Miss America 2012 Receives Overcomer Award From Prison Ministry

Laura Kaeppeler
Share:

Laura Kaeppeler has overcome some difficult obstacles on the way to becoming Miss America 2012, including the challenges of being the child of a prison inmate.

Prison Fellowship, the nation’s largest outreach to prisoners, ex-prisoners and their families—including Kaeppeler’s family while her father was incarcerated—is presenting its inaugural Angel Tree Star of Victory award to Kaeppeler on June 27 in recognition of her achievements.

The award, to be given annually, honors the child of a prisoner or ex-prisoner whose achievements give hope and encouragement to other children of prisoners. Kaeppeler has long advocated for mentoring children with an incarcerated parent and has made the issue part of her platform during her year as Miss America 2012.

“Since its founding in 1982, Prison Fellowship’s Angel Tree program has become the largest national outreach to prisoners’ children, the forgotten victims of crime,” says Miss America 2003 Erika Harold, member of the Prison Fellowship board of directors, who will present the Angel Tree Star of Victory award to Kaeppeler.

“We are privileged to present Laura Kaeppeler, the child of a formerly incarcerated parent, with the first Angel Tree Star of Victory award in recognition of her achievements despite the challenges of having an incarcerated parent. She is an inspiration to the 1.7 million children with a parent in prison in America today and the 10 million young people in the U.S. who have had a mother or father—or both—spend time behind prison walls.”

Prison Fellowship’s Angel Tree program is the only nationwide, year-round effort that reaches out exclusively to children who have a parent in prison. The year-round effort includes Christmas gifts provided on behalf of the incarcerated parent, summer camping and mentoring. Since a mentoring component was established in 2004, more than 5,000 children have been mentored through Prison Fellowship’s Angel Tree program.

“Prison Fellowship’s Angel Tree program helps the children of incarcerated parents know that they are not forgotten and provides them an encouraging mentor to help them be all God wants them to be,” says Kaeppeler. “These kids desperately need to know their circumstances don’t define them, and Angel Tree did that for my younger sisters while our father was incarcerated.”

+ posts
Share:

Related topics:

See an error in this article?

Send us a correction

To contact us or to submit an article

Click and play our featured shows

Anti-Israel protesters.

Anti-Israel Mob Protesting at Pediatric Cancer Hospital

As the preparatory days before the End Times continue forward, biblical prophecy continues to unfold as the world grows increasingly cold to the Jewish people. Yet few would have imagine that in America the same hatred that led to the...

Woman's hands with open Bible and highlighter

Man Who Spent 23 Minutes in Hell: How Do We Understand God?

A common misconception among Christians is the belief that man cannot understand God’s ways. We often hear people use the phrase, “God’s ways are not our ways” referencing the verse in Isaiah 55:8–9 (NKJV), which says, “‘For My thoughts are...

Bible Davids

2024: The Year of the Shift?

Is 2024 the year of the shift? And if so, what new things are we going to see the Lord do in this new season? In an exclusive Beyond The Article interview with Charisma Magazine Online, apostle Bible Davids is...

A woman looking for food in a refrigerator.

Jentezen Franklin: Dethrone Your Stomach

By now you are beginning to realize how crucial the practice of fasting is in the life of every believer. But as a part of that threefold cord of normal Christian duties, why is it so often overlooked? I believe...

1 2 3 4 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100
Scroll to Top