Terely Harrell: A Heart for the HomelessTerely Harrell has a special heart for the homeless, the cast-off, the foreigner without friends. Because she's been there and can sympathize. Born in Cuba in 1965 during the turbulent years after Castro's takeover, Terely and her family, all Christians, have suffered hardship like few Americans will ever have to experience. In 1962, three years before Terely's birth, Castro closed all flights out of Cuba. In 1963, Terely's parents, Ovidio and Betty Alfaro, managed to apply to leave the country --a long, grueling process with no guarantee of success. In an attempt to keep the promising young architect/contractor in Cuba, the government seized his prosperous construction company, informing Alfaro he could stay as general manager if he wanted. He did not. For the next three years he set his will toward earning freedom for his family, working in cane fields 400 miles from his home and seeing his family only twice during that time. The program was designed to weed out the faint-hearted; Alfaro cut cane 12 hours a day, 365 days a year, earning only 48 cents a day. His life was threatened many times. Working in the fields was not the only hurdle; to be approved, everyone had to be well, no one could have even traffic violations, the family had to have the correct number of children, at the right age, and none able to serve in the military. Due to a shortage of architects, Alfaro was released from the fields early and forced to work for the Communist government. In December, 1970, police informed the family they could leave. At the airport, they were stripped of their luggage and allowed to leave Cuba with only the shirts on their backs. They lost all of their possessions and their loved ones. Alfaro's mother and father died without ever seeing him again; in March of this year, Terely saw her mother's mother for only the third time in nineteen years. When they arrived in Miami, an American missionary recognized them and helped them. The United States government gave them some coats, twenty dollars, and fare to any destination in the U.S. So the family of five, none of whom spoke a word of English, drove to California, where they had friends. They were there two months when an earthquake destroyed their apartment. Discouraged, they moved to Minnesota where snow drifts six feet high greeted them. They moved on to New Jersey, but the weather was still cold and rainy. Finally, they settled in Lakeland, where Alfaro has built a thriving construction company. Her brother Ovi is a West Point cadet. Terely remembers her family's hardships with tears in her eyes. "I appreciate so much my mother and father's courage and sacrifice to give us the life we have today. I know that I am more sensitive to others in need because of my struggles." As Vice President of Women's Fellowship at RTS, Terely is a special friend to the international students, trying in every way to help them succeed in seminary and cope with American life. Husband Fred says, "As one of the librarians, Terely aids confused foreign students in finding their way around the library. I think she identifies with people who are far away from family, friends, and country since she's spent most of her life that way. She is such an asset to my youth ministry because she can zero in on hurting kids and sympathize with them." Scripture tells us that God can take even the worst events and turn them around for good. Terely Harrell's life is one good example, isn't it? |