2022/2023 Annual Impact Report - Manitoba

Thank you from MCC Manitoba's executive director

Come, all you who are thirsty, come to the waters; and you who have no money, come, buy and eat! - Isaiah 55:1a New International Version (NIV)

 

The words of the biblical prophet call the community to a new reality; one where justice is done, where basic human needs are met, where the essentials of life are available to everyone. It’s that same vision embedded in the prayer that Jesus taught us to pray; that God’s will be done on earth, as it is in heaven.

Unfortunately, that is not the world we find ourselves living in today. In our home, Manitoba, many Indigenous peoples live without potable water or culturally appropriate education. Newcomers arrive, traumatized by the forces of their displacement, longing for hospitality that heals. Oppressed and marginalized peoples — women, racialized persons, children — long to buy
without price or cost.

These are the contexts in which readers of this report — churches, supporters, volunteers, alumni, local partners and staff — join to answer Isaiah’s prophetic call with all who come alongside this work: you are the hands and feet of God across Manitoba and the globe. Thank you!

MCCM gives thanks for many years and blessings on Plaza Drive and Henderson Highway. Now, MCCM prayerfully anticipates many new blessings,
experiences and friendships in its new home at 140 Bannatyne Ave. We trust God to guide our steps for many years to come in this place where it is our purpose to share God’s love and compassion for all, in the name of Christ.

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Headshot of Darryl

Thanks be to God and to each one of you, in Christ Jesus.

Darryl Loewen
Executive director, MCC Manitoba

 

Migration & Resettlement highlight

Since 2016, the Boissevain Resettlement Committee (BRC) has worked to find a home for a number of refugee families from around the world a home in the small community of 1,500. When reflecting on how newcomers, many of them from Eritrea, have impacted everyday life in Boissevain, Heather Goertzen remembered a moment from a recent potluck that illustrated the mutual change she’s experienced.

“My daughter is almost seven,” said Goertzen, co-chair of the BRC. “And I watched her walk right to the injera (a spongy flatbread staple in eastern Africa) and all the spicy sauces, while one of the Eritrean girls around the same age walked past that whole section, right to the pizza.”

Goertzen says that at first the committee was comfortable having more formalized, defined roles, but that over time, it’s evolved to really feel like an organic, community effort.

“When we started, we had very organized roles — this is who we call for transportation, this is who we call for paperwork,” she says. “But now there’s, I believe, seven Eritrean households in our little community and we’re very decentralized. There’s one family with two little girls and they live in a duplex, and they’re neighbours with a retired couple. Well, whose door do you think is getting knocked on a billion times a day because Grandpa Jake and Grandma
Lois are right there, right? Nobody’s organizing that, those relationships are growing naturally and taking on roles of their own, which is really fun.”

And it’s not just members of the BRC that are making those connections. Goertzen remembers a time when a newcomer mother was concerned that her young boys weren’t making quick progress reading in English. Goertzen shared the mother’s concern at her church and a retired resource teacher offered to visit the boys twice a week to help them with their reading. There
are too many times to count how her neighbours have been part of the process like that she says.

 

Indigenous Neighbours highlight

In Manitoba, more than 97% of our electricity is hydroelectric. And while hydro power is touted as clean and renewable, there’s been a long history of displacement of Indigenous communities by the dams needed to generate the power.

MCC has been part of advocating for hydro-related justice since the 1970s. Today that advocacy is a partnership with the Interfaith Council on Hydropower (ICH), following the lead of Indigenous friends and partners like Ellen Cook whose lives and communities have been greatly affected by hydro.

“Damage to the earth damages us — our lifeways, food and economy. It hurts us spiritually, emotionally and even physically,” says Cook. “It breaks my heart whenever I see one tree taken down by the flooding and ongoing water fluctuations from these dams. So, protecting the environment and truly listening to our knowledge is key to respecting Indigenous rights.”

Your support continues to empower MCC to build relationships of healing, friendship and reconciliation between Indigenous and settler peoples.

