Monday, July 14, 2008

On Safari


We'll get back to stories of the mission trip...but I just can resist posting a picture of a Yellow African Hornbill. It was one of the many birds that I took a picture of that day...but the light was right and it was in focus!

Thank you Jesus for all creatures big and small.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Clinic for the Children


On Monday, we set up a clinic for the sick children. It's winter time in Africa, not supper cold just chilly, and the children don't appear to have jackets or sweat shirts. We have no clue what they sleep on or under in their hut.

We bring medicine and set up a table. The Clinic is open. We hope to help with the symptoms of the common cold as well as kill a few parasites that may be lurking in a child's intestines.



And like all medical offices...there is a waiting room with a long wait. There are no magazines to thumb through, no comfy chairs, or wall art. There are no walls. But you do get to sign in...and then wait.


Instructions

If you can do legos...you can build a church.




The first day on the job and David Woods gives our instructions.
Take a brick.
Sweep it off on all sides.
Put it on the wall.
Repeat.

That's pretty much it. Add the rebar and the windows and the roof, and you're done.

Thanks for the instructions, David.
Let's get to work.

Dressed to Work


(L-R) Gordon Botting, Richard Dederer, Jim Whitcome

The first day on the work site is one of excitement. There is the scent of sunscreen and zinc-oxide in the air! New gloves are ready to get down to work. Hard hats are adjusted, and combined with other head gear to provide protection against UVA and falling tools or bricks.

Give the instructions, O Superintendent! Your wish is my command!

Let's be bold for God.

Camp

We were situated pretty good, as mission trips go. We weren't in the Hilton (Most short term missionaries don't stay in a Hilton, anyway. There are very few ritzy hotels in third world countries.) And we weren't under the stars. We were in tents.

On my mission trips...I've stayed...
in a house that was under construction in Central Mexico (Don't mind that tick!)
in a 2 star hotel in Honduras (Walk down the hall for a toilet and cold shower.)
in an administration building under construction in Guyana (Mind the biting ants!)
in a suite in the Literature Ministry Seminary in Rwanda (3 hot showers in 3 weeks.)
and now...
in a green army surplus tent, with a cot and pad, in Mozambique.

It was very comfortable (After three nights, I swapped out my first cot with the bent leg for a better one!), and there was a shower and toilet in the immediate camping area. There was even an awning to hang a wet towel!



Yep...we were set up pretty well. And we give God the praise.

Friday, June 27, 2008

Our Commute



Check out the map I got from Google Earth!

Follow the red line from bottom to top...from Western Maputo...around the outskirts of the down town...and up to a red road...from there it's a 20 min bumpy ride on a sandy road to Mucapane. This is the drive we made 6 times as we visited the site on Sabbath and work days.

You can go to Google Earth and zoom in yourself....just look for a red (dirt) road north west of Maputo. Follow it out!

Sunday: Work Day

June 8, while our beloved Redding Adventist Academy holds commencement services, we are working to build a church. All it takes is one brick at a time.

I have been assigned to the Left panel behind the platform...and the first seven courses go up pretty quickly. A while later, I'm having trouble holding the brick to the string, and my wall develops a large bow...outward. I finally remove 5 courses...and turn the job over to one of the local Maranatha employees to fix. I work on the side wall with Rebekah, who is building in the afternoon, after finishing VBS in the morning.



At the end of the day we can look back at our work...and know we've done our best and made good progress at constructing a church that will be a meaningful contribution to this community.

Go Rebekah!
Go Kris!
Go Team!

The Old Church

The churches that are being replaced may look very much like this....or less.

This was the church that was the old church in a community about 10 km from where we build a church. Right behind my photo graphic position is a new church, built several weeks before. We distributed food in this community as part of our food distribution on Friday.

Perhaps a few of the locals have already taken material from this church to improve their houses or corn cribs...but I don't think a lot of material disappeared. I was told the church had a tarp as the roof.














All that is changing now in many communities...as one by one...Maranatha builds a church/community center.

Praise the Lord.

First Sabbath


Kris Widmer and Sylvia Ahn sing for church at Mucapane, Mozambique, Africa on June 7, 2008. They are first cousins through marriage. Claude Steen married Donna Chalmers, and thus the two singing the duet are related!

Our first Sabbath was the last Sabbath for the church to meet in the outdoors. Next week there will be a completed church. The skeleton of the steel frame and the stacks of bricks are silent witness to the reality of what will be taking place this next week.

The visitors from North America do the children's sabbath school, and the adult Sabbath school. Jim Pedersen, president of the Northern California Conference speaks for church.

Tomorrow...it begins.

