Wednesday, March 18, 2009
post- africa reflections
The weather was, by no means, the biggest adjustment! I'd heard all about how difficult it was to come back home after a trip to a third world country, but it took me by surprise. It was difficult in different ways than I expected. It's not the kind of adjustment like when you come home from summer camp and go to bed crying because you're utterly exhausted and you miss your camp friends, and then you get up this next morning and eat blueberry waffles and wonder how you lived without them for the week. It's the kind where you sit around and you don't know what to do with yourself, so you look at pictures, email anyone who is still in Mozambique and convince them to tell you what's going on there, and re-evaluate the reason for your existence.
...So that's going well.
I know Africa is where I want to be full time some day, and I don't see that day as being too far off in the future. But I don't think I'm finished with things here yet. I'm SO psyched to see my friends back in Manhattan, and I'm feeling more motivated about auditions than I've felt for a long time. I even listened to musical theater cds just for fun today. What is happening to me?
A couple people asked if I would be continuing this blog after Africa, and I laughed...Because blogging is stupid. Because I hate anyone who is narcissistic enough to believe that other people actually get enjoyment out of reading her personal thoughts.
With that said, I'm totally continuing it.
But seriously, when I thought about it, I realized that my mindset of why I wouldn't be continuing my blog is the kind of mindset I'm struggling to keep myself from having every day. Which is that important things worth blogging about can only happen in Africa. Somehow, in my mind, anything I couple possibly find to do over here is minuscule to whatever great deeds I could be doing in Africa. Somewhere I get the idea that while I can bless people in a third world country, here I have to get back to reality and get a real job and focus on myself. And in some ways, here it's harder to keep my goal of "loving" first and foremost in my mind, just because everything about western society seems to work against that. Relationships aren't really valued here as much as careers and success and drive. They definitely weren't valued as much in my life before February. It's especially a challenging thing to keep in mind when the career you have chosen is the bloodbath that is Musical Theater in New York City.
ANYWAY. I might or might not actually find the time to keep up with this blog. But I hope I will be able to update it atleast occasionally, because a) I want to keep it up because I will be going to Africa again, hopefully before this year is over and b) I never consistently write in a real journal, so this is something concrete I will have to look back on in the future and c) Who knows, maybe I can take bits and pieces from it when I accomplish my dream (hopefully) off writing a book some day.
Please pray for the Iris Centre (where I was) in Zimpeto, Mozambique, as they had two armed robbers break in the other night and threaten a couple visitors and stole everything they had. These robbers are not new to Iris, because they visited several times while I was there. They only managed to steal my food and I never had an actual encounter with them. Also, one of the precious babies recently died. Please pray for the missionaries serving at Iris- that they will have a renewed hope and vision. Also pray for the poor visitors, who were (understandably) pretty badly shaken up!
ALSO- thoughts and prayers go out to my dear friend Nick Brady, who is serving in Columbia for 3 months! Check out his blog at http://singinggringoincolombia.blogspot.com
I'll let you know how jumping back into the bloodbath plays out.
Friday, February 27, 2009
goodbye africa...
After a full 24 hours of travel, I am sitting back in my own bed! It feels good to be home and be with family- i've missed them SO much! But I am utterly exhausted, and I am really missing my Mozambique boys, and I don't really know what to do with myself right now. So I think the best option is to sleep and figure life out tomorrow.
Goodbye, Africa (but ONLY until I save enough money to visit again/move there for an indefinite period of time : P )...
ps. here is my dream. i want to move back to mozambique. i want to get an apartment. and i want to spend all my days in bocaria, the city dump. i want to paint little girls nails and pamper them and play baseball with all the kids, and sing praise and worship songs and build and repair houses. however, to accomplish this dream, i need a team. i need people who know how to build things, because i don't. i also need massage therapists (for the people who work so hard all day there), people who like being silly with kids, and someone who plays a guitar. and someone who wants to help me pay for the apartment. who's in? (i might be more serious than you think).
