You Are Not Too Young To Make A Difference

Brian Burchik —  November 6, 2012

If you have ever thought that you are too young to make a difference I would challenge you to rethink that assumption. Consider the story of the As We Go Project. 

 

In 2010 a group of four college students taking seriously the phrase, “If you can dream it, you can do it” decided to walk from Milledgeville to Snellville in what has come to be called “The Walk Home”. They took on this arduous journey just to see if it was possible. It seemed such an outlandish idea, but that was the draw of it.

At a screening of the documentary made about this walk a friend asked, “Would you ever consider doing this for a cause?” The answer was yes, but nothing came of it.

In the summer of 2011 a young man named Danny Montenegro was having a conversation with a friend about Danny’s freshman year of college. He described the journey his friends had taken and the friend submitted the idea of Tiny Hands International as a possible cause to pursue. This organization had a project in the works that would build border patrol stations on the border of Nepal and India to help prevent the trafficking of over 10,000 young girls across that border each year.

That fall, The As We Go Project was born. Danny brought the idea to the attention of his friends and a team was assembled to plan the first official As We Go walk. After a semester of planning, the first walk came to fruition during Georgia College and State University’s winter break. Twenty-one walkers, seventy miles, four days.

The group set out from GCSU’s front campus headed to the arches at UGA’s campus in Athens, GA. Three churches from three different denominations hosted the team as they made their way through Eatonton, Madison, and Bishop. Multiple cars stopped to ask what they were doing along with three local papers. A group of friends and family received the tired walkers at the arches four long days after the outset of this journey. Over $2,000 was raised toward the border patrol station project.

The Passion Conference that same December fully funded the border patrol station project, which left the team without their original cause. After everyone returned from summer break, the team reassembled to plan the next walk. It has taken a few months, but next walk is right around the corner. On December 8-11 the second annual As We Go Project walk will take place from Athens to Atlanta.

The reason for the new route is to create a sense of continuity between last year’s walk and this year’s walk. The journey ended in Athens and the task will be taken up where it was laid down last December. The team is walking to Atlanta because they are partnering with Night Light International, which is based in Atlanta, and because of the severity of the sex trade industry in that city.

We want to see sex trafficking end in our own town. This is a call for all of us. If you think you are too young to make something out of nothing, to break down walls that others see as immovable, to bring a dream into reality, you’re wrong. Jesus promised the most abundant life and that is the only life for someone who follows him. If you can dream it, you can do it. Therefore, Go.

Written by: Sean Mooney, As We Go team member

Brian Burchik

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This post was by Brian, a leader seeking to know the "why" behind the "how"