Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Spiritual Emphasis Week

This is "Spiritual Emphasis Week" at Rosslyn Academy: The students are learning about the Exodus story in a program called "The Great Escape". As part of the program, Erica is teaching a Bible lesson and craft in the afternoons and I am leading a refugee seminar with one of our Somali refugee friends, Yusuf. The children have been full of questions as they share with him in his first hand account of the trials and ordeals of a Somali refugee.
Erica and Mary preparing for their next class making jewelry in "silver and gold" plastic beads.

Labels:

Joto Sana (Very Hot!)

Tristan and Emma with kids at the Gambala Baptist Church in IFO refugee camp. According to our Somali friends, meaning of IFO is a "bright place". Gambala is certainly a source of "hope and light" in the barren and sun scorched landscape of IFO.
Manase (one of our teachers at the Dadaab Primary School), Kerry Jividen, Mary, Melanie McKee, and Erica with children at the Gambala Baptist Church

mmmmuffins! Erica and Halima with Erica's yummy breakfast muffins at the TB clinic in Garissa.

Out for an evening walk, we enjoyed a wonderful visit with our friend Bisharo at her Dadaab shop with our friends Melanie McKee and Kerry Jividen.



One of the many TB patients recieving care at the Garissa TB Manyatta. (Photograph taken and used with permission)
This past weekend, we traveled back to NEP to connect with several of the ministry projects in both Garissa and Dadaab. Erica and I are co-leading the 2008 PRAXIS group (coming to Kenya in May) with Malcolm Card. Praxis, is a group of graduate students from several Canadian seminaries that will be paired with Christian counterparts here in Kenya for a three week course and practicum on Intergral Mission. Their time in Kenya will include an introduction to Somali ministry with us in Eastleigh and in NEP. We are looking forward to being able to introduce them to two of the Garissa programs: the Garissa TB Clinic and Ibnu Kalduun Early Childhood Education Program (we'll feature a short introduction to both of these ministries in upcoming posts).



Aaron, Tristan, Ron, Mary, Emma, Erica, Josephat and his son Mwangi












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Toad hunting!



Tristan and Emma did some late night flashlight hunting in Dadaab during our most recent trip to Northeastern province. No scorpions this time, but they were sucessful in finding a plump family of white bellied toads living under the stone base of our compounds water pipes.


Emma had a special mission collecting seed pods from a type of Acacia known as the "frankincense tree" for Ron Ward. Emma's bag of seed will be used to grow seedlings to be planted along the Tana River with the Ward's camel cooperative project in Raya. The tree is a favorite among the camels (who like to much on the tiny leaves), as well as a source of frankincense resin prized for its aromatic qualities. Interestingly, each seed has a small cresent on it that resembles a camel's foot print.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Solidarity in the Flames


Nairobi Women's Hospital is a safe and stable place amidst the brokeness and havoc erupting within Kenya. Over the past month, hundreds of women and children have been cared for through their gender violence recovery program that addresses both physical and emotional wounds of sexual assualt.

Last night, fires were set ablaze in Mathare Valley slum running people out of their homes. Some of the people who have been living in the Red Cross camps, saw the homes they had been struggling to rebuild over the past month reduced to heaps of smoldering charcoal in the muddy lanes of Mathare Valley. Five such families arrived early this morning at the Eastleigh Community Centre tired and dumbstruck by the senseless destruction which they have suffered.

By mid-morning, Erica and two female social worker collegues at the ECC had found a young woman who had been missing from the centre for several days. They were able to take her to Nairobi Women's Hospital for medical attention and trauma counselling as she had been a victim of a sexual assualt. We are so thankful for the compassionate and generous services of the Nairobi Women's Hospital for women and children.

It is SO difficult for us to see such senseless violence. Maybe we can begin to understand the anger and rage loose within impoverished communities throughout Kenya, but the wickedness and evil exacted against children and women is beyond understanding. It breaks our hearts. We know it breaks God's heart. It is a devastating perversion of humanity. And like the flames in Mathare, it destroys. It tears apart the soul.


And yet we hold onto faith through the flames, God is here. In the hands of the neighbour who pulls a stranger from the inferno. In the community that embraces homeless children, washes away the ash from their faces and hands, bandages wounds, and finds room. In the gentle touch of the nurses who wipe the tears from a woman's eyes and whispers "You are not alone".