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Reflections while waiting on the safari bus to arrive (3 hours late and counting)
a little potty talk
There kids here get up at 4 AM and do chores and get ready for the 5:30 AM prayer and singing service. They then eat breakfast at 6:30 and attend the 7:30 morning message by Mama Zipporah. Then it's off to school until 3:30, with a short break afterwards until the 6:00 prayer time and sermon and then homework hall until bed. Wow. Just watching it all is enough to make me exhausted. Also, coming from a (very) non-traditional education and spiritual background, this has been an experience for me! It was an even better experience when I sat in the formal school teacher meeting with the headmaster and 20 teachers on the education board and was the only one who didn't understand a word of swahili. Or there was the time when I walked into the morning's worship service half asleep and dressed in very contemporary, bright summerish clothing ( I mean, I wore a dress below my knees. This is a big accomplishment) 15 minutes late (because who knew worship services could even start before 8 AM?!) to see everyone in their school uniforms and the teachers in very conservative, old school teacher garb. Oh, and I walked in the front door instead of the side one- you know, the one that enters directly behind where Mama preaches. Sweet. One thing I know how to do in life is make a scene. It's a talent you really have to work for, believe you me. Seriously, though, I have been SO inspired by the people here. People in Africa work their butts off for things we take for granted in the states. There's no complaining or griping about it, either. And there is always work to be done! In Mozambique, I watched Amelia, the wife of the pastor I stayed with for the weekend, spend all night cooking a meal for us without electricity or running water. She used the best of what she owned for her special guests, which were some mixed plates and bowls, tupperware for serving, and two cups that everyone shared. The next morning she was up by 5 (maybe before, but you can be sure I wasn't up yet), out with the women in the village, bringing back water in the huge buckets- or broken gasoline tanks or whatever they can find- they carry on their heads. The youngest children were up as well, "raking" the yard (the yard was all sand, with the exception of the "garden" which was what looked like some grass in the middle of the yard outlined with a fence of perfectly aligned sticks). After more chores came time for breakfast preperation, and all the kids took part of making the most memorable breakfast I'll ever have- bread, crackers, jam, and bananas (the bananas are smaller and far better than the ones we get in the states) with hot tea, served just as the sun was coming up! Here in Kenya, I've made friends with an amazing woman named Patricia, who is 21 but looks and acts much older, and is a schoolteacher here in the toddler class, where I've been working. Patricia lived as a street child, came to a children's home, and then lived for 6 years with an Irish man who took abandoned children in and paid for their education (school isn't free here). After the Irish man was brutually murdered, Patricia was completely alone in the world at age 18. She finished high school, got a job, and saved up enough money to buy a bed and other essential pieces of furniture and to rent a place to live. She came to Huruma last month, and she feels so blessed to be in a place where she is respected and is able to get a steady paycheck without putting up a fight. Patricia wears a ring around her left ring finger but she isn't married. When asked about this, she laughs and says, "Oh, you have to do that here! Otherwise, people will never leave you alone. They are eager to get on their knees and propose, but after marriage and children, they will leave you alone and you will be on the street. No thank you!" Patricia is hoping to save enough money to earn a degree, which she will obtain while still working full time at Huruma. Most of the people on the school board are in their early 20's and come from similar situations. Patricia inspires me to work a little harder at the every day, mundane things in life. She's made me realized how fortunate I am to be able to live my life doing what I love to do- maybe it won't bother me so much anymore that I have to work in retail sometimes to be able to support that dream.
That being said, I have also learned a valuable lesson here at Huruma. And that is that if I can avoid it, I will never work in ful time education or child care of any type. Not that I was ever planning on it. Being in a classroom for a day sucks the life right out of my body. No wonder I was obsessed with strange, belly-dancing, unschooling hipster authors in high school- I actually cannot stand to be in a classroom for more than a few hours at a time. Come to think of it, almost everything traditional generally irks me in some way or another. I start falling asleep, or wanting to start a screaming match with the two year old who cannot stay in his chair for more than 30 seconds at a time. And this classroom is a tiny space for the 15 toddlers who come from Huruma and from all over the community every day. The walls are decorated with old potato-sack looking things with drawings all over them...numbers, types of farm animals, the alphabet, etc. There is a cabinet filled with small notebooks and a few legos the kids get to play with every afternoon. There are 4 mats that we lay out for them to all sleep on during naptime, which is my favorite part of the day. And these kids are smart. They picked up very quickly on the fact that I am a white pushover who speaks no swahili. During naptime, Patricia left for a total of two minutes, in which time the boys decided to terrorize me. They started getting off the mat and jumping around, running out of the classroom, and showing off to their peers. Every time I said "NO!" and grabbed them and put them back on the mat, they were more motivated by their giggling classmates to start the whole act over again. As soon as Patricia came back in the room (with her little stick she uses to swat them on the hand or the butt when necessary), they jumped right back onto the mat, and were soon fast asleep. Figures. Also, there must be something with kids liking to pee while I'm around. The first incident getting peed on all over at Iris should have been enough to ward off the bad pee karma for a while. No such luck. The girl in charge of the baby room left me there for 20 minutes with the kids last night, in which time they all became little devils and jumped out of their cribs (who knew they could do that?!) onto the floor and into other cribs. One of them took off his pants and diaper, peed all over the floor, and then proceeded to dance in the urine. There were no diapers in the room, and Bounty paper towels do not exist in Africa. When Zipporah finally came back in, she had the kid halfway wipe the pee up with some poor child's sweatshirt, and then it was time for bed. ALSO I forgot to mention that the little kids go to the bathroom in mini little plastic toilet bowls in the classroom or in the rooms here at the home, so after someone goes, it smells awful for the rest of the day (imagine porridge lunch sitting in a plastic bin + african heat +several hours in a classroom). HA. To sum it all up, this time in Kenya has been superb. And TOMORROW I am going to NAIROBI NATIONAL PARK!! And also to the animal orphanage and out to eat with some of the kids! I hope I get to see a leopard or a giraffe! I'm so excited!
