Me with my sponsored children

Me with my sponsored children
Me with my sponsored children

Friday, December 30, 2011

Wonderful Christmas vacation!

It's been such a great 2 weeks - no time to blog! I have taken Linda to most of my favorite places; a couple of restaurants have been closed, so we had to miss those, but we've covered quite a few others! Lodges, swimming (for me!), eating out, eating at home (eatng played a big part in our time!), the Cultural Heritage Center, shopping, movies on DVD, a couple of different churches, including the one in Swahili Christmas Eve! Our favorite thing was a trip to Karanse, where teacher Upendo had us to lunch. So special and a great time with her family. We also visited with Godfrey's family and Moses's family. They couldn't say enough great things about Linda comng all that way during Christmas. Reminded them of the Wise Men and their visit to Bethlehem!

We spent the first week at my friend Jenny's dog-sitting for Stupidhead, I mean Simba! She's 3 and 1/2 months old and just wild! We kept her outside as much as possible! Got up before 6 every morning to let her out and dozed after that as long as she'd let me, which was usually before 8. Snce it was my vacation, that was a bit of a drag, but I've made up for it this week, back at my house.

Really nice time on Christmas day, mostly with the Joshua Team, the few of us left here, and talking with family and friends that night via skype and phone. A few more family members this week, so that's been good, too.

Linda and her suitcase and 1/2 for me made it here fine, so that was a big part of my Christmas! I also sent things back with her that I won't be needing till I go home because I'm trying to figure out how to get everything back at this point.

Holidays end next week, then it's back to work. Hope I can remember how after all this time off!

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Just another typical drive into town

Yesterday Shelley, Sarah, and I headed in to Arusha to the Impala Hotel for a swim, since it's our vacation. As we neared town, we saw what looked like soldiers directing some cars off to the side of the road. Usually it's police, checking licenses and various stickers and documents hoping for a fine (otherwise known as chai money, or money for food and drinks for them!). This looked more official, and praying for invisibility wasn't working (my usual strategy), so Shelley started getting my papers out of the glove compartment, and I pulled over. Turned out to be a fire inspection. We are supposed to drive around with a fire extinguisher, and road triangle sgns in case of a break down. I had both of those, so Sarah handed him my extinguisher. He immediately said, "No, this is not the right kind. And you do not have a fire sticker on your windscreen." Amazingly, we could buy those from him for the low, low price of 60,000 Tshillings (about $40). I was pretty willing to do that just to save the hassle, but Sarah and Shelley started telling him we were part of an organization and our organization would have to sort that out. He told me my other option was to park my car and leave it! At that point I was really ready to pay up, but I'd already told him I didn't have the money. He asked did I want an askari (armed security guard) to go into town and get money with me. I said yes, because I thought he was bluffing. Sure enough, a very armed man walked over, but I don't think he was any more excited about getting in the car with 3 white women than we were about having an armed stranger in the car with us! More conversation, more looking at my papers, then they asked for the head of Joshua's phone number so they could call and verify our story. Everyone with any power is gone at the moment, so Josh Moose has proclaimed himself President of Joshua, as there's really no one else. We had called him to check out this story, and he said the guy was full of it, and it should no way cost that much, and not to give him the money.The fire inspectors eventually admitted that we have till Jan.1 to get these things, and since our organizaton was aware of it, they would have to let us go on our way. They did, however, call Josh (who they called Mr. Joshua, thinking it was his organization!), and he, of course, said he would handle it! This close to Christmas everyone is suspicious of extra "inspectons," as we don't really know where the money is going (or we do and don't want to contribute to their personal Christmas Club!).

You just never know!

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Christmas Holidays Begin!

Yesterday I finished grading exams: 3 exams for 16 students, each including 2-4 essays on Civics, Social Studies, and Christian Education - whew! My holidays have officially begun!

I have no big exciting plans for the next week, but the small plans include the mentors going out for a celebratory dinner, getting a haircut, going to the pool (at a hotel in town), going to movie night at my church (they're showing It's a Wonderful Lfe, my all-time favorite Christmas movie!), having a meeting at Imara one day next week - I know that doesn't sound lke a "Christmas holiday" plan, but I love visiting friends at Imara and will probably go out to lunch since I'm in town, anyway! I also hope there's some sleeping late in the plans for next week, especially as some of my louder housemates will be gone to Zanzibar all week!

Sometime next week, I will also clean out the guest bedroom for Linda, do laundry, do some baking and make some plans for the visit with Linda - my REAL Christmas holiday!

Another orphanage visit

Not Cradle of Love this time but the children's home my friend Jenny is involved with. A TZ couple she knows from Imara, Esther and Lyimo, are pastors of an Arusha church and over the years have found themselves adoptive parents to about 12 children, and counting. Not all of them are orphans; some have a parent who is HIV postive and can no longer care for them, or a parent has died and the remaining parent can't cope; there are many scenarios. Jenny has been spending more and more time with these children and even sponsors one of the teenagers and keeps her on school holidays. Needless to say, this arrangement has maxed out their space at their own home, and they had opened a children's home nearby with a "mama" there to care for them. But, some months ago, they decided to relocate to some family land a couple of hours away and build a home specifically for the children, and for more, as they come. They have been in talks with Jenny to join them as an administrator, so she's leaving Imara in February and moving to Marangu. I spent last weekend with her, and we went to Marangu for the day with Esther and Lyimo, so I got to spend time with the children. I had met some of them a couple of summers ago, but neither they nor I remembered much of that. I held little Precious (about 6 months old, maybe) for a while, then little Junior (about 4) until he fell asleep in my arms waiting for lunch to be ready. Hassan and Witness played games on my cell phone, constantly handing it to me to restart, we sang songs, watched the older children play, then we got to go to the building site to see the progress on the home, due to open in February.

A wonderful facility! A big great room and dining room combo, large kitchen and pantries, 4 bedrooms for 6 children each, a couple of guest rooms for volunteers, a study room, 2 bathrooms, and a garden already planted. Also with lots of room outside for the children to play - something they don't have much of now.

After that, we went to check out Jenny's house. A great place she found to rent with lots of bedrooms and bathrooms, and, a little strangely, 2 dining room areas (?), and a secluded garden and small lawn. She, of course, invites everyone she knows to come spend time there with her! I plan on doing that at least once!

People here have long amazed me wth their vision. Esther is trained as a nurse practitioner, works in the HIV-Aids minstry at Imara, but finds herself opening a children's home! Jenny, who is an administrator, both back home in Australia and here in TZ, has felt called to help them pioneer this new ministry - doing web sites, brochures, hosting volunteer teams, etc. I think that's something I've learned about the mission field that I keep re-learning: there are so many ways for God to use you, and we get so tunnel-visioned that we only see the one way we did it at home, if we even did it there. There are so many needs here that you never even come into contact with back home, and if you're open to being used, it will amaze you to see where God takes you!