Here is Stefanie’s story, as I witnessed it.
Two years ago, I ducked through a narrow doorway into a two-room home in the village of Ceuas, Romania. There was no plumbing inside—just a washbasin near the door and a small stove that worked hard to keep the chill away. Seven children shared those rooms with their parents and grandparents. It was crowded and dim, and yet, in that space, a single bright thing drew my attention: Stefanie’s smile.
She was young, quiet at first, but her face carried a light that seemed to push back the shadows around her. Then I looked down. Her shoes were worn thin—uppers splitting, soles soft and slick from overuse. In Ceuas, the walk to school means dirt paths that turn to mud during the rains, and those thin shoes weren’t enough to keep out the cold or the water. I remember thinking how something as simple as a sturdy pair of athletic shoes could change her days.
Last year, because a generous donor, like you, gave through our Blessing Little Feet with God’s Love campaign, that change arrived.
On distribution day at the local school, you could feel the anticipation. Boxes lined the wall, each labeled with sizes we’d carefully gathered. When Stefanie came in with her mother, she held my gaze with that same luminous smile I remembered. We found her size, opened the box, and she ran her fingers over the new shoes—lightweight, supportive, built to grip the ground when the path turns slick.
She sat, slipped them on, and stood. She rose a little taller, testing the fit, then took a few steps, heel to toe, heel to toe, the way kids do when they can’t quite believe something belongs to them. When she looked up, her smile had widened into something I won’t forget—joy mixed with relief.
The difference showed up immediately in her daily life. On wet mornings, her feet stayed dry. The stones and ruts on the road to school no longer cut or bruised. She missed fewer days when the weather turned bad. She started arriving at school more confident, more comfortable, ready to learn rather than just endure the walk. In the afternoons, she joined other children outside without hesitating, playing longer because her feet didn’t ache. A simple pair of shoes had become a shield—against mud, against sickness, against the discouragement of always being a step behind.
This is what your generosity does. It carries a child safely across a muddy path. It keeps them in the classroom. It lifts their eyes from today’s obstacles toward tomorrow’s possibilities. For Stefanie, one gift—one pair of shoes—became a daily reminder that she is seen and loved by a community far beyond her village.
I met a smile two years ago in a dark, crowded home. Last year, because someone chose to give, I watched that smile step into the light.





