
Group of families who participated in the recent Christmas project organized by Maranatha Volunteers International in India. [Photo: Maranatha Volunteers International]
They celebrated the holidays by laying block and assisting people in need.
January 26, 2026 | California, United States | Maranatha Volunteers International
Many families observed the recent holiday season with long-held traditions. And others, such as those on Maranatha Volunteers International’s latest family project in India, celebrated with a bit more originality. On this trip 53 volunteers, including seven family groups, visited the Irvine Adventist English School from December 19 to January 1, where they laid the block walls of a new dormitory. Irvine is the only Seventh-day Adventist school in its region, and a new dormitory will help house students from greater distances.

As usual, the project helped to deepen old friendships and develop new ones, organizers said. [Photo: Maranatha Volunteers International]
With an age range of 11-90, this volunteer group embodied a theme that’s common among Maranatha’s family projects: Service has no age restrictions. In some cases three generations worked side by side, layering mortar and bricks for Irvine’s new dorm. “They seemed to catch on to bricklaying pretty quickly,” Godfrey said. “They finished nearly all of the walls assigned to them, and then our in-country construction crew helped us add the remaining brick and worked with volunteers to install the roof.”

Volunteer medical professionals teamed up with local health-care providers to operate a medical and dental clinic for local residents, seeing 369 patients. [Photo: Maranatha Volunteers International]

The team also fostered the spirit of the holidays by assembling gift bags for Irvine students and assisting the school with outreach to families in need. [Photo: Maranatha Volunteers International]
Maranatha’s first project in India was in 1988. But the big push for mission trips to India began in 1998, when Maranatha offices opened in the country. Since then, Maranatha has steadily worked with the Seventh-day Adventist Church in India to complete more than 3,000 projects.
The original version of this story was posted by Maranatha Volunteers International, a supporting ministry that is not part of the corporate Seventh-day Adventist Church.