Friday, September 30, 2011

The End of September

We took the Elders to the Snake Park. They got to ride the camels. 
I think they had a really good P-Day.

Sept. 20, 2011
What a packed day!! The keys to the church got lost somehow. So we spent a lot of time running around getting new locks and keys. 
Then we had an appointment with Elder & Sister Dow (Marcia and John) for lunch. They are special missionaries for the wheelchair project sponsored by the church. We went to lunch at the Maasai Cafe. 
Then we went to Moshi (about 2 hours a way) with Moses (the one Elder R. baptized a few weeks ago) 

to see is father and family there in Moshi.


(That's over by Mt. Kilimanjaro) 

They were very nice. Served us some bean soup which we drank from the bowl. Then we had a tour of their farm. They grow all kinds of things. Then down to the river. 




Then we had to run for home. Which ended up being in the dark. Not a fun experience.

Spent most every day doing our normal stuff. Swahili lessons, teaching with the missionaries, grocery shopping and running the branch pres. around.

On Saturday we had the first lesson with the YSA in the branch. We had members of about a year, members of a month or so, investigators of a month or so, an investigator that was to be baptized today and his family. The lesson was the introduction of the D&C. I think most of them had no idea what we were talking about. Our Swahili is still not very good. Then we had the baptism. 

Then we went with Pres. S. to meet a member from Belgium. He was born in the D. R. Congo and has family there. We brought him back to the church and he had a good talk with Brother K. because Bro. K. speaks French. 

Sept. 25, 2011
Today we had our first temple prep class. We taught about the “Plan of Salvation”. I think the members (and some investigators) learned a lot. We used a clear figure cut from plastic and white one cut from paper on a long string to show the progression through the plan. I think they liked that. Bro. Kibanda translated for us. Then we went to the Nicanor family with Elder Rapiya & Kalyango to talk and answer a lot of questions that the new investigator Johney had.

Sept. 26, 2011
Normal busy P-Day. The Elders came at 5:30 today and we had barbecued beef sandwiches and macaroni salad. The Elders had a video of 2010 mission. We talked about some of their investigators and they left.

Sept. 27, 2011
Went to Swahili lesson. Then met with Bro. Kibanda & Bro. Elia for training and answers to our many questions. Pres. S. joined us for the last part. Then went with Elder Ngapa & Harper to teach mama Winnie, Rose & wife of Francis.

Sept. 29, 2011
Swahili class. Then out to Obuya’s to teach an investigator. Had a pretty good lesson on repentance. Had a good talk with Bro. Obuya about everything from the church to the problem of water in Africa.

Wow, time flies. We have been here in Arusha for a full 4 months now. We are getting used to the traffic, roads and the weather has warmed up a bit. We’ve had several rainy nights and a couple of rainy days. They call this the short rains. But it sure makes the roads a mess. And we found the rain comes right through our bedroom windows. The frames are built in a way that just scoops it right in. Not sure what we will do about that.
But we feel we are making a difference here. Bro. O. who works in Mwanza and is in the branch presidency there and comes here about every 3 weeks to be with his family says he can see a big difference in the branch since we came. We love the people here and hope the growth will continue. And as hard as the missionaries are working we are sure it will. They had 17 investigators at church one Sunday. We see the branch leadership getting stronger every week. The 2nd counselor (the one who has only been a member for about 10 months) is really strong now. He’s the one who teaches us Swahili and translates a lot of our classes for us. We hope the Lord will continue to bless the branch here with unity and growth. The work is great and our testimonies have grown. When we see the strong, humble members here come to church under such hard conditions and we feel blessed to be able to work with them.

Monday, September 19, 2011

Mid September

New chairs for the church.
The things we had hoped for that we spoke with Elder Usi about showed up on Sunday the 11th at about 3:00 PM. So we gathered some members and a couple of the Elders to help us unload. The roads are so narrow that the truck could not get to the branch building so we unloaded into our truck load by load and hauled everything to the church. We were very pleased because we received 100 nice chairs, which means we do not have to move chairs in and out of the classrooms for sacrament meeting and they are padded!! 25 small chairs for the Primary, now all the kids can sit down, 4 folding tables, again so we don’t have to keep moving tables around in order to have one for the things we do during the week and for activities outside. And we received 4 white boards, hooray no more chalk dust all over everything. And we will mount them on the wall so there is more room in the classrooms. We even received the generator we requested so we don’t get in the middle of some activity requiring electricity and have it go off (which happens every day here).

