Persons from the deaf community, sign language interpreters and delegates from Caracas, Venezuela, take part during the East Venezuela Union’s first Possibility Ministies congress held on Aug. 31, 2024. The more than 120 in attendance spent a day listening to seminars and presentations on how to better connect and engage with the deaf and hearing impaired across the local fields in the union territory. [Photo: Yulianny Devis]

Event draws the Deaf and Adventist leaders together for reflection, training, and inspiration.

September 24, 2024 | Caracas, Venezuela | Steven’s Rosado and Inter-American Division News

Under the theme, “All in Mission,” the East Venezuela Union Mission (EAVU) held its first conference for the Deaf in the church regional headquarters auditorium in Caracas, August 31, 2024.

More than 120 people attended the event hosted by Rocío de Chacón, director of the EAVU possibility ministries. Among them were 75 members of the deaf and the hearing-impaired community, Venezuelan Sign Language interpreters, and delegates from the local fields and Venezuela Adventist University Institute (IUNAV), who gathered with four main goals, de Chacón said.

Rocío de Chacón (left), possibility ministries director, and Pastor Luis Pareces (third from left), president of of the East Venezuela Union, stand next to a couple who work with bible studies and small groups for the deaf in the eastern part of Venezuela. [Photo: Yulianny Devis]

“This conference is focused on two areas: serving members of the Deaf and the hearing-impaired community and our leaders serving in Adventist Ministries to the Deaf,” Chacón explained. “At the same time, we sought to open a space for our deaf brothers and sisters to meet, interact, and praise together,” she added. “Finally, our goal is to strengthen their faith and belief in the Adventist faith.”

Similarly, Chacón shared that organizers want to train the leaders of the Adventist ministry to the deaf, so they are better acquainted with the hearing-impaired culture in a church setting. “It is extremely important to handle this to act in a respectful way,” she said, “and we want to also provide basic and practical strategies that they can take to their churches and use in their communities.”

Members of a sign language choir perform a special number for the hearing impaired during the a mini concert session during the event. [Photo: Yulianny Devis]

Speakers at the event presented on topics such as “The Devotional Life of the Believer,” “Reverence,” “Organizational Structure of the Church,” and “Gifts and Talents.” They also presented on “Lies and Biblical Truths,” “Human Relations,” “Deaf Culture,” and “Images Behind the Message.” In addition, participants enjoyed a mini-concert performed by a choir of deaf persons and “Hands of Praise” performers.

Also, during the program, broadcast on the union’s YouTube channel, participants witnessed the baptism of a member of the Deaf community, while other members received certificates of completed Bible studies. Likewise, leaders honored several people for their outstanding evangelistic contribution on behalf of deaf persons.

There are approximately 108,000 deaf persons in Venezuela, which amounts to 0.4 percent of the total population, according to the latest 2011 National Census of the National Institute of Statistics (INE).

Rocío de Chacón (left), possibility ministries director of the East Venezuela Union stands with a member of the deaf community in Caracas, as she helds her certificate for completing bible studies. Photo: Yulianny Devis]

The EAVU has only one bicultural church exclusively for deaf persons located in the city of Caracas. Unfortunately, there are no statistics on how many deaf members are currently in the union territory.

Jonathan Marcano, a pastor who attended the event as a delegate, emphasized that in the context of the need to reach the deaf, the training provided is key. “Knowing that something is being done to train us and get us involved in this mission is exciting and fills me with joy,” he said. “Reaching this community involves a lot of effort on our part; we are the ones who have to prepare ourselves, learn how to communicate in their language, learn about their communication system, to extend to them a clear message that might reach their hearts.”

Marcano also called on other Adventist members to join him and others in this effort. “I invite you to acquire the knowledge, the capacities, and skills,” he said. “God calls, God empowers, so that every day there might be fewer people ignored and excluded, not knowing about the beautiful message that we must preach to every tongue, tribe, and nation.”

A member of the deaf community gives thumbs up after being baptized during the congress event on Aug. 31, 2024. [Photo: Yulianny Devis]

On the same note, Silvia Goncalvez, advisor to the union’s possibility ministries and Venezuelan Sign Language interpreter, said she felt happy to participate in the event. “I consider it an honor the fact that God has chosen us to take the message of the gospel to the hearing impaired,” said Goncalvez. “An event such as this helps them to understand that the Seventh-day Adventist Church is a church of inclusion and accessibility, just as Jesus was close, while he was on this earth, to people with disabilities.”

One of Goncalvez’s important tasks is training deaf persons so they are ready to join the labor force. She works hard to opening employment opportunities to people who would normally be rejected because of their condition. “It’s a sort of ant job,” she said as her eyes sparkled with excitement.

Pastor and Psychologist Daniel Fonseca, together with his wife, a lawyer and member of the Sinaí Gutiérrez deaf community and serving at the Adventist University, said that their experience at the event “was unforgettable, because we never imagined seeing such a large community of deaf people and leaders committed to their individual spiritual formation.”

The group of deaf and hearing-impaired pose with church leaders at the end of the East Venezuela Union’s Possibility Ministries Congress event held in Caracas, Venzuala, on Aug. 31, 2024. [Photo: Yulianny Devis]

Similarly, the Fonsecas emphasized that university serves all students with special needs. One of these ways of showing support, they said, is the Mephibosheth Project, where students from different programs at IUNAV receive instruction in Venezuelan Sign Language. Around 15 students are currently involved in the project.

Although initiatives to serve the hearing impaired started in the region more than 10 years ago, it is the first time that there has been such a solid movement in the Union territory, event organizers said.

At the end of the event, leaders of the possibility ministries committed to continue providing training so that more people and local churches can approach the Deaf throughout the country with God’s message. Regional leaders will meet before the end of the year.

A second conference is now being planned for 2025.

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