Tag Archives: Rivermont Presbyterian Church

Father and Son Get New Home

30 Jun

Titus Back (left) receives the key to his new home from Rivermont Presbyterian Church volunteer Bill Honeycutt, as Tommy Back looks on.

This week Tommy Back and his son Titus will have something very special to celebrate – the completion of their new Habitat for Humanity Home, funded and built by members of Rivermont Presbyterian church.

With a grown son, Tommy Back thought his child raising years were behind him, until a girlfriend said she was pregnant with his child.  “I was a little old to have another kid, but I said I’d do the right thing,” he said.  Tommy settled into the role of an excited expectant father, and was in the delivery room for the birth.  Tommy was in for a shock. While both he and the mother were Caucasian, the child was bi-racial.  The baby boy was clearly not his child biologically, but that didn’t matter to Tommy – he felt a connection to the baby and wanted to provide for his care, regardless of what others might think.

Caring for Titus would take Tommy on a journey worthy of a screen play.  Titus’ mother became entangled in a criminal situation, was convicted and received a long prison sentence.  Child Protective Services then stepped in and made Titus a ward of the state.  While Tommy had grown to love Titus, and had been supporting him, he had no legal rights because he was not Titus’ biological father or a blood relative.

Tommy Back (center) with volunteers from Rivermont Presbyterian Church who built his home.

Tommy decided that what his family felt for Titus had nothing to do with biology.  Knowing that Titus faced growing up in the foster care system, Tommy took action.  First, he was married to Titus’s mother, the he legally adopted Titus, and then he divorced her.  By taking these steps, the direction of Titus’ future was changed.

Raising Titus is truly a family affair - Tommy receives help from his mother, sister, son and even ex-wife, Darlene (mother of Tommy’s eldest son).  “We just love this little guy,” says Darlene on a recent visit to the Habitat.  “He is very smart,” says Tommy.  “I am very proud of Titus and his work in school. He is a very good speller; he gets perfect scores on most of his tests.”

Tommy is a hard worker with a great attitude, according to volunteers from Rivermont Presbyterian Church: “He is always busy and willing to do anything to help, from unloading the truck of tools and supplies to cleaning up and reloading the truck at the end of the day. He is really excited about having a new home for he and Titus, making it a joy to work with him on the house.”

Taking care of Titus is one of the driving motivations of Tommy’s life.  By entering the Habitat for Humanity program, Tommy is working to provide a home where they can be safe and sound.  “We are both tickled to death,” says Tommy.  “We are excited to one day have our own home, our own rooms and our own yard.”

“Rivermont Presbyterian Church has been a faithful supporter of Habitat for Humanity of Greater Chattanooga over the years,” says Pete Palmer, Habitat’s executive director.  “Whether through weekly service on the construction site, or in financial support of home construction, they are an important part of Habitat’s work in our community.”

Homeowners around Tommy Back's new home benefitted from a repair and clean-up projects conducted by Lee University Students in partnership with Front Porch Alliance.

Tommy’s new neighbors have something to celebrate as well – many of their homes received a “brush with faith” as students from Lee University painted, planted flowers, and did minor exterior home repairs earlier this spring.   “We are grateful to Front Porch Alliance and their volunteers,” says Pete Palmer, Habitat’s executive director.  “Their work made a visible impact in the surrounding community.  It is a great example of the impact that can be made when organizations with similar goals work together.  We hope to partner with additional groups to include similar efforts alongside future house builds.”

From War, to Exile, to Safe Harbor in Chattanooga

17 Mar

It has been a long journey for Santo and Mary Majok Takfiny from Sudan to Egypt, and then to Chattanooga. Thanks to Rivermont Presbyterian Church, Mary and Santo’s dream of a new home for their family will start to come to life today as construction started on their new Habitat for Humanity home.   This is the 15th home funded  by Rivermont  Presbyterian, and one of hundreds that church volunteers have helped build here through weekly service on the jobsite.

Mary (left) with Connie O'Neal, Habitat's Director of Family Services at the site for Mary's home.

Mary met Santo Takfiny under frightening circumstances. They had both fled violence in the Sudan, losing family and friends. “When I was twenty-two,” explains Mary, “they bombed the city and my father was killed.” Disheveled and lost, it took 20 days on foot for her and her four children, Aleza, Cicilia, Samuel and Patros to reach Egypt.

Mary had no relations or contacts in Egypt, and found the area to be hostile; Sudanese people were not welcomed in Egyptian culture.  Mary yearned to reunite with her family and return to her home, but did not know where they were, and it was not safe to return.  Grateful to be alive, she resigned herself to make the most of God’s blessings.  It was then she met Santo – soon the two were married.

Mary and Santo

“We spent the next five years in Egypt,” says Mary.  They struggled in the country filled with refugees.   Finally, their prayers were answered by an opportunity to start a new life in America.  In March of 2005, Mary and her four children arrived in Chattanooga.   Because of paperwork issues, Santo could not accompany them. Mary was pregnant and ill prepared to provide for her family alone.

Bob Reid and other Rivermont Presbyterian volunteers begin work on the Takfiny family's new home.

Once again, Mary found herself in a predicament where she feared for the well-being of her children – their first home in America was in a housing project.

She was not prepared for her new environment. There was disrespect from neighbors, fights, drug selling and even shootings.  “I didn’t know English,” explains Mary. “It was difficult to communicate; it led to several problems with some of the residents. We were very worried.”  Mary missed her husband and felt she needed his protection, but realized she was the only person her children had in this country.  Mary decided that her family’s plight in Sudan was much worse than anything she could experience or imagine in America, and set about to make a good life for all of her children, which now included Makur, born in June 2005.

Mary studied hard to learn English and get a job.  Being loquacious and friendly she soon made friends.  She soaked up all of the information she could and soon learned about the Housing Choice Voucher Program.  She applied to participate in the program and was able to move her family to a better environment.

Mary never forgot the husband she left behind.  She yearned for him to join his family and meet the son he had never seen.  She worked with Bridge Refugee Services and faithfully followed their instructions until Santo arrived in October, 2006.

Santo, a very quiet and easy-going person, the opposite of his outgoing and talkative wife, eased into his new surroundings and found work.  Shortly after his arrival Mary became pregnant with the couple’s youngest child, Marwell.

The Takfiny Family

Santo met several people while working at American Plastics, but one stood out because of his broad smile and kind manner. The fact he was a fellow Sudanese made things even better.  Santo and Baja Dalla became fast friends.  It is through Baja (Habitat partner family for the 2008 Southside Community House) that Santo learned about Habitat for Humanity and the possibility of owning a home.

Mary and Santo freely admit life continues to be a struggle with five children, (Aleza, the oldest has moved away and started her on family), cultural differences, tough economic times, a language barrier and a blended family.  “We try to make the most of the blessings we have every day; I thank God,” Mary says. “He has saved the lives of all my children, my husband and me and now he is going to bless us with a home of our own.”

“Rivermont Presbyterian Church has faithfully supported Habitat’s work here for many years,” says Pete Palmer, Executive Director of Habitat for Humanity of Greater Chattanooga.  “This is the 15th house funded by their congregation, not to mention all the homes that their volunteers have helped build through weekly service.  We are truly grateful for their partnership in support of Mary and Santo and their children, and for their willingness to commit their time and resources to bless others!”

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