Monday, February 23, 2009
crisis control, dehydration, multiplication...and gender inequality
I am exhausted! And thirsty. And my jeans are soaked.
The thirst and the wet jeans have to do with a small crisis I just experienced that I will share with you later. I am exhausted because these children wear me out. In the best of ways, of course! After playing in the hot Kenyan sun for a few hours and spinning kids around and picking them up and acting like I'm about to drop them (children find these type of things amusing), I have to take refuge in the guest house for a while. It's weird because I have the house (which consists of two bedrooms with two bunkbeds each, a bathroom, and a kitchen/living room area) completely to myself the week I'm here. It's kind of awesome. Usually, I love having people around all the time. A fantastic thing about Iris was the fact that volunteers from all over the world were constantly coming and going. I met people from South Africa, Australia, Sweden, Switzerland, England, and a little of everywhere else. Here, though, I'm appreciating the quiet! I've had a roommate for the majority of the past 10 months of my life, and I shared a bed for 3 of those months, so the alone time has been a pleasant change! The kids keep asking me if I get scared staying in the guest house all alone. Which concerns me a little, because I think, "Um, no...should I be scared?!" And I ask them just that, and they kind of shrug. Awesome. Ha! I'm actually not worried at all (promise, mom!). There is even a freaking alarm in my bedroom to hit in case something were to happen. And there is a gate around the home. With guards. Even that is funny to me, because I’ve never felt unsafe here (EVEN when like 9 street boys ganged up on Ernie and I : P ) and I guess I just don't feel threatened very often. In my 4 years in Manhattan, I remember feeling threatened one time. And here I felt slightly threatened when we got pulled over and I was interrogated by a police standing on a dark road with no street lights. Everything else has been fabulous. So, today, I had a lesson in gardening from my new friends Ben (a complete troublemaker- 16, adorable and he knows it), Martin, Richard, John, and James. All of them have facebooks, except for John, who is a sweetheart and isn't as mischievous as the others. Facebooks and email accounts are strictly prohibited here at Huruma. The boys sneak into internet cafes in Ngong and check them. They are all acrobats and can do really impressive tricks, like doing flips in the air over someone doing a backbend. They also enjoy juggling and doing strange body contortions that are even weirder than licking your elbow (which, by the way, I've met one person in Mozamb. and one person in Kenya who can do that, along with Ally and I. That makes 4 people in the entire world. I just think everyone should take note of that). Wthey were shoveling this morning in the garden, I offered to help, and they laughed and said it wasn't girls work. Well! That was enough motivation for me to grab the shovel right out of James’ hands and have a little lesson in gardening. And let me tell you, this is no easy work they do here! They are digging long trenches that stretch across the entire front of the home to grow crops… and they have TWO garden tools, a shovel and a hoe, one of which is broken. So I’m digging, and the boys are finding this hilarious. I make sure to tell them my little spiel about how there is no such thing as “men’s work” or “girl’s work.” : ) You know I had to get that in! But they are delightful boys, and I spent a couple hours hanging out with them. I also spent some time with my friend Milicent today, who’s around 16 and in grade 7 or 8, and we talked to some of the workers who are constructing the new church (which is making very slow progress, since it’s being hand built by like 3 people and the funds are low). The rest of the time was spent playing with lots of kids, helping with math homework (thank God it was only simple division : P), and dealing with a minor catastrophe.
