Saturday, January 31, 2015

The Discomfort of Traveling to Zambia

I slept on the porch of our hostel since my mosquito net (which I am repeatedly reminded by rain is not a tent) flooded and held a nice amount of mud.  Lights on, people talking, I fell into an intermittent sleep at about 1:30am. Then awoke at 5:00am to pack.

No worries, I tell myself.  I can sleep on the bus to Zambia.  But that was before I realized that God wasn't done with growing me through discomfort yet.  After getting on the bus and going through multiple police check points that won't allow sleep since they must ALL see your passport, we got to the border.  This was a trial of its own since Malawians kept cutting us in the visa line with the excuse "you are so many".  Yes we were many but because of them cutting us it took 45 mins for our team  to get process after arriving at the window (that is not counting time spent in line...just time that we were being "helped").

After the border crossing I finally thought I would sleep on the bus.  I had a good aisle seat to spread out a little and I took a Dramamine to help with the sickness and lull me to sleep.  BANG!  Beside me a stood is slammed down beside me in the aisle and a man placed upon it. I now am squished between too people...and stool man of course is uncomfortably fidgeting the whole time.  His cheap, rough, suit rubbing my arm raw.  And his body forcing mine to lean away in a position that later cause such pain on the left side of my spine that I was brought to tears.  THIS WAS A LONG BUS RIDE!

We stopped at the side of the road so men could get off to pee.  As stool man was off, I slid his stool back just enough that he wouldn't have to touch me so much.  It was easy to do since everyone was tripping over it to get off the bus anyway.  When he got back on, he moved his stool back into alignment with my seat.  SO MAD.

Then our bus found itself debating whether to roll through a closed off road that was under construction or to take the detour through the mud.  For fear of being stuck they chose the closed road.  To make this happen they had to move the road block, which happened to be giant boulders on the street. This took many men and much time.  They would always try to avoid more work by just picking one large boulder to move and hoping we would fit through...when in reality it would have been better to move two smaller boulders a little to the left and right and slip in...but they do what they think is best.  We scratched by the rocks and proceeded.  This occurred 3 more times before our bus driver said "screw it" and drove down a bank to the little dirt detour road that we spent the last hour trying to avoid.

We also had a five minute stop at some shacks they called a rest stop.  There was a fee toilet and I figured it was getting time to go.  But I didn't have Zambian Kwatcha to pay the fee.  They lectured me about that, a lot, saying that it was dumb to travel without the money.  But I had no intention of paying for a toilet even if I had money, so I started around to the back of the building to pee there.  The lecturer yells to me that there is a fine for peeing outside.  To which I respond, "I cannot pee inside, I cannot pee outside.  Am I supposed to pee on myself?"  I left off the part I want to say, "Is there a fine or fee for that?"

Because this isn't my first time threatening to pee myself in public, and I am shameless about it, they let me in to the toilet without paying a fee.  But with all the lost time, the bus was done waiting and was honking to pull out of the lot.  Not feeling a good first impression of Zambia.

Night began to fall, and as impressed as I was by the mix of African Music Videos and Backstreet Boys, Brandy, and Usher, my gaze went outside to the sunset.  They full day of miserable travel weight heavy, especially on my left side where stool man was still leaning. (Seriously...there are 69 other people on this bus...couldn't he at least take turns sitting next to people.)  But with this sunset, I promised myself, that I wouldn't let this be a repeat of Malawi.  That I would let the end of this day be the begin of a new, better one.  And that I was going to be okay.

So, here's to a new country and a better season.

Saturday, January 24, 2015

The Mobile Ministry of Unsung Heroes

Traveling Malawi has been tricky.  Our Ministry this month has been to seek out new ministries to partner with by sending future teams for the month long stints we have been doing.

We started for our training in the capital city of Lilongwe and then moved down to Zomba to finish our training and to start the search for potential ministry contacts.  (To see the interesting journey there see my mission blog at: http://carolineritchey.theworldrace.org/?filename=so-this-is-africa) Unfortunately, due to the unusually wet rainy season we were left in an area affected by flooding so we didn’t have power for most of our time there and no water on the last day there.  We decided to leave for the larger city of Blantyre in the south. 

I was in phone contact with a Pastor there named Bishop Malunga, so we met with him once to discuss his ministry.  We were invited to his church but had to drive out into an embassy declared “disaster zone”, a town called Phalombe to meet another potential contact.  Because of the condition of the roads the driver stayed the night with us in Phalombe and went to ministry with us.  Because she spoke Chichewa she was able to gauge things about the ministry that we couldn’t.  She told us that there was no orphanage in Phalombe, and that the man we met wasn’t a pastor at all.

Upon returning to Blantyre we were a little disappointed.  Our potential contact was starting to look a lot like a scam artist (which made more sense why he kept telling us the cost of everything), and things were not getting any more comfortable.  We tended to be out of power and water at most locations, and things were warming up weather-wise.

We did go to Bishop Malunga’s church back in Blantyre and ate a lunch at his house that his children prepared for us.  This allowed us to meet with a few members of the church council and to get a better idea of how a mission team could serve him in the future.  After one more meeting in Blantyre and the struggle to get transport sorted, we ended up leaving for the City of Salima which was Northward on the Lake of Malawi.

After meeting with a program called Kindle Orphan Care, we took a day off to boat out to an island in lake.  We got into a leaky wooden boat (we had a guy always bailing with an old oil quart), stepped over the catfish that would become our lunch, and headed out.  On island, a few of us explored by bouldering as high as we could go, then soaked in the sun while we had it (still rainy season).  After eating said catfish cooked over coals, I snorkeled a bit in the lake and was over-joyed to see so many beautiful colored fish in fresh water.  I got to even see Cichlids. 

Upon returning to shore we all found out that we now have a 50% chance of getting a parasite particular to Lake Malawi.  Bummer right?  We are all going to the Pharmacy to get the treatment upon returning to the capital.

After our day off, we were able to tour both the health clinic and some farm plots run by Kindle Orphan Care.  They are an amazing organization that gives me renewed hope for the programs here in Malawi.  I am currently staying just outside Salima with Teen Mission Ministry and touring some of their Orphan Care Units before heading to Lilongwe tomorrow.  And tonight’s Vespers left me super encouraged.  We played games with some of the bible students (Malawians about our age), and sang together, played drums, and listened to a message.  I think I like the way the Malawians worship.

We have a few more meetings in Lilongwe with different Pastors and Organizations, but in reality our time here in Malawi is coming to a close.  I don’t want to rush the time away, but I do look forward to a more stable placement with the church we will work with in Zambia next month.  I have already written my first sermon for that, and when things calm down I would like to write another just in case.


Thank you for your prayers and all your support, and I am so blessed and honored to be here even though I do miss the comforts of home.  God has placed me in a place of discomfort for a reason, and I intend to grow in it all.  So here we go!