Friday, July 31, 2009

On the road again...

This past week was full of wrapping up the Fullerton team, preparing for the Black Rock team and a day of staff training in Stakeholder Mgt. It was a good week for organizing my life around the busy weeks to come.

Tomorrow the team from Black Rock comes and I head back to Nyamasheke for the third and final time. It's a beautiful trip, but its a long one winding through the mountains for six hours. While the team is here we will be working in two areas: home construction and home visits.

For home construction, we bring the metal sheets for the roof of a house, windows, and a door and help the family to install them. This activity will take place in the mornings since they are cooler.

(One of the Families we will be helping through construction)

Then, in the afternoons, we will go on home visits to homes of the vulnerable in the community that the churches have asked that we visit.

After the team leaves on August 8th, I will be going to DRCongo for 3-4 days (10th-13/14) to work on a newsletter for the World Relief office there.

I'll fill you in on the trip to Nyamasheke upon my return. Let's hope no more rats crawl on me in my sleep again.

Saturday, July 25, 2009

The night the rat crawled on me...

...is towards the end of the events that I am about to tell you about.

I have not written for three weeks but is has gone so quickly! There have been so many things happening here that, until now, by the time that I had a free second to write, I was too exhausted; exhausted in a good way though. The last time I wrote was just before we had an African Child’s Day, WR Day of Service, and WR Day of Prayer. Now all of those things have happened, I have traveled again to Nyamasheke (see previous posts), and the Fullerton EV Free team has left.

Some of you will want to know all of the details I can provide, others want a brief overview of what I am doing. I do not want you to feel like you must read everything below, so I will break up the different events so you may easily browse. ENJOY!


African Child’s Day (July 8)

African Child’s Day (as you may have already understood) was a day devoted to the children of Africa where there were various speakers, skits and poems devoted to fighting child abuse. Many children in Africa are abused in ways that we do and do not understand. There is verbal and physical abuse, but children are also forced to fetch heavy containers of water and can be expected to do much of the work around the house. These chores may even keep them out of school for days, weeks, or years, at a time. There were over 300 children and parents present supporting this day. I even held a rabbit!



WR Day of Service & Prayer (July 9-10)

For the World Relief Day of Service we put a roof, windows, and doors on a house, cultivated a field (with hoes), and pruned banana trees. It was a great day that the staff really enjoyed. I have to say, after cultivating for an hour, I woke up with a sore back the next day. I also almost took a machete to a rat that ran out of the house towards myself and a group of people (I held back though – thought it could get messy).

The next day, we had a Day of Prayer. It was a good time where the WRR staff to joined together and prayed for each other, WRR, and WR internationally.



Trip to Nyamasheke (Again) (July 14-15)

I also took another trip to Nyamasheke to finalize the plans for the Black Rock trip (they come Saturday, the 1st – SO SOON!) I was able to meet with the pastors again and also see the homes that we will be working on. It will definitely be an interesting time of construction: I climbed up some steep hills just to see the houses with no supplies in tow. Overall, the trip was productive and I will return for my final time on August 2nd with the team.



Team #1 – Evangelical Free Church of Fullerton, CA (July 18-24)

The team arrived on July 18 and left yesterday. They came to work with a camp that World Relief was putting on for 96 Orphans and Vulnerable Children (OVC’s) that they support. It was a psychosocial support camp that provided life lessons in leadership, communication & HIV/AIDs, as well as Biblical lessons. The team did a great job connecting with the kids and really made a difference – they were very sad when the camp was over after 4 short days. God was great (as He always is) at orchestrating the schedule. Obvious reasons/justifications surfaced for every lapse in the schedule or a planned activity that could only have been God ordained.



Now…..

The team is gone, I am relaxing for the weekend. This coming week was/is my trip to Congo for my first stab at putting together the WR Congo quarterly newsletter. This may/may not happen . Staying true to African time, I will start to plan my week on Monday/Tuesday. If I go, I will go Wednesday to Thursday. The Black Rock team arrives Saturday, August 2, so I will also be busy this week planning for their arrival.

I am loving my time here, and am sad to see it quickly fading away. I am at a point where it is actually feeling like home (for the most part) and am surrounded by good friends who I enjoy hanging out with when I am not busy with work and teams (unfortunately this is not as often as I would like). The next four and a half weeks are going to fly by and then I will be back in America on American time.


Oh – and the RAT that crawled on me…

I was lying in bed at the OVC Camp falling asleep when I felt something scurry up my leg and arm over my blanket. At first I thought it was a gecko (we have many of them and they had been in the room the night before) so I threw my blanket in the direction of the movement, got out of bed, and turned the light on. When I looked down, I watched a rat scurry out of the room. Let’s just say that I was sufficiently grossed/creeped out but had to force myself to go back to bed. I think it was one of the most difficult things I have ever had to do – getting back in that bed and falling asleep.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

One Slow Week, One Busy Week

This week has been busy, a big change from last week. With two events this week, it was/is crunch time. Tomorrow is the WRR Staff Day of Service which I am in charge of. The pieces are coming together and it will be a great day of serving together. I have been so busy pulling together details for the Day of Service and the African Kids Day that was today that I have had no time to update until now.

As for the 4th of July in Rwanda - most of us Americans spent the afternoon at the embassy eating hot dogs and hamburgers and other American things. Simultaneously, over 10,000 Rwandans were on the other side of Kigali at the National Stadium celebrating their Independence Day (actually July 1) and their Liberation Day (July 4). It was a busy day in the city.

Last week was pretty calm. There was a traditional Baby Naming ceremony for Iranzi on Tuesday and a movie screening at the National stadium on Friday. Other than that, life was relaxing.

Today, we had the African Kids Day in Masaka and hundreds of children and parents were present. The government theme of the day was Child Abuse Prevention. Groups from schools and care groups competed in poems and skits (the prizes were rabbits and Bibles) and local officials were there to give talks.


Outside of work, it has been great getting to know a new country and culture. I am finally to a place where I feel comfortable enough getting around the city on my own by almost any (safe) means of transportation. It is a good feeling to be fully comfortable here. More and more young people continue to arrive and are starting to form a summer community which is fun.

I will write more soon - as soon as this crazy week is over.