The trouble with diaries is explained by the Irish poet William Allingham:
"A man who keeps a diary pays
Due toll to many tedious days;
But when life becomes eventful--then,
His busy hand forgets the pen..."
Life has been eventful and rich, and that's part of the reason we haven't written in awhile. We'd like to share some pieces of our work and lives with you...
Some prayer pieces:
Things are going well for us. We are sleeping well and getting exercise walking on campus and up the four flights of stairs to offices and meetings. We would ask for prayers for other people and things:
- Remember Kenya. The peace talks with Kofi Annan appear to be bringing the two sides together, but the bitterness and tribal conflict that have occurred will not go away without intentional tribal and even interpersonal peacemaking. People must participate, but it will take God's healing spirit to bring about real change.
- Remember Eugenio Duarte, our wonderful Africa Region Director; Professor Leah Marangu, the legendary leader of ANU; and Rev. Don Gardener, who is working mightily with pastors and congregations who have been disrupted and threatened by the disturbances.
- Remember our students. Kenya's future and Africa's future genuinely depend on whether students like ours can sustain hope in an embattled continent, learn both job skills and leadership skills, and grow in their relationship to the Lord. That's easy to write down but very hard for them to do right now. Please pray for them.
We're meeting some wonderful young people, and since one of the purposes of the blog is to introduce to you African people, we'd like to share with you some of the young people we're getting to know and to ask you to pray for them as well:
- We attended a one-day retreat for student leaders. Nancy spoke on "Celebrating Diversity " as an example of excellent leadership. The style of student leaders at the public universities is very confrontational, but Dennis, the student chairman this year, has a much more cooperative style. He already has a law degree from a public university but is working on a degree in Mass Communications at ANU.
- Paul and Beatrice are a young married couple from Ghana. Paul is a Nazarene ministerial student (who has training in textile design on the side) and Beatrice is an accomplished seamstress. They live along the dirt road between ANU and the paved road and we often see them as we travel from campus to Nairobi. They have one more year at ANU before they return to Ghana and they begin their life as a pastoral couple.
- Lillian and Lulu and Becky are three young women students we had to our house for dinner last Wednesday (more on that evening in a minute). Lillian and Lulu went to high school together. Lillian lives on the Ngong Road which has been the scene of so much unrest in Nairobi and her concerned father asked her not to come home until things settle down. Lulu is a singer and had parts in "Grease" and "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat" in her high school's musicals (isn't it fun to think what those productions might have looked like?). The girls are struggling to be hopeful about their future lives in Kenya.
- Last week we went out to pizza with Jeanette and Bekka (an American student from Oregon and an American volunteer from Rochester, New York). Jeanette brought her best friend Yvonne, a young Kenyan student who is among the most impressive young women we have met--here or anywhere. She was reluctant to come with us but finally agreed. The American students did most of the talking at first but Yvonne eventually began telling her story: she is the youngest child of a single mother who has four children of her own and has cared for as many as 15 orphans in her home in Western Kenya. Right now the mother, three of her own children and 5 orphans are barricaded in their compound in Western Kenya. The mother is clearly a strong, caring woman for whom Yvonne is a source of intense pride. The family is eating food brought to them by kindly neighbors who can get out because they belong to the dominant tribe. Yvonne lives in a small room by herself in the town near the ANU campus. Her attitude in the midst of these family and personal challenges? Realistic about her family and financial challenges but quietly confident and hopeful. She wants to help other people once she graduates from ANU and has a kind of quiet strength and wisdom that will serve her and Africa well. We'd ask you also to be praying for Yvonne's family, life as a student,financial challenges and her future. She's our personal favorite so far.
- Water and snake Wednesday--While Lillian and Lulu and Becky were having dinner with us, we heard a splashing sound from the other side of the house. When we went to investigate we discovered that because of the addition being built for the Jameses, our neighbors, a drain had been clogged and our washer backed up spilling an inch and a half of water on the floor in four rooms! The three girls who had dressed up to have dinner with us rolled up sleeves and pants legs, grabbed mops and towels and went to work with us. In a few minutes we had dumped seven buckets of water outside! When we bragged on the girls they said--"It's nothing. We work much harder than this at home!" Later that same evening as we were shutting out the lights, we saw the guard whose post is behind our house throwing rock after rock at the ground. Turns out his target was a "spitting cobra" that had been slithering across the car park behind our house. (The one behind our house was "only" about 3 1/2 feet long and not as scarey, at least in the dark, as the one pictured to the left. ) As the guard held it up on a stick for us to see, he told us that almost exactly a year earlier and in the same place, a similar spitting cobra had spit its toxic venom into his eyes, blinding him. He praised God that the blindness had only lasted for four days, and Verna Stanton, a missionary nurse, said he was very lucky the blindness wasn't permanent. This was the first snake we've been aware of, and the staff reassured us that they spray twice a year to keep the snakes to a minimum.
- Furniture arrives! The University has been very thoughtful about putting a few, temporary pieces of furniture and appliances in our apartment while we look for permanent furniture that we like. We went to stores, to a furniture factory in a Catholic orphanage, and to some of the "sunshine stores"--little shops with piles of furniture out in the open along Ngong Road . Last week we got a bed and chest custom-made by a roadside shop and four "camp chairs" with canvas seats for the balcony. Today, much of the furniture arrives: five bookcases made by the estate staff of the University; a comfortable living room suite; three area rugs; and a stove, refrigerator and clothes dryer. It may be awhile until our four crates arrive from the US, but in the meantime we are glad to be getting some of our furnishings in place.