30 September, 2012

This Little Piggy



This little piggy went to market,
This little piggy stayed home.
This little piggy had roast beef,
This little piggy had none.
And this little piggy cried "Wee wee wee,"
All the way home!

Where does this little piggy live?  With the other piggies of course.....






















And where is "home"?





























...in Kibera slums.  

The piggies share the slum with over 1,000,000 people in an area the size of Central Park.  It is the largest slum in Africa, and second in the world to one in Mexico City.  

I get to hear the piggies grunting around as they prepare for market and roast beef in the mornings, as they live across the river from my back balcony.

19 September, 2012

Bird Coffee Klatch

A story about laundry may not be of great interest to those people with luxury of a washing machine and dryer; but for those of us hand washing all our clothing and air drying; the events that will unfold are of the utmost importance!

I never knew this, but apparent the birds on this side of Nairobi have a daily coffee klatch.  Unbeknown to me they get together every morning to share the events of the previous day.  How did I discover this great event.  Well one day I did some laundry and hung it on the line to dry.  At the end of the day I took in the dry laundry only to discover that birds had left me some interesting gifts stuck to the clean clothes.  How annoying, now I had to wash the clothes AGAIN!

After this happened two more times, we decided to wash clothes in the evening and hang them up overnight to dry; since the birds should all be asleep an nowhere near the clothes.  We thought that they were doing fly bys and getting lucky.  The next morning I got up early and took in the clothing; it was all clean....Yay!  The plan worked.

Around 7 am, I heard birds twittering outside, went to the balcony, and discovered the coffee klatch. Apparent our laundry lines make a great place to exchange the daily info.

16 September, 2012

Sorry for the Silence

Since starting school two weeks ago, I've discovered I have very little time to do anything on the internet.  Big surprise!!  I will try to do better, at least by posting pictures.  I have a few that I've just not had time to even get on the laptop.  But things are getting better at school and I'm getting okay with the time management; so I hope to have a bit more time as the term progresses.  So thank for understanding!

04 September, 2012

Teacher Talk Tuesday

First Week of School


The prep school.




So okay, the kids aren't here yet; but still so much to do.  My classroom is actually a science lab which is great.  I teach all my classes here except one; have a smart board and video projector.  Now I just have to learn to really use it well in my lesson plans.  I also have to do a lot of decorating; apparently there hasn't been someone as a teacher in the classroom for a while so need to get things down and then new things up; clean out the office, which has been the dumping ground prior to now.  There is a lab tech who will basically get me whatever I need....nice!  Anybody know how to coordinate curriculum???  I'm the prep school science curriculum coordinator.  Oh, and I'm starting a forensics club.  Any ideas??


Ready for the first day of school.


28 August, 2012

Wednesday's Walk Around Town

Traffic Jam & Politics
















One of the main re-election strategies of the Kenyan government is to fix the roads.  In some places it just means grading the surface so it is smooth.  In other places it means repaving.  And in other places it means a total overhaul of the roadway.  Take Thika Road for example, it went from a 2 lane-dual carriage way to a 4 lane super highway. 



On a reconnoiter to see how long it would take me to get from my house to school next week, I discovered that the stretch of Langata Road that I will have to travel is now going through a complete overhaul and traffic in each direction is forced to travel in one lane.  The traffic problem is compounded by the stopping of matatus to pick up and drop off passengers in a one-lane road without any way for other motorists to pass.  I guess I have nothing to complain about since I will be one of those matatu passengers for the foreseeable future. 

Please continue to pray for peace in Kenya as we get closer to the election time, violence seems to just spring up around every corner.  Last week 50 people were killed over cattle issues in a rural area of Tana River, leaving 100 families without homes.  Politicians are doing what they do best....the blame game.

27 August, 2012

Monday's Musings

Mercy Were


Me with Mercy on Visiting Day.


Last year I put out the word that I was looking for sponsors for a young girl in Nairobi to attend secondary school.  Many of you responded and together were able to send Mercy to a private boarding secondary school near her mom's home.  The finances provided were able to cover the entire school year of 2012 (ending in November), uniforms and textbooks, and outfit for boarding school (trunk and personal items).  


