
Last week, select members of the Ole Miss football program and support staff gave up their spring breakĀ for the third year in a row to serve others by doing mission work in Camp Marie, Haiti.
A 28-person group representing Ole Miss made the return trip to Camp Marie to help provide valuable irrigation to the crops of Haitian farmers. In previous trips, the Rebels helped dig a well to provide clean water for the same village.
Head CoachĀ Hugh FreezeĀ emphasized the value this trip has not only for those heās serving, but also the Ole Miss players and staff.
āThat trip never disappoints in the realm of making you grateful and thankful for what we have here,ā Freeze said. āIt is a difficult trip for me the older I get, but itās worth it to a lot of families and kids.ā
The Rebelsā senior quarterbackĀ Chad KellyĀ was on the trip for the second straight year, bringing along teammatesĀ Talbot Buys,Ā Armani LintonĀ andĀ Sean Rawlings.
āIt was amazing,ā Kelly said. āYou have the opportunity to kind of take a step back and realize how thankful you really are to be here in the United States and have the opportunity to play at a great university. A lot of those kids grow up in a certain situation and they canāt really get out of it. For us, to be able to go over there and put smiles on kidsā faces, thatās what itās all about. Weāre thankful we are able to go there and help them.ā
Ole Miss partnered with theĀ 410 BridgeĀ organization, which has provided continued support for the Haitians that call Camp Marie home. With the help of 410 Bridge and the Rebels, Camp Marie is now closer to being able to take higher steps and see economic growth as a village.
Senior executive associate athletics director Stephen Ponder and his family joined the trip this year, and Ponder also spoke on the weight of the trip.
āI know that for my family and the others on the trip from Ole Miss, seeing the need for basic things like water, food, shelter and clothing was overwhelming at times,ā Ponder said.Ā āWe can take things for granted so easily at home, so seeing this up close and personal made a lasting impact.ā
Ponder, being the only senior administrator on the trip this year, reflected on the lasting impact trips like this can make on the young people.
āI think it is so important that our student-athletes learn so much more about life outside their sport,ā Ponder added. āSeeing how fortunate we are every day, taking advantage of opportunities before us and keeping things in perspective are valuable teaching moments that our coaches can use to transform lives on our teams. Coach Freeze does a great job of utilizing football as a platform for a higher purpose to change lives.ā
Along with several other members of the Ole Miss Athletics family and support staff, coachesĀ Corey BatoonĀ andĀ Maurice HarrisĀ and their families joined the trip as well this year.
āWe are well known in that village,ā Freeze added. āThey love to see the Ole Miss group there and to see them get fresh water and the joy they have for getting it is pretty humbling. It always ends up impacting us more than itās impacting them.ā
Freeze added that his foundation, theĀ Freeze Foundation, has committed continued assistance to Camp Marieās irrigation growth in the future.
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Courtesy of Ole Miss Athletics