Sept. 12
Elder and Sister Byrd arrived about 4:30. They had scheduled a workshop on Career Development for the 13th and 14th. They really gave a good workshop. We had 13 or 14 people show up. Several non members.


Note the beautiful new chairs, the tables and white board:

While they were here we visited the Maasai Market.


Sept. 16
We went with Bro. Elias (the first counselor in the branch pres.) to see his home, and meet his family.  He lives about 200 km away.  We left at 6:30 a.m. and didn’t get home until 6:30 p.m.  He is a real maasai, with holes in his ears and dresses in the authentic dress, with a Bone Axe club and a big knife called a Boma.  

He comes to church on Sunday in a white shirt and black pants but during the week when he’s at work as a guide or a guard, he dresses the part.  He’s really a great guy and his family was so kind and gracious.  He was so excited to have us go to his home. His wife is named Agnes. He has 5 children. Pres. Spear (the Branch Pres.) also went with us.
We drove almost to the border of Kenya to a little village called Longido, stopped to buy some provisions for Elias’ family, 

then turned left off the road. We drove for about an hour, saw all kinds of animals



and there was a maasai lady on the side of the road who motioned for us to stop. She wanted to know if she could ride into the village to buy medicine. So we took her with us she sat in the back seat between the two brethren. 



We drove for a long time to a village and we thought that was where Elias lived but after the Maasai lady got out, we drove for another hour and a half (in low 4 wheel drive up the mountain).
Yes, that is the road. Note the beehive in the tree.
The higher we went the worse the road.


 As we were driving up the road, we met Elias’ brother 

modern masaai - checking his watch:

and sister in law. 

The sister in law gave Sister R. a blue beaded cross off her neck because she said Sister R. was a “church woman.”  


Further up the road, we met Elias’ herd of cows. We counted about 25 but they all looked very young, like only a year old maybe.
Finally parked, met some of his family,




then he showed us where he lived.  It was down the side of a mountain into a canyon and up another mountain (Kitumbaine). No road, we had to walk.
He sent word for the family to come down and help carry food up.  When they came, we all carried bags of food and water up to his home.  It was a long and hard hike!
We met his grandmother, and several other family members, his mother,

his sister in law, an elder brother (different mom), a sister (widow  2 yrs) and his father.  

His mother had made 2 beaded bracelets for Sister R. (called umpendeza) Her bones are so big, it did not slide over her hand but she was determined.  She and 2 other ladies worked until they got it on, (nearly broke her hand).

While we were there, we sat in Elias’ home which was a round house made of sticks with mud and cow dung mixed together and spread over the sticks.  The walls were thick about 6” or so and it had a thatched roof. It was very dark and cool (on a hot day, probably warm on a cool day).

We sat on little 3 legged stools made of wood and only about 6 “ off the floor.  The only things we could see in the house was a place where fire had been, a cup hanging on the wall, and he showed us a gourd that had been cleaned out and fixed for the baby to suck on. 

Here you can see the 3 legged stool.

All the family lives in little houses that are similar, placed in a circle surrounded by a wooden fence of sticks. Inside the circle of houses is another circle of sticks where they keep the cattle at night to protect them from wild animals.
This is Elias in the animal pen with 2 of his children.

This is Elias, his wife and their baby.