We are so thankful for the unexpected signs of solidarity that stand against forces that would destroy, and for the Spirit of God that binds us together! Please continue to lift up Kenya before the Lord.

Monday, February 18, 2008

This one is for Grammie and Grampy

Hey Grammie and Grampy! This is Tristan, Emma and Ava. We miss you! We had a long weekend off from school and went to visit the giraffes that you liked to kiss so much. Nana wouldn't kiss them because she was afraid they would bite her! But she liked seeing them up close and the elephants too. Emma lost another tooth this weekend and now she can't say words with "s" very good. She is excited to get another gumball from Mr. Bressler. Emma is also getting ready to have a tea party for all the girls in her class. She and mommy are busy making invitations and gifts for all the girls. We sure wish you could be here! Ava is saying tons of new words like "puppy, see, yes, stop it, mama and dada". She can also say Tristan and Emma and she loves to give kisses to everybody! Tristan is almost as tall as mommy now and he is so smart! He wants to be a chef when he grows up and has already started cooking for us. He makes great scrambled eggs and the other morning he made apple, caramel muffins for breakfast; they were so yummy! We miss you both so much and can't wait to see you again. Please give hugs and kisses to Ezabella, Penelope, Ceciley, Dublin, Uncle Justin, Auntie Amanda, Uncle Corey and Auntie Autumn. We miss them too!
What a beautiful smile!

Some playtime before bedtime!

We love you and miss you!!
Love Tristan, Emma and Ava




Wednesday, February 13, 2008

We're All in this Together!


Sam Mutisya, Bruno Soucey, Patty & Malcolm Card, Aaron & Erica Kenny and Centre director, Ehud Gachugu, at the Eastleigh Community Centre.


As far as cheezy movies go High School Musical has got to be at the head of the class. Despite this, there is a great line from the movie's theme song that both Tristan and Emma love to sing... "We're all in this together!" This has also been a chord that was repeated throughout our conversation today with the Eastleigh Community Centre and our collegues from the Sharing Way.

Beyond the immediate work of the centre in caring for 73 displaced children affected by Kenya's post-election violence, the centre is actively equipping youth and young adults against the messages of hatred and tribalism often used to insight Kenyans to violence as political pawns. "We continually remind them of our common humanity," explained Ehud, the centre's director. Rather than being drawn into disputes over tribe or religion, the centre is tireless in drawing people together as neighbours and persons of intrinsic value. The centre hopes that the youth they are training will carry this message into Eastleigh and Mathare Valley as "custodians of their own community". Perhaps this aspect of building acceptance, forgiveness and cooperation will be as important as the many other efforts being spent in helping Kenya recover.


Sam Mutisya, The Sharing Way coordinator for Africa, enjoying some time with displaced children staying at the Eastleigh centre.




A group of boys proudly showing us the classroom where many of them have been living for nearly a month. In the mornings, they stack their matresses and blankets up against the walls so that the tables can be returned for class time. It is interesting to note that these boys are from many different tribal backgrounds.

Saturday, February 09, 2008

Restoring Lost Hope

Today another twenty displaced children joined the group now living at the Eastleigh Community Centre. We had the joy of leading some activities with the kids and helping out with health care needs. Tristan and Emma were a big help as they were part of a game time with the kids. The children enjoy football, making up their own songs and dances and listening to stories. We played some traditional school yard type games: ship was a favorite.

The Centre's social workers and pastors of the local church are providing trauma counselling for the children, as well as support for their parents who are struggling to rebuild their homes and lives.






Today Erica and her mother, Mary (a nurse from New Brunswick), held a clinic for the kids staying at the Eastleigh Community Centre. Coughs and colds, along with numerous skin infections and stomach worms, were among the most common ailments. Kids who were identified as needing further medical attention will now be taken to hospital by the centre.


"Whistle Pops" are one of the fun things that we've discovered to be a big hit with kids all over Kenya. It is an amazing feeling to hear dozens of children laughing and tooting their whistles as they enjoy a sweet treat.

Going the distance!



