The Habitat
partnership is a hand up
By Danna Webster, KP News
Two more Habitat for
Humanity families are coming to the Key Peninsula
community and the only thing they had in common before the
Habitat partnership was their grit and determination to
have a better life.
The groundbreaking ceremony
for the Habitat houses was held June 26; first, in Lake of
the Woods for the Manibusan family home; and second, at
Palmer Lake for Bonnie Malone’s family home.
The Manibusans left their
family, friends and culture in Guam and came to the United
States determined to find better education for their four
children and better employment for the father, Gerald.
“Schooling in Guam is not
really a priority. No buses; no textbooks,” Gerald
Manibusan explains. His son asked if it was possible to go
to the States.
“Are you sure you want to
do this?” Manibusan asked him. His son was sure. The
decision was made that night and he told his wife,
Juanita. He gave a two-week notice at work and left in
January.
“I thought — my kids are
not happy. I need to do something. I’m a man that takes my
chances. I’m not afraid to give it a try,” Manibusan says.
After two months, his
resolve began to weaken and he called Juanita, homesick
and wanting to return. She told him to try a little
longer.
“I really thank the Lord
above,” Manibusan says, explaining where he got the
strength to stay a little longer. “He helped me a lot… I
talked to him a lot.”
Manibusan got a job and
sent for his family. They settled in Tumwater, paid $650 a
month in rent and acquired a pickup truck. There wasn’t
room in the pickup for all the children and Juanita
established a schedule for shuttling the kids to their
schools. Gerald got a new job for Pierce County in Tacoma.
His work started at 9 a.m. Juanita shuttled him to work at
6 a.m. and returned to Tumwater in time to get all the
kids to school.
Since January, their
vehicles improved (from the pickup, to a four-door sedan,
to a van); employment improved; and now they are building
a house. Some family friends can’t believe what they have
done in less than one year. Juanita tells them, “There’s
so much out there. If you want it, you go out and find
it.”
Juanita says it is not easy
for their teenager, who wants what all teen-agers want.
But the family values are clear, “Our heritage… family
comes first. We make the best of what we have. If we can
have it, we will … concentrate on our own house,” she
says. So far, the house is keeping all the children happy.
It was a long, hard day
when Juanita took her house application to Habitat for
Humanity. She found out about it online and knew it was
her opportunity. That day, she had to “get my kids early;
get all documents ready early; stand in line and pray and
hope they’re going to accept you and that everything is in
order.”
The Manibusans’ family
partner, Pamella Inveen, saw them as they worked on their
application at the Key Center Library. She remembers
noticing them, thinking they were special, and that maybe
they would get a home. “They are a great family,” she says
and expresses her belief about opportunities. “You’re in
charge of your own destiny.”
Which is exactly what
Juanita believes. She tells her children as she sends them
off to school, “I can’t sit there in school with you for
six hours. [It’s up to you] if you decide the right path;
or you don’t.”
The entire family is happy
with the chances they took and the choice they made to
seek new opportunities. They are making plans for their
first barbecue in their new home.
“Every day I thank Habitat
because I know I would never have gotten this opportunity
back home,” Juanita says. “Wow! I’m building my own
house.”
The Malones
Bonnie Malone’s family home
will be in Palmer Lake. Her partner, Angi Hebard, knows
what getting a Habitat home is like from the inside out.
She celebrated her first anniversary in her Habitat home
last November.
“The whole thing is kind of
intimidating,” Hebard says.
“I’m the go-between for you
and Habitat,” she tells Malone recently as they meet at a
coffee shop. She recommends taking lots of pictures and
already has a photo album to give to Malone. “You can
gradually learn how it all goes together. You are going to
meet the most interesting people in this organization.
It’s just awesome,” she tells her.
Bonnie Malone moved from
her hometown near Westport and started a new life in a
half-way house in Tacoma. She says the other women in the
half-way house had such terrible problems that she
realized, “I wasn’t half as bad [off]… but I didn’t have
my kids.” Malone has four children, ages 18, 17, 12 and 4.
Since her move, she has
enrolled at TCC and has three quarters to finish; she has
participated in the TCC work study program for two years.
She now rents a house and has a landlord whom she “loves
to death.” But the rent and the electricity take all the
money she makes.
“Now I’m self-sufficient,”
she says. “I’m almost finished with my school.” Her major
is human services and she wants to work in programs
dedicated to reuniting families. Becoming self-sufficient
is the major change in her life and she credits her
religious faith. “I always have been raised in a church
atmosphere, and I never felt I had a relationship with
God. But now I do. I have a relationship with God today.”
Hebard explains the 500
work hours that Malone must contribute before she can buy
her home. She can work 300 hours building on her own home;
but 200 hours must go for somebody else. That is part of
the partnership with Habitat.
While Hebard’s house was
being built, she lived in Allyn, went to school and
worked. “I would quit work; go there and sweep,” she tells
Malone. The work included picking up nails, sweeping, and
making lots of “L’s” (corner braces).
Both women admit to having
trouble with nails. They can’t figure out how some people
can hammer in a nail in three hits when neither of them
can even count the number of times it takes them to sink
the nail. They agree to a simple truth about the hammering
job: Bend the nail; pull it out; straighten … start again.
Determination will get the job done, they say. Just as
determination made them Habitat families.
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