* This blog entry and others that I'll post in the upcoming weeks are obviously done when I got home. But I hope to put several entries here...and record our trip on the internet in this way.

OKW

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Home Again

We're home safe and sound and as I type this, we're at the pastor's meetings for the Northern California Conference at Pacific Union College.

We're still recovering from Jet lag if you can believe it! I want to go to bed at 7:00 p.m., but then I wake up at 2:00 in the morning.

I'm also still recovering from the 24 hour stomach bug, and the "sore throat" I got in route back. I think getting 3 hours of sleep in 47 hours of living didn't help things any either. That and the car trouble we had coming back from the airport made it one long two days of travel.

I'll blog more later...with pictures when I get home.

OKW

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Just a quick post as we plan on leaving the country.
We had a delightful trip to South Africa and a trip into Kruger National Park.
We saw all the big animals, except the Leopard. But then many people come 2 times a year to the parks and never see a Leopard either.

We saw two male lions sitting by the side of the road, and hippos in the river near the car. We saw lizards and birds (An awesome owl) and a glorious sunset. There were even 3 zebras that visited our hotel, in the dark, just as we were loading the bus for the trip back to Maputo.

In 3 hours we will head for the airport and the trip home.

All The Best and see you soon.

Kris Widmer

Friday, June 13, 2008

Feeding Program Day


I write this from the home of David and Susan Woods. He is the director of Maranatha in Mozambique. They are wonderful people. They had our whole group over to their house for a brief vespers and supper. 25+ in the living room.

Today from 1:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. we visited 3 locations and passed out bags of beans and rice.

It was a neat thing. We started at a completed SDA Church, stopped at a location along the way, and finished at our church location. When we pulled up at our location, two boys were just beginning to skin a goat! I got lots of gross pictures. We distributed 100 kgs of rice and 50 kgs of beans. When the people got them, they thanked us with songs and ceremonial dancing. It was pretty amazing.

At the first stop, we were providing food to people really out in the bush...who mostly live off their own labor. They seldom make it in to town. But they have a new Seventh-day Adventist Church in their community.

I teach the SS Lesson tomorrow...so should be fun....with translation.

That's it for now. This trip is drawing to a close. Tomorrow will be a high day at our church, and then a couple of days looking at Africa's amazing Animals.

Kris

P.S. We have learned connections we have to the other staff here...for instance Mrs. Dederer is related, by marriage, to Ms. Noble, a young adult volunteer here. Tim, the videographer, was in my cousin's son's wedding, and calls Llona "Aunt Llona." The Adventist family is a close one.

OKW

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Hannah Johnson, Missionary


Hannah Johnson is working on a long resume. Different than the one she planned a few months ago.

Hannah Johnson
8th Grade Graduate, Redding Adventist Academy, 2008, in Absentia.
World Traveler (Her first flight ever was SFO to London...to Africa!)
VBS Leader - Song Leader and Actress
Barterer Extraordinare - Shopping Till Dropping
Jeep Trail Navigator
The Indian Ocean Fish Whisperer
Friend of Mucapane Children
Friend of God
Missionary

If you want to know the details...ask Hannah Johnson about her two weeks in Africa.
She'll tell you all the wonderful details.

Thanks Hannah for being Bold for God in Africa.

O. Kris Widmer
okwidmer@sbcglobal.net

Sticker People

What can be said about VBS. It's kids learning to sing Father Abraham in their own language, it's watching a church administrator become the prophet Daniel in a skit, and it's watching 50 smiling faces (some with runny, dusty noses) clamor for balloons.

Look at a former post for a link to Dick and Brenda Duerksen's for more pictures. But I couldn't resist harvesting this from their site and reposting it here.

These children will grow up with a brick church down the trail from their house, instead of a reed backdrop under a tree. We connected for a few days in June of 2008, and will catch up on the rest of life's details in Heaven

Bribery Will Get You Somewhere...Special


Answer to Prayer...with the Proper Money...


Money makes the world go round...and it also greases the palms of the authorities.


Ron Kedas, the logistics contact for Maranatha here and our guide, has had his visa issues resolved today...with the payment of an extra $1,000 US. When it was finally figured out that money payment was what was holding up the process, it is being cared for today, and should be resolved for this precious family of three by the end of this week. This will make them secure for the year...and then have a simple (and less costly) renewal for as long as his work keeps him in the country.


He will also be able to travel to South Africa and Swaziland and back with no problems.


Praise the Lord...and the generous people that support Maranatha.


