Sunday, February 6, 2022

January 30, 2022 Letter

 


Dear Friends and Family

 

We are back in Rwanda this week.  We will probably be here for a month as we meet with our leaders and review prospective projects.   Elder Bird is acclimating to driving like home again.  It takes him a day or two every time we switch countries to acclimate to driving on the right or left side of the road.  I am navigator as often we do not have data so our GPS doesn’t work.  How did we ever live without cell phones and GPS?

 

This society, as in many other countries of the world, is what is known as a "hand to mouth."  They barely earn enough to provide two meals a day.  At one school we visited the enrollment was 1886 students grades K - 12.  600 of those students come to school at 7 am to receive their breakfast consisting of 1 cup of cornmeal porridge and one slice of bread. Most of these same students go without lunch because their parents cannot afford lunch money.  The amazing thing is the kitchens they cook in.  I haven't yet seen running water in any school kitchen.  We have visited several schools where the kitchen is an out door open fire with a pot on top of it.  They are thrilled to receive a 10' x 12' block building to store food supplies in. No shelving - just a room to pile the sacks of grain away from the bugs and thieving hands.  

 

Enablement is a HUGE problem in all the countries of Africa because so many well meaning people do so much.  The people sit back and wait for someone to come to their aid and save them.  Many reach out by Facebook with sob stories that are unreal and scams are frequent - especially with US and Canadian citizens. 

 

Last week we visited a water source with our District President.  He took us there asking for the church humanitarian department to help with a spring where the children are getting water from a ditch.  Only 20 feet away the church had erected a lovely cement capture area with steps down into a rocked area where the children could place their cans under the spout of running fresh clean spring water.  In the 15 years since this structure was built it has eroded and the steps are destroyed (mostly by unattended children).  The ditches are flooding and the area is becoming a swamp instead of watering the crops in the fields.  Our men would see the breakdown of the cement and repair it and clean the ditches.  The committee of 6 men all stood around and could not see a solution.  Finally Elder Bird pointed out the water needed to be temporarily rerouted, the steps could be broken up, the debris hauled away, new steps formed up and poured.  Then the ditch banks should be shored up with rocks and cemented into place.  Most of all, they need to not throw trash into the ditches and they need to clean the ditches so the water would flow downstream to their crops.   They were aghast.  They really truly could not see a solution or any way to remedy the situation.  Simple things are unknown to them because of lack of training.  The people have been held back and oppressed for many years.  They lack education and parental examples.  Think of all the things most of us learn at the side of our parents as we work in our yards, repair a car, clean our homes and cook in a kitchen etc.  Families are almost non-existent.  The youth, however, are being educated.  Slowly the people are coming.  The problem is much worse in Uganda than in Rwanda.  The government is more corrupt in Uganda with wealthy leaders and oppressed citizens. When it is election time the candidates line up to pay their vote bribes to the citizens.  That is easy money for these poor people.  In Rwanda the infrastructure is stronger, leaders are more honest, and people are much more honest.  They take great pride in their country, pay high taxes (50% on earned wages), and the money is returned into the education system.  In both countries the progress will be slow but is steadily inclining. 

 

We met this week with a school committee.  We are proposing a large project at this school which will impact the entire community.  This school is on the top of a hill in Kigali, Rwanda.  The capital city of Kigali is built on hill after hill.  The school is at the crest of a hill with about a 300 foot drop off at a 30% incline.  When it rains, which is often, the water washes down the hill into the community homes below causing muddy flooding.  In addition, this community can sometimes go a full month without water during the dry season.  We are hoping the city will join efforts in terracing the hill side, erecting a retaining wall and fence around the school property, build a water capture tank at the hill top to aid the citizens below, and follow up with leveling and planting the school grounds.  We hope to involve the citizens and members in a helping hands planting project to help control erosion.  This would also provide the children with a large grassy playground area.  It will be one of three very large projects we are proposing to our Area Presidency for clearance.  

 

We are diligently working to find projects in which we partner with the government of Rwanda.  Some members of the government are very leery of our church purposes and are opposing granting visas to prospective missionaries. Two elders received their calls and last week, at their departure, were denied visas and cannot yet leave.  Our Mission President is here in Rwanda now.  Tomorrow we will meet with the Immigration Department of Rwanda to represent the church, the humanitarian work we are doing, and plead our case.    Please pray for our success or we may not be able to come and go from Uganda to do our work here.   

 

After finally getting comfortable in Uganda over the last 6 weeks, we packed up and moved to Rwanda.  We are slowly settling in to this apartment.  Food costs have sky rocketed in the last month because Rwanda borders have been closed.  They announced reopening to start February first.  Hopefully that will help items to drop in price.  When shopping yesterday we found a small box of corn flakes cost the equivalent of $9US.   I put it back and said we can eat oatmeal or toast and eggs.  I was amazed at how many common items had doubled in cost in just the six weeks we were in Uganda.   We brought one full box of items with us because we couldn’t find them here in Rwanda.  Now we are looking forward to our return to Uganda in February just so we can bring another box back with us.  Next time I will bring food items. 


One of our city officials asked about the church and if she could attend.  She and her husband showed up today and even stayed for two meetings!    You never know who is watching and who will be touched by the spirit. 

 

Great week!  Great work!  Finally feeling we are needed and functioning missionaries. 

Elder and Sister Bird

                                   

                                          Rwanda District Conference  January 29 & 30, 2022


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