I'm writing from an awkward lobby computer with limited connection
speed. We are in Choma tonight. It is the closest "big" town to Moyo,
and it took us a good 2.5 hours on primitive dirt roads to make it to
Moyo today-- 2.5 hours each way. That gives you a sense of just how
rural Moyo is and the extent of challenges -- and opportunities -- we
shall face there over the course of the 15 years CPC expects to
partner with Moyo via World Vision. We made two primary stops in Moyo
today, and at both places, we were greeted with vibrant song and dance
performances. The residents formed a receiving line to shake our hands
and welcome us each personally. The World Vision staff told us that we
were the first white people many of these children had ever seen. A
few times they rubbed our skin, as if our color might rub off. At the
first stop, one of our group (Karen) met her sponsored son, Written,
who has a disability that renders his legs useless. Through this
partnership, Written has now received his first ever wheelchair;
previously he had to pull himself around on the ground using only his
arms. "The wheelchair now gives him so much more dignity," a World
Vision staff member whispered in my ear. Written's grandmother
presented gourds and a handwoven basket to Karen as a thank you for
her help; she grasped Karen's hands tightly and repeated her gratitude
over and over. The grandmother also said that Written is now able to
go to school because of the wheelchair.
Before we left Written, the residents asked to sing one last song they
had prepared especially for us. With a tattered hymnal in hand, they
began singing "What a Friend We Have in Jesus" in their Tonga
language. To hear a familiar hymn -- a hymn that has always meant a
great deal to me personally -- sung by these new friends, in their
native tongue, to our one and same God, was a profoundly moving
experience for me.
We then traveled to the center of Moyo, where a crowd of several
hundred awaited us. Chief Moyo greeted us warmly, along with his
Council of Headsmen. More singing and dancing ensued, this time with
our team joining the Moyo people in dance. Obviously, their dance
skills put ours to shame -- but they loved that we tried! They asked
each of us to introduce ourselves individually by name. As we said our
names, they repeated each back to us. When Pastor Paul Tshihamba made
remarks on our behalf of our team, he said our group had come to visit
from America; America was subsequently translated as "the land of
Obama," and all the Moyo people cheered at his name.
We spent time in one of the Moyo schools, spending more time getting
to know Chief Moyo and his hopes for his community. He had specific,
big dreams for this partnership, and is eager to be a full participant
in it. He asked us to tell our congregation at home "to keep Moyo in
[our] hearts, and pray for Moyo." We promised him we would. On the
walls of the schoolhouse was a hand-drawn diagram of the digestive
tract, with each organ name written out in English: intenstine,
stomach, etc. The nurse in our group noticed that the liver was
missing from the diagram. There were other hand-written posters with
English words written on the wall: of the days of the week, of the
rights of Zambian citizenship, of the names of a full dinner
place-setting. It was an eclectic mix of information, but great to see
evidence of education in action.
We spent more time meeting the residents, particularly five of the
children individually sponsored by members of our team. Each involved
the exchange of gifts from the Moyo family to the American sponsor,
and then the American sponsor extending gifts of mosquito nets, Bibles
(both in English and Tonga) and pictures of their own family to the
Moyo child. Each meeting marked the beginning of a friendship that
shall continue through prayer and letters for many years to come.
On the way out of town, we saw the Moyo high school that is newly
under construction. Pastor Paul told us to take pictures and remember
how it looked now; a year from now it will be finished and, for the
first time, education will be available in Moyo beyond Grade 7.
It was a day of new beginnings and eye-opening experiences. Mostly, we
remember the kind, bright-eyed faces that greeted us. And especially
the children -- for Moyo is made up mostly of children. The infant
mortality rate is 10%; the HIV infection rate is 16%; malaria is
rampant. There is much work to be done indeed, and it's exciting to
work with this able World Vision staff in Moyo. We look forward to
returning to Moyo tomorrow. And we look forward to the next 15 years
in friendship and growth with this community.
Thursday, May 6, 2010
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