Washington native eyeing 2009 mission to Nicaragua
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Manna Project sending Eddings to teach
By CLAUD HODGES
Newsroom Manager
Josh Eddings wants to make a difference, and he has found an avenue to do just that.
Eddings, a native of Washington, started a chapter of the Manna Project on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Wilmington, where he earned a bachelor’s degree with a double major in Spanish and international business.
Bonnie and Dana Eddings of Washington are his parents.
He started the formation of the UNC-Wilmington group in 2006. After he met all of the national organization’s requirements to establish a chapter, it was approved and set up to begin operating in 2007.
“I had to drag all of my friends to the first meeting the first year,” Eddings said.
However, at the start-up meeting for the second year, 2008, he said about 60 people showed up.
“That was exciting,” he said.
The Manna Project is a nonprofit organization with the mission of helping people in need.
“It is a service organization,” Eddings said. “Basically, what we believe is that underdeveloped communities can become self-sufficient if they are given the right resources and guidance.”
Eddings will leave Jan. 1, 2009, to go to Nicaragua to carry out a mission with the Manna Project. He will return to the United States in late October 2009.
He is going to coach soccer and baseball. In addition, he will teach English to teenagers and adults in their 20s.
“They want to learn,” he said. “They come to class early and do their homework.”
Eddings has been to Nicaragua several times before on similar missions.
However, he said, this mission is going to be the longest period of time he will have spent in the country.
“When we get an outstanding student in our work, we let them take over,” he said. “We will then fade out of the picture and move on to another mission.”
Eddings will be residing just outside of Managua, Nicaragua’s capital, with a group of other Manna Project members who will be assigned to other missions.
They might be involved in some health-care mission or the teaching of creative arts, he said.
“I like the work,” Eddings said. “It is like I am investing in people and relationships.”
Eddings is a volunteer for this 10-month mission.
However, he is planning to obtain a paid position with the organization when he returns to the United States.
“I’m going to transition into a paid position with the Manna Project where I will be a campus liaison for the nonprofit,” Eddings said.
His responsibilities in that position will be to work with the registered campus chapters of the Manna Project.
By CLAUD HODGES
Newsroom Manager
Josh Eddings wants to make a difference, and he has found an avenue to do just that.
Eddings, a native of Washington, started a chapter of the Manna Project on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Wilmington, where he earned a bachelor’s degree with a double major in Spanish and international business.
Bonnie and Dana Eddings of Washington are his parents.
He started the formation of the UNC-Wilmington group in 2006. After he met all of the national organization’s requirements to establish a chapter, it was approved and set up to begin operating in 2007.
“I had to drag all of my friends to the first meeting the first year,” Eddings said.
However, at the start-up meeting for the second year, 2008, he said about 60 people showed up.
“That was exciting,” he said.
The Manna Project is a nonprofit organization with the mission of helping people in need.
“It is a service organization,” Eddings said. “Basically, what we believe is that underdeveloped communities can become self-sufficient if they are given the right resources and guidance.”
Eddings will leave Jan. 1, 2009, to go to Nicaragua to carry out a mission with the Manna Project. He will return to the United States in late October 2009.
He is going to coach soccer and baseball. In addition, he will teach English to teenagers and adults in their 20s.
“They want to learn,” he said. “They come to class early and do their homework.”
Eddings has been to Nicaragua several times before on similar missions.
However, he said, this mission is going to be the longest period of time he will have spent in the country.
“When we get an outstanding student in our work, we let them take over,” he said. “We will then fade out of the picture and move on to another mission.”
Eddings will be residing just outside of Managua, Nicaragua’s capital, with a group of other Manna Project members who will be assigned to other missions.
They might be involved in some health-care mission or the teaching of creative arts, he said.
“I like the work,” Eddings said. “It is like I am investing in people and relationships.”
Eddings is a volunteer for this 10-month mission.
However, he is planning to obtain a paid position with the organization when he returns to the United States.
“I’m going to transition into a paid position with the Manna Project where I will be a campus liaison for the nonprofit,” Eddings said.
His responsibilities in that position will be to work with the registered campus chapters of the Manna Project.
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