Please don't be uset that your offerings go for bribe money. It's how things get done in much of the world.
Ron politely bribes people on a daily basis....today, the bribes were for him.
okwidmer@sbcglobal.net

Thursday in Africa


Just a brief note from the home of David and Susan Woods and their family. He is the Maranatha Director for the 1001 church build in Africa. His house is about 6 doors away from where we are staying. I just walked out the front gate of our camp, turned left, walked to the corner and then turned left. 3 doors on the right, behind a locked gate, is their home. He said that they have faster internet service here in Africa, than they could have in Roseburg, Oregon!

Tuesday we had a delightful trip to Inhaca Island. See the previous blog for a blurb about that. Also follow the link there to Dick and Brenda Duerksen's blog. There you can find an entry with my picture on it. Click on the photo for 10 more pictures from this trip. That will have to do for now.



If a picture appears on this blog post...it's off Aljandro...the oldest man in Mucapane. I found it on the computer here at the Woods' house and thought I'd through it in. I hope it made it.

A brief report on Yesterday, Wed. June 11. We left our camp at 8:00 a.m. and drove to a completed school. It is the first Adventist school building in the country! It has about 70 students so far, and eventually could handle 400+ in two sessions a day. It was beautiful.! Then we drove to the shop and heard the story of the water. It would cost too much to connect to the municipal water system...something about unpaid bills from the previous owners...so they catch the rain water. In 1.5 years of work there, they have made many bricks using the rain water. When the tank gets low, the shop manager calls David and says "You should pray for rain." It rains that night! This has happened 5-6 times! They have only had to buy a tanker truck of water once to fill the tank!

We also saw how the steel is cut and welded into posts and trusses for the building of schools and churches here. Everything is made by hand and hard work.

We then went to the site of a 1/2 finished school. It will take two more groups to come to finish it, but it was nice to see it in process.

Then we had lunch at a nice Indian Restaurant. Second Wed in a row I've has Indian food for lunch. Last week it was in San Francisco!

In the afternoon, we toured some more...a stop to collect 70 care boxes for distribution on Sabbath, a visit to a completed church where they are having adult literacy classes for women 3 afternoons a week. There were about 25 women present, all learning how to read and write. Some of them were nursing their babies, as they learned how to spell TOMATOE. When the class was over, they set us on our way with singing and dancing.

We finished the say at dusk on a bluff overlooking the Indian Ocean, as we devoured about a dozen vegetarian pizza's and had a couple scoops of ice cream for desert.

On Thursday, it's back to work.... but first a tour stop to see the first Maranatha Well drilled in the country by the drilling rig that was released from Customs just yesterday. It only cost an additional $4,000 at the last minute. I don't know what the total cost of getting this rig in the country has been...but it will be well worth it, sinking a well near most of the churches so thirsty souls can find water...as they seek the water of life.

One final note...Please pray for Ron. He is from India and works for Maranatha. If his visa situation can't be straightened around, he and his wife and son will have to leave the country very soon, and who knows when they will return. He is very concerned...but trusting God for Divine intervention. His wife is Anu and his three year old son is Arien. Ron is the logistics person here, shepherding groups to where they need to be and keeping them safe, paying off thieves, etc. so he is muy importante!

That's it for now.
The church will be finished today! Thursday, June 12.

Much love to all.
And thanks for all you do for World Missions.

Pastor Kris Widmer

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Greetings from Africa

Hi all...this may be my only post.  We are well and the church should be finished in 3 days.  Today (Tuesday 6/10/2008) We went to Inhaca Island, and had a wonderful Indiana Jones style jeep ride, we saw a sea turtle from the beach and dolphins on the way back to Maputo.  We'll get to see the well drilling rig in operation for the first time that is used in the country!  It just cleared customs this week.  We will also be the first group to assemble some of the pews/benches that have been shipped over from Colorado, Gates Plumbing.  God has been so good.  No one is sick, and there have been no mishaps.  For more information and pictures go to: This Link


This is a blog by Dick Duerksen, and he has posted pictures there that have Rebekah W, Hannah J and OKW.

Follow the links there and you can keep up with a couple of his recent posts.

He has let me use his computer for this post...and I'm grateful.
We've been blogging together this evening...and it's been fun to see behind the scenes of how he reports on his travels to the Maranatha world.

Love to all...see you next Wednesday.



Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Bags are Packed

Well the last zipper has been zipped.
Rebekah's bag is 49 pounds
Mine is 50.2 pounds.

We're off to Africa!

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Civil Situation Improved

NEWS
3 June 2008
Posted to the web 3 June 2008
Maputo

The Mozambican government on Monday lifted the emergency situation decreed a fortnight ago to cope with the exodus of Mozambicans fleeing from anti-foreigner pogroms in South Africa.

