2023/2024 Annual Impact Report - Canada and International

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MCC partner Remember the Poorest Communities (RPC) provides preschool education in Adama, Ethiopia, for 250 orphaned and vulnerable children. RPC’s project increases access to early childhood education, improves literacy and supports the emotional wellbeing of the children. (MCC photo/Nafkot Gebeyehu)

Thank you from MCC Canada's executive director

Your gifts at work around the world

Every year, MCC responds to disasters all around the world, providing emergency relief to people after devastating loss. And because of your continued support, the work doesn’t end there. After immediate needs
are addressed, we work to rebuild and restore what was lost, physically and emotionally. Here are a few updates of what MCC’s work looks like.

International program highlights

Featured relief story

Following the Hamas attacks on Israel last fall, the Israeli military response in Gaza launched one of the direst humanitarian crises of the last year. MCC staff overseeing projects in Gaza say the level of destruction is unfathomable.

Your love in action empowered an immediate response.

Your donations to MCC’s Gaza response allowed our partners to hand out emergency food supplies and bedding for hundreds of displaced and terrified families with no delay. Support has since taken the form of cash transfers and cross-border food shipments when humanitarian aid is permitted to flow.

Your faithful support builds on MCC’s 75 years of working in Palestine and Israel, which has allowed us to grow long-term relationships with our partners. Many MCC partners on the ground in Gaza have continued working, even with their own lives in danger. Their years of experience are essential in times of disaster.

“It’s really only possible to respond in situations like this with trusted, existing partners,” says Sarah Funkhouser, who, together with her husband, Seth Malone, is the MCC representative for Jordan, Palestine and Israel.

Story Location Palestine and IsraelFeb 2024

Story theme list

Featured podcast

In this episode we are joined by Palestinian human rights lawyer and former MCC volunteer, Jonathan Kuttab, as well as Alain Epp Weaver, director of MCC's planning learning and disaster response department, to talk about the current situation and the history that has brought us to this point. MCC has continued to respond through local partners, Seth Malone and Sarah Funkhouser, MCC representatives for Jordan, Palestine and Israel, tell us how.

Jonathan Kuttab

Featured food story

Ovagini Rani (pictured above) has seen five homes washed away into the Jamuna River over her lifetime. Her current home sits on the banks of the Jamuna in Bogura, Bangladesh, and every year she hopes it remains there after the rainy season. Two recent rainy seasons have brought so much flooding that Ovagini has found fish at her doorstep more than once. In those conditions, there’s almost no way to reliably grow anything.

But your generous support has equipped her with a life-changing solution and a creative approach.

MCC partner Maitree Palli Unnayan Sangathon (MPUS) is teaching farmers like Ovagini to think vertically. By building simple triangular frames from bamboo and planting crops that thrive vertically, Ovagini doesn’t have to worry about losing her crops when the river rises. Now, not only can she grow more food for her family, but she can also sell seedlings and compost to her neighbours, increasing the amount of money she can bring in for her family.

Ovagini can make 5,000 takas ($58) most months on top of the 10,000 takas her husband makes from working day labour jobs. Your support has empowered MPUS to innovate, which has enabled Ovagini to support her daughter’s studies at university in Dhaka in ways she couldn’t before.

Barbara

Spotlight: Barbara shares her table

As a Share Your Table donor, Barbara Gagne-Gottel receives update emails with videos, recipes and much more. Barbara has been a Share Your Table donor since March 2021. She is one of more than 600 Canadians helping feed people around the world each month. 

“When I first heard of Share Your Table, immediately I felt it was an extension of my personal desire to practice hospitality.” - Barbara Gagne-Gottel, Quebec

(MCC photo/ Mackenzie Schwarz)

Featured water story

Access to clean water is essential for living a healthy life, something Deepa Mandal Paswan knows firsthand. She’s a farmer in the Jahada district of Nepal and had to rely on her neighbours’ offer to use their wells and pumps so she could access clean, safe water. Without convenient access to clean water at her own home, her children’s health was suffering.

But because you gave to MCC, Deepa and her children now have the security of their own safe water point.

MCC partner SAHAS (Helping Hands) dug a borehole well 100 feet down into fresh, clear groundwater that now provides water that is safe for drinking, cooking and bathing, with no treatment needed. This well is one of 53 under the current project, and Deepa says her life is noticeably better as a result.

“It will be easier for me because I had to go [to my neighbours] and sometimes I had to disturb them,” says Deepa. “I’m very happy about having my personal water point.”

With that barrier removed, her daily life has gotten easier and safer.

