessee.
Want to help sponsor one of the orphans? The full scholarship for one child to attend this trip is $925 (includes airfare, lodging, meals, camp scholarship, baseball game, and Dollywood ticket). Other partial gifts that can help collectively reach the scholarship goals are:
- $225 gives an orphan a full week of summer camp
- $75 gives an orphan a full day at Dollywood
- $45 gives an orphan a full day at summer camp
- $25 gives an orphan the Tennessee Smokies baseball experience (ticket, food, souvenir)
SECURE ONLINE GIVING
or mail your gift to:
Breakaway Outreach
P.O. Box 3452
Cleveland, TN 37320
How will your gift empower kids when they return from the U.S.? In the same way that KV has a cycle of redemption domestically, that cycle can be realized internationally as well. Just ask Edwin (pictured below). At 9-years old, Edwin was a homeless Haitian refugee in Barahona when the orphanage took him in. Today he is in his early twenties, serving on staff at the orphanage, and attending the local university. Because others gave him experiences of redemption, he is now giving back to others as a mentor and youth worker. As orphans return to the DR from their TN KidVenturez experience and a dream realized, they will want to give back to others as they continue to grow up as well, because of the tangible ways they have been blessed.
Together, we have the awesome privilege of shaping redemption cycles through KidVenturez and many other Breakaway initiatives. Thank you for making a difference for young people facing hardship!
Every Youth: Tennessee Juvenile Detention Center Outreach
Every Youth: TENNESSEE
Working together to reach every youth in every facility
November 1-2, 2019
ONE GREAT EVENT.
THREE GREAT LOCATIONS:
- Knoxville: November 1 @ 6PM
- Nashville: November 2 @ 9AM
- Memphis: November 2 @ 6 PM
Join the movement to reach every youth in every facility! Giving juvenile justice-involved youth hope and a future.
Contact us for more info about this event or other opportunities to get involved with juvenile detention center ministries in your region.
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80 Youth Discussion Questions
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Youth Discussion Questions
Youth Discussion Questions about life, faith, social issues, and more.
Youth discussion questions to get young people talking in group environments or mentoring relationships.
Read MoreChristmas Outreach: Children affected by homelessness and violence
If you arrived at this page because you are seeking help for relationship abuse, please contact the National Domestic Violence Hotline today at 1-800-799-7233. They are available 24/7/365.
1 in 30 Children Affected by Homelessness
One of the major causes of homelessness for children in the U.S. includes experiences of trauma, especially in the area of domestic violence. According to The National Center on Family Homelessness, there are 2.5 million homeless children in America—one in every 30 children—who go to sleep without a home of their own each year.
Breakaway Outreach partners with churches, agencies, and community volunteers around the U.S. to help provide Christmas shoebox gifts for children affected by domestic violence, homelessness, and transitional living. If you are interested in packing shoebox gifts for kids in your region, CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFO.
More Info About Children Affected by Domestic Violence
The U.S. government’s Child Welfare Information Gateway provides a review of some research about the effects of domestic violence on children. Studies indicate that child witnesses, on average, are more aggressive and fearful and more often suffer from anxiety, depression and other trauma-related symptoms when compared to children who have not witnessed abuse or been abused. Children growing up in violent homes often feel they are responsibile for the abuse and may feel guilty because they think they caused it or because they are unable to stop it. They live with constant anxiety that another beating will occur or that they will be abandoned. They may feel guilty or confused for loving the abuser or getting mad at the victim. Children may be at a higher risk of alcohol or drug abuse, experience cognitive problems or stress-related ailments (headaches, rashes), and have difficulties in school. The Family Violence Prevention Fund offers a good overview of facts related to how children can be affected by domestic violence, and provides many additional resources.
Domestic Violence Statistics
- Every 9 seconds a woman is battered in the United States and one in four women experience domestic violence in their lifetime.
- About four in ten female victims of intimate partner violence lived in households with children under age 12.
- Forty percent of teenage girls age 14 to 17 report knowing someone their age who has been hit or beaten by a boyfriend.
- One in three adolescents in the U.S. is a victim of physical, sexual, emotional or verbal abuse from a dating partner, a figure that far exceeds rates of other types of youth violence.
- Young women between the ages of 16-24 in dating relationships experience the highest rate of domestic violence and sexual assault.
- 15.5 million children in the United States live in families in which partner violence occurred at least once in the past year. Seven million children live in families in which severe partner violence occurred.
- In homes where partner abuse occurs, children are 1,500 times more likely to be abused.
- Boys who witness domestic violence in their own home are three times more likely to become batterers.
- Domestic violence is the number one reason for homelessness among women.
Fall Break Retreat in Cherokee, North Carolina
Our KidVenturez fall break retreat will be in Cherokee, North Carolina, October 11-13. Breakaway kids benefit from historical and educational Cherokee culture during the week: Cherokee Museum, arts and festivities, recreation, etc.
This trip is afforded primarily to underprivileged children in our community. Breakaway Outreach offers camp and retreat scholarships for children of incarcerated parents, economically stressed families, and single parent households. If you are interested in sponsoring a child to attend the Cherokee retreat, the cost is $65 per child.
Learn more about our camps and retreats here.
Cherokee History
What is now Western North Carolina has been part of the homeland of the Cherokee people for untold centuries. Today’s Eastern Band members are direct descendents of those who avoided the Cherokees’ forced removal to Oklahoma in the 1830’s the “Trail of Tears.” Their home today is the 56,000-acre Qualla Boundary in Western North Carolina adjacent to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. There are more than 13,000 enrolled members of the Tribe, over 60% of whom live on the Boundary.
A culture, a people, and a place that’s actually a sovereign nation, Cherokee is located right in the heart of Western North Carolina. It’s also base camp for hiking in the Great Smokies, arts and crafts shopping, native elk herd viewing, hours of fishing fun, and home to a history that spans millennia.