Showing posts with label #POVERTY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #POVERTY. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Serengeti National Park

 


[1]

Psalm 104:24-25

King James Version

24 Lord, how manifold are thy works! in wisdom hast thou made them all: the earth is full of thy riches.

25 So is this great and wide sea, wherein are things creeping innumerable, both small and great beasts.

 

We were poor. All of the other missionaries at Ikizu Secondary owned a car. We could not have afforded to put gas in it, even had we owned one. So, we had to hitch a ride anytime we wanted to go anywhere. From my meagre earnings I had managed to buy an SLR camera and a 200 to 400 mm zoom lens.

We lived on the northern edge of the great Serengeti National Park. Often on a Sabbath (Saturday) afternoon or a Sunday, I would talk with one of the other missionaries—never the Kings who had no sense of adventure—about what we might do. The only real entertainment within driving distance—the Serengeti.

I would almost always ride shotgun while Gary or Fritz or George or Dave or Bob drove. I seemed to have a sixth sense when it came to the trackless steppe county of Africa. Even though the grass was four feet high, and the bush and trees grew with no pattern, I always knew the most direct route to the only ford across the Grumeti River and the way home. There was no GPS in those days.

Upstream or downstream, the Grumeti housed the great crocodiles and even greater hippos. We would often risk life and limb by stealing on foot through the dense brush along the river to snap pictures of the crocs or hippos. Of course, this same thorn brush often hid the lions and leopards awaiting their prey. Hunters claimed you could always smell a lion from 20 feet away by the foul smell of rotting flesh caught between its teeth. I was fortunate not to have ever gotten that close on foot. Every year we got reports of someone’s having been carried off by a lion or disemboweled by a leopard.

Out on the plains we saw the great animals, 5-ton elephants flapping their ears to drive off the tsetse fly, tall giraffes delicately picking off the leaves from between the vicious thorns of flat-topped acacia trees. When we were lucky, we would arrive to experience the hundreds of thousands of wildebeest and zebra during their annual migration towards Lake Victoria. They left the plains totally denuded of grass and blotched with pungent manure. Then we could see the smaller animals: warthogs running with their tails pointing straight up, maybe the sneaky jackal. Always we saw various stately antelope that varied from the eland, as great as a bull moose, to the terrier-size tommy (Thompson’s gazelle) with its perpetual-motion tail. 

As the sun sank towards the lake in the west, we would drive back home, enriched by the vista of God’s varied handiwork. Back at Ikizu, missionaries gathered as Sylvia or Charlotte played hymns on the piano and we hand cranked vanilla ice-cream and popped corn, renewed for a new week of endless work.

Thanks, Lord, that we have never gone wanting and for the enjoyment we have received in spite of periods of poverty.




[1] https://www.exploring-africa.com/en/tanzania/western-corridor-and-grumeti-reserve-western-serengeti/south-grumeti-river

Saturday, May 1, 2021

Content Whether Full or Hungry


[1]

Philippians 4:12-13

Good News Translation

12 I know what it is to be in need and what it is to have more than enough. I have learned this secret, so that anywhere, at any time, I am content, whether I am full or hungry, whether I have too much or too little. 13 I have the strength to face all conditions by the power that Christ gives me.

 

In 1986 we moved to California. The sale of our home in Massachusetts had fallen through, so we were still making house payments on it, and we were paying exorbitant rent on the house we were living in. We now had three kids in church school. I remember lamenting to the Lord, “Not again, Lord, please!” Then our house back east sold for approximately what we paid for our home in California.

A year after we were first married, I was as grad student, and Sylvia had a good job, but it fell through. We were able to borrow enough for me to finish school and move to Africa. Then our second year in Tanzania, the TAD made a big mistake in our salary, and we were with no money for six months. Things eased gradually until I went back to grad school with two kids. Then we had to go on food stamps for a couple years, but the Lord blessed, and we lived very well towards the end. In fact, we were living better than we had previously throughout our married life. Back in Africa double digit inflation and another bigger mistake by the TAD (Trans African Division that employed us) thrust us back into a hand-to-mouth existence. In spite of this, we have always had a roof over our heads and have never gone hungry.