Featured health story

Deselech Alemu’s second child, Aberham, was only three months old when he started to get sick. Deselech thought it was probably a result of his being malnourished, but she couldn’t afford to make any changes to his diet. Living on only her husband’s day labour wages — around $2 a day — in Batu, Ethiopia, meant that affording enough food to survive was already a challenge, never mind medicine for a newborn baby.

But because of you, today, her little boy is happier and healthier than ever.

The staff of MCC partner Meserete Kristos Church Development Commission (MKCDC) knows the needs of the community and moms like Deselech who need support the most.

They provide food or cash to handle the most immediate needs but also offer support for breastfeeding, child vaccination and hygiene to keep babies safe and healthy long-term.

Without MKCDC’s help, Deselech would have been totally on her own, with no support. But because you generously gave, she and both her children are healthy and able to stay in their community.

Lil Grove

Spotlight: Lil bakes pies

Lil Grove has been baking pies for MCC relief sales in Toronto for nearly 50 years. She says the total number differs every year, but conservatively, she’s baked more than 10,000 pies over the years to raise money for MCC’s global work.

When asked what’s kept her baking over the years, she said, “It feels really good to share and I believe in MCC.”

Photo courtesy of Lil Grove

Featured migration story

In December 2016, Alsar Zarour and her family were getting off a plane in Calgary, Alberta, feeling cold and alone. They’d fled their home in Syria into Türkiye, where they received news that they’d been sponsored to come to Canada by a group of total strangers.

Alsar remembers looking at her mother and saying, “Who would be waiting for us?”

Meanwhile, a refugee sponsorship group from Calgary’s First Mennonite Church was eagerly awaiting their arrival, excited to show the family their new home.

"When we got into our house that night, I will never forget,” Alsar recalls.
"They asked us if we have everything we need. We didn’t even know we had a house! We had spoons, everything was there, we didn’t need anything. We only came with our clothes."


Today, eight years later, long after the formal sponsorship support ended, Alsar counts many from that group among her closest friends. They visit regularly, sharing the ups and downs of life.

Every year, the incredible generosity of MCC refugee sponsorship groups creates lifelong friendships and changes the lives of hundreds of people who have been forced from their homes.

Featured peace & justice story

MCC has been working in Palestine and Israel for 75 years, but there’s one thing that hasn’t changed in all that time — our commitment to non-violence as the foundation of every step toward peace. For months after the reignited violence in Gaza after October 7, it seemed like our calls for an end to the violence were ignored by the Canadian government.

But you raised your voice and the government listened.

Hundreds of you sent letters or emails to government officials telling them clearly that Canada should be calling for a ceasefire in Gaza and they listened. MCC staff in Ottawa engaged in press conferences and multiple behind-the-scenes meetings with members of multiple political parties. In December, Canada’s government joined the growing group of nations calling for the end to violence in Palestine and Israel and voted in favour of a UN resolution calling for the same.

Peace still hasn’t come to Gaza, but your support of MCC’s advocacy work has brought our calls for peace into the halls of government and made significant steps in Canada’s support for a non- violent end to the conflict in Palestine and Israel.

Mackenzie headshot

Advocacy highlight

In the newly created position of domestic advocacy specialist at MCC’s Peace & Justice Office in Ottawa, Mackenzie Graham focuses on advocating for policies that affect the work of MCC and our partners here in Canada. In this role, he is supporting the work being done in restorative justice, reconciliation between Indigenous and settler peoples and environmental justice in Canada.

(Photo courtesy of Mackenzie Graham)

Featured education story

Less than 30% of women in Afghanistan over age 15 are literate. Decades of conflict and the Taliban’s increasing influence have prevented generations of girls from attending school. Without basic education, many Afghan women can’t earn money or access essential information on their own.

But with your help, women and girls in Afghanistan are finding ways to get the education they need to empower future generations of women.

An MCC partner* in Afghanistan has developed a curriculum to teach skills such as literacy, peacebuilding and child protection to groups of women. Classes run for an hour each day, over three years. It’s all done at great risk, as Taliban laws have banned most education for women across the country.

A staff member* with MCC’s partner says by ensuring women have access to education, the ripple effects go beyond the immediate benefits.

“If you want to educate [the next] generation, you have to educate a woman because, especially in Afghanistan, women are all the time with their children.”

*Names have been withheld for security purposes

Staff at Die Mennonitische Post

Spotlight: Die Post informs

Die Mennonitische Post (The Mennonite Post) is a German-language newspaper produced biweekly by MCC for Low German-speaking communities across the Americas. It is an important literacy tool and source of outside news for thousands of Low German-speaking Mennonites. Produced alongside it is Das Blatt, a German magazine for kids and their teachers. Between both publications, they reach around 30,000 people every month.