For the past two days, I turn the faucet on and no water comes out, and I have no idea why. This keeps happening and I keep telling mama about it. This morning I boiled some water to drink for the first part of the day, but it was gone by early afternoon, so I told Mama. She was a little distracted, so I ignored my thirst for a few hours and then found someone else to ask. She said not to worry, she will get someone to fix it, and for now, just fill up a pot inside the dorms and bring it back to the house to boil (now, WHY didn’t I think of that earlier?) So, I did that, but the kids nightly pep talk/lecture/sermon was starting, and I wanted to go listen and finish making some multiplication flash cards I was making for Hannah Montanta. So I decided to wait to boil the water, and returned a couple hours later to find water literally POURING out into the living room. I run in the bathroom and the water is up to my ankles. The faucet is still running and it refuses to turn off. Well, the water is now running into the bedroom and the kitchen and I have no idea what to do. I run out the door and yell down the stairs to some boys standing around outside (one of them who is older and was doing the preaching tonight), “Um, I am in serious need of some help!” The boys, instead of rushing up to help me, run INSIDE to get someone else. Wow. Then the older boy comes up and helps me turn off the faucet (he struggles for a minute too, or else I would have felt like an even BIGGER idiot) and then peaces out. I stand there in the water with one towel (mine) and a bucket and mop and actually have no idea what to do. Boy returns with one of the teenaged girls and mumbles, “She will help you,” and then leaves. To play soccer. If I believed in violence I might have hit him, but I just laughed instead. I made a comment to the poor girl helping me-who turned out to be an angel- about the boys not wanting to stick around. “Oh no!” she said, without missing a beat. “They think this is girls’ work!” HA. Well. We had a nice little chit chat about that, and we spent the next 45 minutes cleaning up and dumping bucket after bucket of water outside (good thing we were strong enough to carry the heavy buckets without needing a boy ;) ). So that was enjoyable. I couldn’t stop laughing about it, actually. I’m sure I’m the favorite visitor now- HA. Why am I so ungraceful in most areas of my life? I don’t know. But I’ve been doing lots of thinking about the way women and men are treated differently here and in Mozamb., and just how so many things are so dynamically different culturally. And yet, western women come to visit all the time and end up marrying African men andstaying. And I can’t help but wonder about how much those culture differences, subtle as they may be, affect their relationships. Maybe the women just go along with it, or maybe the men are more open to new things. And I’m not only talking about gender differences- there are so many little things that we just look at differently than people do here! So many things get lost in translation. Anyway, all of this thirst made me appreciate going to the fridge in the states and just getting a glass of COLD (not boiling), clean water! Both here and in Mozamb., the kids kept giving me water bottles and asking me to stick them in the fridge for a few hours. This made them SO happy! It's the little things, I guess!
Well, I’m wrapping it up for tonight, because I need to go to bed, and I can’t stop eating the food. Food in Africa is freaking brilliant. And they give you so much of it. I have a boy’s name, I have acne, and I will have gained 20 pounds and need new clothes by the time I get home. This is going well.
Sunday, February 22, 2009
mychal is a stupid name.
That's what they call me here.
"Mychal is a BOY's name!" That's what they tell me. It's hurtful, really. Takes me right back to those days on the preschool playground when, after an introduction, some kid would ask, "Whoaaa, are you a BOY!?" I've gotten lots of puzzled looks- from kids AND adults- and after discovering my middle name, some girls decided Christine was much more appropriate.
They are very curious here:
"Why is your hair so soft?" [um...shampoo?]
"Why is one of your hands smaller than the other?" [Another self-esteem killer. The therapy bills are already piling up in my mind.]
And finally...
"Why do you have pimples?" [To which I wanted to scream, BECAUSE THE WATER IN YOUR COUNTRY IS RUINING MY LIFE. But I didn't.]
Hopefully most of you reading this understand my little language of sarcasm and silliness, but just in case you don't (it's gotten me in trouble a few times in my life)...I like to be sarcastic. And silly. So there won't be any therapy bills, really. Unless my face continues to break out like this. In which case, there will be dermatologist bills. But anyway, Huruma is a charming place. The kids are all sweet and are so hungry to be loved on! Both at Iris in Mozambique and here in Kenya, there are so many children and so few adults. These kids just want to be held and hugged! Even if you only smile or wink at them, their little faces light up! Things that you say or do that seem trivial make a world of a difference for some of these kids. As does, I'm sure, being able to remember their names. Which is proving to be very challenging here. I think my brain has reached it's nam-remembering capacity. With 300 children at Iris and almost 300 here, it's actually impossible to remember them all. I'm bad at names to begin with, especially when meeting so many people in such a short period of time. And the worst thing is, I'm usually ok with the Susans or the Davids, but when your name is Zipporah or Damaris, you might be out of luck. This really stresses me out, since I know how important it is to the children for you to remember their names. The kids pick up on this quickly, and enjoy tormenting by tapping me on the shoulder and demanding, "What is my name?! I've told you twice!" So I'm praying for the capacity to remember more names.