Their custom is that the children come to their father with their head bowed and he pats them on the head, then they raise their head to him.
We sat and talked about the gospel and Bro. Elias’ concerns for his family and the challenges he faces in life. We told him, that things sometimes seem impossible but with God all things are possible and that He knows Elias and what a good man he is and He will bless him and cause miracles to happen in his life.
Also while we were there, he insisted that we try some of their native food.  So we did.  Maize and beans (cooked together and called Makende).  His wife brought us a big bowl and 2 spoons (we ate out of the same bowl). Sister R. told Elias she wasn’t sure we could eat that much and so he should get a bowl and we would share with him, which he did. The food tasted ok, just like corn and beans.  We did have a cup of orange soda that he had bought and carried up to the house.
When we finished, we sat outside for a while.  We couldn’t visit much (language). They all speak their native tongue and Swahili. But they were so kind and we hugged a lot and said asante sana a lot. Elias went to visit for a few minutes with his father and then we started home because we were afraid it would be dark before we got back.  
Before we left, they chased chickens around the inside pen where the animals are kept and caught a beautiful rooster which Sister R. was afraid they would give to us (and she is so scared of chickens!)  


But we found out that it was for the branch president.  We worried how it was going to get home. We assumed they would chop its head off. (We were wrong!)  We thought it should just be put in the truck bed under the cover. (wrong again!) They did however put it in a plastic bag with it’s head sticking out and it rode in the back seat, squawking all the way home!  It made Sister R. very nervous. But she survived.  We asked the branch pres. if he was going to chop off the head.  He said no, he didn’t know how.  We asked him who would kill it.  He told us his wife knew how and would do it.  (We haven’t checked to see how the chicken dinner was)
A sister in law needed a ride to Arusha to visit her mother.  So we brought her back with us.
Anyhow, It seemed like we would never get back to the main highway.  We kept thinking it was just not far but it took hours and the road was very rough and mountainous.  When we came back a ways, we took pictures of the mountain where Elias lives, 


it was a couple mountain ranges over from the main road.  By the time we got back to the main road, we couldn’t even see the mountain range where he lives.  It was a most exciting day and very exhausting.  But what wonderful people he has in his family, so kind and gracious.  (His father was a polygamist, with 7 wives but 5 of them have died, there are only 2 left.)

Saturday Sept 17th we started the YSA program. We had a really good activity. They were really skeptical of what we were going to do but before long they began laughing and everyone had a good time. We played Savez-tu Passer, the magic game with 9 books, taught them the double clap polka, and did a relay race carrying a boiled egg in a spoon held in your teeth. We had refreshment of chocolate cake and strawberry punch. Then we all helped clean the chapel.

Sept. 18, Sunday
Today we gave the talks in Sac. meeting. Pretty scary but I think the spirit was good. We spoke on “Love Thy Neighbor” along with home and visiting teaching. The second counselor in the branch presidency translated for us. We are still not up to speed with the language. We may never get there. We are getting pretty good with the greetings (they have dozens) and with counting but that’s about it.

Friday, September 9, 2011

Couple’s Conference

What a great several days.
We traveled to Nairobi on Sept. 1st.

We arrived in really good time. The road there is now really good until just outside Nairobi. We thought we could find our way to the mission home but after about a half hour of wandering around we had to make a phone call to get some directions.
We spent all the next day meeting with people about the YSA program and attending their activities. We met with Prince O. for some training. He is really a fire ball. We then went to their planing meeting and watched how they train and brainstorm about the program and how to make it work better.
Then we attended their activity. They played several games and had some relay races.
Then we went to KFC (can you believe it? KFC in Africa) to eat with Elder & Sister Byrd.

Up early the next day to head for Lake Nakuru Park. We stopped to overlook a valley 

We arrived at the park about 10:00 - milled around and talked for a bit. Watched the baboons wandering through the parking lot 

and then entered the park on our way to the Lake Nakuru Lodge. On the way we saw Colobus monkeys, water buffalo, rhino, zebra and all kinds of deer. 


Then at the lodge we registered and went to freshen up at our room.
Note the broom.

Then lunch and out for a drive through the park. We saw all kinds of animals. Then someone called on the phone and said they had spotted lion. We dashed over to see them. What a site. I think there were 3 males and 6 females. There were also some cubs but we could never get a good look at them. It started raining but we decided to stay and watch for a while. Then they all started moving out into the open field. We realized they had spotted some water buffalo and were on the hunt. We were able to watch them chase and kill a water buffalo. 
Watch it here if you want:
That is something I had never dreamed I would see. 