Pictured: Staff and supporters at the grand opening of the new office of Die Mennonitische Post (The Mennonite Post) in Steinbach, Manitoba. (MCC photo/Fredy Hiebert)

Featured material resources story

In countries like South Sudan, a girl’s period is one of the biggest barriers she will face in continuing her education. One-time-use pads from stores are prohibitively expensive. Without access to the basic tools to manage their menstrual cycles with dignity, many girls will skip school and even drop out altogether.

But thanks to your support of MCC’s dignity kits, more girls can attend school without worrying about their period. The kits contain several reusable pads, underwear, towels and cleaning supplies, all designed so the pads last for years before needing to be replaced.

With dignity kits, girls are empowered to take charge of their own health and can pursue their education with one less barrier.

Featured thrift story

Grace Bayles knew she wanted to keep her wedding budget low. She’s a regular thrift shopper, so she knew what kinds of deals she could get if she kept her options open. But even she was surprised when she found the perfect wedding dress hanging on a rack, just a week before her wedding, at the MCC Thrift shop in Warman, Saskatchewan.

“I decided so late in the summer to look for another dress, so I only had a few days to find something,” said Grace. “It was magical because it felt like another affirmation that God can provide for us…. It was a sign of his provision.”

Grace and her husband Bob held their wedding last summer in Ontario, and her story is a great reminder that you never know what you may find when you need it at an MCC Thrift shop.

Follow MCC Thrift on Facebook and Instagram

Featured GSL story

Seek, MCC’s newest young adult service program, is a discipleship experience that invites young adults to explore, engage and reflect more deeply on what it means to be an Anabaptist follower of Jesus in a complicated world. Over a period of six months, a small group of 18-to-20- year-olds live and learn together in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, with many opportunities to explore their faith and the beauty of Cambodia.

Madeline Simons recently finished her term with Seek and says the thing she thinks will stay with her most is the sense of community they built together.

“We heard everyone’s own testimonies and stories about their lives — that was really special because you just get to know people on such a deeper level. And you have so much perspective on their life. I think every time I heard someone’s story, I was kind of in awe of what they had to go through, how strong they are now. That was really valuable.”

Pictured: Madeline Simons (far left) and other members of the 2024 Seek cohort in front of the Banteay Srei temple in Siem Reap province during their term in Cambodia. (Photo courtesy of Madeline Simons)

Story Location Manitoba + 1 moreJun 2024

Featured podcast

Insights from Seek co-founder James Alty and Seekers Nadia Thiessen and Audenne Derksen.

The 2024 Seek cohort in front of the Banteay Srey temple in northern Siem Reap province, Cambodia.

Featured donor story

Dan and Erica Block of Winnipeg, Manitoba, have decided to add a gift in their will for MCC.

While they don’t consider themselves wealthy, they recognize that they have something to share.

“We’re among the privileged,” says Dan. “[Leaving a gift in our will is] a marvellous opportunity for us to practice generosity.”

Their legacy gift ensures that the values they supported throughout their lives will continue to make an impact in years to come.

Watch this video where Dan and Erica tell their story.


Where we work

 

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Annual report financial map
45 countries353 partners452 projects
1,150 workers

Canada 
513 MCC workers* 
$14.5 million

*includes MCC Thrift staff

United States 
208 MCC workers 
$14.9 million
Latin America & the Caribbean 
80 MCC workers 
$7.8 million
Europe & the Middle East 
43 MCC workers 
$24.9 million
Africa 
166 MCC workers 
$26.5 million
Asia 
140 MCC workers 
$8.5 million
Multi-Region 
$12.8 million

Finances

The financial information on this page presents the combined operations in Canadian dollars of the MCCs in Canada and the U.S. for the year ended March 31, 2024. More detailed financial and program reporting, as well as complete audited financial statements are available at mcc.org/about/reports.

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Annual report pie chart
Total expenses: $151,725,000
Direct program expenses
$109,911,000
72.44%
Administration
$17,075,000
11.25%
Social enterprise
$15,378,000
10.14%
Fundraising
$9,361,000
6.17%
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Financials bar chart
Total revenue: $186,523,000*
Donations
$82,159,000
Thrift
$39,565,000
Government grants
$20,282,000
Material resources
$8,429,000
Non-government grants
$8,167,000
Relief sales
$6,499,000
Other sources
$21,422,000

* A gift of capital property of $56.6 million to MCC B.C., managed by HyLand Properties, is excluded from the above graph to make financials comparable year-over-year. Read more about HyLand and this legacy gift.

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