About Me

  Patricia Hammell Kashtock

Aka: Pat Kashtock. Mother of three, wife of one. BA in Social Work and Biblical Studies. Graduate work at Virginia Tech interrupted, then derailed by oldest child’s brain tumor...

My life has not followed the course I planned. But I am not complaining. Pain is to be expected in a world broken apart from its Creator.

The miracle resides in the ability to find joy when least expected...

 

To translate this website into a language other than English, please go to: Google Translate

Go to the third section and paste in the web address. Select "From English" then to which language you want to use.

It isn't a perfect solution, but you can get the main points covered in a basic way.

Search
Add to Favorites
Links
Articles and Entries
Privacy

I respect the privacy of my readers. Your email address will never be displayed. The last thing any of us want is SPAM.

But if you do provide your URL when you leave a comment, that will be displayed. That way other readers can visit your site. If for some reason you want me to visit your website but do not want your URL published, please use the Contact link on the left. It will provide you with a form to do so.

Blessings,

Pat

For What It's Worth

Each life is a journey. The voices of many guides try to direct us, saying, “This is the path – walk in it!” Yet each one leads in a different direction.

I believe only one Voice can be true. That Voice will lead us in ways most unexpected, into worlds yet undiscovered. It will lead us up the hill, around the river and through the forest. And sometimes, it will lead without mercy.

Or so it seems.

I have made listening for that Voice and following it, my life’s quest. I will share some of what I have heard that Voice say with you. But I am not in the business of telling people how to think or what to believe. Each has to decide for himself. Only you can decide if you find the truth of the Voice in these words. And only you can decide how much it is worth to know the Voice, and follow.

But for me, it is worth the whole world.

And then some…

Login
Technorati Ping

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Entries in South Asia (1)

Thursday
Jun132013

Rescue from the Kilns

273 people. 273 slaves. 273 men, women, and children who had been robbed of their lives were forced to do hard labor every day for up to 17 or 20 hours, seven days a week. Never allowed a break. Never allowed to leave.

 273 people were freed Monday evening as we sat in the 

 training session of IJM's advocacy summit through the desperation of one official from Chennai, India when she learned of their entrapment. Originally she understood there to be 32 workers enslaved and reached out to IJM to help free them. When they went in, they found two brick kilns owned by the same remorseless man, and not 32, but 273 slaves begging to be set free.

 


Please tell me: how can we turn deaf ears to the millions of people in the same straights?
Tell me.....I want to know.