Monday, May 26, 2008

Happy Together

What a great team we are assembling here at Mapepe! The early team is inspired by the enthusiasm we are encountering from people both on and off campus.

We have gone through our supplies that remained from last year and found everything in good working order. Let me say a personal thanks to the work of Charlotte Bradsher and Linda Myers who purchased and organized all of our medications. Every med was labeled and placed in a storage trunk. They did a super job.

Another very special person, who I met only a few days ago is Susan Brownfield. What a servant! Susan has cleaned things, counted things, and washed things!! She has made it possible for our team to stay focused on our mission, instead of being distracted by basic daily chores of life. I feel really spoiled. Yet Susan never minds to complete even most common task. Thanks Susan for showing us what it means to serve.

Serving on a Medical Mission is not just about medicine, there are a lot our tedious tasks that have to be completed each day. With a large group, there is plenty of food to be bought and cooked, there are a lot dishes to be washed and floors to be swept. So when you lay down to pray tonight, please pray for every aspect of this mission trip.

We were created to serve not to be served!!!!

THE COMPOUND

Today I went to the compound with some of the locals. The compound is a "neighborhood" near where we are staying. We went to the compound to pick up some bread, tomatoes, and candy. We also were able to visit Stella's home on the way there. For members of Sycamore View, that has meaning. I plan on adding pictures of the home later.

Back to the compound. This was my second experience in which I was the only white person around. This experience was different because of the setting. In the compound there are several shops and run down homes. This is the environment you see on movies and the stereotypical thought of Africa. As the locals shopped I waited and drew a crowd. At the football game I only received stares. At the compound I drew followers. Children followed and self proclaimed "drunkards" wanted to talk. I could not understand a few of the guys, but the white man was an attraction with or without conversation. Also, it is worth mentioning that I was asked if I knew J. Lo, P. Diddy, Eminem, and Denzel Washington.

The funny thing is that I was not intimidated. In Memphis if I was surrounded by black men who were drunk I would be much more intimidated. I wonder why that is the case. The only reason I can come up with (other than assuming they don't have guns) is that I feel like I am better than them. I naturally have a confidence that comes with being the only white person. Although I am supposed to relate to minorities being here I feel even more important because they are in awe of a white man's presence. I feel very transparent right now and am trying to sort all of this out. I knew this would be a new experience, the hard part is processing it.

VISIT FROM A CHIEF


Chief Chibala pictured with his entourage. He came by the French's home today for a visit, we will be visiting his village again this year.

starting the store


Today we laid the first blocks on the store at the front of the property. The store will be for the selling of vegetables grown here at Mapepe. The front wall will have an access window for walk-up traffic. While helping the guys lay block and lay out the walls I learned so much from them. We covered various topics during our working together. They asked me about the US.

While trying to describe my job,home and family,I reflected. When describing my home,it made me appreciate it even more.While explaining the process we as males go through in asking a women to marry,I thought about my family.When asked if I had a car and I answered that I had 4,I thought of the abundance. Our cultures are miles apart yet we are all God's creatures.

I tried to grasp the idea of being hungry on a semi-regular basis. One of the workers said he is almost always hungry to some degree. I stopped mid-day to walk a short distance to our guest house for a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. I thought as I ate an often unassuming lunch.....this is pretty good. Every meal has been that way for me.I think of the people a stone's throw from me with very little. Everyone should come to a country where things we have at our finger tip are a fantasy for the poor.

Last year I fell while in this country of Zambia. I messed up my shoulder to the point of surgery upon my return to the US.If something to that degree happened to these people they would be in terrible way. Each worker told me of injuries or illness he or his family had suffered. They had no idea what a MRI or CT scan is. We often can choose the day before dinner we will eat the next night while laying in our private modern room hospital bed. These guys had never heard of a drive thru window at a fast food joint. Next time you feel slighted because they put pickle on your sandwich at the burger joint,whined over the under cooked bacon for breakfast,the cost of fuel or your pitiful lot in life...Come to Zambia !!!!