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Author: Subject: Couple sells business in La Jolla to house orphans in Mexico
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[*] posted on 12-22-2010 at 03:21 PM
Couple sells business in La Jolla to house orphans in Mexico


http://lajollalight.com/2010/12/21/couple-sells-business-in-...

By Amy Lynne Bowes
December 21, 2010

Five years ago, local business owners Joe and Esther Valenzuela sold their Fay Avenue store, Spoiled Rotten, and answered a call from God.

They started a nonprofit organization called the Casa Estrella Foundation that rescues abused children who are no longer safe at home with their parents due to stressful conditions.

Casa Estrella currently oversees 16 state-placed girls in their facility in Rosarito, Mexico, which is headed by a foster mom and a foster dad.

“God put in our heart, you want to do it, so get into it. We sold our business (operated from 1998-2005) and dedicated our years in this world to these children,” Joe said.

In 2003, through their church, the Valenzuelas had an opportunity to visit an orphanage in Tijuana. “Esther couldn’t make it because she was sick, but what we saw impacted us so much,” Joe said.

He described the orphanage visited two weeks before Christmas as “having conditions that we wouldn’t even keep our animals in.” There were mats everywhere as sleeping arrangements – even on the kitchen floor. The orphanage had 125 boys and girls, with ages ranging from infancy to 18. The facility had two showers and one toilet for everyone.

A couple of weeks later, the Valenzuelas returned together and visited three more orphanages and saw similar conditions. “Esther, being the leader she is, quickly started the nonprofit organization,” Joe said.

Today, they operate one home that can accommodate up to 20 girls. The Valenzuelas prefer not to have a mixed-sex residence and it just so happened that when they started the home, girls were entrusted to their care. In the future, the Casa Estrella Foundation wants to open more homes and help all children.

“We are not an orphanage, we are a home and a family,” Joe said.

One person the Valenzuelas moved to help nine years ago was La Jolla resident Olivia Peña Anderson.

“I met them when my daughter was first born and I was shopping at their store,” Peña Anderson recalled. “I wanted to know what to do with gently used clothes because they used to go to orphanages on weekends and bring supplies and clothes.”

She was encouraged by the Valenzuelas’ mission to help children, because of her own experience of being orphaned at the age 5 with her nine siblings. “I know exactly what it’s like to not have parents to take care for you, to not have a home or financial stability. It was very challenging to say the least – eating tortillas and beans was our only diet,” Peña Anderson said.

It was her 15-year-old sister who kept the family going and Peña Anderson considers that her own inspiration for giving back to society by keeping children, like the Casa Estrella girls, off the street.

“I made a pledge (to Joe and Esther) that I would financially help them every year until I couldn’t do it anymore,” a tearful Peña Anderson shared. “For me, it is very important to teach my daughter by example.”

The home requires between $7,000 and 8,000 per month to stay operational. With the turn in the economy, Joe said the foundation has felt donations drop like other nonprofits.

They also operate a state accredited 31-student school for the girls and other members of their church, Calvary Chapel. The foundation needs monetary gifts, but always welcomes volunteers as well. “We currently have a psychologist who is volunteering for a year,” Peña Anderson said.

The home also houses a foster mom and dad who live full-time with the girls and who have dedicated a year of their lives to help the cause.

“We really aren’t there out on the map (as a charitable org),” Peña Anderson said.

The foundation’s goal is to have a junior high and high school serving 500 students, and at least 5 to 10 more homes within the next five years.

“They (the children) are souls put in this world to accomplish something, too,” Joe said. “We feel that everyone needs a chance.”

Learn more at:
http://www.casaestrellafoundation.org
http://www.casaestrella.org




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[*] posted on 12-22-2010 at 03:24 PM


http://www.dailybreeze.com/sports/ci_16823636

By Phil Friedman
12/10/2010

Former South Bay lifeguard Jeep Shaffer, who passed away on Aug. 14th, and Joyce Jerome of Redondo Beach made a trip in April to Rosarito Beach to help take more than 300 orphan children fishing and treat them to a day of sports. Last weekend, in memory of Shaffer, a group of Southland anglers were back in Rosarito Beach to take the all-girls orphanage Casa Estrella on a fishing trip and provide a Christmas party.

The girls fished, went through a sports clinic, had a great Christmas party/lunch and each received a new rod and reel provided by Big 5 Sporting Goods.

Fifteen-year-old Iris Arguellas of Hawthorne was part of the team that traveled south, experiencing her first trip to Mexico.

"I was a little afraid before going on this trip after listening to the news," the Bishop Montgomery High junior said. "I expected near-anarchy on the streets, but what I found was a whole new world that I feel in love with.

"Everyone we met from taco stands to the people working at the Rosarito Beach Hotel to the girls from Casa Estrella was so nice."

Don Ashley, representing the Sportfishing Association of California, said it was another magical trip.

"Thanks to SAC and so many others, we brought down over 700 pieces of clothing, 75 pairs of shoes, rods, reels, food and a lot of love," he said.

For Arguellas, the trip was an eye opener on many levels.

"I learned so much on this trip," she said. "The people of Baja were so nice; I loved driving past Ensenada, and I had the best shrimp burrito I have ever had in my life."

But perhaps her most important lesson learned was one we can all heed during the holiday season.

"I learned to be thankful for all that we have here," she said.




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[*] posted on 12-22-2010 at 03:41 PM


Thanks for posting the Christmas cheer. :yes:

[Edited on 12-22-2010 by Woooosh]




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[*] posted on 12-22-2010 at 07:10 PM


Awesome
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[*] posted on 12-22-2010 at 07:37 PM


WOW thats really great
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[*] posted on 12-23-2010 at 02:57 PM


Really, really nice stories.

Gracias!




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