We moved to Massachusetts, and I took a second job so we could afford to buy a house. In spite of my two jobs, our bank balance would drop to less than $10 at the end of most months. Still the Lord was good to us, and we were able to grow at least half of the food we ate for seven years. The old clunkers we drove kept right on clunking. Then in California I again took on a second job. God heard my lament, and things did improve—slowly but steadily until my retirement in 2013. I remember walking in the hills and praising God for the prosperity he had granted us. I also remember having a premonition that things would change. … Again.

Since then, West Nile virus, threatening blindness, and cancer take their toll. This miserable pandemic has cramped our style. It appears that we, as a nation, are facing serious inflation and possible national financial collapse. In spite of all this, I have a solid confidence to say with Paul, “I have the strength to face all conditions by the power that Christ gives me!”

Thank You, Lord, that everyone reading this blog has the very same promise that God will continue to look after them, too.

 


[1] https://line.17qq.com/articles/oohncpdov.html

Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Unshakable Government

Hebrews 12:28
Good News Translation (GNT)
28 Let us be thankful, then, because we receive a kingdom that cannot be shaken. Let us be grateful and worship God in a way that will please him, with reverence and awe.


This past week Robert Mugabe, the world’s longest ruling dictator of 37 years, was deposed by a carefully orchestrated, bloodless coup d’etat.  Mugabe had emerged the victor in a bloody civil war that rocked the idyllic, prosperous, and peaceful Southern Rhodesia or just Rhodesia. Hundreds of innocent people were killed after the war by simply stepping on land mines that had been planted throughout the country.

Mugabe started a systematic genocide attempt on the Ndebele people who had put up the strongest resistance to his assuming leadership.  He methodically drove the successful white farmers out of the country and gave their farms to his favorite military generals who had no desire or skill to farm. The net result was that when he took office, the country was exporting food to the nations around: after his policies took effect, starvation overtook the country. The international community has had to step in and feed his people.

The pictures above show how he squandered the limited wealth of his country to build himself a mansion that rivals the mansions of European nobility and royalty. As the country ran out of money, he printed vast amounts of paper money until the Zimbabwe dollar became literally worthless.

King Ndebele, a boyhood friend of mine, once wrote, “When the British were here, we had freedom but not independence. Now we have independence, but we don’t have freedom.”

As we see the steady erosion of our rights and freedoms in our own country, I appreciate more and more the promise that we will, in God’s own time, receive the “kingdom that cannot be shaken.”

 Let us indeed “be grateful and worship God in a way that will please Him, with reverence and awe.”




[i] https://i2.wp.com/truthorfictioncom.c.presscdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/zim5.jpg
[ii] https://i0.wp.com/truthorfictioncom.c.presscdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/zim10.jpg
[iii] http://m.wsj.net/video/20150616/061615zimnote/061615zimnote_1280x720.jpg

Friday, December 25, 2015

Our Imaginations Versus the Real Thing

John 1: 18
The Message Bible
No one has ever seen God,
     Not so much as a glimpse.
This one of-a-kind God-Expression,
     Who exists at the very heart of the Father,
     Has made Him plain as day.

We read about Madagascar, about its poverty, its people. We imagined what is must be like. We read about the tourist attractions, the rain forests, the lemurs, and the marvelous diversity of its flowering plants.
Now we’ve been here nearly a week. We’ve driven down the streets and roads, rich with potholes, big potholes. We’ve jostled with semi’s, trucks, big busses, little busses, pickups, luxury cars, small cars, motor cycles, scooters, oxen-pulled carts, hand carts piled higher than I ever would have imagined, rickshaws, bicyclists, pedestrians—hundreds of pedestrians, dogs, and chickens. None of these gives an inch on the road. All take death-defying (and sometimes not defying) chances.

The cities are brown, dirty, bustling with life. The countryside is a rich green, the result of daily rains. The hills are bare of forests, bare of the diversity. The valleys are all partitioned off into thousands of rice paddies. There is a vast carefully engineered network of aquifers carrying the life giving streams to more paddies higher up on the sides of the hills. Bare paddies have women and girls working ankle to calf deep in the water and mud with large handfuls of rice plants that are planted in neat rows.

Now I know the real Madagascar a little bit. It’s not like I imagined. It’s not like the way it is painted in tour guide books. In a similar way, God was described, painted, represented a thousand ways to me as a child. I formed pictures of Him as a vengeful, exacting, controlling tyrant. Then I met Christ, full of love, mercy, and grace.

Thank You, heavenly Father, for sending Christ so that I might know the real God.