The kids here really have so little. They each have one blanket and pillow on a mattress, maybe sheets, and an old bookbag with a few old schoolbooks and one notebook that is falling apart.Most of the clothes are old and torn- everyone be thinking of some super fundraising ideas for when I get home! :) There aren't any toys here, and the the little ones play with whatever they find lying around. I taught a couple girls tic-tac-toe yesterday, which was exciting, and thumb wars and hand slapping games are also hits. Despite how little they have, all the kids are so joyful! Yesterday, I sat in on dance practice, which was terrific. The kids all love to dance. The dance team here competes with other homes and has a competition on Thursday. I also watched drama practice. How cool is it that the arts are so alive here?! It's nice, because none of the kids have ipods, cellphones, emails, or even toys, so they get real joy out of playing group games, dancing, and singing! Every morning, singing starts around 7 AM! Dear God, please forgive me for every time I whined about having to sing at "early" 9 AM auditions. Oh, and I learned to peel potatoes. This was a huge event for me. There were like 9 girls huddled around a big bucket, peeling. I had no idea that you could peel potatoes wrong, but take my word for it, you can. They looked at me like I was a crazy woman. The girls all started yelling at me, trying to explain to the hopeless city girl how to do it right. "I don't cook," I say apologetically. More confused looks. "How do you eat, then?" They ask. Good question. A few minor cuts and 30ish potatoes later, and I'm a pro! Yipee! I talked with a couple of the older girls for a while about their dreams and goals. Jackie (woohoo, I can remember her name!) told me about the corrupt Kenyan government and about her life before Huruma as a beggar on the street. "If you don't work, you won't end up on the street. Your mom will make sure you have a place to sleep and something to eat," she explained. "But it's not like that for us. If we can't get work, we won't eat! That's why we love school so much...education is key to everything. I will finish school, get a job, and get out of Kenya...and only return to help and encourage other people who are in the same situation that I was in." She told me of her hatred for the people in leadership in her country who "only love themselves." She seems to think her only hope is to get out of Kenya, because here there is so many school graduates competing for so few jobs. There are 7 kids in Jackie's family, and two of them are at other homes, and she has no idea where the others are. While her situation might be enough to make her outlook on life jaded or skeptical, Jackie is upbeat and keeps talking about her "family" at Huruma and how thankful she is for Mama and the education she is getting here. The girls also tell me the importance of finishing education before getting married (yessss mam! hurrah to the huruma teachers for driving that point home!). We watched a really bad pirated copy of Slumdog Millionaire yesterday. I've been wanting to see it, but that totally doesn't count. Half of the captions made no sense, and the sound didn't even come close to lining up with the picture. I guess I'll have to wait for it to come out on DVD. :) This morning, we had a 3 1/2 hour church service. HA! The kids loved the singing and dancing but kept falling asleep on my shoulder during the message. Who can blame them? Right now, they are watching another pirated DVD but I had to come in for a break and some quiet. It's hard getting used to one place and then switching. I'd be lying if I said I wasn't missing my Iris kids a LOT. I think part of it is knowing I only have a week here, so it will be harder to get to know the kids. The organization is really different here- nobody really explained how anything works so I'm just kind of doing whatever I walk outside and find to do. Actually, they never explained much at Iris either, but I had my lovely roommate Rose to show me the ropes. :) Which is GOOD on one hand, I mean, that's what being a volunteer is- jumping in wherever you see help is needed! But there hasn't really been a schedule here, just lots of kids running around! Mainly because it is weekend and tomorrow school is out for midterms. It's hard to see so much need and not have the capability or the tools to just FIX everything like you want to! I'm so used to just taking charge (because I'm bossy), but when you are in an unknown place for a short period of time, you can't really do that! Actually, it's been a great thing for me. Trying to live up to my favorite Mother T quote, "We can do no great things, only small things with great love," is teaching me a lot! My instinct tells me that I'm not helping if I'm not doing something monumental, like raising funds or leading a class or building houses or something. But sometimes it's more tiring, atleast for me, to do the small things without getting burned out. Small things, like focusing on being a blessing even to just a few children. It's like Shane says in his book, "Everyone wants a revolution, but nobody wants to wash the dishes!" (or peel the potatoes, in my case). So pray that I'll be able to really be able to make good use of my time by blessing some kids while I'm here.
