Monday, November 8, 2010

Those Kendalls


Next time you see Paul Kendall be sure to say “habari” instead of “hello.” Paul is obsessed with learning Swahili and it’s a riot to follow him around the Rift Valley Academy campus trying it out and learning as he goes. And of course everything and everyone he encounters is ‘muzuri’ … good. The Kenyans love our Ashevillians.


And we’ve loved winding down our month in Africa with some time with the Kendall family—well, half of them. Paul is managing the household well (with a little biscuit making from Bernice) in Christie’s absence, along with Mary and Rich(ardson). They have been terrific hosts, showing us the RVA campus, introducing us to parents and friends, building fires, taking us on walks for real African food, feeding us in the school cafeteria —and all the while reminding us of home.  It’s nice to have coffee from a Dripolator mug.

The school campus sits perched above the Rift Valley. It’s cool and breezy up here at 7,000 feet (no heating or air conditioning in the homes) but down in the valley it’s nearly desert. There are tent cities of displaced people from the election violence a few years ago living down there—from the campus you can see them gleaming white against the brown landscape—and Paul has already begun ministering there. Last week his Sunday School class trucked drums of water and other supplies down to them, and he’s busy thinking up better ways to help.

Meanwhile, Mary and Rich seem to have settled into RVA life happily, with new friends, activities, and sports. We loved having them as our African guides for a few days...and it took the edge off harder places like Joytown and Kijabe Hospital.

We've now been back in Nairobi two days and leave in just an hour for the airport, first to Amsterdam and then on to Atlanta...and home. With more stories to tell.

Friday, November 5, 2010

Survivors

On Thursday we crisscrossed tea plantations and coffee farms to reach Thika, an old town north of Nairobi, Kenya. Some might remember The Flame Trees of Thika, one of my favorite books of childhood and later a TV series. Today colonial remnants are hard to spot (as are flame trees) but Thika is an industrial and agricultural center—in fact, Del Monte has a pineapple processing plant there and roadside stands were stacked high with them.


But we were in Thika to visit Joytown Special Primary School for the Disabled.


There 340 kids live and go to school under supervision of five therapists (5!!) and about a dozen teachers and dorm mothers. These are some hard working heroes, as many of the children are severely handicapped and in this culture often neglected or cast out by their families.




 Francisca helps to run the school and told us her story. She was born with spina bifida and her grandmother several times tried to kill her...with rat poison. Her father described her as "useless" and her extended family thought she might possess an evil spirit. "No one understood me," she said. "I had problems with my bladder, and my legs would not bend. I was always alone and always wet. I had no peace—at home or at school." Ultimately her mother ran away with her and took her to a Catholic priest, which turned out to bring only temporary respite. But when an uncle became a Christian, he helped get her to Kijabe Hospital, the Africa Inland Mission outreach that specializes in treating childrens' disabilities. She was 19.
There doctors amputated her right leg from the knee down and treated pressure sores that can be fatal in spina bifida victims. And they taught her to catheterize herself, which proved life-changing for her. She was no longer an outcast who always smelled bad. They also shared the gospel: "My life completely changed."

Francisca went on to work at Kijabe Hospital for 10 years before she began mentoring children at Joytown. Many of them suffer from spina bifida, cerebral palsy, or other birth defects, and Francisca understands how isolated they feel. Now she is married. And she is expecting a baby. Doctors at Kijabe have treated thousands of spina bifida cases, but one told me today they've never known a survivor who went on to have children.


 Francisca here is comparing her cane with a student's.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Flora

We do solemnly swear that it is summer here.



Rebecca Bell in the raspberry patch. Sunday afternoon.


And abundant swiss chard at the Bell home in Harare.


Jacaronda in bloom in Johannesburg. Everywhere.


A park in Johannesburg.

Roses in Stellenbosch. For Dottie and Carol.

Seaside nasturtiums in Hermanus, South Africa.

And unnamed beauties in the Company's Garden in Cape Town.

Tonight making our overnight flight from Harare to Nairobi. Realizing we are on the downhill I am overwhelmed by the blessings of safety, health, peace among ourselves, and richness of new friends. God is good all the time.

Zim time

 I am listening to the strange sound of rain on a thatched roof. It is both thumping on the roof and running down off the verandah behind where we sit, dry, indoors.


 
We are staying in an old cottage in the Harare suburb of Borrowdale, an area settled by Europeans, largely around the time of independence, which for Zimbabwe happened relatively late—and under unusual circumstances. The white Ian Smith led the Rhodesian Front, first fighting for independence from England then fighting the black militant ZANU forces, with majority (i.e., black) rule not coming to Rhodesia/Zimbabwe until 1980. During that prolonged struggle many white families moved out to places like Borrowdale as blacks began to take up residence and business in former white areas of the city.

Today we talked to Tim, who heads up Scripture Union in Harare, and was one of the first blacks to attend Central Baptist Church. Until then blacks were not allowed to use the sidewalks in the city, could only walk in certain areas, and only to and from work (for whites). They had to live in designated areas, often alongside industrial sites, could only shop in certain places and were prohibited from buying certain things, like the local Castle beer. Not quite apartheid, but close. So today Tim is one of the leaders at Central and heads up a Christian ministry that takes Bible literature to government schools, even teaches classes on scripture to students.