[i] http://traveldealscheap.com/data_images/top_cityes/antananarivo/antananarivo-01.jpg

Monday, December 21, 2015

Sojourn to Madagascar--01--Preparation and Travel

Sojourn to Madagascar Part 01

Preparation and Travel



When we mentioned to our friends, relatives, and acquaintances that we were planning to spend three months in Madagascar, their invariable and predictable response was a disbelieving and shocked, “WHY?”

Disney has recently produced some very popular animated movies entitled Madagascar. We knew enough to know that the only fact that Disney used is that Madagascar is a large island. Beyond that they got everything totally wrong. But, after all, Disney is an organization that cares only for making money by entertaining the voluntarily gullible public. So dismiss everything Disney has told you and start over. To help you do this, I’m going to call the island Mada, the popular name for it, at least amongst the expatriates.

Our long time friends Gideon and Pam have been encouraging us to come to Mada on a volunteer basis ever since they moved here from Namibia about 5 years ago. Then earlier this year they requested permanent return to Africa. By the common political maneuvering in Adventist official circles, they were persuaded to remain here and for Gideon to assume the role of rector of the Universite Adventiste Zurcher (UAZ). Rector is the title here for the U.S. title of university president. The request that we come and teach English Communication to the university students was renewed and redoubled.

We tentatively agreed, subject to being able to cut through the red tape that we knew would be wrapped around us. Had we realized how much red tape there would be, we undoubtedly would have turned them down.
They requested that we go through the Adventist Volunteer Services (AVS) of the North American Division of SDAs. So we duly applied. We were immediately shunted to the appropriate obscure and completely confusing website. Since classes at UAZ started in mid to late November, we realized that we might be a week or so late. We spent two days filling out an interminable amount of information (this is just permission for us to spend our own money serving the church).

The AVS then demanded that we study an introduction to Adventist Missions online course. We went through the first two lessons and submitted our responses. In order to proceed to the next lesson, we had to “discuss” the concepts we had studied via their blog with other currently enrolled students (there weren’t any) and submit a carefully reasoned term paper. I think there are 24 lessons total, but I never found out. We realized that this semester length course would take us at least a month to finish under the most concerted effort. That would mean it would be mid-semester at the earliest before we could get to Mada. We sent an impassioned plea to the AVS that because of the urgency of the time constraints and because we had spent the equivalent of 12 years in the service in the countries of Tanzania and South Africa, we be permitted to waive the completion of this course.

In case you are unfamiliar with how decisions are made in the Adventist organization, let me mention that no decisions are made without being acted on by the appropriate committee. In an amazingly quick action, the committee approved this request.

We were then allowed to start the process to get health clearance. This clearance is important in order to get insurance to cover expenses in case of some life threatening event where we had to be evacuated to the nearest hospital with the capabilities of treating us. After we applied, they promptly informed us that since we are both over 70 years of age, they have an age discrimination policy that they will cover a maximum of 50% of what they would normally cover for younger volunteers. That didn’t faze us. But what fazed them is the fact that about 10 years ago I was treated for prostate cancer which is still in remission. This should not have fazed them because they also have a clause that they don’t cover any preexisting condition. After deliberating for two weeks and lots of correspondence later, they finally gave us tentative go ahead on Thursday, December 3, 2015. According the AVS there had not been General Conference or Madagascar Union action granting our request.

We had been strictly instructed not to purchase tickets or obtain visas until their go ahead had been given; however AVS encouraged us to start making arrangements since apparently UAZ had authorized our coming. We immediately requested our travel agent to get us tickets and sent in our application for visas for Madagascar (the visas cost us $523.00 with overnight service). Had we gotten our authorization 24 hours earlier, we would have been able to save $3200 on our airline tickets. Hey, but it’s only money!

In the meantime, God had worked out a plan for someone to stay in our home and look after our dog, Cleo, while we are away. Thank you, God, and thank you, Jan, for keeping our home fires burning! In the meantime we had been able to get a series of vaccinations and inoculations that are recommended for visitors to Mada.

We flew out of LAX on Turkish Air at approximately 7:15 Tuesday evening, December 15. This way we still missed most of the huge rate hikes around the Christmas holidays.

The flights were uneventful except for being very long. We ordered Asian vegetarian meals on the plane. They were excellent, and we recommend the choice. The AVM breakfast on Thursday was a mistake because its major dish was chicken. The attendants apologized and were able to get satisfactory substitutions for us.