The next day was Sunday. We had church with the sacrament. All were assigned to pick their favorite hymn and talk about it. So each couple would talk about theirs and then we would sing it. What a spiritual meeting. We picked Hesabu Baraka Zako (Count Your Many Blessings). Elder R. lead it. We didn’t sing it in Swahili but it was still very moving. Then we had lunch and out for another drive through the park. 








We went back to see what was left of the buffalo that was killed and there was nothing but bones.


Amazing how it had been completely stripped in just over night.
Then back to the lodge for our evening meeting. Again a great meeting. We had some instructions on PEF and the upcoming “Train the Trainer” program for the Elders. Then we watched one of the African DVD presentations. 

Then we went down to have the entertainment people sing to us. They do that expecting a tip. We sang to them “I Am a Child of God” and they really liked it.

Monday: Up early and checked out. Then tried to go around to the other side of the lake but the spot where a unit got stuck and we almost did was jammed up with two more stuck vehicles so we decided to go around the other way (the way we came in). Then we went past the gate and saw some different country. 

Then headed for Nairobi. 

Sept. 6, 2011
We had planned to go home today but just too many irons in the fire. We followed Tuttles to the mission home. Spent time with Pres. Jadmire training on the MLS system, then met with Pres. Usi about some things for the branch (tables, chairs, white boards, a generator, maybe a copier). Not sure any of that will happen. Then we went shopping some more. Back to the office to pickup the computer system for the branch. 

Up early the next day to go to the mission home with Nevins. Spent time talking with the Neffs about all the stuff they are doing with HIV people, blind and deaf people and training on the YSA program along with some PEF training. They really have some neat programs going.
As soon as our toner that we had Victor get for us showed up we took off for home.
We thought we were doing great to get through the traffic and out of town until we realized we were 2.5 hours down the wrong road. We had gone toward Mombasa. We decided to cut through to the highway to Arusha. We had a really good road for about 60 km then it turned into a bad dirt road. We realized we were going out through the desert to Amboseli Park. 

So we decided the only way to get home was to go through Amboseli and out the other side. We paid $25 to get into the park and asked one of the guides how to get out the other side. He said it would take about 40 minutes and to just go straight ahead. We started down the road and came on an elephant herd, 

then the road came to a T. We decided to try the road to the right. Not sure they should be called roads. Anyway after seeing wildebeests, ostrich and giraffe 

we got to the other gate. Then the road got better (if you can call dirt, pot holes, washboard and washouts better). We drove as fast as we dared (about 80 km/h) and almost lost it several times. After about 3.5 hours we came to the border town of Namanga. We made it through the border (by the grace of a good agent there that knew Pres. & Sister Taylor (the previous mission pres.) and let us go without our required declaration papers that we were supposed to have filled out going in). We then headed for Arusha. We got close to town about 6:00 PM. On the way in a “piki piki” driver pulled from the side of the road right in front of us. Elder R. swerved as best he could but we still hit him. Tore off the left front of our truck 

and sent the “piki piki” sliding across the road. 

Elder R. jumped out to see if he was still alive and amazingly he did not even have any broken bones. We loaded him into the truck to take him to the hospital. A driver behind us saw the whole thing and came with us to the hospital. We thought we should go to the Lutheran Hospital in town but they said no we needed to go to another one. We found out it is the old original Lutheran hospital. After wandering around back through the terrible roads they have here and saying, “are you sure there is a hospital out here?”, we found it. They checked him over and we left for the police station. We later found out he was okay. We filled out all the police reports and went through the crazy system. The police station was back off the road and there was no power that night so everything was done by lantern light. They wanted to keep the truck. We said, “NO WAY!”. We came back the next day with John M. a good member and attorney from Dar who just happened to be in town, and worked out all the details. We feel we have had more than our share of accidents. We plan on going for the rest of our mission without any more!!!

By the way, if you ever want to see an enlargement of a photo just click on it.