Central started in the city center in 1928 as Salisbury Baptist Church (Harare was named Salisbury until independence) but today is a mostly black church. The church has had a black pastor but currently the senior pastor is white and associate is black. Vibrant only begins to describe it. We’ve had a great time getting to know senior pastor John Bell, a lifelong Zimbabwean and my original contact here and now friend and outstanding host, and Asafa, the assistant.

Today after Central’s service, Asafa took us to a “high-density area,” the government term for the projects, so that we could experience “African worship” in native Shona tongue. Pastor Gardner Moyo and the congregation were welcoming. 
As we readied to leave, a member of the congregation, whose name is Knowing God (really) prayed for us as a family, and for us all to “grow together in Christ.” Shona names are always meaningful, and in addition to Knowing God, I’ve met Zimbabweans named Thank You, Six Pence, Grace, and learned tonight that at one time Wireless was a popular name (given by parents jealous of the whites’ telegraphs and telephones).

Listening to Shona then English then Shona and Scripture recognizable to all and among people who live in houses made of brick, corrugated metal, and cardboard & plastic was a reminder of something emphasized at Lausanne: Christianity is the only truly world religion. It breaks the barriers.

But none of that’s to say that Zimbabwe is easy, or easy to understand. We spent yesterday visiting high-density areas all over the city, shocked by the extent of poverty, woeful housing (high-rises of one-room lodging once meant as hostels for single men now housing families), chaos, and crime. As John said, “We live in a land of sadness.”



Friday, October 29, 2010

A few wild things

Jonathan Dockery! From Winston Salem to Johannesburg, where he is working with the cutting-edge microfinance group Paradigm Shift. Our paradigms shifted as we ate dinner with him in a hip side of town, where Ferraris and Lambourghinis rule—and ate ostrich fillets and other African dishes. Oh, and a waiter painted our faces by candlelight.
At a nearby lion park, we got closeups with more wildlife, including extremely rare white lions (below). 

We also saw zebras, springboks, rare birds, a cheetah, and some nasty hyenas. The highlight was Sara playing with the lion cubs, until one got a little aggressive and with one cub paw pulled her to the ground. Like Aslan, these lions aren't safe but possibly they aren't good either. Our game guide told us of several tourists killed because they thought lying lions looked cuddly enough to touch. We stayed in the safari truck, but still were close enough to touch. 


Sara did get up close with a giraffe who loves to curl his tongue around your hand to pull in the whole bag of food. He seemed practiced.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Musical beds


Already we are losing track of the beds we’ve slept in, but last night we slept aboard a train between Cape Town and Johannesburg—Nat in one sleeper cabin and Sara and me together in another. 
Porters made our beds while we ate a luxurious dinner, making for a relaxing, 26-hour trip that took us through vineyard upon vineyard to scrub desert and mining country.  Our Premier Classe train is a somewhere below a Blue Train but at least a grade above regular passenger service. Everywhere we’ve been the Africans have treated us to exceptional hospitality: Our guesthouse hosts and these porters have made dinner reservations for us, called cabs, driven us places themselves, made food to order, dusted while chatting, taken our trash, etc.

We are winding up our time in South Africa but not without enjoying wildlife, the water, and good food. 


 African penguins! Here a colony of them at Betty’s Bay, where we stopped Sunday afternoon on our way from Hermanus back to Cape Town.


 Seals out in Table Bay, where we took a sail on Monday. And a lone shark that wandered into the harbor. 


We had perfect sailing weather—light winds, sunny and cool—and our regret was that Jim Goffin wasn’t aboard to show the crew what’s what.

We did meet onboard several Sudanese who also attended the Lausanne conference, including an Anglican bishop from Nuba Mountains who told me of their delegations’ meetings with African regional leaders to press for peace as the January referendum moves forward. Everyone expects the South of Sudan to vote for succession, and that will leave areas like Nuba and Blue Nile (where I travelled 10 years ago) in a very precarious state. He was strong too in his belief that the north will quickly move to becoming a radical Islamic state after the referendum. All this, pulling into the dock in Cape Town harbor—keeping us grounded to the realities of life in this beautiful place.

Our trip is reaching its midpoint, but we have miles to go…

Monday, October 25, 2010

Whale watching in Hermanus

Every July, Southern Right Whales migrate to Hermanus, a town south of Cape Town, to mate and calve. They remain there until November, then return to the oceans around Antarctica until the next winter. One of these whales can weigh up to 80 tons and be up to 15.5 meters long. It's tail fin can be up to 3 meters long. We drove to Hermanus for a few days to see if we could catch of glimpse of some, and we did.



There's a path along to rocky shore that's great for spotting them, and sometimes they came close enough for us to see their features clearly through the water. We wished we had a foot-long lens or a big pair of binoculars like some of the other tourists, but our point-and-shoot did us just fine.


