Kids are diving into Salvation Army summer camps

Jun 7, 2017 | by Ed Covert

Read Andy’s story to see the miraculous work being done

 

[UPDATED July 11, 2017]: Support our summer camps with a little healthy competition! We are part of the Macy's shop for a Cause Charity Challenge. Learn more by following this link, and give what you can to help send kids to camp! We're aiming for the grand prize$100,000, so help us out!

More than 230,000 children went to Salvation Army summer and day camps around the United States in 2016. Our goal is to make each child’s experience meaningful. In short, we hope to make miracles happen. For some, the miracle is simply enjoying the outdoors for the first time. For others, it’s learning a new skill and applying it. For Andy, it was finding a place of stability and love.

Read the story of his miracle as told by a camp director below.

 

Camp changes lives

Sometimes camp is the only port in the storm of life

By Ed Covert

Originally published here by New Frontier Chronicle on June 17, 2013

From the moment Andy stepped off the bus at camp, we knew he would be one to test the boundaries. During his first few days, he quickly moved through the stages of our progressive discipline program. Calls home to his mother for support and trips to my office seemed to have little effect, and so with sad hearts we decided to send Andy home, and called his mother to pick him up.

This is where the story really begins.

That initial call was placed at 9:30 a.m. After numerous follow-up calls, his mother still had not arrived by dinner time.

I finally got her to answer her phone at about 7:30 p.m., only to learn that she was still at the casino and had called Andy’s sister—who was at the boardwalk—telling her that we would be dropping Andy off with her.

So we took Andy to the boardwalk to meet up with his sister. After completing all the necessary ID checks and paperwork, we left Andy in the care of his very unhappy sister.

The following day Andy was put on a plane—unaccompanied—and sent across the country to be picked up by his father…who did not show up. Arrangements were then made for him to be sent back across the country to be picked up by his extremely angry mother.

Upon discovering all this, I called the folks who had sent him to camp and told them that I wanted to have Andy come back to camp for the last session and that we would make it work.

 


 

It did work, and here is the second chapter of the story.

Andy was in Brett’s unit for the last session of camp, and Brett was struggling. Brett had been to camp twice already this summer, and he was clearly just too exhausted to cope with the level of activity and noise—he just wanted to fight his way out of camp and be home where he could rest. Brett and Andy had a couple of dust-ups. After some calls home, we decided that Brett had made it as far as he could for this camp session. We called his mother and arranged for her to pick him up while the other kids were at campfire.

While Brett—who by the way is a really good kid—and I waited for his mom at the gatehouse office, Andy’s counselor approached me and asked me if I could give him a minute. Out of Brett’s earshot, he told me that Andy would like to come say goodbye to Brett. Initially, I thought this was not a good idea, but the Lord had other plans. I said yes after the counselor’s persuasive argument, and he hurried back to the campfire pit to get Andy. When Andy arrived, he knelt down in front of a sad and distraught Brett, and lifted his head so that they would be eye to eye.

I will never forget the depth of compassion, grace and empathy these two boys shared that night. The words of comfort, caring, and courage that Andy offered to Brett where only possible because Andy had experienced the same authentic unconditional love here at camp when he faced a similar circumstance only a week earlier.

Camp makes a difference in kids’ lives. I saw it with my own eyes and felt it deep in my soul as these two boys embraced and said goodbye. God resides where children are free to love and live—that’s camp. That’s where you’ll find me.

To find a camp in your area, please contact your local Salvation Army by using the location search at www.salvationarmyusa.org.

 

Tags: KidsDoing the Most Good


Recent Stories