Friday, February 20, 2009
JAMBO kenya! :P
Kenya is beautiful, from what I can see so far. Nairobi looks pretty big, and the traffic is (almost) as crazy as in Maputo! Still no marked lanes, so people just try to keep to their side of the road. There were several road blocks on the way home, and we got stopped probably just because the police saw a white person in the car. He talked to Rufus, the driver, for a minute and then quizzed me a bit. He was trying to figure out if our car was a taxi, because then he would charge Rufus a "tax". Kenya is similar to Mozambique in that the police are really corrupt. They can try to charge you money for just about anything they think they can get away with, and if you do get in trouble for something, you can generally get out of it by offering to buy the officer lunch or a beer. Oh, and did I mention that driving drunk or driving while drinking happens all the time in Mozambique? Nobody really cares. Anyway, after I told the cop I wasn't in a taxi, he looked a little perturbed but allowed us to carry on. I really enjoyed talking to Rufus about Kenyan government and politics and where he has traveled in Africa (he drove from Nairobi to Jo'burg once! That's a 12 day drive!) To me, that's what great trips are made of- little conversations with interesting people who expand your ideas of the world so much! I also talked to some awesome people at the airport from all over- ahhhhh, I've got the traveling bug! Anyway, after we got away from Nairobi and into Ngong, things got much smaller and looked a lot less modern. The area I'm in now is an even poorer area than I was expecting. From what I could see, even if I would walk around in Maputo alone (which I would, during the day), I wouldn't do it here. I can't figure out how the driver saw anything at all, because there were no street lights! I couldn't see more than 3 feet in front of us! There is a big gate around Huruma. It's a delightful home! When we pulled up, 15 or 20 excited kids showed up outside and ran to greet me. I don't remember any of their names. I guess I have to start all over with that! Hopefully they won't be too terribly mean and make up names like the boys did at Iris. Speaking of Iris, leaving was the hardest thing I've done in a while. I'm not an emotional person, and goodbyes usually don't bother me too much. I was NOT expecting to have any issues on the last night! I was doing fine until I said goodbye to two of my closest boys, and the little one started to get a bit emotional, and then I couldn't hold it together. Luckily, I fell apart in my room, and not in front of all the kids! I miss them so much already, but I'm so excited about what the next week will hold! It's 1:30. I'm hitting the sack!
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Goodbye Mozambique (ONLY for the time being!)...
Ps. Of course I said YES to the proposal. Ramito and I will be having a happy African-style wedding here, with chicken feet served and the reception. All are invited. Thanks Uncle D :)
Monday, February 16, 2009
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
say whaaaa?!?!
PEOPLE EAT CHICKEN FEET HERE. Chicken feet. And it isn't disguised as some sort of a sandwich or pie. It's the centerpiece of a plateful of rice, sitting straight up in the middle, and it looks like- well, the same way it looks when it is still on a live chicken! I thought Ken, my south african friend who is also visiting Iris, was kidding when he told me what was on the lunch menu. And when I got to the front of the line and saw the FEET, I quickly stepped out, for fear of losing any leftover breakfast that might still be in my stomach (the breakfast here is just bread, so that would probably be ok). Ken started laughing and the poor man serving the FEET looked confused as to why I wouldn't want a chicken FOOT in my meal. As we were eating, the litte girl next to me dropped her FOOT on the ground. "Thank God," I thought. That's where it belongs. But no. The FOOT is a delicacy here. Not wanting to waste it, she picked the thing off the ground and stuck it her mouth. *Gag*.
On a not so light note, there are some other things that have made me pretty nauseus on this trip. Yesterday we drove past a body in the middle of the road who had just been hit by a car. Blood was all over the pavement and everyone in my van got really quiet (and that's saying something, because it was me and like 8 mozambican boys in their late teens and early 20s, and they aren't quiet very often. There were kids lined up on the street staring. I still can't get the image out of my head. And I can't help but think if it affected ME like this, how much more is it affecting those little kids? Ugh. Tough stuff.
The other day we also went to a Mozambican hospital to pray for sick kids. We brought some bananas to give out, because here, they don't feed the patients. So you can literally die from starvation before dying of whatever illness got you hospitalized in the first place. Scary. There was a child who'd been caught in an electrical fire, and another who had a snake bite in the eye. The whole place looked so hopeless. The mothers were so open as we laid hands on the children and prayed. It was amazing, and gut wrenching at the same time. I've got to talk myself into going to do that again.
