Our busy weekend
We had a truly busy and exciting weekend. Maybe the best days of all.
Saturday, we visited our two sponsored
families. Musa is a young boy about 10 years old who lives on the edge of Bo. His father
is ill and cannot work. Musa was very shy, but his family was very grateful for
the 25 pounds of rice and bag of small candies that we brought them.
After seeing Musa, we began the long, long
drive to Sami Village for a little girl named Misu and her family. Most of the
37 miles thru the bush was on a deeply rutted dirt road, passing through 4
small villages to reach Sami (it took almost 2 hours each way). We went in a
very worn-out Land Rover that was equipped but struggled. We bounced like ping-pong balls -- yes, I bounced against the vehicle ceiling. Ouch!
In Sami, we had a very warm greeting from
almost everyone in the village. Even the chief was there. Misu's mother hugged
and hugged me. James, the case manager who accompanied us, introduced us and we
each said a few words, which James translated into Mendi, the local language.
Tommy has learned that Bike-ah means thank you, so he bike-ahed A LOT. Then the family walked us to see their
house, which is made of dried mud-brick.
The soil is clay, so everything seemed sturdy.
As we were leaving, the family gave us
about a dozen coconuts. And TWO live chickens. 😁
Then, on Sunday, our team attended nearby
Centenary United Methodist Church. We arrived at 9. We left at 1130 - before
the sermon. There were at least three times they took up collections. One time
I got recruited to hold the collection bucket. The music, the energy, and the
spirit were wonderful. I didn't want to leave.
Today, Monday, TD and I are back to work
with the local leadership team to make a 4-year plan.
It is still warm and very humid. I welcomed
the rain returning, though, as the temp dropped nicely.
Tomorrow we go to the grand opening of a village's latrine!





Misu is such a doll. Ellen, I love the photo of you holding the collection bucket. Thank you for sharing your wonderful experiences.
ReplyDeleteDear PingPong Balls, did your in-house expert (the guy from Arkansas) wring the chickens' necks and pluck them? Bike-ah for the uplifting (as usual) report. Joyce and will
ReplyDeleteLoving all these stories. Keep them coming. Especially love the live chicken gift. Did TD clean them???
ReplyDeleteThank you for these updates. So happy to see your smiles. ❤️
ReplyDeleteAww to be so humble and Grateful . God bless them and you
ReplyDelete