Further down the path, you pass some little Dutch cottages. On the roof of one of them were two men who were watercoloring. It was hard to believe we were actually in Africa.—by Sara

Sunday, October 24, 2010

To the Cape

First the Atlantic and then the Indian Ocean opened up before us as we headed south from Cape Town on Thursday. We hugged the Atlantic side on a road high above the beaches and palms and resorts of Camps Bay and other seaside enclaves. At Constantia we cut inland—the green pasturelands were calling to us—and made our way to the oldest vineyard in South Africa, Groot Constantia, founded in 1658. Situated on a rise, the rows of vines march off to the south where you can see the Indian Ocean in the distance, and up hills toward the Atlantic coast. The manor house and winery are tall and Dutch with thatched roofs. We marveled at the trees (the 9th grade leaf project cannot be stopped; it can only be Africanized!), the vistas, the breeze, and the wine itself.

But oceans, and the Cape of Good Hope were beckoning. Through sun, clouds, wind, rain, and sun again we made our way south to the Cape Point Nature Preserve and the other-world that is the end of the African continent, the starting point of all colonial-era landings. Much of it is a treeless wonder of rocks, wildflowers and scrub known here as fynbos. And baboons. A large, grandaddy of a baboon greeted us at roadside as we entered the preserve, and at one point we had to stop our car and weave through an extended family of young and old. They are cute, annoying, and apparently a menace. They reportedly can open a car door and climb in.

At Cape Point we took a funicular (the new rescatura for trip duration) to the lighthouse, hiked to its peak, and watched below as birds dived, wind howled, and two oceans mingled together. It was a faraway land even as we stood on it, something out of Myst, and hard to believe we had made it.
But we had another hike to go, about a 30 minute trek down a narrow path along the spine of the very point, further out and further in, Drew would say, where only a few go. We're so glad Sara (and Drew in our minds) urged us on...away from the tour groups to just hear the waves and birds and wind. Out there we discovered another lighthouse, one built earlier in 1919, perched on a slab of rock over the waters. A plaque said its light flashed three times a minute at "1,000,000 candles power" visible for 63 km (that's 40 miles!) in all directions. I've never been anywhere where the ocean felt so immense, and we so small.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Lausanne's big small world

Onesimus was reason enough to come to South Africa. He is the chaplain to the Archbishop of Uganda, Henry Orombi, and a mighty man of God. Here we are awaiting the week's first press conference.
But that's just the beginning of the small world of the very big Third Lausanne Congress on World Evangelization—with its 4,000 delegates from about 200 countries. Other samples, largely involving meals: At Sunday's opening night dinner I filled a plate from one of a gazillion buffet tables lining two floors of the Cape Town convention center. Then I headed upstairs to a giant ballroom, sat down at a random round table with a pastor from Estonia, a teacher from Chad, and Gabi Nagy, who teaches English in Budapest, and is Hungarian. She's a delightful, animated young woman and after a few minutes of chatting, I asked, "Do you by any random chance know Heidi Meiners?" Heidi is a friend from Asheville who also teaches in Budapest (yes, a big city) but Gabi's jaw dropped, and she said, "She's one of my best friends." I explained that we've known Heidi since she was a little girl, she babysat my children in Asheville, and her father had taught all my children.
Monday's lunch was a boxed lunch that most ate standing up at the empty buffet tables, and through the throng of people I spied Covenant Seminary President (and World Magazine board member) Bryan Chapell, who was heading up an important working group of theological schools from around the world at Lausanne, among many other things. Monday's dinner included conversation with a pastor from Johannesburg named Cecil. At Tuesday's dinner I ran into Doug Nichols, who heads up Action International Ministries and just a few months ago stopped in to see me in Asheville. He was at a table with Daren Beck who works with a school in Cambodia (and knows Marvin Olasky). And Joel Edwards, who used to head up the Evangelical Alliance in UK (connection: Anna Moyle; he's her former boss) and now heads up the Micah Challenge.
On Wednesday we celebrated a long and cherished connection with Os Guinness over breakfast, and including our friend Emad Beshay Ibrahim. Emad took such good care of our family in Cairo (over the Eastern Christmas, no less!) that he is a mythological character: When we're lost, where's Emad? Don't know what time a school event starts, ask Emad! Need help planning just anything, call Emad! He is still wonderful, sincere, humble, and helping to manage the hard work of Mama Maggie and Stephen's Children in Cairo...but also now married and with two children, ages two and four!!
Os, meanwhile rightly diagnosed what's troubling many about this year's Lausanne Congress—"the shift from proclamation to conversation, from solid substance to sound-biting, from truth to entertainment.”
And then there were coffee line run-ins: with Labib Madanat of the Palestinian & Israeli Bible Society, plus pastors Joel and others from Baghdad, the legendary Peter Hammond from South Africa, Carl Ellis from Chattanooga, even a pastor-friend from Kabul, Afghanistan. All in the same building in Cape Town, South Africa.
And somewhere along the way these two travelers showed up. And they are a sight for sore eyes.