Signing off for now. So much to tell but I'm out of internet time. And, in response to everyone's comments, thank you for reading! You aren't eating up my internet time, I reallyreally love hearing from you while I'm here! Love you all. <3
Monday, February 9, 2009
I'm learning the true meaning of communal living here! Between hearing Shane speak shortly before leaving and now being here, it's like something finally clicked...and folks, let me tell you, this is where it's at! A ship from the US Navy (The Robert E Bradford, I think it is?!) is here and the guys are doing some work for the centre. They brought along some donations from Project Hope and other non-government organizations and their purpose is basically is to do humanitarian work and befriend African nations...and I'm sure it doesn't hurt the good ol US of A's reputation around the world either. Well, I don't know what they were expecting. We had a service the other day with some of the boys and girls here and at the end, they brought the navy guys up, wrapped them each in a capulana (african wrap/skirt), and laid hands on them in prayer. Watching some of these tough men getting choked up as African children prayed over them was quite the experience! And today, the ship chaplain preached in our church service (with a portuguese interpreter, of course). Obviously a bit nervous and unsure how to communicate to these people, he struggled through it and kept apologizing for using big words! After the service, tears were streaming down his face as the last song played. These people know how to do a worship service! At the beginning, the church-which is nothing more than a big open building that also doubles as a kitchen/meal house- is filled with children and adults dancing in the isles and in front of the stage, singing at the top of their lungs. People from all over the community come. Funny how it happens, though- one of the sailors mentioned something about how they came to help people "less fortunate" than they were. "If you only knew," I thought. The people here have a secret to life. Maybe that's what Jesus meant when he said, "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven." Smart guy. :P You come here, thinking you are going to bless someone, and you end up being blessed instead. Just ask the US Navy! : )
My luggage arrived TODAY!! YAY!! And for all my friends and family who know how I tend to...um, overpack...I have been cured! I have lived all this time with just my backpack! I bought the essentials at a drugstore and borrowed some stuff from my roommate. I used a t-shirt as a towel for my (cold) showers. How's that for roughing it. Ha! Anyway, my luggage being gone for so long has resulted in a great friendship w/ the Iris driver, Samuel (I don't know how you'd spell that...it's pronounced Sam-well), who picked me up from the airport and has driven me back a couple of times in search of my bads (it's a 20+ min drive each way). Now, I am giving him English lessons! He asked me to ride along with him when he needs topick someone up from the airport or go into town for something, and tomorrow he will come to the centre for a lesson. Samuel also teaches me a lot about Mozambican culture and helps me with my portuguese (and my portuguese, I mean nothing more than something that sounds like pig latin). Samuel is very eager to learn and will often pull the truck off the road, which is not unusual here. Maputo traffic is exciting enough to have it's own blog entry, For now, we'll just say: absolutely NO street signs or traffic rules, and I've only seen one stoplight. Anyway, he pulls off the road, types a word into his phone, and asks me how to pronounce it. Samuel loves Celine Dion and sings "My Heart Will Go On" to me and asks for help with pronunciation. Very entertaining.
I survived my first Mozambican bus (chala) ride! Quite the adventure! You are packed in like sardines- it's really more like a small shuttle than a bus- with loud, American hip hop music playing. Nobody speaks English, and it smells like body odor. Good stuff. It's just appalling to look outside at the overcrowded streets...people walking around with no shoes, women selling fruit or tshirts, SO many children, and people living in small, open shacks built out of whatever they can find.
Ok, I'm really out of time now! More on Thursday!
Anyway, I'm out of time for now. Will be back on Thursday.
Wednesday, February 4, 2009
Here in Mozambique!
The people here are beautiful. Rachel is about to give me a tour. I will write more later!
PS. Forgive any spelling or grammar errors in these posts while I am here, as I will always be writing in a hurry!
Saturday, January 31, 2009
+ Kenya...
I leave tomorrow for 2 1/2 weeks in Mozambique- arriving Feb 3, leaving Feb 20- and then I'm heading to Kenya from the 20-28th. I'll be working at Huruma Children's Home- see link below! I'm thrilled to add this to the itinerary because it will be a true Kenyan experience- eating all kenyan meals, living with kenyans, working with kenyans. Much less westernized than Iris in Mozambique will be. I'm so excited to leave tomorrow, broaden my horizons, and expand my comfort zone!
http://www.hchngong.org/
Thursday, January 15, 2009
Africa Bound!
In a little over two weeks, I leave on my first adventure in Mozambique!
Mozambique is one of the poorest countries in the world, with a population of 21 million, of which 1.6 of these are orphans. Because of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, the number of orphans is constantly on the rise. 54% of people here are living below the national poverty line, and 44% of the population are malnourished. I'll be visiting from February 2-25, which is in just a couple of weeks! I am serving at Iris Ministries, headed by Rolland and Heidi Baker (they have several books out, check it out!) Iris is an AWESOME organization! Iris started in Maputo and is now in 25 countries all over the world, heads up 6000 churches, and reaches thousands of children. 29 international missionaries serve in Maputo and over 175 Mozambican part time and full time staff are emplyoed.
Check out my location at: http://www.irismin.com/ministryLoc_zimpeto.cfm.
Videos about Iris:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v_ZLloNMuKg- On the Zimpeto Center, my location!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c6oB0UTwNK0&feature=related- Documentary on Iris
MOST IMPORTANTLY...I emailed the Zimpeto Center asking for a list of donated items or needs. I am listing them here to ask each of you to please consider contributing to these needs! With the flight and all the expenses, I can't afford very many of these items! Anything you can contribute is amazing- contact me to give them to me in person OR mail them to me (remember I leave Feb 2). THANK YOU!!!
For the bigger items that I can't fit in my suitcase, consider making monetary contributions instead and write what they are for in the notes line on the check. Checks can be made to Iris Ministries. SEE LIST BELOW. And contact me for my address to send supplies to.
Also please PRAY...pray for the orphans in Mozambique and pray that God will use me to serve and love for the three weeks I'm there.