A statement issued by the government's Disaster Management Coordinating Council (CCGC) noted that the number of violent incidents in South Africa had fallen, and most of the Mozambicans who are currently sheltering in temporary accommodation centres in South Africa have said they do not wish to return to Mozambique.

Instead they are waiting for calm to return, and will then try to go back to their residential areas in South Africa. (There are thought to be about 12,000 Mozambicans in these centres).

The government has thus raised the orange alert that was declared on 23 May, and has deactivated the National Emergency Operations Centre (CENOE).

A final operation to transport those displaced Mozambicans who do wish to leave South Africa will take place on Wednesday. They will join the 36,404 Mozambcians who have already fled the South African ethnic cleansing.

On Tuesday morning, the bodies of four Mozambicans who died in the pogroms arrived in Maputo, bringing to ten the number of bodies that have been returned from South Africa.

During three weeks of violence, 62 foreign migrants were murdered. It is thought that half of them were Mozambicans, and to date only 17 of these bodies have been identified. South African funeral agencies are transporting the bodies to Mozambique, in an operation paid for by the South African government.

Interesting Feature in Time




Three-year-old Samo scurries across a grassy field, his nose twitching furiously. Hooked up to a harness, he darts back and forth across the roped-off minefield — then, suddenly, he freezes in his tracks, sniffing the air. After a concentrated pause, he scratches vigorously at the ground, a signal to his handler, Shirima Vendeline Emmanuel, who stands in a safe zone a few yards away that he has found a landmine. "Good boy, Samo," shouts Emmanuel, as he scampers over to receive his reward — a banana. Samo is not some exploited child-soldier, however; he is a bristly giant Gambian pouched rat.

Mozambique's brutal 16-year civil war may have ended in 1992, but the country's villages, farming land and transport system remain covered by thousands of minefields. Some were planted decades ago by the Portuguese colonial army, others, later, by the forces of the Frelimo government and their South African-backed rebel opponents. The wars may be over, but their ordnance continues to kill and maim Mozambicans and prevent them from farming their land.

Once in the ground, landmines are devilishly hard to get rid of, and efforts to remove the estimated 100 million buried around the world have prompted many an outlandish innovation. A Cambodian newspaper once proposed bringing over British cattle suffering from mad cow disease to roam the countryside setting off an estimated 11 million mines buried there. More conventional approaches to demining all have their flaws. Armored mine-clearance vehicles only operate on flat terrain; metal detectors are terribly inefficient because they pick up all the non-lethal bits of metal in the ground; dogs can smell the explosive in a land mine, but tend to get bored and run the risk of getting themselves blown up.

So when researchers from the Sokoine University of Agriculture in Morogoro, Tanzania, began training rats — known for their keen sense of smell — for the job, the Mozambicans were willing to give it a try. "Rats are intelligent, and they like to learn new things," says Jared Mkumbo, a Tanzanian who supervises the training of the rats and their handlers. "You can train them to do exactly what you want them to do." The project, run by an organization called Apopo, which is funded by the Flemish government in Belgium, is proving so effective that a new batch of mine-sniffing rats is scheduled to be deployed in Angola later this year.

Samo is already a veteran: Last month, he was part of a crew of 10 rodents that successfully sniffed out all the mines in fields totaling 130,000 square feet around the village of Macia in southern Mozambique. But today's exercise is only a practice run. A grassy field on the edge of town has been set up to resemble a real minefield ready to be cleared. Dozens of 100-square meter (1,076 square feet) plots are demarcated by markers and strings, red perimeters signify areas of dangers, while green marks the safe zones where the handlers stand, connected to their rats by a rope pulley system. The mines buried here are dummies, already detonated but still containing the traces of TNT that the rats have been trained to sniff out.

Rats are almost perfectly suited for this type of work, argues Mkumbo. They are easy to train and transport to clearance sites, cheap to feed, and resistant to many of the tropical diseases to which dogs succumb. In the field, they are quick and methodical. Thirty-six rats trained in Tanzania are working on the project so far, and have already cleared thousands of mines across the country. "Two rats can clear a 200-square-meter area in one hour," says Mkumbo. "It takes one [human] de-miner two weeks to do the same area." And all that the rats ask in return is tasty food. When Samo signals the presence of a mine by scratching the ground, Emmanuel, his handler, presses a clicker which makes a noise that Samo has been trained to associate with food. He scampers over and snatches his banana from Emmanuel, devouring it in a couple of quick bites. To maintain their conditioning, the rats require regular training when they're not in the field — and on training days, from Monday to Friday, they only eat what they earn. Later, when a rat named Grigory fails to adequately signal the presence of one of the dummy mines, Emmanuel withholds his reward. "Tomorrow he will know that he needs to better," he says.

