Hello,
my friends and loved ones!!!
Wow,
where to start. My two weeks in
The readjustment process has been just that a process. I’ve taken some time to get back into a
groove here in DC, but the groove is a little different than it was
before. I desire to be in community
more. My new roommates knew that was a plan of mine before they moved in, so
that’s been helpful. Oh yeah, while I
was gone Sherri and Susan left and Jessica and Rachel moved in. It was strange walking into the house and
finding different furniture and hearing different morning routines, but it’s
been good. Rachel and I hang out quite a
bit and that makes me smile. God does
hear our prayers and answers us, I was really concerned about the changes at my
house while I was in
I found it easier to be around groups of people that are not
involved at Kairos. The first week I was
back it was time for the monthly Texas Exes Thirsty Thursday. It was so much less stressful to be there
because there was no pressure to talk about my trip in any meaningful way. Without pressure I found that the stories
rolled more easily off the tongue, but I also love the way that my Kairos
community cares about me and wants to know what I learned in
The first day we went out in
The Tumaini Medical Clinic that we
visited that morning was a busy place in the Kibera
Slum. The facility is rudimentary with
regards to equipment. They have one
microscope that is solar powered, with a car battery for cloudy days. It took a while for our group to notice that
the facility had no electricity whatsoever.
It struck me most how for granted we take so many things here in there is not much that can be done to prevent
that, since the best medicine is a well-balanced diet and wide open spaces in
which to run around and play. Their
living conditions are squalid, the room is maybe 9x9 in which the whole family
lives, eats and sleeps.
There are 4 major slum areas in
American’s are so focused on helping those that are in developing nations. But what is needed most is a hand up not a handout. If we are really intent upon using our resources to help those in need we need to send people who are in business and can facilitate economic development. Not people with specific business plans and rigid ideas, but people with a broad sense of how to plan and implement a business that will succeed. The micro-enterprises that have the best chance are ones with leaders that find out what the local population is good at and what is needed and can tailor the plan for the culture.
Like this woman Jane, she started a micro-enterprise that
has taken a very holistic approach to the women she serves. Beacon of Hope, as she has called it, truly
is a beacon for the women it serves.
Jane realized that in order for the women to be able to work they would
need to have some more basic needs met.
Like food and childcare. Jane
takes in women from one of the most dangerous slums on the outskirts of
Max Collison is an Australian
doctor, who has begun the Tumaini Medical Clinics; he
spoke to us one evening about the one skill that is needed most in
Our time at and gaining an education. The day that our group went was the day of
the Harvest Festival, a school-wide assembly in which they get their previous
term grades. It’s a big deal there, they
get badges to wear for the entire next term to denote if they are position one
or two in their class, and if they are the best in a subject area for their
grade level. Along with the badge they
also receive a token gift of a pencil or ruler or other such school supply. It’s truly an honor to them. I hung out with
the high school kids before the assembly started and we just chatted about our
favorite subjects and what we found hard.
I also had a great conversation about the level of poverty there and how
it compared to
her, I walked up and started to chat with
them, one of the boys brought me out a chair to sit on. So I was sitting there facing them and we
were laughing and they were teaching me ‘Chang,’ their slang mixture of English
and Kiswahili. They noticed my camera
and wanted to have a group photo taken, so I asked where I would sit and one of
the boys on the end put his hand on his knee to indicate that I should sit upon
his lap, I got a good laugh out of that and said “no, no, no” thinking how inappropriate
that would be. It was just really funny for
me to see that adolescent boys are the same no matter where in the world they
are. The boys ended up making space for
me on the bench in the middle of the group as you can see from the
picture.
After the morning at Akiba, which
means “treasure,” about a dozen of the kids walked us over to the Light and training available. There are a few boys that live there either
because they have no home or their home situations are too horrible for them to
be in. Charles is one of about eight
that lives there, and he is also sponsored by a family associated with The
Falls Church to attend the
The other component of my time in worldly
and being involved would in turn corrupt them.
Churches discourage active participation in campaigns and do not take positions
on current or longstanding issues. Even when those issues have direct impact on their lives as
Christians. I know that Christ said we are to be in the world without
being of the world, so that means that we need to participate in our
governments to keep them accountable.
All of the ministries were amazing; the people that started them all have a passion to help the people change their lives. In the Lord’s Prayer, which we usually say without thinking about the words, there is a line about giving us today our daily bread. That line is how people in the slums live. They have no bank accounts, the have no credit cards or lines of credit. They work each day to earn their food and shelter. It has really changed how I view the challenges that I come in contact with here in the states. I have found that I have a lower tolerance for people when they complain about superfluous items.
I want to say thank you for all that you have done to support
me in this time of ministry and readjustment.
The thing that has struck me most is that I am so blessed to have such a
wonderful community. Not to mention the
wonderful team that I was so lucky to be around in
In His Love,
“Seek justice, encourage the oppressed. Defend the
cause of the
fatherless, plead the case of the
widow.”
–Isaiah 1:17
P.S. I forgot to
share with you a moment that I had with Erin, my team leader, when the group
was walking into Quaray from Beacon of Hope
Centre. Ruth and Jen are two young women
from Beacon of Hope that live in Quaray, so they were
our guides. As the group walked, Erin
and I were chatting with Ruth and Jen.
There were two really popular questions that we were always asked: “how many years do you have?” and
“are you married or dating?” Well, Erin
and I have 10 years on these women, but I felt as though it was the other way
around. The hardships that they have
endured and the events that have transpired in their lives have caused them to
mature much more quickly than myself or those in my peer group here in the states. They are both mothers, they are at Beacon of
Hope to provide for themselves and their families. It just still amazes me how blessed I am to
have been born here in the states. I
know that I have lost close family members, but even growing up here in a
single-parent household is so much easier.
And as typical, they are filled with joy and hope. We see their situation as desperate and
lacking, but to them it’s typical and normal.
I went to Kenya to build relationships, not any physical structures, but
to further the kingdom of God here on earth and to connect my heart and mind to
see and hope to understand a culture that is far from my own in many respects,
but very alike in other.