Love,
Mychal
Suggested Donation Items
Urgent Needs:
Baby mobiles or crib toys for 0 - 6 months
Baby bouncer or seats
Premmie or newborn clothes
Triple antibiotic ointment
Disposable diapers, new born to 12kgs
Baby liquid soap
White Permanent Fabric Pens
New Single Sheets (flat and fitted)
Girls clothing ages 4 - 12
Boys and girls underwear ages 4 - 7.
Baby wet wipes
Baby shampoo (any brand)
Hand sanitizer
Boys shorts age 6 - 18
Boys T shirts age 6 - 18
Disposable latex gloves size medium or large.!!!!!!!
Paracetamol.
Current Needs:
Craft sponges
Craft scissors for 5 - 10year olds.
Triple antibiotic cream (lots)1% hydrocortisone cream
Baby bum cream like sudacream, bepanthan
bandaids
wet wipes for babies bums.
Hand sanitizer
disposable gloves
used but good educational baby toys ages 6months to 5 years.
used but good baby bags for mums to carry their baby gear in.s
imple jig saw puzzles ages 5 - 10 years.
DVD used good movies for kids from 8 years to 15 nice stories!
Disposable diapers for anyone who has room, premmie, new born, 6 - 15 kgs
Instruments- Second Hand Guitars for youth/children to learn onGuitar Strings for acoustic guitars - as many as you can bringGuitar Strings for electric bass guitars
Baby House:
* Priority items: * Diapers (especially disposable newborn and small sizes) and plastic pants
Clothes for premature babies
Crib Sheets
Good Quality Fisher Price Type sturdy toys
Baby Dolls - particularly black skinned
Chunky cars and trucks
Underwear - size 2 - 4
Laundry Markers
Instant Hand Santizer
One Piece Sleepwear - specially large - size 2 - 4
Spill proof training cups
Boys:
* Priority items* :- Shorts: especially age 12-18; good quality, prefer darker colors, "three quarter" / long length.
Long pants, prefer baggy-style
Underpants - small mans sizes- Belts
Other boys' items:Shirts, T-shirts, ages 6-18 years (not white)Jeans/trousers ages 7-18 yearsUnderwear: all sizes from 4-18 yearsLight Jackets for boys/girls: ages 5-18 Linen: Single Bed sheets, and blanketsSchool shirts - white School trousers - navy blueSports socksShoes: Size 2-10 ( ages 7 - 18) Sports socks Deodorant, shampoo, tooth brushes and toothpaste.Balls: soccer, football, basketball, etc.Frisbees and other toysPlaying cards.Curtains for windows
Clinic:
Single use, non-sterile gloves in sm/med. (boxes of 100) all you can bring!Oral Rehydration solution (ORS) powder packages for 1 liter of waterTriple antibiotic ointment (Neosporin or polysporin), Rolled Gauze,Cough syrup; Children’s chewable vitamins; regular multi-vitamins; iron supplements; Tylenol; ibuprofen (200 mg); Paracetemol (500 mg); Doxycyline, Cotrimoxazole, MetronidazoleIntravenous solutions: Glucose 5% Ringer 250ml, 500 ml, 1000mlHartmann 250ml, 500ml, 1000mlNatrium Chloride 0.9%Intravenous linesband-aids; elastic bandages; bandaging tape;cotton balls; Q-tips.IV or Syringe capsDiabetic candy (hard candy and chocolate)
Girls:Girls wrist watches for Christmas.Thin, lightweight sportsbras, the type you pull over your head that have no cups. In all sizes (please, no lace or underwire bras).Underwear sizes 4 - 7Clothing in nice condition. Girls wear dresses at or below the knee, nothing short please.No shorts or spaghetti strap tops for girls over 12 or so.School shirts - white School trousers - navy blueShoes in all sizes, especially sandals and flip-flops.Black baby dolls or Barbies.Combs.Nail Polish/RemoverDeodorant, shampoo, tooth brushes and toothpaste
GeneralPlastic tubs or old suitcases for under bed storageSunglasses for Christmas.Back packs for Christmas.CandyPortuguese Bibles Balloons Curly ribbon or fishing wire Colored paper Streamers Scissors Glue stick TapeBeads and thread (boys enjoy making necklaces etc as much as the girls!)
Hospitality: Sheets for single beds Mosquito Nets Tents Pillows Towels DishtowelsKitchenware including cutlery Tape: scotch, masking, duct Dry erase & Permanent Markers
PreschoolPuzzlesSimple preschool activitiesGlueCraft SticksQuality educational toys
SchoolEnglish/Portuguese dictionaries. English dictionary.Books/teaching materials for a local English Language School PencilsPensNotebooksScissorsGluePaper
YouthSoccer BallsBaseball CapsShorts - Size 14 - 18Jeans - Size 14 - 18