Mercy's dorm room at school; bunks are three beds high with 20 beds in each dorm room!!!


She started her Form 2 (Sophomore) year of high school after missing the second half of her Form 1 (Freshman) year due to lack of funds; and has worked hard to catch up with her fellow pupils.  Currently, she is averaging a B- and is 14th in a class of 50 students.  Her best subjects are English, History, and Geography; while she is working hard to catch up a lost year in Business Studies.  Her teachers say that she is very disciplined and doesn't get into trouble, and that she is working very hard to improve in the subjects that she was weak in at the beginning of the year.  


Mercy (on left) with friends on Visiting Day.


We are now looking forward to Mercy's Form 3 (Junior) year, which is very important in Kenya.  It is when high school students begin focusing their studies towards the national exam at the end of Form 4.  This national exam will determine where a student goes to university or college.  Mercy's goal is to become a primary school teacher, and she will need to have a C+ or more on the national exam to be able to attend teacher's college.

Would you please consider sponsoring or re-sponsoring Mercy for her Form 3 year of school?  You can contact me by email to find out more details on how to help financially.  

24 August, 2012

Friday's Photo Finish

Another Bodie & Auntie


In  the process of moving and unpacking...will have a photo of the new place next week.

23 August, 2012

Thankful Thursday

Things I am thankful for this summer....
  • God's grace and provision.
  • The safe and healthy birth of my first nephew; Boaz Michael D. (Bodie)




































  • The family together for Allie's M.Arch graduation from Tulane.



























  • Not only getting summer job; but also getting a permanent job.
  • Reconnecting with old friends.
  • Air conditioning.
  • The unconditional love of a dog.

22 August, 2012

Teacher Talk Tuesdays

Thinking about "The First Day".



Since I have no idea what my classroom is like...or if I even have my own classroom, planning for this day is turning out to be bit difficult.  I am a person who like to have a plan of action detailed out before whatever the event is, the plan has been revised, edited, adjusted for timing, and practiced a few times just to make sure it's seamless.  And I hate creating the plan at the last minute, rushing around, or having to make changes at the eleventh hour.  So you see my dilemma, sigh!

Of course we will have some class rules/guidelines; it doesn't matter if my classroom is under the baobab tree (which it is NOT), the rules will be the same.  There will be routines: routines to come in and get ready for class, routines for getting packed up to leave, routines for getting into lab groups, routines for fire drills, and some more that I still have to think about. (Any teachers reading this please feel free to add).  Those will be dependent on the classroom situation.  Then there is the learning stuff that should occur during that first week which should result in getting kids turned on and excited about science.  And I don't mean to hand out the textbooks during the first week, or even assign homework; there is the entire year for that boring stuff!  

I was recently reminded by one of my previous boss's of this important time to grab students' attention with the concept of "Discrepent Events."  This is an attention getting, thought-provoking approach to initiate inquiry, a thing that puzzles the observer, causing him or her to wonder why the event occurs as it did.  An example of a DE is something like the "AntiGravity Bucket".  Put some water in a bucket, swing the bucket around in a large upright circle.  We expect the water to fall out when the bucket is upside-down (the law of gravity must hold true), but the water does not.   WHY?  Inquiry!!!  So now, its just to figure out what DEs will I demo each day to the classes.  

TIME TO GET BUSY!  SO EXCITING!

16 August, 2012

Friday's Photo Finish

Presenting.........

Boaz Michael D. a/k/a Bo or Bodie; who has made me "Aunt Elisabeth".
Born on the 10th of August at 9:46pm, 6 lbs 12 oz, 20 inches. 

15 August, 2012

Wednesday's Walk Around Town

So what's been going on in Nairobi these days?



Well, major political moves going down with the presidential election coming up in March 2013.  Alliances are being made and then broken and new ones made; just typical Kenyan politics.  Two of the potential candidates have pending cases at the ICC for inciting violence in the last presidential elections in 2007.  If one becomes president how will that work out I wonder?  Also on the political front, MPs just opened a newly renovated Parliament, where each of the 350 chairs cost $3,000; you do the math.    Meanwhile the Kenyan people who have actually paid for the chairs can barely buy food for their families due to the rising cost of staples like rice and maize.
 