It has been good for us to get back into studing the Somali language with the help of some of our Somali friends in Eastleigh: This week we met with Zahra and Yusuf not only to trade Somali phrases, but to catch up on their experiences in Eastleigh during the past weeks of unrest. God has been protecting them!




We also wanted to share with you this great quote that our team mates the Carlines included in their most recent update letter. Our Africa team leader, Malcolm Card, had shared this with them years ago when they first left Canada to serve the displaced Somali people here in Kenya. Dr. Kanda's thoughts are both inspiring and challenging for us given the current tempest of Kenya and our desire to go the distance!




Modern Africa is no place for the uncommitted. Life here demands cool nerves, perpetual optimism and great faith in human possibilities. Those who are utterly pre-occupied with the search for cracks in the foundation live lives that will spell only unhappiness and insecurity. To demand brass-bond guarantees that one will be preserved from challenge and difficulty as a condition for residence in an African state is to demand the impossible. Africa is a continent in ferment in the heart of an unstable world. Identify yourselves with any of these nations and you are committed for better or worse, in prosperity and adversity. If the nation is wounded, you must bleed with it, just as you are entitled to feel pride in its achievements.


Past president of Zambia-1964-1991, Dr. Kenneth Kaunda

Friday, February 08, 2008

Displaced Children in Eastleigh

Eastleigh Community Centre ~ Restoring Lost Hope

One of the teachers at the centre during class time

The centre has been struggling to meet the costs of food and basic needs
for these extra 70 children. Today they were having cabbage soup for
lunch. CBM has released funds for the Eastleigh Community Centre,
specifically for feeding these displaced children.




The violence and destruction of homes in Nairobi's Mathare Valley slum has deeply impacted the lives of thousands of its residents. The effects have spilled over into Eastleigh as displaced families desperately look for help. At the Eastleigh Community Centre, 70 children have been left in the care of Christian workers and volunteers by their parents and guardians who are recieving medical care or who have returned to the slum to rebuild their homes. The centre's quick response has found a temporary home for the children in two of the centre's primary school classrooms. Since the children arrived with very little, the centre has clothed them in school uniforms. Those who were already attending a local school are continuing to walk to their old schools, but for many, the centre is making room in their own classes for the children.
If you or your church would like to contribute to the
Kenyan Emergency Aid Relief
we would encourage you to contact:
Canadian Baptist Ministries
7185 Millcreek Drive
Mississauga, Ontario
Canada, L5N 5R4
phone: 905-821-3533
All contributions should clearly state "Kenyan Emergency Aid".

Sunday, February 03, 2008

Lost Tooth!


At long last, it finally happened on Saturday afternoon: Emma lost that stubborn loose tooth! She is very proud of her new smile. Before the tooth goes under her pillow, she will be taking it to school. Emma's principal, Mr. Bressler, awards gum balls to kids who show him any lost teeth.


Although negotiation talks are in progress, unrest continues in the country. Two members of parliament were killed in Kenya this past week, and violence is escalating in western regions. Refugees are still moving into safe camps and communities. Our friends in Limuru have seen the camp there swell to about 6300 people. Karura Community Church still has over two hundred displaced people living in its sanctuary. CBM continues to contribute to the relief work throughout the country.



This week, Aaron and Malcolm Card will be joining our team mate A's Pastoral Training Classes in Thika where they will take part in a panel discussion on pastoral leadership. Please be in prayer for the emerging leadership of the African Christian Church & Schools, one of our national partner churches that ministers within the Kikuyu community.



We will also be taking Mary with us into Eastleigh where we will be working at the Eastleigh Community Centre. This will be her first experience of Eastleigh. Please pray for the stability of this community and for our ongoing ministry among our Somali neighbours.

Sports Day at Rosslyn

Tristan and his buddy, Spencer, celebrating Red Team's
second place finish at Rosslyn Academy's Annual Sports Day.
"Red team is what? Red Hot!
Red team is what? RED HOT!
R-E-D with a little bit of H-O-T
Oh Baby
Red Hot - Red Hot - RED HOT!!!"


Tristan ran hard in his races, getting second place
in both the 50 meter and 100 meter dash.



Emma also did fantastic this year in track and field:

She took second place in both the 50 meter

and 100 meter races, and her team won the mixed relay.


Ava wanted to get in on the races too!
Go RED TEAM!