We had a seven (7) hour layover in Istanbul (the locals informed us that the name should have the emphasis: i-STAN-bul) from 6 p.m. until after 1:00 a.m. the next morning. We witnessed a number of Muslim pilgrim flights board in Istanbul to Jeddah and on to Mecca. Of course, the women were wearing the usual burkas. The men and boys had similar garments, most of them looking like they had been made-at-home-by-loving-hands out of snow white chenille bedspreads and bath-towels. Most of those on pilgrimages looked like they came from Turkey or other nearby Islamic states. Some, however, were blond, blue-eyed Americans who spoke to us freely about their pilgrimage. We wished them bon voyage and a blessed time in Mecca.

We flew to Mauritius first. Most of the island was shrouded in heavy clouds. I wanted to get off at Mauritius just to say I had been there, but with today’s security problems they wouldn’t let me. An attendant told us that our flight was only the second Turkish Air flight from Turkey to Madagascar. That may be one reason why we arrived at Antananarivo (Tana) a full hour-and-a-half late.

The airport at Tana was a real shock to me. The one in Mauritius looked state of the art with a great glass façade. It was obvious that the Mauritius airport is too small because there were a number of airplanes parked away from the terminal.

The one in Tana looks like it was constructed during WWII and has had nothing done to it since. We waited in a long “line” (great glob of people fenced in by ribbons. We had received no arrival forms in the plane, and I wondered why. The “line” finally dumped us at the head of the immigration. She handed us the forms and told us we should have filled them out. Sylvia and I stood behind her writing on her cubicle wall. She leaned over and whispered to me conspiratorially “You don’t need to fill these out. I will fill them out for you.” She turned and stamped another passport for someone else. Then she leaned back again, “For a little present, of course,” and winked at me.

She was busy when we had finished filling out the form and another clerk beckoned us to come to him. When he saw that were going to UAZ, he looked at me quizzically and asked, “You Adventist?”

I was momentarily puzzled about how he knew; then remembered I had UAZ on the form. “Yes. I am. You concluded that from the Universite Adventiste Zurcher?”

“I am Adventist, too. I don’t work on Sabbath.”

With his help we quickly cleared immigration. After all this time our bags had not yet arrived on the carousel. We could watch progress on the feeder side of the carousel through a strategically placed window. By this time Sylvia was totally exhausted and sat down on the floor near the carousel. I pulled the bags off one by one and took them over to her.

Pam and Gideon were pacing back and forth wondering what had become of us. We piled all of our bags and ourselves into his little SUV. They were also famished and took us to a well secluded little Mediteranean style restaurant called L’Orientale where we ate.

By the time we left there, night had fallen. They had booked us rooms in the ADRA (SDA missionary foundation) compound. The next morning we did a very little bit of shopping (no place to put anything!)

Gideon remarked that the Madagascar method of driving is the merge method. Everyone drives as though they own the whole road—in other words, on both sides of the road. Only at the last minute do you forcibly merge back onto your own side of the road. Thousands of pedestrians, cyclists, and animals move up and down the road as though there were no cars, trucks, busses and motorcycles, and in total fearlessness. Needless to say, we did see several accidents. Driving becomes a death defying experience.

We arrived at UAZ mid afternoon. The country is extensively farmed with rice paddies and field rice. UAZ is situated on a hilltop in an open forest of pine and eucalyptus trees. The university roads double as gullies during the afternoon and evening rains. Compared to much of Africa, security is very light. The people are friendly. They all seem to speak Malagasy, which seems to have no cognates with any western languages I recognize nor with Swahili or Zulu, Arabic or Hebrew, all of which I have had some exposure to.

The physical plant reminds me in many ways of the Solusi we moved to in 1954. It is spread out and rural. Quiet and peaceful. The people are very friendly, laugh easily, and suffer from extreme poverty. Many of them speak some French, a former colonial language. Very few speak English. So our conversations become very minimal.

I stood and surveyed the place. I could not help but ask myself, “WHY?” Why have I come? Can I make any difference for the better to these people’s lives? Have I bitten off way more than I can chew?  We will find out!




[1] http://mw2.google.com/mw-panoramio/photos/medium/54426596.jpg
[2] http://www.winfocus.org/_/rsrc/1250368635127/uscme/uscmc/primus/madagascar/PRIMUS%20Madagascar%201.jpg?height=315&width=420