In a year-long drama, a probe into the conduct of the Deputy Chief Justice of the Kenyan Supreme Court has determined that she should be fired due to misconduct.  In the wake of small scale terror bombing, security at many public places has been stepped up.  The DCJ refused to have her bag checked, pinched the nose of the security guard, and threatened the guard with a pistol she pulled out of her car. Needless to say the DCJ is appealing the findings.  And so the drama continues.


On a more sober note, the Kenya Defense Force has, for the last year, been pushing the Somali terror group known as Al Shabab (who apparently have links to Al Qaida) away from the Kenyan boarder.  KDF has worked their way from the Kenya-Somali border to just before the port city of Kismayu; the Al Shabab stronghold.  As they continue to work with other African Union forces, Al Shabab has been creating havoc in refuge camps in Dadaab & Wajir and in the city of Nairobi by bombing public areas.  The sad thing is they have recruited discontented Kenyan youths to kill their fellow citizens.  Parliament is in the process of implementing an anti-terrorism bill into law.


Poaching of elephants are on the rise with orphaned baby elephants being reported daily to the elephant orphanage.  The increase in poaching coincide with the arrival of Chinese investment and the huge influx of Chinese in Kenya.  It is a common pattern in Africa; where Chinese investment go, poaching follows.  Additionally, lion killings are also on the rise; this is due to human-wildlife conflict over resources as human populations spread into previously untouched areas.  Perhaps someone should remind Parliament that the tourism sector is the backbone of the Kenyan economy.  I’m just sayin’!

What to pray for?  
  • Against impunity and corruption in Kenyan government.
  • A wise, godly man or woman to win the Kenyan presidency.
  • The campaign against Al Shabab to be resolved swiftly.
  • Justice done for the security guard who appeared to be too unimportant to matter.
  • A fair and transparent presidential election.
  • Safe roads, improved traffic laws and less corruption in the police force.
  • Reduction in food prices and fuel prices.
  • Peace in Kenya.

13 August, 2012

Monday Musings

Traveling Again



Getting ready to leave for Kenya this Wednesday.  I've got four suitcases each weighing 49.5  lbs, a carry-on suitcase weighing 30 lbs, and a backpack for my books and electronics.  Do I have enough stuff?  The joys of travel!!

So here's a list of things YOU can pray for me as I go:

  • Safe travels, all luggage arrives in Nairobi with me and intact.
  • No problems/inspections going through customs with 4 large suitcases.
  • Moving day will go smoothly (18th August) and I settle in quickly.
  • I get into a good quiet time routine and also find a small group Bible study in my new neighborhood.
  • I will enjoy orientation at the new school (27th - 31st) and be comfortable with my new colleagues.
  • I will be prepared, professional and unsmiling for the first day (4th Sept, I think) with the students.
  • The wireless internet at the house will work.
  • I have peace, go day-by-day, and trust the Lord.

13 May, 2012

"Tentmaking" or Paul's Missionary Model



What is a tentmaker? Tentmakers are believers who support themselves as they do cross-cultural evangelism on and off the job.  This is in comparison to "regular missionaries" who rely completely on raising financial support and have organizational ties, or "Christian expatriates" who have moved to another country for the sole purpose of work having no call to missions but happens to be a believer.

There are many good, responsible, and accountable mission organizations who require their missionaries to raise their support or raise support as an organization for their missionaries.  The people who are commissioned and sent abroad are financially relying on the gifts of others.  For the first three years of the past four years I was one of these missionaries with Rafiki Foundation in Kenya.  The last year of the past four years, I relied on individual financial gifts from people as I worked with a local pastor in Kenya.  Starting in September I will be tentmaking as I work for Brookhouse International School in Kenya.