We are all treaty people

We Are All Treaty People is an annual event, where settlers and newcomers join together with Indigenous People in celebrating and honoring the Treaty commitment to share the land together in a good way.

“150 years ago we signed that treaty to welcome people here… we welcomed you with open arms into relationship…That relationship we had 150 years ago is very much alive today,” said Anishinaabe Elder Harry Bone.

 

Abuse Response & Prevention highlight

The work of MCC Manitoba’s abuse response and prevention team is not easy, but it is incredibly important.

Val Hiebert, program co-coordinator, has taught about abuse academically for 20 years in Manitoba, educating students on the complexities of the systemic and insidious nature of abuse. She’s joined in this work by Jaymie Friesen, and together they speak to pastors and church staff about the often-ignored

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A headshot of Jaymie Friesen

 realities of abuse in the church and what allows it to go on.

“Almost all pastors have had experiences of abuse within their congregations.

 And they’re often not trained to recognize how much internal power everyone grants the pastor,” says Hiebert. “They’re usually overworked and overtired and supposed to be everything to everybody. Whatever their training background is doesn’t typically equip them well to deal with abuse, to help them to understand the complexities of domestic violence.”

Your generous support is what allows this team to continue this invaluable work with churches in Manitoba.

“As a Christian community, what we really want to bring attention to is the people who have been harmed, what are they needing?” says Friesen. “Whose responsibility is it to meet those needs? That’s the restorative justice piece of it.”

 

Material Resources highlight

On a crisp evening in November, the youth group at McIvor Avenue Mennonite Brethren Church were ready to go. More than 20 relief kits were packed in the blink of an eye, starting MCC’s Buckets of thanks campaign of with a bang.

“It’s a cool way to integrate both the older generation and the younger generation in service,” says Mikayla Doerksen, the church’s youth pastor.

In total, eight churches packed 378 relief kits for Buckets of Thanks last year, allowing MCC to provide relief in Ukraine, Cuba, Jordan, Zambia and five other countries.

Allison Penner, 13, was happy to see her congregation coming together the way it did, citing Luke 3:11 (“Anyone who has two shirts should share with the one who has none, and anyone who has food should do the same.”) and adding, “Helping people is not a question.”

This year, MCC provided 32,285 relief kits to people in need in nine countries — all because of grassroots support like the kind provided by McIvor MB.

 

Community giving highlight

After a two-year pandemic hiatus, Cycle Clear Lake made a triumphant return, and it was clear from the energy and atmosphere that people were excited to be back.

The fundraising event, held in partnership with MCC since 2001, is run by a committee of dedicated volunteers. Last year’s event saw 47 cyclists take to the trail and raise $45,502 for families displaced by violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Joanne Hildebrand, who’s been part of Cycle Clear Lake since it began, says every year feels like a bit like a reunion, but this year was special after a few years off.

“It was familiar faces — ‘Oh, you’re here again, and you’re here again, and you’re still here!’ A good feeling,” said Hildebrand. “It was very upbeat, and to have it end with such a high amount of money raised was sort of the crowning glory.”

A man and woman talking a selfie photo

Legacy giving profile

 

When Jonathan and Liana Toews retired, they decided to leave a
a legacy gift to MCC in their will. "We hope that the wealth we have accumulated can contribute to a better world in some way, to be part of something bigger than us because life itself is a gift."

 

Financial highlights

These 2022-2023 fiscal year numbers reflect the kindness of compassionate donors, the support of grant programs and the generous contribution of MCC Thrift shops.

For complete audited financial statements, please visit mcc.org/about/canada/manitoba#reports

Expenses

 

 

$13,158,106
Total expenses
$1,509,312
Manitoba program expenses
$9,668,787
International program expenses
$202,316
Fundraising
$1,777,691
Administration
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A pie chart of MCC MB expenses

Revenue

$16,059,549
Total revenue
$8,147,757
Donations
$3,377,509
Thrift
$2,515,853
Property transactions
$1,320,257
Other sources
$500,199
Material Resources (in-kind)
$197,974
Grants
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A bar graph of MCC MB's revenue

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