Unlike dogs, which grow attached to individual handlers, the rats are happy to work with anyone, so long as they are fed. Instead, it is the handlers who have grown attached to the rats. "Our economy used to be poor because of landmines, but now the rats are making a difference," says Alberto Jorge Zacarias, a handler who previously worked with mine-detecting dogs for eight years. "They are heroes. One day I will see my country free of landmines."

Why Mozambique

This is off of the maranatha web page.

Mozambique
Over 2,500 congregations currently meet each week in Mozambique. When Maranatha first visited the country there were only 13 permanent church buidlings. Maranatha has agreed to construct 1,001 new churches for Mozambique. Maranatha builds a church for 250 people that is ideal for the cities and the One-Day Church will be built in the rural areas.

You can read all about what Maranatha Volunteers International is doing at
www.maranatha.org

Leaving Tomorrow

Our Trip

This trip to Africa is very special for several reasons.
  • We will experience the joy of service in Jesus name.
  • We will build with a new brick technology that Maranatha has developed for the country.
  • We will have a great father - daughter memory for the rest of our lives.
  • We will meet friends and fellow believers in one of the poorest African countries.
  • We will be on a wildlife safari for two days, and I will have a 300mm zoom lens and a 10 mega-pixel camera...
  • We will build once again in the memory of Alex Williams, who died at the age of 19 on a Maranatha Trip to the Dominican Republic
  • We will land in London and Johannesburg...to cities and countries that I've never been to before.
Thanks to God and to the generous church for making this trip possible.
We will tell you all about it when we return.

Love

OKW

Mozambique

Here is the flag of the country we are traveling to.



We are traveling to the capital of Maputo, which is the red dot city in the south part of this map.

Wow

We just had a faith building experience with our passports.

We sent them off to the Mozambique embassy in April, and they arrived there on April 30. We knew that because we had a delivery confirmation tracking number through the post service. They were supposed to be processed in a 10 day turnaround, and we had plenty of time.

But they didn't come...and didn't come. Finally, on Thursday, May 23 Debbie called the embassy. They said they would be mailed to us the next day, May 24. O.K. No problem. We waited. They didn't come Tuesday, but with Memorial Day, perhaps they'll come Wednesday or Thursday. They didn't. Nor did they come Friday.

By then, we succumbed to panic.There were three delivery days left until lit would be too late...and we had to make the arrangements to get new passports, and pay again for entry visas when we would enter the country. We figured it would cost us about 700$, which was better than the $1500 changing our ticked would cost us. If we missed the flight all together, we'd be out $4,000. As many times as I told myself "it's only money", we still all shed tears over the loss we were experiencing.

On Friday, May 30, Debbie called the embassy first thing, and left a message, and it wasn't returned. We spend the weekend in prayer, worry and wonderment. We also sent sent word out to friends and family. Pray for our mission trip that God will intervene and place these necessary documents in our hands in time. The church in Magalia, Lakeport, Shasta Lake and Redding was praying for this situation on Sabbath. May 31.

We also spent much time in thinking out "Plan B" and "Plan C". I tried to get an appointment for the San Francisco passport office, where we could get replacement passports done in one day, but the only appointment their automated system would give me was June 5, a day too late for us to catch our plane. Should we call our Congress man? Could he get us an appointment?

On Monday Morning I stopped by the Post Office and asked if a package had arrived for us. No, it's not there. I went home and called the National Passport Office, and was able to get an appointment for San Francisco for Tuesday at 10:00 a.m. That would require Rebekah to appear personally, which meant she needed to take tests earlier than planned at school, and miss all day of school. But we felt God had opened a crack in our problem.

Meanwhile, our phone system went out at home about 9:00 a.m. No dial-tone on any of the extensions! This meant no Internet and no phone calls as we negotiated the rest of the logistics. I went out to the phone box and took all the red and green wires off and put them back on...with no fixing of the problem. So I called a phone fix-it man and he came out at 1:00 p.m. While he was working...

The post man arrived...with a package for us to sign for.The passports had arrived !!! This gift of God saved us a trip to San Francisco and that extra $700. Praise the Lord. Debbie and I knelt on our knees in a prayer of thanks!

We spent the afternoon making phone calls (on our recently fixed line) and our cell phones telling people our good news.

Tomorrow...Wed, June 4. Rebekah and I leave for Africa.

Thank you for your prayers.
Thank You, Jesus!
Thank you for the personal reminder that worry doen't really help a thing!