Paul's missionary journeys were emphasized by tentmaking, in fact that was his missionary model.  Other apostles did rely on the churches for financial support, but Paul did not.  1 Corinthians 9:6 suggests that Paul and Barnabas were self-supporting on their first missionary journey; "Or is it only Barnabas and I who must work for a living."  In the same chapter Paul gives many reasons in favor of donor support for the mission work, but states three times that he and by association, his teammates, did NOT use this right; vs. 12, 15, and 18.  In Acts 18, Luke writes about Paul's work with Aquila and Priscilla as a tentmaker, most probably as a leatherworker; with verse 4 stating that Paul continued with his mandate from the Lord, "he reasoned in the synagogue, trying to persuade Jews and Greeks."  In Acts 20: 25 - 35 Paul commission the church leaders in Ephesus to continue in the way that he had shown them since "I know that none of you among whom I have gone about preaching the kingdom will ever see me again" (vs 25) and "You yourselves know that these hands of mine have supplied my own needs and the needs of my companions." (vs 34).


Brookhouse is a door that the Lord opened for me to continue His assignments for me in Kenya.  It is possible now for me to do much more in specific areas than possible in the past four years.

Getting support for girls like Mercy to go to secondary school.

Visiting and caring for the sick in the hospital.

Cheering up sick children.

Visiting families with gifts of food stuffs.
I have some other new ideas too, but solicit your prayers as I continue walking in God's amazing plan for my life in Kenya.


07 April, 2012

Gospel Written in Nature

God writes the gospel not in the Bible alone, but on trees,
Sunrise over the trees in Amboseli National Park
A white rhino grazes peacefully under Acacia trees around Lake Nakuru
Trees surround a homestead in Mudete; Western Kenya
and flowers,
Garden at Kiambethu Tea Farm in Limuru
Bouganvilla overgrowth beautifies the stone wall of a Nairobi compound.
A Sunbird sips nectar from the flower of a banana tree.
and clouds, 
Rain cloud over Lake Naivasha
Cloud expanse over Lake Amboseli
Mt. Kilimanjaro peeks through the clouds
and stars.
Full moon over Nairobi.
Wildebeests silhouette under the starry sky in Masai Mara; courtesy of Martin Dohrn.
Nairobi Dec 2008; a crescent moon with Jupiter (l) and Venus (r).

- Martin Luther

23 March, 2012

Now with the Lord...


Mama Susan was a pioneer mother/caregiver at Rafiki Village Kenya.  She took care of 13 boys and raised them well.  Her oldest Rafiki son had many issues due to the fact that he was brought to Rafiki at the age of five.  To hear him speak about Mama Susan as the "best mother" who was "a kind woman, who loved us"; and his memories of "Mom singing lullabies for us to sleep" and how she "taught us to read the Bible and pray"; and to see him as a man carrying his mom's coffin to the grave, was a testimony to her work and prayers for her children at Rafiki.  


What I remember about Mama Susan was her love of singing and her method of doing devotions with her children.  On a devotion about how Elijah was fed by ravens during a famine, she told the children to imagine that the ravens were flying into the king's palace (where there was plenty of food) and taking the bread and meat off the king's table and carrying it to Elijah in the desert.  She asked the children if they could see the ravens doing that; and they could.

Mama Susan is resting in the Lord Jesus Christ, whom she loved.  She worked tirelessly for Him in her calling as a Rafiki Mom and we can begin to see the fruit of her labor even today.  Please pray for the boys who have lost the only mother they have ever known.

02 March, 2012

Just listening to the radio...

Heard about this on the radio this morning.  I thought how amazing it would be if we had this in the USA.  I wonder how many who claim to be lovers of Christ in the USA would be able to live Romans 1:16 in this way; "For I am not ashamed of the gospel, because it is the power of God to salvation..."



So maybe you are not in Nairobi to join in the marathon, but you could support their projects to translate bibles into the mother tongues of unreached communities of Kenya.  In country claiming to be 80% Christian these tribes are mostly Islamic or Anamist and destined for eternal destruction.


From the radio program, I heard the following from people who hear and read the Bible in their own language:


"I can read Kiswahili and English, but it's not as if it's my mother tongue."


"Jesus speaks my language!"

"When I hear God's words in mother tongue, I can see it with my heart."


Let's not be ashamed!  Mark 8:38 "If anyone is ashamed of me and my words in this adulterous and sinful generation, the Son of Man will be ashamed of him when he comes in his Father's glory with the holy angels."