We had an overnight layover at
London Heathrow, and looked for a place to lie down. Although
information desks will tell you there is none, we knew that if you go
into the very depths of Heathrow, there is a place with lots of long
couches.
I must have picked up some sort of
bug from that couch, because the next morning I was a total zombie.
It didn't worry me at all when the pilot notified us, once airborne,
that we were being diverted to Uganda. Just gave no reason, other
than something about needing to pick up some tires, which sounded
pretty thin. We would eventually reach Nairobi, but be two hours
late. I was still a zombie when we landed in Uganda, and I did not
even feel like looking out. Barbara was afraid I was having a bad
panic attack, leaving her on her own, not a good thing to be in
Africa. When we, at long last, landed at Jomo Kenyatta Airport,
Barbara was excited, and I was just there.
Rafiki headquarters in Florida had
sent us a very large bag of books for us to carry through for them,
along with the appropriate paperwork. We also had a huge suitcase of
toys they requested us to buy and bring for the children. The customs
agent told us we couldn't do that, then waited to see if the
customary bribe was forthcoming, maybe in the form of a supply of
toys for his grand children. Barbara just kept smiling at him,
telling him "The toys are for the orphans." He gave us some
more reasons why we just couldn't do that, Barbara just kept smiling.
"The toys are for the orphans." Finally, he just gave up
and waved us on through.
Our driver, hired by Rafiki, had
patiently been waiting three hours now. We kept this same driver
throughout our stay, and he was always competent and patient. He had
a little sign that said,"Patt and Barbra". Whatever the
spelling, we were overjoyed to see him, we're here, and we'll take
it.
It was a 45 minute drive to
Rafiki, and the route was directly through the staging ground for the
violence. The last mini missionaries picked up, right at the start of
the violence, had to pass through road blocks for both sides, and the
car had been shaken around pretty good. Yeen-Lan, the director, was
in that car. She kept saying, "Just keep smiling. Whatever
happens, just keep smiling."
Well, the warriors, and the
roadblocks were gone now, and we were happy. When we entered the
gates at Rafiki, we were treated like rock stars. To the children, we
were the first mini missionaries to arrive since the violence, and we
must have represented the end of that horrible time for them.
Getting out of the car at our
guest house, a woman screamed, "It IS you! It IS you!"
We saw our friend Emily running from
the guest house to hug us.
We had assumed the area we had
come through near Rafiki was a slum, but no, they said. Upper middle
class. Our rock star treatment continued
for a couple of days. My strange illness slowly went away. By then,
all 80 of the children knew everything there was to know about both
of us. The children just loved to stroke the long, thick hair on my
forearm. "Uncle Pat is like Esau!" The children always had
a neat way of asking a question."Where are you going" woud
always be asked, "And you are going where?"
The oldest of the children were
now in the fourth grade. Six native Africans were the "mamas,"
full time care givers. Each mama had 10
or so children, and the goal was, to give continuity, each child
would have the same mother until they were grown. But things didn't
seem to always work out that way.
There were 16 junior secondary
students who walked in to school every day at Rafiki. Some walked two
hours through very dangerous streets. Their uniforms were left at
Rafiki. They had been recommended by a pastor, because they had very
high potential, yet too poor to even buy a uniform to go to public
school. One of those students told us her brother was a shoe
salesman, and he provides food for the entire family. I asked, "Does
he have a store?" "No," she said. "He carries
them, tied over his shoulder, while he sells on the street."
I had never seen such motivated
students before, except for one student I once had at Arkadelphia,
Ket. She was from Bangkok, and was learning a new language at the same
time. We still stay in touch.
Nairobi is located on the equator,
at 5000 feet elevation. Cool nights, warm days. Every day. Almost no
mosquitoes. We only took Malaria medicine because we would be going
into lower areas, such as on Safari and to Tanzania The Rainy season
was due to begin just before we would leave.
Many of the secondary students
stayed, on their own, after school, to help the kids. You could pass
their classroom, almost any time, and think it was empty, it was so
quiet. Open the door, and 16 students were working hard. They looked
upon this as their only chance in this world to better themselves. If
one talked to them about their ambitions, they would all seem to be,
what probably was, impossibly high. Brain surgeon, scientist,
astronaut, on and on.
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